-- I hadn't really thought about it before reading this, but of course you're right: if he'd lived Hisoka would have made a splendid doctor. (Assuming, that is, that he could manage the sheer stress of being open to all that extra sensory data from his patients.) He'd be able to get around the difficulties people without specialized educations can have in explaining their symptoms to their doctors, so he'd be a brilliant diagnostician. And of course, if he could bear it, he'd be an even better psychiatrist, notwithstanding his own issues.
But then, Tsuzuki pretty much needs his own full-time psychiatrist. So from Meifu's point of view, I suppose one could say that things worked out perfectly.
no subject
-- I hadn't really thought about it before reading this, but of course you're right: if he'd lived Hisoka would have made a splendid doctor. (Assuming, that is, that he could manage the sheer stress of being open to all that extra sensory data from his patients.) He'd be able to get around the difficulties people without specialized educations can have in explaining their symptoms to their doctors, so he'd be a brilliant diagnostician. And of course, if he could bear it, he'd be an even better psychiatrist, notwithstanding his own issues.
But then, Tsuzuki pretty much needs his own full-time psychiatrist. So from Meifu's point of view, I suppose one could say that things worked out perfectly.