Quoted By: >>68287520 >>68287601
>>68287210
>Wendy rock back and forth on her.
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>She repeats to herself, until she finaly grabs one her green puppets and rips it in half in a blind rage, trying to calm the emotions of what she just witnessed.
>Wendy falls from her bed and crawls to her night table.
>She rises up and looks at herself in the mirror.
>She's sweating, her pupils shrunken and shaking, she bares her teath as she clenches her fists.
>"What was that?", she puts her balled fist to her forehead.
>Wendy is well aware of her condition, but It's not like most therapist and psychiatrist think it is.
>While Wendy all her life had to battle a host of intrusive and delusional thoughts, many of those thoughts weren't pure fabrications of her shattered mind.
>She knew this due to them appearing even when she supposedly was medicated. Another indication of their difference is that they were always premonitions of the future.
>Peculiar predictions of assignment dates, gifts she was to receive by her mother, her grandfathers unfortune demise in boating accident.
>All of these images would appear to her and would always come true. She would push them aside, just as her therapists advised. But this image couldn't be pushed away.
>What could she have possibly predicted?
>A lost twin? An odd coincidence? A secret experiment? What was this?
>Wendy rock back and forth on her.
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>"This can't be real."
>She repeats to herself, until she finaly grabs one her green puppets and rips it in half in a blind rage, trying to calm the emotions of what she just witnessed.
>Wendy falls from her bed and crawls to her night table.
>She rises up and looks at herself in the mirror.
>She's sweating, her pupils shrunken and shaking, she bares her teath as she clenches her fists.
>"What was that?", she puts her balled fist to her forehead.
>Wendy is well aware of her condition, but It's not like most therapist and psychiatrist think it is.
>While Wendy all her life had to battle a host of intrusive and delusional thoughts, many of those thoughts weren't pure fabrications of her shattered mind.
>She knew this due to them appearing even when she supposedly was medicated. Another indication of their difference is that they were always premonitions of the future.
>Peculiar predictions of assignment dates, gifts she was to receive by her mother, her grandfathers unfortune demise in boating accident.
>All of these images would appear to her and would always come true. She would push them aside, just as her therapists advised. But this image couldn't be pushed away.
>What could she have possibly predicted?
>A lost twin? An odd coincidence? A secret experiment? What was this?