FGV-SP Administração 2019/2

PERFECT LIE
By Anna Blundy

 

[1]    It was as though he was sitting in the consulting room with us, a golden figure of male beauty, intelligent sensitivity, sparkling wit and an endless
capacity for good. This was established by my patient as a stark contrast to all her multitudinous failings. “I don’t deserve him,” she said, twisting a tissue
in her bitten fingers, legs tucked meekly under her chair. She began (again) to detail her repulsiveness and stupidity.
[2]    She met this Adonis at university where he excelled at everything. Strangely enough, he liked her and they began a relationship that made her feel
inadequate. “He’s just so good socially. Really funny and chatty,” she explained. “I know people look at us and wonder why he’s with me,” she added.
[3]    I was supposed to nod and understand that it must be very painful to be so ugly and crap while he is so perfect. Did I mention that he is multilingual
and that his strong eco-credentials will, sooner rather than later, save the world? Sitting there looking at this crushed girl, I really started to hate this guy.
“He says he can’t put up with my depression much longer. He says it’s embarrassing.” Our Adonis was constantly going to Norway for long stretches. “There
was a girl who liked him, but nothing happened,” she said, eyes pleading.
[4]    Two years into our once-a-week sessions, my patient looks very different. She meets my gaze, smiles, is dressed less like a five-year-old and more like
a 30-year-old, and is struggling with her now husband. “He’s such a show off. He dominates conversations so nobody else can say anything,” she tells me,
describing an excruciating evening at an Indian restaurant. She is exasperated by his bullying at home, always shouting about her incompetent recycling,
her use of the central heating and her not switching lights off (when she is actually in the room). While her job in publishing is going well, he is currently
out of work, the eco-start up thing that he was involved with didn’t start up.
[5]    I won’t go into detail about her psychotherapy journey, but she is a favourite in my supervision group because she is funny and insightful, desperate
to get out of depression, initially to please her Adonis, but ultimately for herself. She’d chosen someone she felt was her superior in order to prove her lack
of self-worth and was re-enacting a miserable childhood in which she was always ignored in favour of (and also by) a golden brother.
[6]    But now what? I’ve often heard anti-therapy types complain that therapists turn couples against each other, that if one party is in therapy the marriage
is doomed. I suspect this is often true—an unhappy person is often unhappy specifically in their relationship. But this relationship was based purely on
fantasy. My patient had ludicrously idealised an ordinary guy and he liked it (as it fed his narcissism). She was unable to know the real person, seeing only
the glittering fantasy that revealed her own worthlessness. Once she’d recovered her reality-testing, withdrawn her colossal projections of perfection into
him, and was more able to see the world as it is, the rose-coloured veil slipped away and she is left with a man as flawed as any other: as flawed as herself.
[7]    Since she didn’t choose him clear-sightedly, she didn’t choose him at all. She chose a fantasy. Though reality has allowed her to accept herself, she’s
now going to have to accept or reject him, without the auriferous sheen
[brilho].

Adapted from Prospect, June 2017. 

In paragraph 4, the phrase “dressed less like a five-year-old and more like a 30-year-old” most likely refers to which of the following?

a

The therapy patient is still struggling to find her own unique sense of style. 

b

The therapy patient’s changed way of dressing is evidence that she is responding positively to her therapy sessions. 

c

The therapy patient’s new husband has been helping her to act in a more mature way. 

d

The therapy patient now dresses to please herself rather than to please her husband. 

e

Getting out of a destructive relationship has helped the therapy patient become a mature, responsible woman.

Ver resposta
Ver resposta
Resposta
B
Resolução
Assine a AIO para ter acesso a esta e muitas outras resoluções
Mais de 300.000 questões com resoluções e dados exclusivos disponíveis para alunos AIO.
E mais: nota TRI a todo o momento.
Saiba mais
Esta resolução não é pública. Assine a aio para ter acesso a essa resolução e muito mais: Tenha acesso a simulados reduzidos, mais de 200.000 questões, orientação personalizada, video aulas, correção de redações e uma equipe sempre disposta a te ajudar. Tudo isso com acompanhamento TRI em tempo real.
Dicas
expand_more
expand_less
Dicas sobre como resolver essa questão
Erros Comuns
expand_more
expand_less
Alguns erros comuns que estudantes podem cometer ao resolver esta questão
Conceitos chave
Conceitos chave sobre essa questão, que pode te ajudar a resolver questões similares
Estratégia de resolução
Uma estratégia sobre a forma apropriada de se chegar a resposta correta
Transforme seus estudos com a AIO!
Estudantes como você estão acelerando suas aprovações usando nossa plataforma de IA + aprendizado ativo.
+25 pts
Aumento médio TRI
4x
Simulados mais rápidos
+50 mil
Estudantes
Rejandson, vestibulando
Eu encontrei a melhor plataforma de estudos para o Enem do Brasil. A AIO é uma plataforma inovadora. Além de estudar com questões ela te dá a TRI assim que você termina.
Jefferson, formando em Medicina
Com a plataforma AIO consegui acertar as 45 questões de ciências humanas no ENEM 2022! Sem dúvidas, obter a nota máxima nessa área, foi imprescindível para ser aprovado em medicina.
Mariana Scheffel
AIO foi fundamental para a evolução do meu número de acertos e notas, tanto no ENEM quanto em outros vestibulares, fornecendo os recursos e as ferramentas necessárias para estudar de forma eficaz e melhorar minhas notas.
A AIO utiliza cookies para garantir uma melhor experiência. Ver política de privacidade
Aceitar