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Pokémon Teamwork Makes the Dream Work

Part 1

NebulaDreams

Ace Trainer
Partners
  1. luxray
  2. hypno
Author's Note: Well, hello there. It’s been a long time, and there are a few reasons for that. My motivation for writing fanfiction has waned a bit, primarily because I've gravitated away from Pokemon. I’ve mostly lost interest in following both the games and anime and I don’t really interact with the fandom anymore as a result. This also fed into the problem of feeling disappointed by a lack of response to certain pieces because, without engaging with other people’s works, it’s rare for writing to pick up much traction on its own. So ultimately, it’s less to do with the fandom itself (which I’ve had great experiences with, especially on this forum) and more to do with my tastes changing over time.

As a result, I shifted focus towards writing original pieces, and have drafted an urban fantasy novel during my fanfic hiatus. This has been a positive change since I’m much more pleased with my writing progression and am not constantly tying myself up in knots about reader engagement or chasing trends. Well, for now, since that’s a universal worry no matter what writing you’re doing, and releasing my writing is my least favourite part of the process.

So what the heck am I doing back here then? At the moment, me and my family are dealing with a lot of stuff, though I don’t want to get into details. Because of this huge change to my life, my attitude towards writing and creating stuff has changed as well. Before I returned to fanfiction, it was difficult for me to find much fun in writing since my priorities shifted towards money making ventures, especially since I’ve started working two jobs at the same time.

However, I realised that I needed to work on something just for its own sake without any outside motivation. And fanfiction is the purest form of that, especially with the niche I’m writing in because Pokecentric isn’t really on anyone’s radar. So I decided to dig up an old WIP from a few months ago (I had written 3k words back in July) and make something out of it.

I don’t know where this will go afterwards or how many people will read it. I don’t know anything about promoting my own work so I have no pretences that this will gain much of a following. If you do read it and like it, though, feel free to share it with your friends or fandom mutuals, or spread the word about it in other forums, servers and such.

Special thanks to @canisaries for beta-reading this.

About Dreamdiver: Dreamdiver is a collection of episodic stories that each follow the adventures of Jung: a Hypno therapist who reads the dreams of distressed Pokemon in order to help treat them, each story following a different patient or problem. While this is an ongoing series, you don't need to read the previous stories to enjoy this one as they're self-contained, though it also enhances your reading experience if you have caught up with everything. The links to these stories are down below:
  1. The Inalienable Dreamless
  2. The Dreamer is Still Asleep
This entry also marks the first instance I've decided to release the story in multiple chapters. This will be posted altogether because the story was written as one huge piece, but I've just split them up since 13.5k words is a lot to read in one sitting, and unlike the other two stories, it was easy to split Teamwork up without messing up the story flow since it follows a more conventional three act structure.

Summary: A Hypno therapist gets assigned to treat a Pangoro who falls into depression after losing a huge league battle. After going through a rocky start that results in the Pangoro lashing out, the Hypno has to rely on his raw skills as a counsellor to help his patient without relying on dream reading or hypnosis.

Content note: There's not much objectionable content here aside from the occasional swear and a few innuendos, but it does tackle issues such as depression and gets a lot into the thought process of someone who might have it, so if it hits too close to home, it might be best to tread with caution here. This also portrays cognitive behavioural therapy as a treatment for depression, which is something I've personally experienced, so I've tried to keep it authentic.

Teamwork Makes the Dream Work

dreamdiver dream variant.jpg

Part 1:​

The stale air stank of sweat, spilt soda pop, nacho cheese and ale. Flashing lights bombarded Beat. The audience cheered and roared in equal measure. His claws dug into the padded floor of the ring. His trainer chanted his name from behind. The ring was Beat’s home away from home, his proving ground, his perfect square where he had everything he needed. All it needed was a face to rearrange.

But no opponent awaited him on the other side of the ring.

Beat looked to the audience, to the spectators in their glass box, then back to his trainer. He shouted a war cry, which boomed throughout the stadium. And yet, his opponent still wasn’t there.

Everything cut to black. Beat usually could see in the darkness, but it was blacker than black. Like, coffee black or space black. A spotlight pierced through the shadows to focus on a large bamboo stick in the middle of the ring, which materialised out of nowhere.

It wasn’t like a walking bamboo stalk or a Sudowoodo, it was a bona fide tubular breakfast, sourced straight from Kalos’ deepest thickets. Like a Pyroar pouncing on its prey, Beat sank his teeth into the bamboo, extracting its stalky goodness. The crowd gasped and booed, throwing tomatoes at him, but he ignored that — if anything, it complimented the sumptuous meal. He couldn’t stop eating, and even after he got to the end of the stalk, it regenerated, repeating the cycle.

Beat wanted to savour as much as possible. He wanted to forget all those years training and toning his body to give into his most primordial urges.

“Hey, fatso.”

A giant Pangoro crashed through the stadium, head scraping the roof of the building. All the spectators ran in a panic, only to get smooshed under the giant’s paws, turning them into lots of different foodies: hamburgers, fried Torchic, Miltank dumplings, peanut butter tubs, everything Beat could think of. He wanted to abandon his stalk and gobble them all up, but the giant blocked his way. The giant entered the ring, squeezing themselves into Beat’s perfect square.

“You gonna keep eating that, or are you gonna come train with me?”

Beat’s tummy hurt, like the cramps he got from eating too much or not eating enough. He wanted to stand his ground. He already did all the training he needed, sacrificing many moons to be a brawler. Instead of fighting like a manly Pangoro, he shivered like a Glaceon after eating a mountain of shaved ice.

“What’re you doin’ there, shakin’ like a Spinda?” Another Pangoro giant said, taking a chunk out of the stadium’s roof as he bit into it. “Pangoro, more like pussy.”

Beat raised his claws in defense, which had turned into bamboo stalks. He too was a bamboo stalk, and he lost his balance, rolling in the ring. The giants leaned over him, one raising their paw to stomp him into bits. He shut his eyes, preparing for the worst.

Beat stood in a bamboo thicket. He was a stalk in a sea of stalks just like him. Beat saw his face in all of them. He still couldn’t move, but weirdly enough, he felt at peace here. No limbs. No worries. No battles to fight. Just him and the wilderness and the birds and the wind. And those giants weren’t here either.

Oh, crap, those giants totally were here. They razed the thicket, grinding the stalks underneath their heels to drive it further into the ground. They delighted in this, deliberately taking the extra time to smoosh them into dust.

One laughed. “How many d’you reckon I can crush in a minute?”

“More than you, chump,” the other said, snapping one in between his claws.

“You wanna bet? All my trainer’s money goes on it.”

“Mine too, ya chode!”

“Screw you, small-tail!”

“Your mom!”

This went on for hours. By the time the sun set, casting red light along the ruined plains, the Pangoro eventually found Beat, stroking the tip of his stalk.

“Your stalk’s so small. Like a freakin’ mushroom.”

“Still bigger than yours,” the other said, which earned him a knuckle sandwich. Mmm, sandwiches. Beat could go for one right now. Particularly his trainer’s. He made the best, with beef, onions, tomatoes…

One appeared out of thin air and plopped on the ground, becoming food for the Durant. Aww, what a waste. It was way past the three second rule this time. Where was his trainer anyway—

Yank.

A searing pain flashed through him like burning white light. His stems got ripped out. The Pangoro snapped him in half like Miltank jerky. Beat had no mouth to scream with. The Pangoro’s jaws snapped into his half where his face was, biting and gnashing and tearing and crunching and munching and grinding and masticating and chomping and chewing and—

---

Beat awoke in tears, though he didn’t know why. How pathetic. And in front of that freaking Hypno as well. All this strength, and that yellow bastard had put him to sleep.

“Don’t… don’t look at me...” Beat snivelled. The Hypno, Jung, turned away, though that didn’t stop Beat’s snivelling. He backed against the wall, burying his face in his lap. Useless. Weak. Pathetic. Pathetic. Pathetic. He kept repeating that to himself. Pathetic.

He wanted to get out. Get out of this stupid garden and go back to his trainer. But he couldn’t go back. Not after that failure. Failure. He couldn’t face him anymore. How could he? His trainer wanted to leave him behind here. That’s where all the weak Pokemon went. So he was weak too. Why was he here? Why did he need help?

Why didn’t he need help?

That kept him from totalling this place and escaping to the wild. He probably would’ve preferred it there, living off of the land, chasing after prey, eating bamboo to his heart’s content. But he probably would’ve wallowed in a thicket anyway, eating his feelings until he died.

His stomach growled. He only remembered bits of that dream, and the details grew fuzzier with each passing minute, but he knew he dreamt about food. And lots of it. He even remembered how juicy those burgers were. What was he thinking, starving himself here? He needed to fill that void in his gut, and he couldn’t keep doing that if he just wasted away like that.

Beat settled down a little, his eyes still moistened. He faced Jung at last, who observed from a careful distance, but with a look of concern as he extended his hand. That Hypno stayed silent, however. At least he knew when to shut his trap.

“Doc?” Beat started, rubbing his tears away. “Can you get me something to eat?”

--

Jung squirmed in his seat as he stared at Amelie, plus a couple of other therapists staffed in the clinic. Since he was the only Pokemon in a room full of humans, he felt like a rusty nail in a plank full of polished screws. Jung could pull through this. These humans were nice enough, and knew Jung well enough to not treat him any differently. Again, he had earned his place here. Still, Jung’s gaze alternated between the other staff members and the box of cronuts in the middle of the room. Whoever thought of fusing a donut and a croissant together needed an award.

This weekly briefing recapped which Pokemon were being treated and what their progress was. Each therapist had their specialisms. Elise was more skilled in giving battle therapy, which helped the more active and aggressive Pokemon work through their natural urges. Roche had more experience in rehabilitating wild Pokemon by analysing their behaviour and trauma, and helped Jung out with Tupelo through the initial stages. While Jung’s dream powers played a part in his therapy, that was only a small part of his responsibilities as a psychologist. He also had to play the mediator between the humans and his Pokemon patients.

The instant Jung got the chance to speak, he raised his hand.

“Yes?” Amelie said.

Hello, um, regarding Beat’s case, is there still no alternative to hypnosis? Do any drugs, soothing berries, or other remedies safely pacify the Pangoro?”

“Ah, good question, Jung. Unfortunately, we can’t find anything that’s compatible with his body chemistry. Anything we could find, it would have to be above the advised dosage, and we don’t want to risk that here.”

Not even from the Roserade assistant? She knows aromatherapy and sleep powder.”

“Well, we’ll try, but because of Beat’s body mass, that means she’d have to use up a lot of her energy to soothe him in such a way, which we don’t want to abuse for her sake.”

Right, I see.” Jung twirled the rusted pendulum from his neck, spinning the hollowed penny around. “Beat expressed his displeasure about being hypnotised, and I think he harbours a grudge against me because of that.” He sighed. “I knew this would happen.”

“Without your quick thinking, Jung, he would’ve done worse than merely resent you.”

I know, I know.” He knew that in his head, sure. Jung had caught Beat wandering through the garden one night — the Pangoro threatened to punch Jung if he tried to intervene. Once it escalated, Beat got even more violent when the security staff barged in, roaring, snarling and swiping at the air. Still, the thought of knocking out a helpless Pokemon made his blood curdle. “In any case, I will continue to use it, but only when necessary. However, I got some use out of my initial dream interpretation, combined with my analysis of his present state.”

“And?”

Cognitive behavioral therapy seems like the best course of action, if I can get Beat’s trust. He seems to suffer from a lot of feelings of inadequacy, corroborated by his trainer’s statement, which might have contributed to his depression spiralling further.”

“I had a hunch,” Roche said, tenting his fingers. “He doesn’t show the signs of a typical rowdy Pangoro or a disobedient Pokemon.”

Jung huffed, though he curbed his tongue. Despite his feelings about how Roche viewed Pokemon, at least through the lens of his work, Jung had to stay professional, so he washed his consternation down with a frosted cronut and some coffee.

“I mean, he didn’t wanna fight either,” Elise said, leaning back in her chair. “Well, if not fighting is his problem to begin with, then, y’know, I might as well be fighting fire with fire.”

In any case, I could benefit from a mix of all your opinions, but time will tell when that will be. For now, I’ll try not to focus on digging up any emotions with dream therapy unless the patient consents to a reading.” He held out his half-eaten cronut. “At least his appetite has increased. That dream possibly reactivated his hunger.”

“Good.” Amelia smiled. “Actually, I do have an idea about how you can bond with him.”

---

Beat stared at the sky, focusing on the clouds as well as the trees in the garden that occasionally swayed in the breeze. Occasionally, he closed his eyes to see if he could force himself to sleep, but he couldn’t. His body itched for a fight, like a phantom limb, and that drive left him restless. Yet his lack of drive to do anything else made it hard to stand up. His stomach still rumbled after last night. Could he go to that kitchen place on his own? When would the staff come to help? What was his trainer doing? Would he even care after Beat failed so spectacularly?

He stopped to stare at a disfigured Eevee, whose scars laced his body with lines from head to tail. Despite his puny size, his presence in the room was massive. His eyes were pinpricks that bored through Beat.

“Hey, lil fella,” he said, clicking his claws. What would that accomplish? The Eevee continued to stare until a Furfrou popped out of a bush, licking the fox’s back.

“Don’t mind him,” the Furfrou said, “he’s been here for a while.”

“He has, huh...” He didn’t look weak. Why was he here?

“I wouldn’t recommend petting him, he gets territorial.” The Furfrou brushed the twigs and leaves out of her immaculate white coat. “If you want, though, you can pet me.”

Right. At first, Beat didn’t know why he called that Eevee over, but he realised he needed some company. He knew a Flareon in his team. Although he never had the courage to go up and cuddle him, Beat wanted to ask all the time since he looked so soft.

However, that would make him look weak. Why did he need to submit to a Furfrou? What did he need to pet a Pokemon for, especially one much smaller than him?

“I’m fine,” he said. The Furfrou hummed and walked off, the Eevee tailing her. Now Beat was alone again. Alone with his claws that pulled up the grass from the lawn. Alone with his own thoughts. Stupid. Why didn’t he accept her offer? He would’ve felt better. What, and face even more humiliation? Please.

That Hypno appeared as well. Great. Beat stayed seated, though he bared his teeth.

“Whaddya want?” he asked.

“I believe we got off on the wrong paw.” Jung raised a plastic bag. “I’m really sorry about what happened the other night, and I wish never to do that again if I can avoid it.”

Beat closed his maw, though he kept his lip tightened.

“It’s around lunchtime,” Jung continued. “If you’d like, we could talk over a little picnic.”

Ah, he saw what that Hypno had up his sleeves. He tried to bribe him with food so he could get Beat to sniff his butt like a good little Pokemon, then that Hypno would go in for the kill with his pendulum. Well, that wouldn’t work on—

“Wait, is that a beef sandwich?”

Jung pulled out a whole pack of them, perfectly sealed in a plastic cocoon. But that wasn’t all. He brought cake as well, peanut butter flavoured too! Topped with raisins! No, wait, this was a trap! What would Bro say?

Except Bro wasn’t here. But what about all of those years he built up toning his body and training himself for the fights? But one big-little dessert wouldn’t hurt, right?

While he ummed and ahhed over it, Jung pulled up a blanket big enough for the both of them and laid the food out on a plate. He also poured tea from a thermos into a couple of cups, but Beat ignored that as the nutty, succulent notes of the icing hit his nose first. He didn’t know what to focus on first: the sandwiches or the cake.

“Well, feel free to dig in first,” Jung said, sitting down with his own slice of cake. “I’m already covered—”

Beat didn’t wait for that quack to stop talking before he finished his sandwich in one gulp. Then the next one, then the next one. He wanted to savour that sweet, succulent meat, but he couldn’t stop himself. He reached out for the last one, then stopped. No, that would be too greedy. And this was Jung’s treat too.

“Sorry,” Beat said. “You can have the last one.”

“Thanks, Beat, that’s kind of you. Would you like me to slice some of this cake?”

Beat wanted to dunk his whole head in it, but that wouldn’t look dignified or considerate. Wait, why the hell did he care about manners? Still, Beat nodded as it would’ve been easier to eat from smaller slices.

They didn’t talk much, but it was a comfortable kind of silence, one he often shared with his trainer. Beat tried to properly chew his food unlike those sandwiches, as best as he could since he couldn’t properly hold much. When he finished, Beat licked the peanut butter off of his paws. Jung smiled as he washed his portion down with some tea.

“How’d you like that?” Jung asked.

“It was alright, I guess,” Beat said, sucking his coated thumb. “Nothing special.”

“Would you like me to get a different flavour the next time we have a picnic?”

“No, no, that’s fine.” Beat cleared his throat. “Actually, I like this one a lot. Thanks, you know.”

“You’re welcome.”

“But that doesn’t mean we’re friends, doc. Don’t get all chummy with me.”

“Of course not. You’re only my client. While I wish to help you, it doesn’t have to lead to anything beyond that. Perhaps you can tell me more about yourself and how you’re feeling right now.”

“What, and look like a weakling?” Beat grumbled.

“How is expressing your emotions weak?”

“Because in the wild, in the arena, there’s no room for that stuff, y’know. You give your opponent anything and they’ll use it against you.”

“Alright, in the fray, yes, you’re in fight or flight mode. But what about outside the arena when you have time to cool off?”

“I usually just train some more or eat, then sleep. Everything I do is so I can get stronger, for my trainer.”

Jung set the cups aside. “That sounds like a fulfilling routine, then.”

Beat relaxed, letting go of his legs. What was the point of all this small talk crap? Why was his routine outside of battle any of Jung’s business? And yet, Beat played back what Jung said in his mind.

“Whaddya mean by fulfilling?”

“As in, satisfying, something that makes you happy.”

How could Beat be happy when he was so stressed? But it was fine. It should’ve been fine. He should’ve been able to handle it since he was tough.

“Uh, yeah, it does. It’s all I live for.”

“It’s good to have a goal like that. I never really got into training myself, but—”

“What, were you too scared to fight?”

That came out of nowhere. Oh no, Jung was gonna walk away and leave him like everyone else did. But he only smiled.

“No, I wasn’t scared. I can fight if I need to, and unfortunately, as a Hypno, I have to be in a position to defend myself if needed.”

“But you’re not with a trainer.”

“It just isn’t the lifestyle for me. I can see why it gives others meaning, and I’m happy for them, but I find enjoyment more in other things.”

“Well, lucky you.” Beat scoffed. “Must be nice, not feelin’ that pressure to win every moment you wake up.”

His claws shook. Goddamn it, what was wrong with him? He should’ve been proud to be in the ring, to prove himself in front of hundreds of trainers. He truly was. Then why was he acting so weak now? And the tears as well. He backed away and covered his face, turning himself away from Jung’s sight.

“Beat, who’s pressuring you? If your trainer is punishing you because of your results, then you can tell me.”

“Don’t talk about him that way!” Beat dug his claws into the ground and snarled. “Who do you think you are, you quack?!”

Jung stood up. Beat hoped that if he acted scary enough, it would make that Hypno disappear. But he stayed where he was, adjusting his glasses.

“I’m not accusing him of anything.” Jung took a deep breath. “If it’s not your trainer, then who is it?”

“No one, okay!” Beat threw a clump of mud at Jung’s face, which bounced off his snout. “Just get lost!”

That quack still didn’t move. What was he, some kind of robot?

“I’m sorry, Beat. I think I overstepped my bounds there. Perhaps we can talk about this another time, when you feel ready.” His shoulders slumped and he started packing away the blankets with the empty foodstuffs. Except for the cake. Beat was desperate for some, even though he had eaten so much. What a Grumpig — grumpy and a pig. But he couldn’t help himself.

Beat gave in and dove into the box, eating the last half of the peanut-buttery goodness in one fell swoop. He wasn’t even hungry. He was already quite full. But he didn’t care. Eating was the only other thing Beat had to look forward to in his day. Jung didn’t even stop him, not that a puny Hypno would’ve done much.

After Beat decimated all that cake, he expected to feel better. But there was nothing left but an empty, crumb-filled box and a belly full of fattening cream. And that was Jung’s cake, the one he probably bought himself. Or someone else bought it. Beat didn’t deserve it. He didn’t deserve anything.

He didn’t flee this time when the tears came. Beat hated hiding. Always hiding like a fraidy Bunnelby. No, wait, Jung was right. How was expressing his emotions weak when showing them made his claws shake more than going up against a Salamence did? That took some strength.

“Doc, what’s wrong with me?” Beat croaked. “Just tell me. I’m so sick of feeling like this.”

Jung stepped forward. He hesitated at first. Probably afraid of what Beat would do. Then he took another step, within arms reach again, and laid a paw on Beat’s flank.

“You’re dealing with a lot of stress. Stress is normal, and even a helpful response. If you feel like that all of the time, however, you’ll burn out. Have you heard of that before?”

“My trainer…” Beat wiped his eyes. “Pierre, he told me not to push myself too far while I trained, else I’d burn out all my energy.”

“Right. Same here, except it goes on inside you, not in your body.”

“But it’s all in my head. It’s not real.”

“Your mind affects your body, Beat. If you get too stressed, you might get stomach aches, headaches, a lack of energy, no sleep, and lots of other things.” He eyed the messy box. “I’ll admit, whenever I feel really down or stressed about something, I gorge myself on sweets. Especially cake. That’s a physical result of what goes on in my head.”

“But you’re so strong, though.” Beat turned away from Jung. He didn’t feel proud enough to look him in the eye. “You didn’t flinch when I went all aggro on you.”

“Because I know how hard it is for you. And I know you didn’t want to hurt me, not deep down. Knowing when to hold back takes strength. So you’re not weak, and I’m not weak either, because we all have these emotions that claw at us from the inside.”

“My trainer doesn’t.” Beat sighed. “Pierre can block some of my strongest punches. He always knows what to do. He always smiles it off. I bet I’m just dead weight to him.”

Jung sat cross-legged before Beat and gripped his paws.

“Pierre calls me a lot to see how you’re doing.” Jung hummed. “He misses you. He misses how much you enjoy sharing those peanut butter cups with him. He misses your enthusiasm whenever you get to fight. And he told me that he hadn’t been sleeping lately because of this situation.”

“Really?” Beat cocked his head. “Did he ask you to put him to sleep?”

“Oh heavens no.” Jung chuckled. “What I mean is, he adores you, Beat. If you were dead weight to him, he wouldn’t think this much about you.”

Beat couldn’t grasp that. If he wasn’t doing something, if Beat didn’t dedicate every waking moment to his trainer’s success, then what was he? Who was he? There’s no way Beat would’ve gotten away with that while Bro was around.

“Point is, feeling negative isn’t a weakness. It’s a part of who we are. If you’ve been raised to think otherwise, then we’ll have to help you to think of it in another way, like another battle tactic. And just like training, it will take hard work.”

“How can you help, though?” Beat’s claws extended, threatening to puncture Jung’s hands. With enough self-control, Beat softened his grip. “What the heck can you even do to fix me?”

“That would imply you’re broken.” Jung frowned. “You’re not, Beat. Nobody here needs to be mended. So I’m not here to fix you, I’m here to listen to you. And until we have a more extensive chat together, I won’t be able to give much advice on my end. I want to know how you’re feeling from day to day, about stuff in your past, stuff you’re going through right now.”

“And all we need to do is just, er, talk?”

“Yes, whenever you feel up to it. Don’t feel as if you have to let it out all at once, though.”

Beat thought of what to say next. He had never talked to another Pokemon this way before. Not even his own teammates, who he stayed away from anyway. Every other Pokemon he met was an opponent for him to conquer. Not Jung.

“Actually, doc,” Beat started, “can I talk to you for a bit longer?”

“Yes, of course. What would you like to tell me?”

Where would Beat start? All this pressure made him feel like his chest would explode. He loved battling, lived for it, but before his biggest failure, every time he stepped into the ring felt like life or death. He trained for so long so he could bury those feelings, pretend they didn’t affect him, because his trainer depended on him. They all did. But if Pierre was okay with him losing, then what was the point of all this stress?

“I feel lost and alone and scared, and I don’t know why. That’s where I want to start.”

---

Partial Psychological Report

For professional use only

Name of patient: Beat

Species: Pangoro

Age: 21 (in human years)

Trainer: Pierre Bernard

Examiner: Jung Hypno, Assistant Psychologist

Initial Referral:

Pierre placed Beat under our care on the 9th this month. The Pangoro exhibited symptoms of moderate depression for a month prior to the referral. This happened after a league battle against a touring Obstagoon that resulted in a loss. Beat subsequently stopped participating in fights or training sessions and voluntarily stayed in his Pokeball for days on end, sometimes refusing to eat.

Assessment Procedure

Interview with Beat (March 16th):


Beat was initially hesitant to talk, showing heightened aggression when questioned about his emotions or his past. However, after slowly easing him into an informal chat and gaining his trust, Beat seems more willing to express vulnerability. This pattern of suppressing emotions and engaging in self-loathing behaviour seems to stem from bullying he experienced as a cub.

Wild Pancham commonly follow a leading Pangoro, as they often imitate their higher authority figures. This role may be taken up by their parents or relatives, but can also be taken up by another Pangoro in the pack. Beat had a relatively normal upbringing as a cub, staying with his mother for the first year of his life, then joining a pack to learn to hunt with them. Beat called the lead Pangoro ‘Bro’ despite not being blood-related.

In Bro’s care, Beat experienced a harsh training period. He regularly had his prized leaf taken away from him, sometimes for no reason, as a form of discipline. Beat also had a strict regimen of physical exercises and battles against his fellow Pancham. Sometimes Bro forbade Beat from eating his daily bamboo. Beat explained this as Bro’s way of preparing him for the harsh world out there, and being a good male specimen of his species.

The other Pancham underwent similar treatment, and also directed their aggression towards Beat in particular for not picking up the slack. They isolated him from their group rituals when they weren’t training. They would randomly challenge him to battles and gang up on him all at once. They also nicknamed him ‘small stalk’ for reasons that can be left to the imagination. Contrary to popular belief that Pangoro have zero tolerance towards bullying, the social dynamics of Pancham and Pangoro are similar to any group with a hierarchy, which paves the way for ostracisation.

Regardless of Bro’s intent or effectiveness, this upbringing is responsible for most of Beat’s current neuroses. Beat’s constant need to prove himself and his fear of failure in particular stems from his pack’s extraordinarily high standards. His under-eating (and occasional binge-eating) also stems from how he was starved, and he also shames himself whenever he indulges in his favourite meals. He is afraid of appearing ‘weak’ (Beat’s own words) or vulnerable, exacerbated by the environment he was raised in as a Pancham. There may be other factors behind this, but these seem to be the main ones for now.

During treatment, Beat discussed these fears for the first time in his life. Although he thrived under a traineeship, Beat felt increasingly isolated, especially because of the language barrier between him and his trainer. He also confessed that he doesn’t enjoy battling in the sense that it provides fun, only that it gives him a purpose, and that the only alternative is losing, which brings back unpleasant memories of his pack.

Recommendations:

As this is only a partial summary written in the midst of Beat’s treatment, it is impossible to provide a full analysis or any long-term recommendations. For the next week, however, Beat will undergo a series of suggested treatments.

Cognitive behavioural therapy is still the recommended course of action. It is important for Beat to recognise his own neuroses and adopt strategies that will help him change those patterns of behaviour. He will be given homework to reflect on what he has learned alongside regular talk therapies.

At the same time, Beat will undergo battle therapy with the assistance of Senior Pokemon Behaviourist Elise Duchamps. Despite Beat’s anxieties, he still feels the urge to battle and wants to release his pent up aggression. Easing him into these battles could help boost his self-esteem. Combining the two treatments will helpfully result in Beat taking a more constructive approach to battling, changing habitual behavioural patterns that have previously contributed to his dissatisfaction.

Despite Beat’s previous reservations about showing affection, he has also taken an affinity to Lotte Furfrou. As a result, Pokemon-assisted therapy is also recommended as it provides Beat comfort.

Dream therapy is a possible option, as it will provide a deeper insight into the patient’s subconscious. However, Beat is still hesitant about dream reading, so this is not advisable until Beat consents to a session.


junsign.png
 
Part 2

NebulaDreams

Ace Trainer
Partners
  1. luxray
  2. hypno
Part 2:​

Homework was dumb. Why did Jung even call it homework if Beat didn’t do it at home? This wasn’t a house, and he’d hate to live here with all of these Pokemon. If only he was ready to return to Pierre. But Beat knew that if he got better, then he would go back, and if homework helped, then he would do as much of it as it took.

All he had to do for now was fill out a diary with drawings. Apparently, humans were usually asked to write in an exercise book for some cog behaviour crap. Since Beat couldn’t read or write, he had to draw whatever came to mind, and different coloured pages had different themes. The first theme was red for all of his worries. Jung asked him to think about different types of worries, including the way he acted when stressed, what bad thoughts went through his head, and how he felt on the outside when this affected him.

Beat sat down with a black crayon and stared at the blank page. This was silly. He was wasting time. Beat should’ve been out there battling or making himself useful, not waving his paw around a piece of paper.

‘Stop sitting on your butt all day,’ Bro said in his mind, ‘you’re a born fighter, so act like it.’

That was an example of a bad thought that went through his head. Whenever Beat sat down doing nothing, Bro’s words came back to him. Whenever he wasn’t battling for Pierre, he felt at sea, like he wasn’t doing enough while he was out of the fray. But Jung mentioned a Komala that did nothing but sleep all day, and they needed that downtime to keep their strength up. Wasn’t it okay for Beat to feel like this as well?

The first thing Beat drew was a scene of Bro standing tall and bossing him around while a frowning younger Beat lifted a tree ten times his size.

Huh, this was actually kind of fun. Beat turned the next page and drew, then the next one, then the next one. One drawing featured Beat roaring like a mighty Ursaring with the mouth of a Loudred, since he often yelled or lashed out when upset. Another featured Beat clutching his stomach, since his tummy sometimes twisted whenever he thought too hard about his battle performance. Now he knew why Bro said he had such a weak stomach.

Some of what Jung said went over Beat’s head, sure. Wrapping his head around his own head still took some getting used to. But for the first time in a while, Beat forgot about his present and past worries as he got lost in the book.

Most of his days spent in the clinic were slow, spent either lazing in the garden and the recreational room, or eating there or both. Sometimes he talked to Lotte or some of the other patients, but he was still alone with his own thoughts. As he scribbled, though, the clock ticked forward, and it halted the turning gears in his mind even as he recalled his memories on the page.

Beat came to Jung’s next session fully prepared. Sort of. Before Jung arrived, Beat took a peek at his drawings, only to find unrecognisable messes that didn’t even pass as scribbles. Granted, using crayons and charcoal with his big paws was a feat in itself, but he thought it looked much better than it actually did while he had fun drawing.

“Ah, hello,” Jung said, entering the garden. Beat snapped the sketch pad shut.

“H-hey, knock first!” Even though the garden lacked a door.

“Are you alright?”

“Yeah, fine, none of your business, you quack!”

Beat considered lobbing the book into the bushes when Jung looked down.

“Is that your homework?”

“No, I’m not a dweeb! Does it look like I care about doin’ your stupid dirty work?”

Jung tented his paws. “Well, if I was a mind reader, I’d say you do care.”

“You Hypno probably are mind readers anyway,” Beat grumbled.

“I’m not, but I’ve seen you drawing in there as well.”

“Oh.”

Was it too late to eat the paper? How did it taste anyway? Nah, probably not very good. He didn’t want to think about how he’d eject it out once it went in.

“Sorry,” Beat said, clutching the book. “Everything in this book just sucks, that’s all.”

“Well, I’ll be the judge of that.” Jung sat down beside Beat. “And the point of this exercise isn’t to come up with a masterpiece, it’s only here for you to express yourself and what you’re going through.”

“I know.” Beat sighed. Right, time to tear the scab off. He gave the book to Jung, who turned to the first page. Beat grimaced as soon as he saw those childish scribbles again. Jung probably thought it sucked and would laugh at it.

“Is that you as a Pancham?” he asked.

Beat blinked. “How’d you figure that out?”

“The likeness is there. You know, the leaf and those little round ears. And that’s Bro to the right?”

“Yeah. Bossing me around as always.”

“And was it fun to draw out this memory, or at least cathartic?”

“What’s that mean?”

“It’s an abstract concept, but it means a strong release of emotions, like feeling relieved after winning a difficult battle.”

“Oh, then I guess it was, yeah. And kind of fun to draw as well.”

“Well then, that’s all that matters.” Jung flicked to the next page and smiled. “The key is to find the fun in whatever you do, whether that’s drawing or fighting. You aren’t always going to be in fight or flight mode, so why not make the most of your time doing what you like?”

“That’s what I thought battling was, what I liked. And I wanna like it again.”

“You will, Beat.” Jung focused on the next few drawings, all unpleasant memories from his past. Looking at them gave Beat a record of his life, all the way up until leaving Pierre. “And when you look back at these drawings, how do you feel?”

As Jung leafed through the pages, Beat tried his best to parse his emotions. “Nervous. Angry. Afraid. Lonely. Tired.”

Jung stopped at one page in particular, of a Pancham looking up at a flexing Pangoro. Beat liked drawing that since muscles were kinda satisfying to put down even if it didn’t look exactly how he envisioned it. His only reference was of a beefy Machoke he remembered admiring once.

Jung chuckled. That damn Hypno.

“You’re laughing at my work,” Beat grumbled.

“No, no, I’m not laughing at your drawing, I’m laughing with it.” He covered his mouth. “I just think you have a good way of conveying humour in your artwork, like the one where you lifted the tree.”

“That wasn’t meant to be funny.”

“Oh. I apologise. Anyway, is that you looking up to Bro?”

“Yeah.” Beat brought his paws together. “I always thought he was strong and cool and stuff. I wanted to be like him. I wanted to make him proud with all my battles.” He sighed. “And now I realise how badly he treated me. I feel like such an idiot.”

“You’re not, Beat.” Jung gazed at him. “If you depend on any sort of role model, then you’re going to see them through rose tinted glasses, and they might even take advantage of that. You were an impressionable Pancham as well, and Pancham have adapted to imitate their elders as a method of survival.”

“You make me sound like I belong in some kinda zoo.”

“Ah, I apologise for that as well.”

“Never mind. Anyway, each time I fight, all I can see is him drilling me.” Beat traced a claw over Bro, poking the crayon drawing of his face until it tore the paper. “I can’t get him out of my head.”

“Well, that’s what the next part of the exercise is for.” Jung turned to an orange page. “In this section, think about what you might do to change those thoughts. Let’s take this memory for example, where you put Bro on such a pedestal.”

“And?”

“When you fight, it’s because you’re living under the shadow of his expectations, right?”

“Yeah.”

“Alright, so right before you’re about to battle, for any reason, ask yourself ‘what’s the worst thing that can happen?’”

“Pfft,” Beat snorted. “What a dumb question. I’d embarrass myself in front of the whole crowd, Pierre would be mad at me and leave me behind, I’d be in the wild again, I’d either lose against a bigger Pokemon or get poisoned and die and turn into a ghost and scare people forever and ever until some other loser picks me up and--”

His stomach churned. Goddamn it, not now. And all that talking made him breathless. Or was he freaking out again? Why did that quack make him think about that? He wanted to run. He—

“Beat, Beat, stay with me here.” Jung stood up, holding his arms out. “You’re not in the wild. You’re here, in a place where you can relax. What can you see?”

“What does that have to do with anything, you quack?!”

“Just tell me. What do you see in front of you? Focus on that first.”

He hated his stomach, his body, his brain. Everything about it was stupid. He wanted to get out of here. But Jung stayed by his side. He had to answer his question, at least so he could shut up.

“I see you. The grass. The trees. The building. Okay, you happy now?”

“Never mind that, how are you feeling?”

Beat would’ve said he felt terrible, but he didn’t. He wasn’t thinking about that other stuff as much, even though his tummy still bubbled and his claws shook.

“Still not good, but less bad.”

“Alright, now focus on me.” Jung lowered his hand. “Now, breathe in.”

Jung breathed, his chest rising along with his motioning hand. This time, Beat did as he was told and sucked in some air.

“Hold it for a bit.” Jung held out his hand. Beat kept it in. He grunted as if the breath tried to escape.

“Then let go.” As Jung exhaled, Beat did too. His body felt funny. The air felt less stuffy. His heart slowed a bit. “Good, now repeat after me a few times.”

Beat did. With each breath he took and released, his body relaxed until Beat sat on the floor again. He was still here. He was safe in the garden. Bro couldn’t touch him here. He looked to Jung. His necklace swayed with the light breeze.

“You didn’t do your thing on me again, did you?” Beat prepared to throw another clump of mud.

“No, absolutely not.” Jung clutched his pendulum. “What you just did was a grounding exercise, usually practised by humans who have no powers at all. It’s meant to remind you of what’s happening in the present. You focus on what’s going on around you, then you become mindful of your own breathing. This is meant to stop you from getting caught in a loop with your thoughts.”

“Huh.” Beat felt a lot better. He didn’t even remember why he felt so scared in the first place. His mind truly was his worst enemy. “What were we doing earlier?”

“I asked you the worst thing that could happen if you lose a battle.” Jung sat down. “Now, let’s think about this in another way. You said that Pierre would leave you behind if you lost. When you lost against that Obstagoon, though, how did he react?”

Beat blinked. It felt so long ago that he didn’t remember why he got so mad at first, but it came back to him.

“He told me that it was a tough battle and that I tried my best.” He looked at his claws. “I didn’t believe him. And he also got me a PB&J sandwich though I didn’t want it.” Beat pawed his face. “Idiot, idiot, idiot.”

“No, you’re not, Beat. You were still thinking in terms of survival. That’s understandable. But Pierre didn’t leave you behind. He supported you when Bro probably wouldn’t have.”

“But I lost in front of all those people. Everyone watches you fail when you’re in a big arena like that. They record stuff as well from what I heard. And now they see how much of a loser I am.”

“Tons of Pokemon lose battles every day in the league. There’s always a victor on one side, that’s how a competition works. But they know that it’s not a reflection on your own abilities, necessarily, and as Pierre said, you tried your best. Sometimes, you can do your best and still be outmatched because of lots of different factors. Does that make sense?”

Bro’s voice echoed in his head. ‘If you lose in a real wild battle, that’s it. You’re dead meat.’ He said it while he patted Beat on the back, like he was all buddy buddy with him. But Bro wasn’t a friend at all. What friend would make him feel so worthless?

“Yeah, it does, doc.”

Beat picked the book back up, staring at the blank page. Then he snatched Jung’s pen and furiously scribbled in the sketchbook. He drew the worst thing that could happen: that he’d have to train more and improve for the next fight. But he also drew his teammates and his trainer smiling in the background, staying by his side.

---

Jung wasn’t a battler by any means. He was a writer, not a fighter. Fortunately, Jung wouldn’t be fighting against Beat today since Elise took the reins and had her own Pokemon to spar with. Elise’s Pokemon had lives of their own, and therefore took time before the session could start. Although Jung was out of his element analysing a live fight, he would do his best to include it in his ongoing research.

All three of them waited in the garden while Elise’s Pokemon arrived. Elise passed the time by doing stretches and occasionally stopped to observe Beat. Beat, in turn, petted Lotte, running his paws through her coat.

Jung sat within arm’s reach and smiled as he scribbled in his notepad. Beat made so much progress in these past two weeks. Hopefully, this fight would give him the ego boost needed to pull Beat out of his funk, given his healthier attitude on life.

Even though he was meant to be an impartial observer, Jung couldn’t resist getting in on that Furfrou action, and sat closer to pet Lotte.

“How are you so well groomed?” Beat asked.

“That’s a secret,” Lotte said with a wink.

“Aw. My trainer uses this shampoo stuff that smells like lemons. Whenever he coats me in it, I hafta be careful not to bite myself, I smell so delicious.”

Both Jung and Lotte chuckled.

“I wonder if there’s a shampoo that smells like cake,” Jung said.

“Oh yeah, do you get your hair cut or groomed, doc?” Beat laid a paw on his shoulder. “You look more like a human though you’re still covered with fur, so I guess someone grooms you.”

Jung’s face felt hot. It was embarrassing to talk about his care routine, and he didn’t know whether it was more humiliating for him or the groomer to have his fur trimmed alongside Eevee and Litleo. He might as well have said he ate from a dog bowl.

Elise’s Gallade, George, popped up, saving Jung by the bell. He came in with wooden sheaths attached to the sword-like protrusions on his elbows.

“Hey!” George said as he waved. “Long time no see, June!”

Jung snorted as he stood up. “How many times have I told you that it’s Jung?”

“Enough times for me to keep calling you June on purpose.”

“Fair enough.” Jung shoved his hands in his coat’s pockets. “How is your dojo doing?”

“Alright, yeah, busy as ever. Never too busy for me not to come in today, though.” George went away to hi-five Elise. “This Beat?”

“Uh huh,” she said. They congregated in the corner of the garden behind a bush and talked, which Jung couldn’t make out. Eventually, they reappeared. “Jung? Is he ready yet?”

Jung patted Beat’s back. “How do you feel about fighting right now?”

The Pangoro released Lotte and stood up. “Good right now. I’ll let you know if it’s too much.”

“Alright, I’ll be watching. And remember what I told you.” Jung stayed where he was with his notepad at the ready. George turned to Beat and extended his leafy arm, but Beat didn’t return the shake and stiffly moved into a battle stance, stomping his paws into the grass. Lotte bowed and left the garden, possibly attending to other inpatients that needed their daily dose of serotonin.

Start?” George asked Elise. Once she nodded, George entered a stance of his own, arms raised like a shield. It looked natural and relaxed, fitting his personality. Beat’s stance seemed more rehearsed in comparison.

Both of them waited for each other to make the first move. Beat stood still as stone. George tapped his foot on the ground, occasionally switching arms. They were at an impasse before the battle even started.

“Beat,” Jung called, “are you okay?”

He didn’t respond. George dropped his arms, exiting his battle stance, and opened his mouth as if to talk.

Beat swung his fist at George’s face. The Gallade stepped back in time to avoid the punch, then countered by hitting Beat’s flank with his wooden attachments. This didn’t stop Beat from diving into the fray again, swiping at George with his claws.

Jung took notes. Beat just took advantage of George’s moment of hesitation. He wasn’t kidding when he said there was no room for weakness in the ring.

The battle went back and forth for a while. Beat swung, swiped and body slammed George, but George dodged most of his attack with grace, moving across the garden like a ballet dancer. This only seemed to encourage Beat’s aggression as he roared and shouted more with each of his subsequent attacks. At this rate, Jung expected Beat to tire himself out before he planted another hit on George.

To Jung’s surprise, Beat got on all fours and swiped at George’s legs instead. Of course, Beat must’ve sensed that George only guarded his torso, exposing his lower half. This successfully knocked George to the ground.

Beat wasted no time. He punched George while he was down, swinging at his face and his chest. George tried to shield himself with his wooden sheaths, which provided some resistance against Beat’s fists. He couldn’t hold the Pangoro back for much longer, however, as the wood splintered through Beat’s sheer force.

Well, Beat certainly got his groove back. From what Jung saw of George’s sessions with Elise and his occupation, he was born to fight, and yet Beat gave him trouble here. Elise only looked on as if the fight was a televised match, and to her, it probably was as mundane as that.

The punches abruptly stopped. An invisible force suspended Beat’s fists. Probably George’s psychic capabilities. Although it only gave George a one-second window, that was all he needed to turn the tides. He struck Beat’s paws with his extensions. Beat backed away, but not swiftly enough to re-enter his stance before George put him on the defensive again. Although Beat’s fists countered George’s swipes, his breathing grew heavier with each strike.

Jung sat up and waited with bated breath. Whether Beat won or lost was irrelevant: all that mattered was how he responded to it.

Beat’s shoulders slumped. He panted like a Growlithe. That gave George room to deal the finishing blow, shoving the tip of his extension into Beat’s belly. He doubled over in pain, falling to his knees.

George took a few paces back and bowed.

“You gave me quite the workout, there.” He grinned. “That was a good match. Are you still up for one more?”

Beat went silent. Everyone else did too. This silence lasted for a moment in the garden, enough time for one of the other inpatients to duck into the garden and walk out again. Jung laid the notepad on the grass and went to his knees, about to check on Beat. George beat him to it as he extended his hand to the Pangoro.

“Hey, you alright?”

“Shut up.”

Jung pawed at his face. George narrowed his eyes.

“Excuse me?”

Beat spat on the grass. “Don’t act all nice, I know what you’re thinking, I know I’m a loser. Just say it.”

“Um, I don’t, actually. You’re better than some of my prized students.”

“I don’t believe you.” Beat tried to stand back up, only to falter. “Those wooden things are still on your arms.”

“And?”

“You’re doing that because I’m too weak, you’re just putting on kiddy gloves for me.”

George scoffed. “I put them on for everyone I fight, not just you. It’s not worth killing someone over a match, league or otherwise.”

“Just take them off.”

George looked at his elbows, knocking the sheaths together like clackers. “You have no idea what you’re asking for, panda guy. Do you think I wear these for fun? Imagine living knowing that any second, you could stab someone because you accidentally bumped into them in the street. I’m sorry you’re offended, but this isn’t a game to me.”

Jung stood at last. He expected this to happen, somewhat. It was common for some patients to regress during therapy since what worked in theory didn’t necessarily work in practise.

“Beat.” Jung put on his calm, yet authoritative voice. “Step back and take a few deep breaths.”

“Are you tellin’ me to calm down?” Beat stomped over, glaring down at Jung. “What, so you think I’m crazy? Like all the other wackos in this loony bin?”

Jung chose not to reply. Beat probably needed to let it all out, and questioning him would’ve been pointless in his state. After a moment of silence, Beat eventually took his advice and sucked in a few deep breaths. However, his angered expression didn’t change.

“I’m goin’ back to the rec room.”

He stomped back into the clinic, leaving Jung, Elise and George on their own. All of them looked at each other, taken aback, particularly Elise since she was the only human in the bunch.

“Jung,” she said, scratching her head, “can you fill me on what happened?”

Jung sighed and adjusted his glasses. “Beat didn’t take the defeat well.

Sore loser,” George mumbled, which earned a glare from Elise and Jung. “Sorry Elise, sorry Jung. I know there’s more to it than that. But wow, what a reaction.” He took his sheaths off and brandished his swords as if he was about to dice a massive onion.

What I mean to say is that Beat may not have taken my lesson to heart.” Jung joined the two. “He still seems to have a heightened fear of failure and he takes that out on himself. Of course, I’ll share my notes with you when I finish the next report.”

“Yeah, thanks. I can’t say I have much input right now, I just wanted to be here to see it unfold myself, or step in if things got too hairy.”

Of course, but I still appreciate you being here.

“Thanks.” Elise glanced at George, then back to Jung. “If you want my two cents, I’d say he also wanted to release a lot of pent up aggression. If you saw his face right before he fought, it looked like he wanted to murder someone. What did he ask you, George?”

Take my sheaths off.”

Because Beat didn’t want to feel like he was being patronised.”

“Given what you told me, that checks out. My other theory is that he saw something in George that really set him off. It had nothing to do with him personally. And from what you told me, that Bro guy’s still on his mind a lot. So I think it’s more to do with him.”

Huh.” Jung cupped his chin. “I think I know what you mean there.”

“Cool, I’m glad I could be of some help.” Elise picked up George’s sheaths. “I’ll see you at the dojo later, okay? Or we could go for a walk if you’re not too busy.”

Sounds good.

Elise escorted George out of the garden, leaving Jung on his own. He needed to get back and attend to the other patients, but he also needed some peace and quiet for now. Even as a spectator, battles always made his fur stand on end.

Objectively, Jung knew this was a part of the healing process. Sometimes, it was necessary for patients to step back and make mistakes so they could learn from them. Did that mean Jung didn’t feel a tiny stab in his heart? Absolutely not. He sighed and headed for the break room. Hopefully, the catering staff delivered more of those cronuts.
 
Part 3 (Final)

NebulaDreams

Ace Trainer
Partners
  1. luxray
  2. hypno
Part 3:​

The ring was empty. Beat called out to a silent audience. His claws tried to find purchase in the ring’s rubber floor, but failed. And so, he fell. The floor consumed him, wrapping around him like jelly. Mmm, jelly. He would’ve killed for some strawberry jelly. He liked the pots Pierre got from the store. The jelly turned redder and redder, and less viscous. It tastes like metal. Beat tried to breathe. Breathe. Breathe.

Beat woke up. Then stayed awake without moving.

Pathetic. Weak. Whiny.

Beat lost again. Loser. Bro would’ve been so ashamed. He wanted to disappear. He didn’t want to sleep or go in a Pokeball or anything like that, he just wanted to poof into a ball of smoke like a Gastly.

Why did anyone in this clinic help him, anyway? He was just a waste of space. To think things were getting better. That Hypno was still a freaking quack. And that Gallade as well, the nerve.

Beat didn’t get back to sleep at night. He didn’t sleep during the day either, despite feeling tired. Jung came in again at some point.

“Hello,” Jung said, though Beat didn’t turn around to face him. “You haven’t moved much since yesterday. Are you alright?”

Beat didn’t feel like talking.

“We could have another picnic today, if you’d like.”

“No.” Beat sighed. “Leave me alone, please.”

“Alright, just let me know if you need anything.”

He left Beat to his own devices. Other Pokemon drifted in and out of the room during the day. Some paid no attention to him, others waved to him, though Beat didn’t wave back, and some tried to talk, but he wouldn’t respond. Eventually, they ignored him and went about their own day.

Someone else, probably a staff member, left him food throughout the day too. Beat didn’t always eat, even though his mouth drooled. Even the offers of peanut butter or bamboo didn’t change his mind.

Beat had another nightmare. His stomach left his body and he tried to run after it, but he tripped on his own feet and his face flattened on the ground. Then all the Pancham laughed and pointed paws, telling him he had a stupid face.

The next few days dragged on like rusty clockwork. Sometimes, Beat ate, sometimes he didn’t. That sketchbook went untouched, probably gathering dust. He thought about that Gallade battle again, replaying the fight in his mind, and reflected on the loss. Not just losing the battle, but losing his face by lashing out, like he always did. And just like that quack said, the worst thing that happened wasn’t so bad after all.

That Hypno and Furfrou occasionally checked in on him, but he waved them away. They were paid to check up on him. That’s the only reason why they helped him. Who would want to help him after that embarrassment earlier? Especially Jung? Beat snapped at the only other Pokemon who tried to understand him. None of it was real, though. He only pretended to care.

Maybe if Bro got paid to pretend, then he would’ve been a lot nicer to Beat.

Bro this, Bro that. Beat saw him more often now. He hated it. Hated him. Detested him. Loathed him. If Beat went back to that thicket, he would’ve rearranged Bro’s face. Or eaten his arms and legs so the Pancham had to take care of him for the rest of his life. Whenever he went into battle, he saw Bro’s face in the opponent’s. It made it so easy to fight, to channel his anger into his body. It carried him through the whole league.

He saw a bit of Bro in George as well.

Beat wanted to tear this building down. Especially the garden. He wanted to pound those trees into dust and leave it in tatters. No, Beat, breathe, just breathe. Jung taught him that. That pain still ate him up from the inside, but he needed another outlet that wasn’t destroying everything he touched.

Beat sat up for the first time in hours and furiously scribbled in the sketchbook. He did it in the last red page, knowing right away what he wanted to draw. The end result was a crude sketch with jagged, angular lines, featuring a Pancham stabbing a Pangoro with a knife, like the one Jung used to cut up that cake.

Oh god. Beat thought he was a loony before, but now he was a psycho. Like in those films Pierre sometimes watched. Yet, like that quack suggested, it felt good to draw it. It wasn’t the first time he thought that either, it sat in the back of his mind for ages, just with different variations, like dicing Bro to ribbons with his claws or poisoning him with a Zubat bite or hiding a spike in one of his bamboo shoots.

After Beat finished the drawing, he laid on the floor, once again alone with his thoughts. Day turned to night. Beat’s stomach grumbled, but he didn’t care. His throat was dry, but he didn’t care. What made him care was when that Furfrou Lotte padded into the garden. Her coat was unkempt and stringy.

“What?” Beat asked. It was his first word in days.

“I just thought I’d check up on you again.” She blew at one of the white bangs that obscured her eyes. “I’ll stay out of your fur if you still need some space.”

“Yeah, get lost.”

Lotte hummed and turned around to face the hallway’s dim light. She was about to disappear. About to leave him. Beat didn’t want to be alone. Not again.

“Wait,” Beat called. Lotte turned back and cocked her head. “Lemme ask you something.”

“Okay, go on.”

Beat tried to find the right words for this. Dammit, he wasn’t good at telling people what went through his head.

“Why are you here? Surely, you don’t wanna spend your life babysitting a bunch of messed up Pokemon like me. I bet they pay you, that’s why.”

She lowered her eyes, pawing at her stray strands. “I don’t get paid, I have no use for money.”

“You don’t?”

“I’m a Pokemon. Jung gets his share, but Jung is more human than Hypno in my opinion. I’m just an old dog who’s seen her share of struggling Pokemon in her lifetime. I don’t have long left, so while I’m here, I want to help others feel safe and loved like my trainer made me feel.”

Beat shifted slightly. “Well, I don’t deserve it.”

“Beat,” she crooned, “why would I come to you if you don’t feel like you’re worth it?”

“Because I…” He was about to say it was because Lotte got paid, but that was silly. Beat had no way to argue with her. Finally, he curled up in a ball, cradling his paws. “I don’t get it. I mooch off of everyone’s food here. I make Jung miserable because I’m always miserable. Back in the wild, I wouldn’t have gotten handouts like this.”

“We’re not in the wild.” Lotte sauntered over to him and nudged his side with her muzzle. “You don’t have to worry about that here. You’re in a place where Pokemon give you the care you never got.”

“But Bro did care about me!” Beat didn’t care it was nighttime, he stood up anyway and stomped around the field, pacing back and forth. “I know he did, he spent all that time on me, so why did he treat me like a steaming heap of droppings in a Bunnelby hole?”

“It’s not my place to say.” Lotte sat on her hindquarters, tail slowly swishing. “But from what I know, he probably did love you, he just didn’t know how to show it in the right way.”

“I know. And that’s why I don’t trust this place.” He was too tired. So tired. Beat crumpled like sheets of scrapped drawings and collapsed on the cool grass. “What if you turn around and suddenly hate me? Or kick me out? Taking me in and saying you’ll love me, then turning on me, that’s just cruel.”

“From what Jung told me, what Bro did was cruel.” Lotte’s ears drooped. “But he isn’t here to bug you anymore. You’re here. You have a trainer that loves you.” She smiled. “And you can be a sweet fella when you sit down to give me headpats.”

He stared at his claws. “Really?”

“Yeah, really. You’re gentle, you’ve told me what’s on your mind before, you’ve flattered me about my fur, you ask me how I’m doing and all that. So trust me, I know you have a big heart. And a big heart needs a lot of love to last.”

Huh. Beat never thought of it like that. Bro always made him feel worthless. It felt ridiculous, wanting his approval, his love. But that was everything any Pokemon, no, person should’ve had.

Beat’s vision grew misty. He scrunched his eyes, which felt wet. One wipe and it was all gone. No, more came out. Dammit, he became such a crybaby ever since he entered the clinic. It wasn’t the first time, or the second time, or the third time Beat made himself look like such a fool. But it felt good, like drawing his memories or talking to Jung.

When Lotte approached him, he pulled her closer, wrapping his big, ursine arms around that strawberry-scented Furfrou.

---

Jung popped into the garden again, expecting Beat to remain sedentary. Sometimes, patients took a long time to come around, and sometimes, they simply didn’t want help. He had to accept that. This time, Beat sat up, occupied with his sketchbook.

“Oh, morning, Beat.” Jung waved.

“Hi, doc.” Beat rubbed his wax-covered paws. “Sorry about what happened the other day.”

“It’s alright.”

Jung sat down beside him and peeked at the sketchbook. It was on a green page, signifying goals for the future. This drawing showed a Pancham walking away from a Pangoro.

“What does this drawing represent?”

“It means I wanna move on from Bro, duh.” He sighed. “I did some thinking, and I realised why I fight. It’s all because of Bro. Not just because I wanted him to be proud of me, but also because I really, truly, hate him.” Beat dug his claws into his palms. “Every time I battle, I imagine battling Bro. I think that’s why I got so mad at that Gallade guy.”

“I considered that a possibility, yes, but I’m glad that you also figured that out on your own. So what do you think we should do to move on from Bro?”

Beat flicked through the book and stared at a blank green page. This colour represented future dreams.

“I dunno.” Beat blinked. “Bro’s been with me for so long, I dunno how I can forget what he did.”

“You won’t be able to forget, but that doesn’t mean you have to forgive him.”

“I know. But if I can’t even look my opponent in the eye without seeing him again, then I dunno how I can keep battling either.”

“That’s something you might have to learn as you go along.”

Jung outstretched his hand, gesturing to Beat to lend him the sketchbook. Once he relented, Jung flicked back to the red pages, stopping on a new drawing of a Pancham stabbing a Pangoro.

“Uh, ignore that, doc, I’m not some murderer, I swear.”

“No, no, it’s okay to be angry, or even have these thoughts sometimes. They’re fantasies. They allow you to express your emotions without letting them become you. That’s what you have to do, Beat.”

“What do you mean?”

“You’re allowed to feel disappointed when you lose, or sad or lonely sometimes. That doesn’t make you weak. I don’t have the best advice for how to avoid those negative emotions.”

“That’s kind of your job.”

Jung chuckled. “I know, I know. What I mean is, even as a doctor, I can’t help but be angry or sad sometimes.” He didn’t want to mention how it was mostly down to him being a Hypno. This was about Beat, not Jung. “So what I do is that I try to accept them at that moment, then I give myself time for self care. I had to do that recently.”

“Like the cake thing?”

“Perhaps a bit healthier than gorging myself, like going for a walk or talking to friends.” What little friends Jung had anyway. “Or imagining myself in a better place.” Like planning vacations to Alola he would never go to. “And thinking of all the people that currently support you.”

“Like Pierre. And you, and Lotte.”

Jung smiled, rubbing Beat’s back. “And when you eventually feel ready to go back to Pierre, you’ll still be able to contact me. You know, if things get worse or you just need a pep talk.”

Beat hugged Jung. They had never been this close before, as doctor and patient. It would’ve been lying for Jung to say he didn’t like this attention. But he was also glad that Beat opened up more. Jung returned the hug, somewhat clumsily since he had to wrap himself around Beat’s big bear body, but they eventually got there.

It occurred to Jung that they hadn’t had a single dream reading session. It wasn’t always necessary, and in a way, Jung was glad to not use his capabilities as a crutch. However, his powers were ultimately a tool to use like a computer or a clipboard. That gave him an idea.

“Beat?” Jung asked. “Can I ask you something?”

“Sure, go ahead.” Beat released Jung.

“I don’t want to ask you to do anything you wouldn’t want to do. And I still apologise that I read your dreams when you were in such a vulnerable state.”

“It’s nothing, doc, you only did what felt right.”

“Right.” Jung clutched his pendulum. “But have you ever heard of lucid dreaming?”

Beat cocked his head.

“It’s when you’re aware that you’re dreaming. So you can control certain parts of what appear there. I’m just thinking, if you want to meet Bro again, or even fight him in order to move on, do you want to try it?”

“Yeah.”

“Really?” Jung hummed. “Just like that?”

“Well, yeah, I trust you, doc. We’ve known each other for, I dunno how long. I’m not good at telling time.”

“Nearly three weeks.”

“Wow.” Beat stared at his feet. “Pierre must be worried sick about me.”

“Well, I’ve given him regular updates about your situation. He’s glad you seem to be doing better.”

“And if I give Bro that knuckle sandwich I’ve been cooking up all these years, I’ll feel even betterer.”

“Alright.” Jung undid his necklace, concealing it in his paw. “I must warn you, in order to open you up for a lucid dream, you either need to go to sleep or I’ll have to hypnotise you into it. I’d much prefer doing the first option.”

Beat forced a yawn, only for it to come out as an ‘eh’. “Well, I don’t feel sleepy yet. I don’t mind you doing your thing.”

“Are you absolutely sure?”

“Oh come on, doc, don’t tease me.”

“I’m not.”

Beat grinned and laid flat on his back, stretching his arms out as if making a mud angel. “Just do it already, long nose guy. Zap me or do whatever you psychics do.”

“It doesn’t work like that!” Jung tried to come across as serious, though his laughter betrayed that. Right, time to get down to business. He knelt down to Beat and held out his pendulum. “In order for this to work, I need you to participate as well.”

“Alright, alright, whaddya want me to do?”

“I just need you to take a few deep breaths and focus on the pendulum as it sways. This works best if you’re already relaxed.”

“Got it.”

The garden was completely still. The Pokemon and the other staff probably would’ve popped into the middle of their session, but that wasn’t a huge worry. The distant calls of bird Pokemon, the swaying trees and the chittering wind chimes provided the perfect environment to doze off in. It was spring as well, a bit cool, but warm enough with the sun bathing them in its rays that it was comfy.

“Ready, Beat?”

Beat inhaled and exhaled as asked, his big chest rising and falling.

“Ready.”

---

The stale air stank of sweat, spilt soda pop, nacho cheese and ale. Flashing lights bombarded him. The audience cheered and roared in equal measure. His claws dug into the padded floor of the ring. His trainer chanted his name from behind. The ring was Beat’s home away from home, his proving ground, his perfect square, where he had everything he needed.

The spotlight shone on the other side of the stadium, where the opponent entered. An Obstagoon levitated above the ring, holding a microphone with a never-ending wire.

“And in this corner, weighing a hundred tonnes, you have The Undefeated Champion! The Shadow! The Destroyer of Worlds! The Punisher! The Wanton Flexer of Muscles! The Goddamn Bastard That Ruined Beat’s Life! The Devourer of Bamboo! Let’s give it up for Broooooooooooooooo!”

Bro appeared holding a bamboo shoot. As soon as the audience cheered, he dropped it to flex his muscles wantonly. Then he did both at the same time, flexing while holding a shoot the size of a tree. He took a big bite out of the stalk, crunching and munching, making sounds like claws on a blackboard.

The Obstagoon glanced at Beat and coughed into the microphone.

“Oh, and Beat, I guess.”

The audience booed, throwing tomatoes at him. He took it in his stride. All he needed to focus on was Bro, who cannonballed into the pool-like ring. Oh yeah, it turned into water for whatever reason. And they both walked on it. Beat tested this out by stomping in the square puddle, which sent waves rippling over the surface.

Right, that Hypno fella sent him here. This was a dream.

Beat looked down at the water. What if it wobbled like jelly instead? And hey presto, the water turned thick and red. Not blood red, cherry pop red. His feet slapped against the gelatin, making the whole arena wobble. Bro tried to stabilise himself, only to fall flat on his ass.

The audience laughed. Now Bro was the tomato recipient. He shielded himself.

“T-t-t-t-that’s not fair!” Bro wailed. “I want mama!”

Bro grew smaller and smaller until he turned into a Pancham again. He turned his back and continued sobbing, forming puddles on the gummy ring.

Beat didn’t want to beat up a helpless Pancham, even in his dreams. He tried to evolve Bro back into a Pangoro, but he lost control. Oh no. And he moved towards Bro too. He knew it was a trap. The one time Beat let his guard down, Bro had to come and haunt him again. And the instant Bro was in claw-swiping distance, Bro doubled in size and charged at Beat with a furious strike.

Beat had a hollow hole in his chest. He still maintained his form, and none of his guts spilled out, but Bro did a number on him. He fell to his knees, sinking into the jelly like quicksand.

Bro grabbed his neck, lifting him off of his feet. He grinned, teeth shining like a bear trap. Beat tried to move, but he had turned into a bamboo stalk again. And he was gonna take a bite out of him. He screamed, but he had no mouth. No. Help. Help. Help!

“Here comes a new challenger!” The Obstagoon pointed to a new part of the stadium that wasn’t there before. A shadow emerged from the entrance and glided across the arena like a superhero. Beat couldn’t tell what person or Pokemon it was.

It stepped on the ring’s rails. The spotlight shone on the shadow to reveal Jung. He donned a new outfit, different from his real self. Instead of a lab coat, it was a rainbow-coloured costume with a cape that swished along with invisible gusts of wind. The starry pattern in the cape didn’t move, as if it was a portal to outer space. Jung also had roller skates on, like he was some dancer. All they needed was a disco ball.

The stadium’s roof opened up to reveal a shimmering moon, beams of light reflecting off of its myriad of mirrors. The moon was a disco ball.

Jung jumped off of the rail and flipped around endlessly before falling towards the ring, foot aimed to dropkick Bro. Pow, right in the kisser! He sank into the ground, half of his body concealed in gelatin. Served him right. Even on the unstable floor, Jung skated on it like ice, spinning around in place. Beat turned back into a Pangoro.

“Is this what you look like in your head?” Beat asked Jung.

“No, it just happened!” He swayed his hips and pointed his finger at the moon. “Dreams do that sometimes.”

“You look kind of, er, gaudy.”

Before Jung could reply, Bro rose from the ground as well — he had freed himself by chomping through the jelly. He wiped red stuff from his mouth and swiped at Jung. But Beat stepped in before he struck Jung’s nose, rearranging Bro’s face, literally. It looked exactly like one of Beat’s weird drawings, down to the jagged snout. Bro pawed at his face, trying to swipe it off.

Jung took advantage of this and planted another wheelie into Bro’s face. Now it looked like one of those abstract paintings Beat saw in a museum once with his trainer. Another punch. Back to the doodle. Another kick. Back to the painting. Punch. Painting. Kick. Drawing.

Bro fell into the cage, a sweating, panting mess. Jung and Beat smiled at each other. They raised a fist at the same time. Then drove it right through Bro’s chest. He exploded into hundreds of crayons, which rattled on the floor which was made of rubber again.

The audience cheered. Jung and Bro held hands. The Obstagoon made devil horns with his paws and raised them in the air.

“I guess teamwork really does make the dream work!”

He got a tomato in the face for that one.

---

After that dream session, it only took a couple of days for Beat to get back to Pierre. Considering how much Beat backslid, Jung found his progress remarkable. Progress being relative. The key thing about mental health was that therapy never cured any patient of their affliction like a disease. It was a lifelong process. Beat was no exception.

A day or two after Beat was discharged, Pierre had to call Jung again. Beat struggled with feeling down, though it wasn’t because of losing a battle, it was just a matter of getting used to Pierre’s routine again, plus he felt guilty for all the worries Beat caused his trainer. Although he called out of hours while Jung was in his pajamas, he talked Beat through it and he was able to recuperate from that low period.

Even as Jung worked with other patients who needed immediate help, he always tried to make time for his previous clients. Pierre was kind enough to update him on Beat’s situation as well. He started talking to his teammates more. He also drew more regularly, both inside and outside the workbook. As was often the case with cognitive behaviour therapy, it was also a continuous process of practising self help. Beat apparently still had off days where he sat around or seemed deflated after a battle and wanted to be alone. But then there were good days where Beat smiled more, which he never did in the past.

A whole week passed after Beat’s discharge. Jung had a day off and he didn’t know how to spend it. It would’ve been nice to find Jet in the middle of the day since that Blastoise always lifted his spirits, but he was apparently busy. George was a bit too intense for Jung’s liking but that would’ve given him something different to do. Amelie was always busy too.

Jung sat at his computer desk with a snack pile and his plushies to accompany him, poised to catch up on the films in his bucket list. The next one was an animated film about a Braixen on a broom who opens a delivery service for a bakery. He’d heard good things about it. He just wished he had someone to watch it with. Then a call came in through the computer: Pierre again.

“Hi, Pierre!” Despite his weariness, Jung still tried to come across as inviting. “How are you doing?”

“Good, thanks. Sorry for calling again, I just wanted to thank you, really.”

“Oh, of course, it’s no problem. You know I’m always happy to help.”

“I know. Beat’s doing fine as well, great today, in fact. We’re having a picnic by the beach with all of his buddies. I packed that peanut butter cake he likes.”

“Ah, always a good choice.”

“Yeah.” He clicked his tongue. “So, uh, I dunno if I’m allowed to do this, but apparently, you’re not working, so… I’ve saved you a slice.”

Jung blinked.

“Oh, you have?”

“Yeah. And I thought you’d like to come along and catch up. We’ve got sandwiches, finger foods, cupcakes and other stuff too.”

This wasn’t the first time Jung got invited to dinners or received gifts as thanks for his treatment. Granted, it wasn’t always appropriate, and to some extent, Jung had to maintain a level of professional distance, but he wasn’t one to look a gift Ponyta in the mouth. They came so rarely that Jung savoured every moment.

He could’ve said ‘I have other plans’ or ‘oh no, I wouldn’t want to burden you’. Truthfully, Jung had nothing else going on that day and for once in a while, he wanted to be selfish.

“Er,” Pierre started, filling in the silence, “I dunno what food you like, so I just got what we’d usually eat anyway.”

“Ah, no, it’s not a problem at all, I’m not picky.”

“Okay, cool. So, do you wanna come?”

“Yes.” Jung smiled, clutching his chest. He felt warm inside. “I’d love that.”

The End
 
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slamdunkrai

bing.com
Pronouns
they/them
Partners
  1. darkrai
  2. snom
Hello! Nice to see you here again, even if only temporarily, and I'm once again glad to hear that your original work is serving you well. :> Of your work, I'd still only read the first few chapters of TCaTS (which, really, is my bad; I did like those chapters, and I have been missing out!), and I figured I would pop my head in and give this a read. One takeaway I had is that I should probably tackle the other two fics in this series! The premise and cover remind me a little of Paprika, a movie that I'm never against being reminded of, even though this is pointedly about Jung figuring out alternate modes of therapy that don't involve dreaming. If there's any more of that sort of thing in the other two entries... 👀

Anyway, I digress. Beat and Jung are compelling leads here, and I liked how the premise was set up right away. This felt just real enough that I was caught off-guard as it got weirder and weirder, yet it captures this loose sense of anxiety that crystallises into more concrete representations of Beat's fears as things moved along. Moreover, I like that you made full use of how dreams translate those abstract fears into striking images. This opening does a good job of setting up Beat's inner struggles without being all explicit about them -- the report at the end of part one does a good job of providing context what's ailing him and where it comes from (e.g. the "small stalk" jibe). It feels authentic, and I like it! Poor Beat, tbh. You do a good job of making him easy to root for off the bat, and it continues throughout; it might just be my weakness for big boisterous lugs who are learning to process their feelings and soften up, but I was taken by him pretty easily.

Jung works well as a guide and co-protagonist because he makes those internal struggles external in a way that feels natural for a therapist (and, in fact, his own internal struggles come from finding ways to get Jung to process his feelings externally). He's good at what he does, too, and he clearly cares for his patient; he knows how to lighten the mood with a picnic in order to connect with him, and he never comes across as anything other than totally sincere. He seems like what you'd want out of a therapist. The title feels fitting for their relationship, which I'm sure is deliberate; recover is a team effort, after all!

I thought the structure of this was clear, which worked to its benefit -- part one has the problems spelled out and moves towards healing, part two continues the upward trend but comes across a setback, part three deals with that setback and ends on an upward trend for Beat. That setback happening in part two is of particular interest to me; on the one hand, I like that Beat doesn't react well to a setback that reminds him of his trauma. It feels like a pretty realistic approach to that, as recovery is not necessarily a linear process, and it works to add tension to things that makes the resolution all the better. On the other, I don't think George comes across all that well. He's correct to dismiss Beat's requests for the safety of both participants, and I totally understand his passion for the matter (especially given the adrenaline of the matter), but diplomacy isn't his strong suit in such a way where I can't help but feel his bluntness makes things worse for Beat -- I think it's his one word replies ("And?") and scoffing where I can't really blame Beat that much for getting more heated (though I like that we're not asked to blame him; his response is understandable, and worked through in the next part). I'm glad the "sore loser" quip gets pushed back on, but the rest of that remark makes him seem oddly unprofessional compared to his colleagues in a way that I might have liked to see challenged some more. But! I don't know how you'd change this while telling the same story, nor is it really a huge deal; it works to get the plot moving, I'm willing to bet I'm missing context from the first two stories for why he's like that.

The resolution in part three is very well done though! Lotte's "I have no use for money [...] I'm a pokémon" quip got a laugh out of me (she's just generally very charming tbh! Love her), and it's good to see Jung and Beat break through and wrap things up. The insights here on therapy and self-care are great; sadness and anger are unavoidable emotions and the key is learning to control/rebound from them, recovery is a lifelong process, and it's almost always non-linear but those setbacks are best handled with the proper tools. It was good to see the dream therapy return this time round, and I liked the ending a lot too. We got to see a lot of development for both leads, and I like that growth isn't just confined to Beat here; Jung treating himself to a treat at the end there is very nice, and pretty well-earned, I'd say.

tl;dr: good stuff! Cheers for writing this; I'm glad I read it, and I wish you the best of luck with your urban fantasy project!
 

NebulaDreams

Ace Trainer
Partners
  1. luxray
  2. hypno
Hey there, @slamdunkrai, thanks a lot for the review! I'm glad you checked this one out, and if you like Paprika, you'll definitely like the other two one-shots since they're much more focused on the dream aspects of Jung's work, particularly the first one which was influenced by Mulholland Drive. On a side note, I wouldn't worry about TCATS at this point since I don't even know what I'm doing with that story anymore.

About George, ehhhhh, I made him up for the purpose of that scene, so this story is his debut. The vague idea I had for him was that he worked independently from Elise's job, so he wouldn't be as tactful with the other patients since it isn't his field. Even though I think the outcome would've been the same if George's personality was different (while Beat's reaction is understandable, he's still his own worst enemy in this situation), I agree that his bluntness wasn't addressed that well by the story, and that's something Jung could've chastised him for. I'd only need to add a couple of lines of dialogue. Plus, it would probably reinforce the themes of mental health as it could show an example of a Pokemon not quite getting another Pokemon's internal struggles.

In any case, I'm glad the story worked overall and that the exploration of mental health and therapy felt believable. I injected a lot of my own experiences of therapy into the story and my own ups and downs throughout the past few years.
 

kyeugh

you gotta feel your lines
Staff
Pronouns
she/her
Partners
  1. farfetchd-galar
  2. gfetchd-kyeugh
  3. onion-san
  4. farfetchd
part 1
hi neb. sorry this is late. this week ended up being... a week. in ways i didn't expect it to be. i was thinking about going for two chapters here to make up for it but i don't want to make you wait longer than you already have. with that in mind, you can depend on me to be back for the rest of this story soon.

some overall thoughts: i really liked your voice here, the narration is closely tied to the perspective of the narrator but is also quick and to the point, never belaboring the point. the story moves along briskly and the prose is clear and fun to read. there are quite a few quotes in here that cracked me up, and some really nice and powerful lines too. overall it was a joy and a breeze to read as your stuff always is.

i have heard about jung from the discord but wasn't quite sure what to expect from the story itself. i was surprised that it's (mostly) not actually from jung's perspective, but i think it was a good choice that works for you. getting insight into beat's thoughts makes his mental state clear to the reader, and it allows you to demonstrate jung's proficiency sublty through his actions and dialogue rather than wrapping us up in a clinical thought process.

dream sequences can go either way but i think it was a great way to start this particular story. through this opening, we get a look into beat's psyche and some of his insecurities, and we're introduced to jung both as a dream therapist who uses his powers for good and as a hypno who is discriminated against on account of them. great introduction to both characters, their backgrounds, and their dynamic.

i wasn't sure about the jung POV scene. it seems to me like the main thing we get out of it is exposure to some of the anti-hypno prejudice that jung experiences as well as a bit of telegraphing for the rest of the chapter. i feel like the latter bit isn't necessary and it's a lot of words for just the former; i wonder if that point couldn't be worked in elsewhere somehow.

i mention it in the line comments, but you really make jung's expertise shine through in his dealings with beat. he sweetens up with food but never pushes too far and apologizes when he feels he's overstepped his bounds. his approach is gentle but determined and when beat eventually softens to him you can really understand why. i appreciated the way beat's resistance to jung's tactics, even though he never seems to recognize them as tactics so much as jung just being a nice guy.

i really liked the way some of beat's neuroses present themselves. his distrust and stress-eating were portrayed convincingly to me. beat never really questions his own behavior here. it's almost absurd to think of someone gobbling down an entire cake given to him as a gift and then remarking that it wasn't that good, but to beat it's just the natural way to act. i liked that characterization a lot, especially in the context of a therapy-based story.

if anything, i feel like beat might come around a little too fast at the end. i found his guardedness believable and well-integrated with his backstory, but once he starts coming around to jung he basically lets down his guard entirely. the incremental progress he makes throughout the chapter, gradually opening up as jung pivots the conversation and then clamming up abruptly when a sore spot has been pressed, was great and i wanted it to continue at that same incremental rate a bit longer. it felt like a lot for him to be thrashing about in anger and accusing jung of being a quack to fully accepting the concept of therapy and opening up fully to jung within the span of a few dozen minutes, at least as i interpreted it while reading.

that said, the overall arc beat takes is really good. i especially liked jung's note at the end and the way it recontextualized the earlier stuff i'd read. beat is a believable character whose unique background and experiences mold his behavior in a convincing way. after reaching the end of this chapter, i actually felt ok with the progress beat had made already (even if the last step felt a bit rushed) and was actually expecting the next chapter to be a new character and for the fic to overall take an episodic approach. from a brief skim i see that the fic actually does continue to follow beat further, which is interesting—i feel i have a good understanding of what makes him tick now, so i figure the next couple chapters will be a further unpacking of his character and the route to his recovery. i'm sure there will be an increased focus on jung's character and hardships as well. i'm looking forward to (dream)diving into the rest of it! this has been a neat story so far and i'm glad i finally got around to reading it. sorry for the lateness of the review and hope you're doing well, it's been great seeing you around here again lately.
The stale air stank of sweat, spilt soda pop, nacho cheese and ale. Flashing lights bombarded Beat. The audience cheered and roared in equal measure. His claws dug into the padded floor of the ring. His trainer chanted his name from behind. The ring was Beat’s home away from home, his proving ground, his perfect square where he had everything he needed. All it needed was a face to rearrange.
you waste no time jumping into some awesome and impressively tight scene-setting here. weird thing and very subjective, but i feel like the second line would actually be a better opening line here than the one you've got. it immediately introduces us to the character and establishes a feeling of high energy. while the description of the smell of the air is evocative it also feels low energy to me and feels more like a scene furnishing than a proper hook; i might kick it between "The audience cheered..." and "His trainer chanted..." just a thought. also, "it had everything he needed" followed by "all it needed" feels contradictory.

A giant Pangoro crashed through the stadium, head scraping the roof of the building. All the spectators ran in a panic, only to get smooshed under the giant’s paws, turning them into lots of different foodies: hamburgers, fried Torchic, Miltank dumplings, peanut butter tubs, everything Beat could think of.
omg. ok, i was wondering about the regenerating bamboo, but we're for sure in a dream here, huh. i liked the gradual effect here, the way the situation started out believable, introduced a single bizarre feature, and then totally slipped into nonsense.

Instead of fighting like a manly Pangoro, he shivered like a Glaceon after eating a mountain of shaved ice.
i liked this simile.

“What’re you doin’ there, shakin’ like a Spinda?” Another Pangoro giant said, taking a chunk out of the stadium’s roof as he bit into it. “Pangoro, more like pussy.”
"another" should be lowercase here. also last line cracked me up good.

“Mine too, ya chode!”

“Screw you, small-tail!”

“Your mom!”

This went on for hours.
lololol. ahh... high school.

The Pangoro snapped him in half like Miltank jerky.
i'm not sure why this stood out to me but it felt weird to go from using the word "beef" to describe the sandwich a few sentences ago to saying "Miltank jerky" here.

But he probably would’ve wallowed in a thicket anyway, eating his feelings until he died.
good line.

Again, he had earned his place here.
i really liked the use of "Again" here. rather than just communicating a piece of jung's backstory, this makes it feel like it's jung reminding himself for the nth million time and gets across his sense of imposter syndrome, too.

“Without your quick thinking, Jung, he would’ve done worse than merely resent you.”
wow. that's cold comfort, jeez.

Beat didn’t wait for that quack to stop talking before he finished his sandwich in one gulp.
chad. i feel like "the quack" would flow better here than "that quack."

“Sorry,” Beat said. “You can have the last one.”
considerate king.

“What, and look like a weakling?” Beat grumbled.

“How is expressing your emotions weak?”

“Because in the wild, in the arena, there’s no room for that stuff, y’know. You give your opponent anything and they’ll use it against you.”

“Alright, in the fray, yes, you’re in fight or flight mode. But what about outside the arena when you have time to cool off?”

“I usually just train some more or eat, then sleep. Everything I do is so I can get stronger, for my trainer.”
i thought this portion was really cool. jung's expertise comes through loud and clear here, the way he steers the conversation and gets information out of beat specifically by talking about why beat doesn't want to reveal information.

How could Beat be happy when he was so stressed? But it was fine.
uh huh.

That came out of nowhere. Oh no, Jung was gonna walk away and leave him like everyone else did.
i didn't quite follow this.

“Must be nice, not feelin’ that pressure to win every moment you wake up.”
maybe "every moment you're awake"?

What a Grumpig — grumpy and a pig.
:galaxeon:

How was expressing his emotions weak when showing them made his claws shake more than going up against a Salamence did? That took some strength.

“Doc, what’s wrong with me?” Beat croaked. “Just tell me. I’m so sick of feeling like this.”
dare i say based? yet also oof.

Beat couldn’t grasp that. If he wasn’t doing something, if Beat didn’t dedicate every waking moment to his trainer’s success, then what was he? Who was he?
ouch. poor guy. did his trainer make him feel this way somehow? do all pokémon have this kind of complex?

Despite Beat’s previous reservations about showing affection, he has also taken an affinity to Lotte Furfrou. As a result, Pokemon-assisted therapy is also recommended as it provides Beat comfort.
omg awwww
 

The Walrein

Vicinal Dragging for the Truth
Partners
  1. gulpin
  2. kricketot
  3. bulbasaur
Hello NebulaDreams! I'm here with your catnip review, just before the deadline! The deadline for Catnip Speed Dating, that is. I'm sincerely sorry about the huge delay on this. As usual, I'll start with some line comments before providing more general thoughts.

Instead of fighting like a manly Pangoro, he shivered like a Glaceon after eating a mountain of shaved ice.

I'm not sure this simile quite works - wouldn't a Glaceon, being an ice type, not be bothered enough by the cold of shaved ice to have to shiver violently? I think something like 'shivered like a Leafeon' might work better.

One appeared out of thin air and plopped on the ground, becoming food for the Durant.

The phrase 'food for the Durant' also bothered me - Durant are quite large creatures with a fairly limited distribution, so it's hard for me to imagine them being so commonly thought of as scavengers of random sidewalk food for the idiom 'food for the Durant' to be in use. Even if this is a Pokemon-only world without actual ants, I'd guess that other Pokemon would fill the 'ubiquitously acknowledged scavenger of garbage' role much better - Wingull, maybe?

But he probably would’ve wallowed in a thicket anyway, eating his feelings until he died.

Thought the phrase 'eating his feelings until he died' was clever.

Since he was the only Pokemon in a room full of humans, he felt like a rusty nail in a plank full of polished screws.

This simile didn't quite work for me - I think the issue is that, polished or not, screws in a plank generally get overlooked, nor are they terribly glamorous, so an extra nail there wouldn't really stand out much.

Whoever thought of fusing a donut and a croissant together needed an award.

Huh, I didn't know cronuts were a thing until I read this; now I'm tempted to try one myself.

Hello, um, regarding Beat’s case, is there still no alternative to hypnosis? Do any drugs, soothing berries, or other remedies safely pacify the Pangoro?”

“Ah, good question, Jung. Unfortunately, we can’t find anything that’s compatible with his body chemistry. Anything we could find, it would have to be above the advised dosage, and we don’t want to risk that here.”

Hmm. Is there a reason why recalling Beat into his Pokeball doesn't come up as a proposed solution? I could see there being logistical issues with it being hard to get the specific Pokeball on hand when needed, but I'm surprised it wasn't even suggested.

I know, I know.” He knew that in his head, sure. Jung had caught Beat wandering through the garden one night — the Pangoro threatened to punch Jung if he tried to intervene. Once it escalated, Beat got even more violent when the security staff barged in, roaring, snarling and swiping at the air.

I think this could use a bit more description, because I'm not sure how it would escalate - couldn't Jung simply back off and let Beat continue to wander? I didn't get the vibe that the therapy clinic is a 'total institution' where patients are supposed to remain confined to their rooms at night - if it is, it certainly makes the setting a lot grimmer. Actually, I think this episode might've made sense to portray directly - it'd inject some more tension into the recovery process, and would be interesting to show how Jung reacts to direct physical danger.

Still, the thought of knocking out a helpless Pokemon made his blood curdle.

It feels a bit odd to describe a rampaging, professionally-battling Pandoro as 'helpless', although I guess it makes sense if you consider them to be a prisoner of an institution.

“In any case, I will continue to use it, but only when necessary. However, I got some use out of my initial dream interpretation, combined with my analysis of his present state.”

Seems like it'd be a violation of privacy to do dream-reading on someone who hasn't agreed to it - is it not possible for Jung to hypnotize someone without also entering their dream?

He stopped to stare at a disfigured Eevee, whose scars laced his body with lines from head to tail. Despite his puny size, his presence in the room was massive. His eyes were pinpricks that bored through Beat.

Wished we got to see more of this character; you gave him a pretty intriguing description.

However, that would make him look weak. Why did he need to submit to a Furfrou? What did he need to pet a Pokemon for, especially one much smaller than him?

I'd assume Beat would consider doing what the Furfrou said as the act of submission, rather than the petting, which would typically frame the Pokemon being petted as the one 'submitting'. For petting, I wouldn't think that petting a smaller Pokemon would be more humiliating than petting a larger one; if anything, it'd seem more normal and less remarkable for Beat to be doing it.

Ah, he saw what that Hypno had up his sleeves.

'Had up his sleeves' seems like a very human idiom, so it feels odd for Beat to use it, given how much his mental state is stuck during his time in the wild.

Beat gave in and dove into the box, eating the last half of the peanut-buttery goodness in one fell swoop. He wasn’t even hungry. He was already quite full. But he didn’t care. Eating was the only other thing Beat had to look forward to in his day.

I can definitely relate to feeling like eating being the only thing to look forward to each day, so this part seems very realistic to me.

Name of patient: Beat

Species: Pangoro

Age: 21 (in human years)

I'd assume the patient's age would be given in chronological years first, perhaps with the 'human years' as an aside. Presumably the conversion of Pangoro years to human years is an inexact science which people might disagree on, so only providing the 'human years' would make it difficult for someone looking at the report later to figure out what Beat's chronological age actually was.

Huh, this was actually kind of fun. Beat turned the next page and drew, then the next one, then the next one. One drawing featured Beat roaring like a mighty Ursaring with the mouth of a Loudred, since he often yelled or lashed out when upset.

Beat comparing himself to a 'mighty Ursaring' here seems odd given how similar Pangoro already are to Ursaring.

“Well, that’s what the next part of the exercise is for.” Jung turned to an orange page. “In this section, think about what you might do to change those thoughts. Let’s take this memory for example, where you put Bro on such a pedestal.”

“And?”

“When you fight, it’s because you’re living under the shadow of his expectations, right?”

“Yeah.”

I was surprised that Beat agreed with this characterization outright; I'd have thought he might agree with that he felt like he was living under the shadow of Bro's expectations, but not that this was his primary motivation for fighting. Given how much he thinks about feeling like he's letting Pierre down, I'd have expected him to protest that he wasn't fighting because of Bro, but rather that he was doing it for Pierre, or perhaps that fighting was something he did because it was a part of who he was and how he defined himself.

“Alright, so right before you’re about to battle, for any reason, ask yourself ‘what’s the worst thing that can happen?’”

I've never been fond of the "what's the worst that could happen" question, because usually the worst possible thing that theoretically could happen is actually very bad!

Elise’s Gallade, George, popped up, saving Jung by the bell. He came in with wooden sheaths attached to the sword-like protrusions on his elbows.

I like the idea of Gallade wearing wooden protectors over their sword-arms for battle; it's not something I've seen before, but it makes sense for a low-power universe where Pokemon are relatively frail.

“Alright, I’ll be watching. And remember what I told you.” Jung stayed where he was with his notepad at the ready. George turned to Beat and extended his leafy arm, but Beat didn’t return the shake and stiffly moved into a battle stance, stomping his paws into the grass. Lotte bowed and left the garden, possibly attending to other inpatients that needed their daily dose of serotonin.

A bit surprised they're having the fight right in the middle of the garden, rather than moving to a private arena or something. I guess if they're sticking to melee combat only there's less risk of attacks going wild and destroying the surroundings, but it still seems like a less than ideal place to battle.

The battle went back and forth for a while. Beat swung, swiped and body slammed George, but George dodged most of his attack with grace, moving across the garden like a ballet dancer.

The phrase 'swung, swiped, and body slammed George' is a bit awkward; phrasing it as Beat swinging and swiping George, rather than swinging at and swiping at George implies that Beat is lifting George off the ground and whirling him about like Mario throwing Bowser in Super Mario 64, which is hard to reconcile with George dodging most attacks with grace.

The punches abruptly stopped. An invisible force suspended Beat’s fists. Probably George’s psychic capabilities.

Mental image of myself repeatedly writing "Type immunity is only a thing in the mainline game canon. Type immunity is only a thing in the mainline game canon." on a chalkboard as I suppress my desire to complain about this interaction.

“It means I wanna move on from Bro, duh.” He sighed. “I did some thinking, and I realised why I fight. It’s all because of Bro. Not just because I wanted him to be proud of me, but also because I really, truly, hate him.” Beat dug his claws into his palms. “Every time I battle, I imagine battling Bro. I think that’s why I got so mad at that Gallade guy.”

I think this might be stronger if there was some specific similarity to Bro Beat perceived in George that he could point out; maybe some particular habit of George's that happened to mirror something Bro did. It might not be a comparison that was particularly fair or made sense, but I'd expect that Beat would have something in mind.

The garden was completely still. The Pokemon and the other staff probably would’ve popped into the middle of their session, but that wasn’t a huge worry.

Think this should be "probably could've popped into", since it's in past tense.

“And in this corner, weighing a hundred tonnes, you have The Undefeated Champion! The Shadow! The Destroyer of Worlds! The Punisher! The Wanton Flexer of Muscles! The Goddamn Bastard That Ruined Beat’s Life! The Devourer of Bamboo! Let’s give it up for Broooooooooooooooo!”

I smiled at 'Wanton Flexer of Muscles' here!

A whole week passed after Beat’s discharge. Jung had a day off and he didn’t know how to spend it. It would’ve been nice to find Jet in the middle of the day since that Blastoise always lifted his spirits, but he was apparently busy.

Was Jet supposed to have been introduced previously to this? As far as I can tell, this is the first time he's been mentioned in the Dreamdiver series. If not, the current phrasing feels like it's reminding us of a character we're already supposed to know about, and could be clearer that this is a new character.

Jung sat at his computer desk with a snack pile and his plushies to accompany him, poised to catch up on the films in his bucket list. The next one was an animated film about a Braixen on a broom who opens a delivery service for a bakery.

This may come down to a difference of philosophy, but I'm of mixed opinions about references to real-world media like this (assuming I'm correct that this is a reference to Kiki's Delivery Service). It provides a nice "hey, I know what this is!" feeling in readers who get the reference, but at the same time, I think it makes the world of the fic feel sort of... maybe 'artificial' is too harsh, but 'small', perhaps? It feels like a missed opportunity to do some worldbuilding and show us what sort of movies people would make in this world - and in a fantasy slice-of-life story, worldbuilding is usually a big part of what readers are looking for! I think maybe there's a possibility to thread the needle and have both the reference and some original worldbuilding if you described how this world's version of Kiki's Delivery Service differs from ours due to the underlying differences in culture and society (on more than just the surface level of replacing the witch character with the most witch-associated Pokemon) - although you'd have to consider whether it'd be worth the extra length of description required to pull it off, and readers who didn't know the details of the movie might think you were just explaining the plot of the IRL version.

So, I have some mixed feelings about this one. I thought the writing quality was generally good and the characters were likable, but at the same time, reading through it felt like a bit of a chore. Probably some of that can be attributed to the fact that I was reading this out of obligation for a catnip review (although I had actually been meaning to get around to it at some point anyways), but I think a lot of it is that I had the wrong expectations going in of what the story was going to be about. I had thought it was going to have more of a mystery focus, driven by tension derived from Jung having to figure out what the underlying cause of a hostile patient's issues were without being able to fall back on his dream-reading abilities (which I assumed was due to Beat having a dark-type immunity to psychic powers).

Given those expectations, it's easy to see why I found it hard to get through the fic. By the end of part one, Beat's hostility towards Jung has been dropped, the cause of Beat's issues is neatly explained in Jung's notes, and it's implied that Jung's initial dream reading of Beat played a big part in the previous item, making me suspicious that an inability to do dream-reading is really going to be an obstacle in this fic (and indeed, the climactic resolution also comes from Jung using his dream powers). It's almost like a murder-mystery novel where the killer's identity is revealed in the first chapter - all the tension has been deflated, and I'm left wondering what the point of the rest of the story is.

But the fic isn't really a mystery story - I'd say it's a slice-of-life, hurt/comfort-y sort of story about someone recovering from past abuse. This mismatch between my expectations and the fic's reality came primarily from the summary provided in the first post, but also from The Inalienable Dreamless, which did have a strong mystery element, which, being the first entry in the series, I assumed would be a good indicator for what the subsequent entries would be like. Obviously re-writing the summary could address the former problem, but the latter is trickier - perhaps you could try declaring it a side-story to the main Dreamdiver canon rather than the official first entry, or add a note somewhere saying that it's non-representative of the rest of the series - although I think that The Inalienable Dreamless actually works better if you don't know the whole premise behind Dreamdiver going into it. I guess it isn't necessarily a major issue, although it may cause the problem that people who are looking primarily for slice-of-life content might look at Inalienable and decide the series isn't for them, while people who liked it could be annoyed that the rest of the series is in a different genre.

So, what do I think about Teamwork Makes The Dream Work when judging it as a slice-of-life, hurt/comfort story? It's hard for me to say, since although I've enjoyed occasional works in those genres, they're not really my primary wheelhouse as a reader. That in mind, I still didn't really find myself that engaged with the story. Part of it is that slice-of-life is difficult to do in short-form works, given that it heavily relies on the reader's attachment to the characters, which is hard to build up in a limited amount of words. It also doesn't help that the relatively short wordcount requires Beat's issues to be resolved fairly quickly, which makes it seem like his depression doesn't really have a lot of weight to it. I was also a bit disappointed with the ending dream sequence - having Beat getting over Bro be represented by him and Jung simply beating Bro up felt kind of on the nose. I had been hoping for something a bit subtler and more dream-logic feeling.

I think what could've helped is maybe having Jung's initial assessment of Beat's issues turn out to be partly wrong in some important way, which might make Beat seem like a more complex character. Also, I think just cutting out Jung's notes at the end of part one might help - the part describing Jung's recommended treatment plan is redundant since we're directly shown all the steps of Jung's plan later, and the part describing Beat's issues I think could be replaced by actually writing out the conversation between Jung and Beat implied to happen at the end of part one. One suggestion I'm not entirely sure about would be to write the story entirely from the perspective of either Jung or Beat - I think this could lead to stronger empathy with the chosen character and also give a better sense of the difficulty in establishing a bridge of understanding between the two, by having the reader also be uncertain about what the other party is thinking.

I'm sorry I wasn't able to give a more positive review, but I'm glad that you're continuing to write in the Pokemon fandom. If you want to discuss this story more, I'll try to be on Discord tomorrow, and I'm also available through forum PMs. Take care!
 
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