>After running a lot of standard noninvasive tests on your son's mind and doing a complete neuronal scan, I'm afraid to inform you, miss Anon's mom, that some of the damage done by the wild psychic Pokémon may be... permanent.
>His frontal lobe was overstimulated to dangerous levels, some areas of his brain have been messed up to the point they aren't responding as intended and we also suspect the wild Pokémon have purposelly implanted tics and memories to keep his thoughts disrupted and his concentration severily disminished. He also appears to be a bit detached from reality sometimes as a consequence of his condition... I don't know what kind of monster would do this to a young mind, but... *sigh*.
>What Anon needs right now is a lot of heavy medication to compensate for his abnormal neuronal activity and regulate the chemical composition of his brain as soon as possible.
>My prescription already has all the medications and schedules in which he will have to take his medicine, but I want to be clear with this, miss Anon's Mom, the patient needs to follow that schedule to the letter if we want this treatment to work and the patient must be supervised at all time to avoid the abuse of the medicine as some of them tend to be addictive in the long term.
>You can't by any means let him get near a psychic-type, fairy-type or dark-type Pokémon. Even the slightest mental disturbance in the delicate state of his son's mind could greatly reduce the effectiveness of the treatment or worse his conditions.
>Finally, I'd also recommend to find a psychologist specialized in cognitive therapy to help him cope with his... "new personalities" and "fixations". Most of them usually employ psychic-type Pokémon, so I'd suggest to avoid those and find one that preferably relies on more traditional methods with no Pokémon involved at all.
>I know this is a lot to handle, miss Anon's mom, but rest assure your son will recover from this... abuse.