Marion Silver Character Diagnosis and Treatment Plan Paper

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During the course term, students will watch one film, and create a diagnosis of one of the characters in the movie. The film must involve a character struggling with addictive behavior. Also, provide a one page case analysis in which you conceptualize the client’s issues. In addition, students provide a counseling treatment plan. Students should use the treatment planning article in the Files section to guide them. In addition, students will present at least one treatment/therapy approach appropriate to the case. Students will include at least 5 scholarly resources that support that this approach has efficacy or is considered an evidence-based approach. Supporting material will be presented with in-text citations and a reference list using APA style. Many films with addictive behavior themes exist. If you are not aware of one, please post a question in the Discussion Forum, under “General Discussion.” Also, if you Google “substance abuse in movies,” or a similar key term you will locate many such films. Finally, the films MUST include addictive behavior (i.e., they can’t just involve a general mental health diagnosis, although they can involve dually diagnosed persons).

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View to a Thrill Marion's a co-dependent thrillseeker who aspires to be a fashion designer…but, since this is Requiem for a Dream, a drug habit gets in the way. Pro tip: do not watch this movie if you feel like your faith in humanity is faltering. Marion's drug of choice isn't cocaine or heroin. It's Harry. When Harry suggests that she focus on her fashion design and open a store, she has this response. MARION: Then when will I have time to hang with you? That is something that Vivienne Westwood would never say. But Marion doesn't have a good sense of self-worth, and she likes Harry because he gives her the illusion of an identity. He inflates her ego, and she holds onto it as long as she can. But it eventually deflates and she needs him to boost it again. Why does Marion feel worthless? Because her parents only put worth in money. We never meet them, but Marion explains her relationship with them to Harry. MARION: Which is fine, you know, it's great. It's just... money is never what I really wanted from them, you know? That's pretty much all I have to give. Marion wants to be more than money, but she doesn't know how. Instead, she's made a life of drug use and cheap thrills, like when she pulls the fire alarm in a building just so she and Harry have to run from security. Did we say security? We also mean in-security. A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Dollars Marion is dependent on Harry for emotional support and for actual drugs, like cocaine. When Harry fails to get drugs, the two fight, and Marion isn't getting emotional support or drugs. She takes out her anger on Harry, never taking responsibility for her own failings. She is particularly angry with him shortly before he goes to Florida, prompting this outburst. MARION: Some dumb-ass junkie did what? You mean you fucked it up? […] You promised me that everything was gonna be okay, remember? I fucked that sleazebag for you, and I put myself through fucking hell for you. […] You fucking loser. Yeowch. That stings. But she brings up a valid point. Harry asks Marion to sleep with her therapist for money. Marion loves Harry because he makes her feel like a person, but here, he's reduced her to an object. It all comes down to money, which Marion has tried hard to get away from. After this blowout, Harry gives Marion a phone number for a man who will trade drugs and money for sex. If you look closely, you'll see that he writes it on the back of a picture of them both. Again: yeowch. At the end of the movie, Marion has a choice—the drugs and money, or Harry. She doesn't choose Harry. Everyone in this movie is self-destructive, but perhaps none more so than Marion. She ends up becoming what she never wanted to be at the end. She is someone who doesn't follow her dreams, but who humiliates herself for money. Sure, compared to armless Harry and in-jail Tyrone, Marion might seem like the best off. While all the characters are shown lying alone in bed at the end, Marion is cuddling up with her new best friend: cold hard cash and drugs.
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Running Head: CHARACTER ANALYSIS AND TREATMENT

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CHARACTER ANALYSIS AND TREATMENT

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Marion is addicted to Harry. She depends on him since he gives her the illusion of an
identity (Melan, 2019). This is proven by the fact that Harry inflates Marion’s ego making her
hold on it for as long as she can. Though the ego eventually deflates, she then depends on Harry
to boost it once more. Marion is so dependent on Harry to the point that when he tells her to
focus on her fashion design and open a store, she tells Harry that if she opens the store, she will
not have time to hang up with him. Marion is too dependent on Harry to the point that she is
willing to forego her dream of fashion design. This proves that she does not value herself hence
willing to forego fashion design in order t keep hanging out with Harry. Marion feels worthless
because she does not have a good relationship with her parents. In fact, we do not meet her
parents in the movie. She, however, explains her relationship with her parents to Harry by telling
him that her parents only focus and put worth to money. The fact that they put worth to money
makes their relationship with Marion cold. This is because Marion explains to Harry that she did
not want money from them. The cold relationship between Marion and her parents contributes to
her situation of being dependent on Harry as she cannot obtain help from her parents due to their
bad relationship. It also contributes to her self-worthlessness.
Apart from Marion being dependent on Harry for emotional support, she also depends on
him for actual drugs (Melan, 2019). Such drugs include cocaine. When Harry fails to bring the
drugs to Marion, they en...


Anonymous
Just what I needed…Fantastic!

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