(M.P.): That’s a difficult question to answer at this stage. Per-haps I can give you a more definite answer in the summer, when I’ll be able to judge whether or not hot temperatures help make my limbs looser than they are during the cold months. In 1987, I went to Turkey. I could walk very well then, and I even went swimming. It might be that I find it easier to swim in warm water than in cold.
(G.V.): With his food, would you eat the fat of the meat? In gen-eral, do you like fat?
(M.P.): I usually eat very lean meat. I wouldn’t say that I have a particular craving for fat. If there is a piece of meat with fat on it, I wouldn’t make a special effort to cut the fat away.
(G.V.): What kind of meat do you like best?
(M.P.): I don’t eat any pork at all, but I do like beef or poultry, and I like fish.
(G.V.): Why don’t you like pork? Are you Jewish?
(Therapist): He doesn’t think that pork is healthy. It’s a bit of an intellectual reason.
(M.P.): A lot of people say that eating pork isn’t good for you. We made the decision as a family not to eat pork anymore.
(G.V.): Do you like smoked meat?
(M.P.): I like smoked meat a lot, although I know that they con-tain pork.
(G.V.): But you’d eat them anyway. If you saw an injustice being inflicted upon someone, would it bother you?
(M.P.): I’d get annoyed, and probably very quickly too.
(G.V.): Would you speak out?
(M.P.): I might when discussing it at work or with friends, and I might even get heated up about it.
(G.V.): Do you feel bloated in your abdomen, distended, gassy? (M.P.): I don’t have more gas than usual.
(G.V.): All right. Thank you.