Quote 1
In the group meetings there were gripes coming up that had been buried so long the thing being griped about had already changed. Now that McMurphy was around to back them up, the guys started letting fly at everything that had ever happened on the ward they didn't like.
"Why does the dorms have to be locked on the weekends?" Cheswick or somebody would ask.
"Can't a fellow even have the weekends to himself?"
"Yeah, Miss Ratched," McMurphy would say. "Why?"
"If the dorms were left open, we have learned from past experience, you men would return to bed after breakfast."
"Is that a mortal sin? I mean, normal people get to sleep late on the weekends."
"You men are in this hospital," she would say like she was repeating it for the hundredth time, "because of your proven inability to adjust to society. The doctor and I believe that every minute spent in the company of others, with some exceptions, is therapeutic, while every minute spent brooding alone only increases your separation."
"Is that the reason that there has to be at least eight guys together before they can be taken off the ward to OT or PT or one of them Ts?"
"That is correct."
"You mean it's sick to want to be off by yourself?"
"I didn't say that—"
"You mean if I go into latrine to relieve myself I should take along at least seven buddies to keep me from brooding on the can?"
Before she could come up with an answer to that, Cheswick bounced to his feet and hollered at her, "Yeah, is that what you mean?" and the other Acutes sitting around the meeting would say, "Yeah, yeah, is that what you mean?"
She would wait till they all died down and the meeting was quiet again, then say quietly, "If you men can calm yourself enough to act like a group of adults at a discussion instead of children on the playground, we will ask the doctor if he thinks it would be beneficial to consider a change in the ward policy at this time. Doctor?"
Everybody knew the kind of answer the doctor would make, and before he even had the chance Cheswick would be off on another complaint. (2.3.1-14)
The men begin questioning the rules and regulations that govern their lives. Nurse Ratched clings to ward policy, and reminds them of their mental illnesses, to prevent a full-scale rebellion. She posits law and order as the cure to their inability to adjust to society; if they get the freedoms they want, they will never be able to live on the Outside.
Quote 2
In the group meetings there were gripes coming up that had been buried so long the thing being griped about had already changed. Now that McMurphy was around to back them up, the guys started letting fly at everything that had ever happened on the ward they didn't like.
"Why does the dorms have to be locked on the weekends?" Cheswick or somebody would ask.
"Can't a fellow even have the weekends to himself?"
"Yeah, Miss Ratched," McMurphy would say. "Why?"
"If the dorms were left open, we have learned from past experience, you men would return to bed after breakfast."
"Is that a mortal sin? I mean, normal people get to sleep late on the weekends."
"You men are in this hospital," she would say like she was repeating it for the hundredth time, "because of your proven inability to adjust to society. The doctor and I believe that every minute spent in the company of others, with some exceptions, is therapeutic, while every minute spent brooding alone only increases your separation."
"Is that the reason that there has to be at least eight guys together before they can be taken off the ward to OT or PT or one of them Ts?"
"That is correct."
"You mean it's sick to want to be off by yourself?"
"I didn't say that—"
"You mean if I go into latrine to relieve myself I should take along at least seven buddies to keep me from brooding on the can?"
Before she could come up with an answer to that, Cheswick bounced to his feet and hollered at her, "Yeah, is that what you mean?" and the other Acutes sitting around the meeting would say, "Yeah, yeah, is that what you mean?"
She would wait till they all died down and the meeting was quiet again, then say quietly, "If you men can calm yourself enough to act like a group of adults at a discussion instead of children on the playground, we will ask the doctor if he thinks it would be beneficial to consider a change in the ward policy at this time. Doctor?"
Everybody knew the kind of answer the doctor would make, and before he even had the chance Cheswick would be off on another complaint. (2.3.1-14)
When the men begin questioning the rules and regulations that govern their lives, Nurse Ratched clings to ward policy, and reminds them of their mental illnesses in order to prevent a full-scale rebellion. She posits law and order as the cure to their inability to adjust to society; if they get what they want, they will never be able to live on the Outside.