Note sull'episodio
Chicago, 1953. A cramped second-floor counseling room on Drexel Avenue, half a block from the University of Chicago campus, has become a sanctuary of quiet amid the bustling city. The afternoon sun filters through a narrow window, illuminating motes of dust that hang in the still air. Two people sit facing each other in plain wooden chairs – no couch, no desk between them, nothing to distract from the human encounter. On one chair, a young man in his twenties leans forward, elbows on his knees, head bowed. He struggles to find words, his voice low and taut with shame. He’s a war veteran turned student, and life off the battlefield has been bewildering; nights bring nightmares, days bring a sense of disconnection from everyone around him. On the other chair sits Carl Rogers, quietly attentive. Rogers’s posture is relaxed yet engaged, his hands loo ...