Grey's Anatomy s02e05 Episode Script

Bring The Pain

[narrator.]
Previously on Grey's Anatomy: Divorce papers.
The ball's in your court.
If you sign, I'll be on the first plane out.
Would you like to go out with me tonight? The hospital grants you four months to retake the exam.
If I don't pass a second time? You will no longer be a surgical resident.
- You look great.
- Thanks.
- Are you OK? - You ready to go? - I didn't lie.
- You withheld the truth.
- Had I known you were pregnant - You broke off with me.
- Dr.
Yang! - Cristina! [Addison.]
It's an extrauterine pregnancy.
She's bleeding out.
- [Ellis.]
I'm not supposed to be here.
- [Richard.]
No, you're not.
I don't want someone who doesn't want me, but if there's the slightest chance that he does, I'm not leaving Seattle.
[Meredith.]
Pain comes in all forms.
I had a good time.
Really.
Thank you.
It was the perfect evening.
Best date ever.
- Whatever.
- lzzie.
I especially liked the part where you treated me like crap the entire night.
- That was fun.
- I had a good time.
- Really? - Yeah.
The small twinge, a bit of soreness, the random pain.
The normal pains we live with every day.
I gotta go.
Seriously? Seriously? Then there's the kind of pain we can't ignore.
Seriously? A level of pain so great that it blocks out everything else.
- [George.]
I'm sleeping.
- Oh, shut it.
Shut Makes the rest of the world fade away.
- [Meredith.]
I don't want to talk.
- [Derek.]
Meredith You didn't sign the divorce papers.
Fine.
End of discussion.
- Meredith - What? Until all we can think about is how much we hurt.
I usually just say "Meredith" then you yell at me.
I haven't thought past that point.
I actually didn't have anything planned.
- How we manage our pain is up to us.
- What is that? Hey.
Stop it.
Seriously? Seriously! Seriously! This is a very small bed.
He's a brain surgeon.
I look fantastic.
I shaved my legs.
He's a brain surgeon.
How can he be so brainless? - Hello? Seriously! - Seriously! - Shh.
Sleep.
- [thunder.]
Pain.
- We anesthetize, - [lights pop.]
ride it out, embrace it, ignore it And for some of us, the best way to manage pain is to just push through it.
- You're dripping.
- I'm back.
I just want to make that clear.
I'm ready to work.
- Has anyone seen Dr.
Shepherd? - His name's on the OR board.
- He should be here somewhere.
- I'm good.
Ready to scrub in.
- I'm 100% on top of my game.
- You just got discharged.
- Pace yourself.
- I'm paced.
I'm paced.
Rounds, people.
What? You're not talking to me anymore? OK, what happened last night? What is going on with you? I'm fine.
- What's your problem? - [snorts.]
Fine.
You know what, Alex? No, I'm not talking to you anymore.
[pager beeps.]
Dr.
Bailey.
Henry Lamott, age 42, is scheduled with Dr.
Shepherd for a spinal implant to control the pain of his herniated disk.
Is allergic to all pain medication - Is that? - Porn.
Porn? - As in porn? - All right.
- What are we watching? - Karev.
Go stand in the hall.
Mr.
and Mrs.
Lamott, I'm sure you are really nice people, and what you do in the privacy of your own Look, we can't have porn in here.
This is a hospital.
It's for my pain.
My doc said it releases endorphins in the brain and helps keep my pain at a manageable level.
- Really? - George.
Hall.
[TV: woman moans.]
- What is this? - Nasty, Naughty Nurses 4.
[TV: women giggle.]
- That does not look comfortable.
- Trust me.
It's not.
Get in the hall.
[# Psaap: Crazy in the Rocket.]
[Baile7.]
O'Malley, Karev, you're in the Pit.
Stevens, there's a cardiac patient for you on two.
Yang, keep an eye on the Lamotts.
I don't want any problems.
Go.
Grey, your mother's being discharged this evening.
- You've made arrangements? - The nursing home is coming at eight.
Then you're with Shepherd, Derek Shepherd, today.
Hey, life is short.
Times are hard.
The road is long with many a winding turn.
He asked for you.
Take it up with him.
OK.
Pete Willoughby, 25-year-old, GSW to the chest.
- Return of 860 cc's of blood - Oh, damn, this hurts.
He's put out more than 200 cc's over the past hour.
Movies never say how much it hurts to get shot.
Push morphine, two milligrams.
Alex, this is my case.
Morphine, five milligrams.
- You didn't call him.
- I was here first.
You got her first because I let you.
Where's the chest films? I got it.
You always get the surgery.
Today, I'm getting a surgery.
Guys.
Knock it off.
He's one of Seattle's finest.
You've got an entire police force watching you.
[George.]
Page Dr.
Burke.
- Let him know I'm bringing up a GSW.
- "We" are bringing up a GSW.
Looks like you'll be able to go home today, Ellis.
- But I still have patients to see.
- No.
No more patients.
I'll be back to check on you later, OK? You should know I'm thinking of leaving Thatcher.
I should never have married him.
I'll leave him.
You leave Adele.
Then when our residency's over we can both get jobs at the same hospital.
Why don't you get her meds ready for discharge, nurse? Thank you.
[woman on PA.]
[distant siren.]
Ellis, that was a long time ago, remember? We had this discussion 21 years ago.
Think about it.
We should make the break now.
If we wait till residency's over, you'll be at one hospital, I'll be in another.
We could end up at opposite ends of the country.
It'll be too late.
[bell dings.]
- Meredith.
- Your wife is looking for you.
Oh, my God, this is hard for me, Meredith.
Let me make it easy.
I'm not going to be that woman.
The one who breaks up a marriage or begs you to want me.
You can sign the papers or you can not.
The choice is yours.
Either way, when it comes to this relationship, I'm out.
Now, where's this patient I'm supposed to be helping you with? Down there.
You shouldn't have walked the dog in the rain.
Oh, Lou, it wasn't the rain.
I just passed out.
- Actually, Mrs.
Bradley - Verna.
Verna.
You presented with lateral ST elevations and reciprocal inferior changes consistent with an Ml.
- A heart attack.
- [Lou.]
Oh, my God.
Lou, don't worry.
I've had little chest pains before and it turned out to be nothing.
This is nothing.
Lou, not in front of the doctor.
[woman.]
I've had a twinge in my back for a while.
I thought it would go away, but then last night, my legs went numb.
This morning, my back The pain is just too much.
Miss Chue, we'll put you on a PCA pump, give you morphine to control the pain.
- Thank you.
- OK.
But there's a greater problem.
- I've just looked at your MRl - Anna! - Why didn't you call us before coming? - I'm sorry.
These are my parents.
- Hi.
- What's going on? Anna's MRl has shown that she has a myxopapillary ependymoma.
It's a tumor in her spinal canal.
But the good news is that we can operate.
You have a 95% chance of fully recovering if we get you to surgery as soon as possible.
We can't wait.
With a tumor this aggressive even waiting another day puts you at risk for permanent paralysis.
Father? No.
No surgery.
Mr.
Chue, without surgery, Anna will be paralyzed within the next 24 hours.
No surgery today.
We're taking her home.
- Anna needs surgery.
- She can have it another time.
- Mr.
Chue - We are taking our daughter home.
Anna, you're over 18.
You don't need your father's consent.
I'm Hmong, and my father is the elder.
If he says I go home, I go home.
Hmong? Let's find out what that means.
Contact Social Services, see if we can get somebody to talk to them.
- Do I process her discharge? - Yeah.
It's insane, but we have to.
It reminds me of a case I had in New York where a woman Look, do you need me for anything else work-related? Look.
I was married for 11 years.
Addison is my family.
That is 11 Thanksgivings, In one day, I'm supposed to sign a piece of paper and end my family? A person doesn't do that.
Not without hesitation.
I'm entitled to a little uncertainty.
A moment to understand the magnitude of what it means to cut somebody out of my life.
- I'm entitled to at least one moment - [door opens.]
of painful doubt.
And a little understanding from you would be nice.
- Dr.
Shepherd.
Still here, I see.
- I couldn't leave you.
- Have you seen the other Dr.
Shepherd? - I'll tell him you're looking for him.
- So, thanks for, you know, being there.
- No thanks needed.
- OK.
- So where are we? The north-east corner of a hospital.
- Oh, I'm getting back on my feet.
- Fine.
- That doesn't mean that - Cristina - It's my first day back, I've got - I'm not waiting forever.
[elevator bell.]
Karev and O'Malley are bringing a GSW.
Want to scrub in? No can do.
I'm trying to get out of here at a decent hour tonight.
- What, you got a date? - Yes.
Yes, I do.
A handsome man is whisking me away to a love nest for the weekend.
You got shot in the line of duty? First month on the job.
Can you believe my luck? Guy pulls a gun and I freeze up.
The rookie who let himself get shot.
- I'm never gonna live this down.
- Sure, you will.
You think? Absolutely.
[elevator bell.]
Hey, I got Verna Bradley's tests back.
I don't think she had a heart attack.
Look at the changes in her EKG.
She had something.
Her serial enzymes and dobutamine stress echo were negative.
- I actually think she's fine.
- Get a cardiac cath.
Be thorough.
I am thorough.
- [Alex.]
What's the deal with lzzie? - She shaved her legs for you.
- And? - You didn't even kiss her good night.
- You didn't follow through? - Hey, I always follow through.
- You didn't last night.
- Mind your own business.
Mind She had expectations.
Women have expectations.
And you didn't meet them.
I live with these women.
When you guys don't meet their expectations, I hear about it.
I didn't get any sleep last night.
So, you know, it is my business.
[clattering.]
[monitor beeps.]
- Dude, we're not moving.
- Really! You think? [wheezes.]
[woman on PA.]
Dr.
Cole, 2621.
Dr.
Cole, 2621.
[lights fizz.]
[groans.]
You know how long the surgical scar takes to heal.
You must be in pain.
You should take something.
- Drugs are for babies.
- I hate Alex.
- And the non sequitur award goes to - I'm sorry.
I hate Alex.
- I broke up with Derek.
- Burke wants to have a relationship.
Boys are stupid.
[woman on PA.]
Yep.
[George.]
"lf elevator should stop, do not become alarmed.
" "Press the button marked 'alarm' for assistance.
" If they don't want us to be alarmed, - why call the button "alarm"? - That didn't work the last five times.
- We've lost power.
We're stuck.
- [Pete groans.]
You OK? His pressure is falling.
Alex, there's a lot more of his blood in the Pleurovac.
- We need to get him to the OR.
- OK.
Don't whisper.
I don't want to complain, but I got a bullet in my chest and whispering isn't a sign that I'm going to be A-OK, you know? - Damn it.
It's out.
- It's bad.
It's bad, right? Someone is going to get us out of here.
Don't worry.
- How we doing? - Can you move me to another room? - The lights and TV went out.
- Power outage in the east wing.
They'll have it back on soon.
- You're not critical.
You'll be fine.
- Oh, God! What am I gonna do? - You mean - Without my porn.
Read a book.
Talk to your wife.
School closed early because of the storm.
She had to pick up the kids.
She won't be back until after dinner.
Well, I'm sure you can find some normal way of amusing yourself.
- I need my porn! - Yeah.
[Addison.]
Lightning hit a substation.
We're running on backup generators.
One of them is down.
Richard, breathe.
The only means of transporting patients from the ER to the OR isn't working.
Don't tell me to breathe.
I'll breathe if I want to breathe.
- [man.]
Caught between floors.
- How bad is it? - Two interns and a GSW to the chest.
- Good air in, bad air out.
Come on, people, get those doors open.
- [man.]
It's jammed.
It won't open.
- [Baile7.]
Move.
- This is as wide as it goes.
- What What did you two do? Nothing.
- How's the patient? - He's not looking so good.
[thunder.]
[lights fizz.]
- Why do the lights keep flickering? - Something about a backup generator.
This pump will provide you with a morphine drip and should stop your pain.
I told you, I don't need it.
I'm going home.
You'll have to sign a form stating that you're leaving against medical advice.
Fine.
I know this is new and confusing.
I called a social worker and she's willing to talk to you Spare me the white-girl, cultural-divide love.
I grew up down the street.
I play in a band.
I went to U-Dub.
I get it.
But my father doesn't.
He says no, it's no.
We're talking about your ability to ever walk again.
That's what you're talking about.
I'm talking about my family.
Have you even heard of the Hmong people? Our religion has got rules that are way old and way set in stone and way spiritual and you don't mess with them.
You don't anger the ancestors.
Even if you pierce your tongue and play in a band.
What are the rules, exactly? ICU patients are going to the south wing.
Telemetry and stepdown patients, north wing.
- You paged me.
- Porn as pain management? You met Henry.
There are lots of theories on how to treat pain.
Porn as pain management? It's possible pornography can stimulate the brain to produce endorphins that minimize pain.
- Porn as pain management.
- I didn't prescribe it.
It wasn't me.
Take it up with the physician.
If he turns out to be some sex weirdo, it's on you.
That's all I'm saying.
- Oh, and your wife is looking for you.
- I know.
- Derek.
- Yes? Talk to Anna's father.
I'd do it myself but having testicles is a requirement.
- What happened to Social Services? - According to Anna, they can't help us.
Anna's father believes she's missing something she needs for surgery.
- Missing something? Missing what? - One of her souls.
We don't need a social worker.
We need a shaman.
Shaman? Cardio tells me your cath went just fine.
- Is that much bruising normal? - Your wound looks good.
So do the results on your cath.
You have no blockages in your arteries.
- Which means? - You did not have a heart attack.
[both chuckle.]
- So I can go home? - Not yet.
Your EKG shows significant changes.
And I'm going to find out why before you leave the hospital.
- Hey, Pete, what are you doing? - I have to get home.
- Pete, you're in the hospital.
- Need to get home.
Need to get home.
- What's his blood pressure? - It's not reading.
He's too agitated.
- How's his pulse? - Thready, but still there.
- Do you have instruments? - A code box and gloves.
You didn't bring an open chest tray? - We thought - No time for excuses.
- Blood pressure.
- I've taken it three times.
- And? - I can't hear a systolic over 50.
He's gonna die.
[Pete groans.]
- lntubate him.
I'll be back.
- Where are you going? To get an instrument tray.
You guys are going to have to open up his chest.
[Pete groans.]
- Are you sure about that? - No.
When's Burke coming back? [distant thunder.]
When is Dr.
Burke coming back? - Alex - Oh, would you shut up? [thunder.]
Mr.
Chue.
You want to take Anna home for a healing ritual? When sickness comes, it means that one of our souls is missing.
Anna needs to have her souls intact before surgery.
- She needs a shaman.
- Well, you could have told me that.
Why? So you could call me a fool? I respect that you have traditions that I can't understand.
But you're standing beside me in a $3,000 suit so I know you respect that I'm telling you Anna needs surgery in the next 24 hours if she's going to continue to walk.
She can't leave this hospital.
She can't undergo surgery without her soul.
She'd die.
All right then.
We're just gonna have to get a shaman.
Today.
In the hospital.
Shamans aren't in the Yellow Pages.
Our shaman is 500 miles from here.
You are an arrogant man.
No.
I'm just a guy with access to a helicopter.
Thank you.
- Finding her soul won't be easy.
- It never is.
[Richard.]
This is unconscionable.
Not enough power to move those elevators? They're replacing the backup.
Fire department is standing by.
- Critical patients? - Moved to south wing.
- lncoming trauma? - Rerouted to Mercy West.
- That backup should have been replaced.
- Yes, sir.
- Why didn't it happen? - Chief, you'd have to ask maintenance.
- I wouldn't know.
- Dr.
Bailey, you know everything.
Tell me whose butt to kick.
That would be your butt, Chief.
You didn't authorize the replacement generator, saving money for the new MRl machine.
Um I need to get on back down to the OR.
[monitor beeps.]
Hey, this isn't gonna be too sterile, but we can still try.
Prep and drape the patient.
[thunder.]
Can you get me copies of all Verna Bradley's records and page me? - I'll be on the OR floor.
- [PA.]
Dr.
Bennett Hey! Wait Where are you two going so fast? Burke is talking George and Alex through heart surgery in the elevator.
Shepherd's setting up a shaman healing ritual.
Rock on.
I have porn guy.
[Mr.
Lamott.]
Help! Please! Mr.
Lamott? What's wrong? Your pressure's elevated.
Pulse is racing.
You're really in pain.
What? Do you think? Are you telling me the porn actually sedated you? You think I'm a pervert, watching that stuff in front of you? Well yes.
OK, OK.
[sighs.]
You're allergic to most narcotics and NSAlDs.
I suppose we can try droperidol and diphenhydramine.
That put me into a coma last year.
Well, I can get an anesthesiologist down here.
But with your surgery tomorrow, he won't give you an epidural block.
- What am I gonna do? - Uh hold on.
We're really gonna do this.
Take these.
Karev, take the scalpel.
Alex! Come on.
Alex! Ventilate! [George.]
I got it.
What do I do? Make a large, anterior, lateral, midaxillary incision in the fifth intercostal space.
- How How large? - [Burke.]
As long as possible.
You need to get two hands in there.
It needs to be long and deep.
- Use the scissors if you have to.
- OK.
- Don't cut into the lung or heart.
- How can I be sure of that? You just have to be sure.
We're not in Kansas any more.
Your shaman's late.
My shaman is never late.
Can you see anything? Poor George, he doesn't have the steadiest hands.
- lzzie.
- Yeah? He can hear you.
O'Malley? How you doing down there? The fire department's here.
- They can get the doors open - No.
Nobody works on the elevator.
I have an open chest and a very nervous intern in there.
Keep them back.
- OK, guys, we're not going - O'Malley? Dr.
Burke, I didn't cut the heart or the lungs.
Good, good, O'Malley.
Really good.
Now, check for injuries and do a pericardiotomy.
I'll need some lap pads, forceps, Metzenbaums and Satinsky clamps? Yes, you will.
You tell anyone I did this for you, not only will I kill you, I will sell your body parts for cash.
OK.
So There were these women.
Nurses.
Three nurses.
And they were naughty.
They were really, really naughty.
They were three naughty nurses.
Saucy, even.
They were saucy and bad and naughty.
Three saucy, bad, naughty nurses.
They were taking a shower.
Together.
Soaping each other up.
And then this doctor walks in and he sees these three naughty, bad nurses with these great big Mrs.
Bradley, do you realize that you've been admitted to the hospital on this date for the past seven years? That can't be.
- I don't remember the date exactly - I have the medical records.
On this date for the past seven years you have what looks like a heart attack.
No.
No, I know I've had some scares but I don't.
Every year on this date? Is there significance to this date for you? No.
Nothing.
What were you doing the first time you had a cardiac episode? Who can remember back that far? We were in the yard.
I remember because our neighbor What was his name? - Ted.
- That's right.
He died.
Of an aneurysm, I think.
And we watched as the funeral home people took him away and you had your first attack.
- And you were close to Ted? - No.
We barely knew Ted.
That was all very sad, but what does that have to do with Verna's heart? I removed a small clot from the pericardium.
- No obvious cardiac injuries.
- Change in the vitals? - BP's still too low to register.
- We need to cross-clamp the aorta.
Stick your hand in and bluntly dissect down until you feel two tube-like structures.
The esophagus will be more medial and anterior.
I feel one tube that's easily collapsible and the other's more muscular, spongy.
I feel I can feel the spine just underneath it.
- Yes! You're touching the aorta.
- I'm touching the aorta.
Wrap the index finger of your left hand around it and apply the Satinsky clamp with your right hand.
Got it.
Wait, l I think I can localize the bleeding.
It's coming from the inferior vena cava.
- Can you find the lesion? - Yeah.
Yeah, I think I can feel it.
- It's too far in to repair.
- How big is it? Small, maybe smaller than a dime.
OK, O'Malley.
I want you to take your finger and plug the hole.
I can feel his heart starting to fill more.
It's beating a little stronger.
- Excellent.
Keep your finger there.
- OK.
Now what? - That's it.
- That's it? [George.]
I just stand here with my finger plugging the hole? Until we can get you out of that elevator and into the OR.
Bailey, you can tell the firemen to get my guys out of there.
Will do.
OK.
We're ready.
- O'Malley.
- Yes, sir? You just flew solo.
Thank you, sir.
OK, Anna, we're going to shut off the PCA pump now, which means you'll be in a lot of pain for the duration of - The healing ritual.
- Are you OK with that? Yeah.
They can't find my soul if I'm medicated.
- No pain, no gain, right? - It's not just for your father.
You believe it too, right? I know it sounds like a load of crap but watch the ritual.
You'll see.
- See what? - The moment it happens.
[# Mike Doughty: I Hear The Bells.]
I'm ready.
"Oh, yes! I'm so very, very naughty," Bianca said as she dropped her stethoscope.
"Me too!" said Crystal as she snapped on her surgical glove.
And then there was Marta - Where was l? - Marta.
Oh, yes.
Marta was the naughtiest nurse of all because she knew how [TV: woman giggles.]
- Oh, thank God.
- [man.]
We're back up.
How long do you think it takes to retrieve a lost soul? I don't know.
- Way to go, George.
- I have my finger in a heart.
Very cool.
[# Way Out West: Don't Forget Me.]
- You have stress cardiomyopathy.
- Cardiomyopathy? - What Can you tell me what that is? - It's Ted.
Ted? Ted.
Not just the neighbor you barely knew, was he? I don't know what you're talking about.
Every year, on the day he died, you get a rush of adrenaline caused by stress.
Your pressure rises, you have chest pains and you end up here.
I loved the man next door, and he loved me.
I know how this is gonna sound but Ted was my soul mate.
And then he just died.
It's grief.
Your heart stops because you're grieving for Ted.
[sniffs.]
So what do I do next? I mean, how do you treat it? I wish I knew.
I told Thatch I'm leaving him.
You left Thatcher, Ellis, but I couldn't bring myself to leave Adele.
Do you remember? Painted horses.
Yes.
We were on the carousel in the park.
It was raining.
- I have an offer from Boston General.
- You took it to get away.
We swore we'd never talk again about what we had together.
It was gonna always be our secret.
Richard? Yes, Ellis? Carousels give me the creeps.
How do you put up with it? I mean, Nasty, Naughty Nurses 4 and, I'm assuming, 1, 2 and 3.
- He's my Henry.
- I know.
But don't you find it misogynistic and degrading and kind of [sighs.]
I mean, 24 hours a day of porn? Seriously? That's your life? I'm grateful for it.
It takes away his pain.
See, the thing is, Henry Henry takes away my pain.
I lied.
I'm not out of this relationship, I'm in.
I'm so in, it's humiliating, because here I am begging.
- Meredith - Shut up.
You say Meredith and I yell, remember? - Yeah.
- OK.
Here it is.
Your choice? It's simple.
Her or me.
And I'm sure she's really great, but, Derek, I love you.
In a really, really big, "pretend to like your taste in music, Iet you eat the last piece of cheesecake, hold a radio over my head outside your window," unfortunate way that makes me hate you, love you.
So pick me.
Choose me.
Love me.
I'll be at Joe's tonight.
So, if you do decide to sign the papers, meet me there.
[sighs.]
Goodbye, Ellis.
I am gonna come see you tomorrow, OK? He doesn't love her.
He can't.
But he'll stay with her anyway.
She's his wife.
Mom? - Mommy.
- Meredith.
- You grew up.
- I did.
It's a shame.
It's awful being a grownup.
But the carousel never stops turning.
You can't get off.
OK.
You think he'll show? He'll show.
[# Not Tonight: Tegan & Sara.]
[bell jangles.]
Hey.
How's your patient? - The one that got her soul back? - She's going to be fine.
- Gotta go.
- Look at you.
You look like a girl.
- Is that your date? - That's my husband.
- You're married? - Ten years today.
- I didn't know you were married.
- You never asked.
You haven't signed those divorce papers yet, have you? Bailey.
Tell me what to do.
[chuckles.]
- God, why does this have to be so hard? - It's not hard.
It's painful but it's not hard.
Come on, you know what to do already.
If you didn't, you wouldn't be in so much pain.
[Meredith.]
Pain.
You just have to ride it out.
Hope it goes away on its own.
Hope the wound that caused it heals.
So here's where we are.
I work too much, I'm competitive, I'm always right.
- And I snore.
- What? I'm trying here.
Oh Oh.
Oh! - Yeah.
- So? OK, we're a couple.
Whatever.
Don't make a big deal about it.
There are no solutions.
No easy answers.
You just breathe deep and wait for it to subside.
Oh, man.
I just - [laughter.]
- [bell jangles.]
[sighs.]
He's not coming.
- You don't think he's coming.
- He might come.
- Yeah.
You never know.
- He's definitely coming.
- [thud.]
- Ow! Want her doing tequila shots all night? I'll be the one cleaning up the vomit.
Besides, I touched a heart today, Porny.
[doorbell.]
[Meredith.]
Most of the time, pain can be managed.
Pour me another one.
But sometimes, the pain gets you when you least expect it.
I'm telling you.
Any second.
Hits way below the belt and doesn't let up.
I have been looking everywhere for you.
Well - You found me.
- So you going to sign those divorce papers or not? Pain.
You just have to fight through.
Because the truth is you can't outrun it.
And life always makes more.

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