Leo was a man of clockwork precision. Every morning, he tied his left shoe with a double knot and his right with a single, convinced that this specific imbalance kept him from drifting off the sidewalk. To his neighbors in the quiet suburbs, Leo was "eccentric." To the clinical world, he was a living case study in .
His sister, Sarah, eventually found him sitting on the porch, exhausted. She didn't see a "crazy" person; she saw someone whose internal thermostat for anxiety was broken. She encouraged him to see Dr. Aris, a psychologist who viewed abnormality through the . In their sessions, they peeled back the layers:
Months later, Leo still liked things orderly, but the rituals no longer held the keys to his life. He learned that understanding abnormal behavior isn't about labeling someone as "broken"—it's about identifying where a survival mechanism has simply gone into overdrive and helping them find the "off" switch.