The
Big Nurse calls a staff meeting because she is concerned about
McMurphy’s behavior. She has regained her composure and
imposes her will on the meeting. The young resident doctors,
wanting to stay on the right side of her, argue that McMurphy
should be considered potentially violent. One of them suggests
that he should be sent to the Disturbed ward. But to the surprise
of everyone, the Big Nurse does not agree. She argues that if
he is sent to Disturbed, he will be regarded as a hero by the
other patients, but if he remains in the general ward, his rebellion
will soon subside, and the patients will lose respect for him.
The Big Nurse regards McMurphy as no more than a braggart and
a coward.
Throughout the following
week, McMurphy continues to be hard on the Big Nurse and the
black boys. She assigns him to cleaning the latrines, and is
horrified at how poorly he does it. He continues to laugh and
joke with the other men, and Bromden is convinced that McMurphy
is strong enough to resist the Big Nurse and continue to be
himself. Under McMurphy’s influence, Bromden starts to
see his world more clearly, with less “fog” clouding
his vision. Also, the men start to become more assertive in
the group meetings, challenging the hospital rules they do not
like. McMurphy complains about the fact that the Big Nurse has
taken charge of their cigarettes, and only allows each man one
pack a day.
But after McMurphy
talks to the lifeguard at the swimming pool, where the patients
go every Wednesday, his attitude changes. The lifeguard points
out that if a man is committed to the hospital, he has no say
in when he is going to be released. The lifeguard tells McMurphy
that he has been in the hospital for nearly nine years. McMurphy,
who had been thinking that a couple of months in the hospital
was far better than the same period in the work farm, now has
second thoughts. On the work farm, he knew exactly when he would
be released. But in the hospital, he has no knowledge of how
long he will have to stay. So he decides to cooperate with the
Big Nurse, to speed his release. At the next group meeting,
he declines to support Cheswick when Cheswick makes a fuss about
the cigarette allocation. Cheswick’s only reward is to
be taken to the Disturbed ward, where he remains for a few days.
The day he returns, he is drowned in the pool after his fingers
get stuck in the grate. It may be that this is a suicide.
In the lunch line,
Sefelt, the epileptic, has a seizure. This is because he refuses
to take his medication, giving it instead to another epileptic,
Frederickson, who is so scared of having a fit that he is eager
to take a double dose of medicine. The medicine has bad side-effects,
rotting his gums.
Harding’s wife
visits him. They quarrel, and she belittles him, implying that
he is a homosexual. She soon leaves. McMurphy yells at Harding,
and later apologizes to him, saying that he has had a miserable
week and has bad dreams.
One Friday, the patients
go for X-rays. The X-ray room is near to the “Shock Shop,”
where patients go for EST. Harding explains to McMurphy how
it works. The electric shock to the brain induces a seizure,
after which the patient is, supposedly, calmer and more peaceful.
But he will also be damaged in other ways, forgetting things,
for example. McMurphy is horrified by what he hears. Harding
then explains even more drastic procedures, such as lobotomy,
in which part of the brain is removed. McMurphy realizes that
the problem he and the others face is deeper than merely the
Big Nurse, but he cannot put his finger on what it is. Then
he gets even more perplexed when he discovers that of all the
patients in the hospital, only very few are committed. The rest
are in on a voluntary basis. McMurphy struggles to understand
why this should be so. He seems worried.
Near the end of the
afternoon meeting, the Big Nurse announces that she intends
to punish the men for the disturbance several weeks earlier
when they sat around the TV and refused to do their duties.
She announces that she will closes the room which they have
been using for their card games during the day. McMurphy gets
up from his chair and walks to where the Big Nurse is sitting,
near the Nurses’ Station. Saying that he needs a cigarette,
he thrusts his hand through the glass window and grabs one of
his own cigarette packs. The Big Nurse does not know what to
do, and is silent as McMurphy apologizes to her, brushes the
glass splinters from her hat and shoulders, and walks back to
his chair and lights a cigarette.
Analysis
In Part 2, McMurphy is obviously having a positive influence
on the men. He tends to accept them as they are, and his own
example encourages them not to be so passive in the face of
the treatment they receive. But equally important is the change
that starts to takes place in McMurphy. His decision, after
his conversation with the lifeguard, to toe the line, is only
temporary. He is beginning to realize that he has some responsibility
to these men, and this feeling is strengthened when he learns
that almost all of them are in the hospital voluntarily. Although
it will not become fully clear until Part 3, he now has a sincere
desire to help the other patients in ways that he sees best,
although he does not yet know how to approach the task.
The first hint of
this change comes after Sefelt’s seizure. McMurphy learns
of the side effects of the medicine used to control seizures,
and he begins to appreciate some of the dilemmas the patients
are put in. They have few choices in life, and whatever they
choose, their lives remain downtrodden. As McMurphy looks down
on Sefelt, “His face has commenced to take on that same
haggard, puzzled look of pressure that the face on the floor
has” (p. 170). This shows that McMurphy is starting to
empathize with the situation of others.
After Harding’s
wife visits, McMurphy is uncharacteristically depressed and
moody, and he confesses to having bad dreams. He is beginning
to realize that the real problem is not only the Big Nurse but
the attitudes of the men themselves, that have been shaped all
their lives by society. Harding’s wife, for example, is
just as emasculating for his husband as the Big Nurse is. He
would face the same problems, in or out of the hospital.
Whereas earlier,
McMurphy’s decision to challenge the Big Nurse was entirely
personal—he wanted to show he could get the better of
her—his decision to renew the challenge by breaking the
glass and retrieving his cigarettes, is motivated by his desire
to help the patients. |