Subject: Okay, I see where you're coming from.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-06-21 15:41:00 UTC
That does make sense.
However, I don't think it's wise to assume that no one in FicPsych is a veteran, to continue your metaphor. People come to the PPC from all walks of life, fictional and non-fictional. I don't know everything about the background of all the nurses, and the one I know best, Jennifer Robinson, wound up in the PPC partially due to suffering something of a cosmic identity crisis. If she can't relate to wandering lost and alone in a strange country, no one can. (That said, she would also hold out against more aggressive measures as long as possible, but she doesn't have anything like ultimate authority in the department. There are at least five people ahead of her in seniority.)
And even if none of them count as veterans in this case, they do have extensive experience in working with emotional trauma of all sorts, and being in the PPC, which routinely neuralyzes random bit characters without so much as asking their permission first, they ought to be very comfortable with the idea that people don't have any kind of right or requirement to hang onto badfic-induced memories, especially if they're competent to express that they don't bloody well want them. Perhaps putting the problem in terms of gender reassignment would be more apt: it's a person's prerogative to say "even though I have X body part, that's not me, I don't want it, and I should be able to change it if I choose."
Though, you know how Bleeprin works, right? It selectively represses bad memories, leaving the person's personality entirely intact. That's why it's so popular. Granted, I don't think anyone's ever tried using it on a cartoon horse before, but that's something to keep in mind before you decide a total mindwipe is necessary.
Also, are you aware of the herd of horses, led by Alice the meara, that lives in the courtyard? Integrating her with a supportive surrogate family there would certainly be on FicPsych's radar.
~Neshomeh