Author's Note: The musings begin now. Again, this is from Meredith's p.o.v.

--

Reason Number Ten: Judgmental, superiority complex-having, annoyingly perceptive therapists.

--

Dr. Wyatt had called her a coward. She had protested, her instinctive denial fueling her fire, but the casual observation had unnerved her. If she had listened to the voice hidden behind the walls of denial, she would have realized that Dr. Wyatt was dead on. But years of practice had taught her not to bypass the surface, and so she had left the therapist's office in a mood, resolved never to set foot in it again.

This resolution proved more difficult to uphold than she had anticipated. Dr. Wyatt was simply refusing to comply with it. The therapist wouldn't give her an inch; she wouldn't give her chart back. How was she supposed to quit therapy if she was practically forced to stalk her therapist every moment of the day? This just wasn't going to fly. She had to figure out a way to retrieve her chart before getting sucked right back in.

In the end, she had returned to therapy, newly committed. It probably had something to do with being caught between Dr. Wyatt and Lexie in the washroom. She had to admit, Dr. Wyatt was kind of right. She was a coward, or at least acting like one. She didn't like being a coward, so she would change that.