My Attorney, the
Jungian
by Vincent Barry
My
attorney wants to plead me Not guilty by
reason of mental illness.
Youre a psychopath, my attorney
says, before reassuring my gasp, Oh, not
the violent, criminal kind, and rattles off, Elizabeth
Bathory, Jack the Ripper, . . , then adds
with a laugh, Oh, I could go on, but Im
sure to offend by leaving someone or other out.
The aforesaid gallery were, apparently, pure
psychopaths. I, by contrast, am a run-of-the mill
psychopath, The kind, my
attorney says illustratively, that ones
spouse might call one in a divorce hearing.
The hypothetical spouse, my attorney
elaborates, doesnt mean that the
partner devours or makes soap of human flesh but
only that they are incapable of showing any love
or affection for anything but, say, golf.
My therapist, I return meekly, says
Im neurotic.
Uh-huh, my attorney distractedly nods,
you could be that too walk and chew
gum? Then, You feel compelled to
avoid sidewalk cracks, do you? eat porridge
every morning precisely at 6 A.M.?
Rhetorically, speaking.
We exchange head shakes.
Were you so compelled, my attorney
continues, certainly, somewhat are
called compensations might be in order. . .
. Say, Try walking with your head up,
or Must you always eat porridge at 6 A.M?
Harmless enough advice to the neurotic.
I mean whats the worst that could happen? A
stiff neck? . . . corn flakes at 6:15 A.M? But
to you, your average psychopathdismantling
the structures of the average psychopath? Whoa!
Were talking nitroglycerin here.
My therapist says, I allow,
I have a compulsive attention to duty.
Yes, my attorney nods, but born
with, you mean.
You mean like a birth defect?
Yes, yes, only in the brain an empty
place, so to speak, that you are trying to fill
incompulsivelyin one way or
another. Then leaning in conspiratorially,
And the beauty of it: Its incurable.
Im an invalid, I am thinking,
and, as if reading my mind, my attorney say,
Exactly! All of us are. Before we learn to
walk were born with-with an inner limp, so
to say.
Which explains my compulsive attention to
duty?
Let me ask you this, my attorney says
indulgently. What did your therapist
recommend?
Before I can answer, my attorney says, Let
me guess. Then, like throwing darts at a
board: How about easing up a tad?
Ever try stretching your lunch hour now and
then? What about treating yourself to
a sick day?
Im amazed. How did you know?
Well-intentioned advice, my attorney
says with a smug smile, but misguided . . .
So misguided that it explains, quicker than you
can say Adolf GuggenbÜhl-Craig, why you sent
your therapist a postcard from Bimini, where, and
I quote from the aforementioned, I am
enjoying a well-earned vacation, with,
wisely omitted, BTW, the banks funds.
I sheepishly nod.
Why, my attorney says with a
sly, confident smile, you did everything
but sign: Your Compensated Psychopath,
and gushes, After acquittal, malpractice!
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