Since the prompt is open-ended, here are three possible texts based on different contexts (clinical, narrative, or academic). Please clarify if you meant something more specific (e.g., a case study, role-play script, or short story). Case 143: The Hayes-Delacruz Family
Reyna was referred by school counseling following verbal altercations with peers and declining grades. Honey reports increasing conflict between Reyna and Lear, including physical fighting. Reyna accuses Honey of favoring Lear; Lear states Reyna “scares everyone.”
The family therapist, a calm woman with kind eyes, entered. “Good afternoon, Hayes-Delacruz family. Before we begin, I want everyone to say one word about how you’re feeling right now.” FamilyTherapy Honey Hayes Reyna Delacruz Lear...
Lear hesitated. “...Invisible.”
“Trapped,” Reyna said.
Honey Hayes (mother, 38), Reyna Delacruz (eldest daughter, 16), Lear Hayes (youngest son, 12).
“See?” Lear muttered. “She’s always like this.” Since the prompt is open-ended, here are three
Honey Hayes smoothed her blouse for the third time. Across from her, Reyna Delacruz scrolled through her phone, jaw tight. Between them, Lear picked at a loose thread on the couch.
Honey (tearful): “I’m doing everything alone. Reyna won’t listen, and Lear just hides in his room.” Reyna (crossing arms): “You only notice him. I stopped existing when Dad left.” Lear (quietly): “She yells at me every day, Mom.” Therapist: “Reyna, when you hear Lear say that, what happens inside?” Reyna (long pause): “I feel like the bad guy. Again. So I might as well be.” Honey reports increasing conflict between Reyna and Lear,