Dr. John H. Watson, M.D. (
lightconductor) wrote2024-02-05 07:31 pm
Inbox for Watson (Pumpkin Hollow)
Here you may contact Dr. John H. Watson, MD, late of Her Majesty's Army, with any professional or personal issues. He is available by phone, message, or just by dropping in on him at his clinic or his tenement flat.
The Clinic
Watson's clinic is a small building with a couple examination rooms and some beds, kept warm with a little iron stove in the front room. Pictures to come at some point.
The Flat
A short walk away from the clinic is Watson's small but cosy flat, on the second floor in a small tenement building.
The "sitting room" end of the main room
The kitchen, where the stove is the primary source of heat
Watson's desk
Watson's bedroom, alternate view
The Clinic
Watson's clinic is a small building with a couple examination rooms and some beds, kept warm with a little iron stove in the front room. Pictures to come at some point.
The Flat
A short walk away from the clinic is Watson's small but cosy flat, on the second floor in a small tenement building.
The "sitting room" end of the main room
The kitchen, where the stove is the primary source of heat
Watson's desk
Watson's bedroom, alternate view

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He finds his way back to his seat, and Diogenes comes to cautiously weave around the chair legs, still keeping an arm's length from César, for the time being. Watson leans down to scratch Diogenes's ears. "I suppose that's the basics of one of your medical conditions. There was another, that you said you were being treated for?"
cw: internalized ableism due to end of the world threat??? UH yeah
"We still need to discuss DNA, but right, the next one. I'm already going to be getting stimulants for treatment, which is the most common treatment method. This is from the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, Fifth edition. Well... paraphrased. I didn't have it entirely memorized. But it's the one I used to get rediagnosed in the United States so I could get medicated."
Watson doesn't need to know that he memorized it to remind himself how to better appear not himself.
"It's a neurodevelopmental disorder. So, my brain's just... structured differently. And sometimes those structural differences can cause issues. I'm of the Predominantly Inattentive Presentation type."
César hands over the paraphrased pages he wrote for Watson to read. Trying to keep professional. One of his feet start to tap, and he stops it. Instead, he knits his fingers together and keeps them still as a reverse-fidget.
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"I've known people like this," Watson says, tapping the paper. "They are generally labelled as eccentric, or perhaps even odd. I would never have thought to label it a medical ailment of any kind."
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"A long-acting stimulant." There's faint concern there, because he knows stimulants, but he is going to have to put some trust in his future colleagues. "Well, we shall have to do our best with what we have. Perhaps we can find a chiming clock for you that might help."
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César pulls out of his pocket a repeater pocket watch. "Already ahead of you. I've also created a small notebook of To Dos of various lists to help me keep track of things. ... Stimulants actually act differently in my brain. Sometimes people find out they have this by taking illegal stimulants like cocaine and then finding they want to nap."
hey let's do some cw: drug use
He startles, visibly, and then passes a hand over his eyes. Aware that he's reacted noticeably, Watson is uncomfortably silent for a beat or two while he tries to work out what to say. Perhaps he should not speak ill of the dead; on the other hand, he will hurt no one by his honesty.
(On the other other hand, he is also dead.)
"I beg your pardon," he says. "I am... aware, of course, that some people do react to stimulants in that way. A very dear friend of mine, in fact, was very fond of cocaine for how restful he found it."
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"Restful..." Huh; César's expression knits into sympathy. "... was he the reason you didn't blink at my sometimes inability to remember my basic needs?"
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He closes his eyes for a moment, and sighs. "Illegal, was it? I didn't think it was quite that serious, but I admit that it is... validating, shall we say. There must be newer drugs to take their place, surely. What of morphine? I know it has its risks, but also it has its uses, it seems to me."
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César makes a sound of agreement. "Morphine is highly regulated because it's addictive. Opioids as well. Opium itself is illegal."