so i have one example from amos worthington. i'm just going to read it to you her conduct and conversation has been much the same as any other person in the ordinary walks of life so much so that if he this is amos had not heard that she was once of unsound mind. he should not have supposed that she ever was. other residents were a little bit less favorable, right? so they suggested that lydia's mind still continued to be weak or not, right? mary canard for instance explain that lydia's whole conversation appeared light and trivial totally different from what it was when i first knew her her conversation was not that of a rational person. canard concluding so after this detailed investigation the court decided that lydia was still of unsound mind and they decided that she was unfit for independence. and so she petitioned again. two years later she writes a second letter to the court of common pleas. and this letter is quite amazing. she describes herself as grievously vexed and disquieted. she argued that at the time of the tape