What was wrong with Cheswick in One Flew Over?

Cheswick Gets His Chin Up
I ain't no kid!" Cheswick's anxiety makes it very hard for him to function as an adult, and it hasn't made things any better for him to be treated like a child all the time.
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Why is Cheswick in the hospital?

Cheswick is sent to the Distrubed ward after an outburst where McMurphy fails to support him, and drowns in the pool - a likely suicide - shortly afterwards. A timid man born with a severe stutter, and who has been on the ward for about five years.
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Was Cheswick death an accident?

later in the book Cheswick was swimming in the pool when he had a accident and got stuck in the net. it was later found out it could have been a suicide. this tragic action caused McMurphy to finally think that he had a huge impact in the patient's life.
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What happens to Cheswick in Cuckoo's Nest?

Cheswick, a man of much talk and little action, drowns in the pool—possibly a suicide—after McMurphy does not support Cheswick when Cheswick takes a stand against Nurse Ratched. Cheswick's death is significant in that it awakens McMurphy to the extent of his influence and the mistake of his decision to conform.
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Why did Cheswick drown himself?

At one point McMurphy decides to fall in line when he learns his stay in the ward is indefinite and his release is solely determined by the Big Nurse. As a result, Cheswick drowns himself in the ward's swimming pool when he decides he himself will never escape the relentless Big Nurse.
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Mr Cheswick wanna watch the World Series



What was McMurphy's mental illness?

Each film takes up specific gendered mental illnesses – Susanna is diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder, seven times more likely in women than men, and McMurphy with Anti-Social Personality Disorder, three times more likely in men than women.
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Is Chief mentally ill Why or why not?

First Person (Chief Bromden)

Chief Bromden is a Columbia Indian who suffers from schizophrenia. Although he plays a central role in the story, he is largely an observer. Chief is an interesting narrator because he is certainly not unbiased, and his mental illness can also shed doubt on his reliability.
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How is Cheswick described?

Charles Cheswick is a timid man, and that's just the way Nurse Ratched likes it. The nurse rules her ward in the mental institution with absolute authority, until a new patient inspires Cheswick and the other patients to challenge her in Ken Kesey's ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest''.
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What mental illness does Charlie Cheswick have?

As McMurphy starts to engage in the group therapy sessions, he realizes that he really is in a crazy house with all the inmates having some sort of disorder: Billy Bibbit, who suffers from nervousness and stuttering; Charlie Cheswick, who has childish fits of temper; Martini, who is delusional; Dale Harding, who is ...
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What was wrong with Billy Bibbit?

Billy Stutters

Billy Bibbit's psychological problems manifest themselves as a stutter. Billy reveals in group therapy that he flunked out of college because he had to quit ROTC.
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What happens to McMurphy after Cheswick dies?

However, after Cheswick commits suicide, McMurphy realizes that Nurse Ratched's control is a life-and-death matter. At that point he steps up his rebellion. Punishment with electroshock therapy only serves to strengthen his will and preserve his spirit from Nurse Ratched's manipulation.
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What page does Cheswick drown himself?

"But just as soon as we got to the pool he said he did wish something mighta been done, though, and dove into the water." Chapter 18, pg. 151 Cheswick jams his fingers into the grate at the bottom of the pool, and drowns himself.
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How does the incident of Sefelt seizure?

How does the incident of Sefelt's seizure contribute to the reestablishment of the Big Nurse's power on the ward? When Sefelt has his seizures everyone else gets scared and loses control. Nurse Ratched comes in and takes over control and shows the ultimate result of not listening to her.
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What does Cheswick do to himself in the pool and why?

After he returns, on the way to the pool, Cheswick tells McMurphy that he understands why McMurphy no longer rebels against Ratched. That day, Cheswick's fingers get stuck in the pool's drain and he drowns in what is possibly a suicide.
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Why did McMurphy get a lobotomy?

McMurphy is given a lobotomy for his attack on Nurse Ratched. When he is returned to the ward after the operation, he is a vegetable. That same night, Bromden suffocates McMurphy with a pillow.
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Why don t the voluntary patients leave the hospital?

Why don't the "voluntary" patients leave the hospital? Billy Bibbit overcomes his usual meekness to explain to RPM the reason he and the others stay. They are afraid and don't believe they are strong enough or courageous enough to live outside the hospital.
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What is Harding's illness in Cuckoo's Nest?

Harding is a homosexual, but the social pressure to be straight cripples him. He is married, but he prefers to commit himself to the hospital rather than face prejudice or the anger of his wife. After McMurphy is lobotomized, Harding checks himself out of the ward.
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What mental illness does Chief Bromden have?

Chief Bromden presented a long-standing history characterized by the complex features of Schizophrenia.
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Why was bromden in the mental hospital?

Bromden, like his father, is a big man who comes to feel small and helpless. The reason for Bromden's hospitalization is cloaked in ambiguity. He may have had a breakdown from witnessing the decline of his father or from the horrors of fighting in World War II.
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What mental illness does Harding have?

This diagnosis of Delusional Disorder, Persecutory type, would allow Harding's real issue to be confronted (his homosexuality), which Harding demonstrates that he wants to do, but feels he cannot speak the truth about. The setting of this film is in the 1960s, which works against Harding's favor.
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What effect does McMurphy have on Cheswick?

When McMurphy doesn't support Cheswick in his own stand against Nurse Ratched, Cheswick commits suicide. His suicide shows McMurphy that he has more influence over the men than he realized. It also shows him that conforming to Nurse Ratched just for the sake of his own freedom has consequences for all these men.
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Is Nurse Ratched evil?

Ratched was named the fifth-greatest villain in film history (and second-greatest villainess, behind the Wicked Witch of the West of The Wizard of Oz) by the American Film Institute in their series 100 Years... 100 Heroes & Villains.
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Why is Billy bibbit in the ward?

He is completely dominated by his mother (a close friend of Nurse Ratched), and committed himself to the hospital voluntarily because he couldn't handle the outside world. After he loses his virginity to Candy Starr in the nighttime ward party, he is initially proud.
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What is the fog in Cuckoo's Nest?

The Fog Machine

Fog is a phenomenon that clouds our vision of the world. In this novel, fogs symbolize a lack of insight and an escape from reality. When Bromden starts to slip away from reality, because of his medication or out of fear, he hallucinates fog drifting into the ward.
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Why does Chief Bromden pretend to be deaf and mute?

According to the source novel, he pretends to be deaf and dumb because it allows him to hear the secrets of the people around him.
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