[s7e3] Unwritten -
Alice Tanner spent her life building a fortress of logic out of paper and binding, only to find that her own biology was the one mystery she couldn’t plot her way out of. She wanted to end the story on her own terms because the "unwritten" is terrifying. An unwritten ending isn't a mystery; it’s an admission that you’ve lost control.
In the House, M.D. episode "" (Season 7, Episode 3), Gregory House becomes obsessed with a famous mystery novelist, Alice Tanner, who attempts suicide but can't explain why her body "gave out" before she could finish her book series. [S7E3] Unwritten
In the end, House gives her the "lie" she needs to keep writing. Because sometimes, the only way to survive the truth of who we are is to keep the ending unwritten just a little bit longer. Episode Context & Key Details Alice Tanner spent her life building a fortress
We’re all just ink on a page that hasn’t been blotted yet. In the House, M
House realizes Alice is paralyzed by the guilt of a past trauma (her son's death), which she has been subconsciously writing into her books. He manipulates her into forgiving herself so she can continue her work.
House sees himself in her. Not because he’s a novelist, but because he’s a technician of the human machine who hates it when the machine stops making sense. He didn't save her because he cared about her life; he saved her because he couldn't stand the idea of a book ending with a blank page. He needed the answer to the "why" more than he needed her to have a "tomorrow."
But that’s the trick, isn't it? Every life is an unfinished manuscript. We spend our time trying to find a diagnosis—a reason—for why the ink is running dry. We call it "destiny" or "medical science" or "just plain bad luck."