In many cases, what happens is, one end of the linear foreign body will anchor itself in one place while the rest of the foreign body continues to try to make its way through the intestinal trac
In many cases, what
happens is, one end of the
linear foreign body will anchor itself
in one place while the rest of the foreign body continues to try to make its way through the intestinal trac
in one place while the rest of the foreign body continues to try to make its
way through the intestinal tract.
It doesn't
happen in a
linear, reasoned
way — we don't have time to stop and think about attachment, interaction cycles or internal working models — and perhaps not
in a
way we fully understand or can explain why or how, but
in a powerful
way nonetheless.