Back at the office, Dr. Rivers is getting ready to leave for a long day of work. He asks Rivers to take a seat on a bench so that he can talk to his daughter while everyone else is out. Rivers asks her to tell him the story of how she fell in love with Dr. Bledsoe. She tells him that she spent a great deal of time trying to catch up with him when she was still a nobody, and that the way he looked made her flowers and trophies fade in color. Rivers tells her that she's home and that he's been talking to a friend about how to reduce the generation gap. Rivers says that he didn't ask her what she was going to do, and she doesn't listen to what he had to say anyway. She says that her work is important, and her life isn't as important as hers is. Rivers
Back at the office, Dr. Rivers is getting ready to leave for a long day of work. He asks Rivers to take a seat on a bench so that he can talk to his daughter while everyone else is out. Rivers asks her to tell him the story of how she fell in love with Dr. Bledsoe. She tells him that she spent a great deal of time trying to catch up with him when she was still a nobody, and that the way he looked made her flowers and trophies fade in color. Rivers tells her that she's home and that he's been talking to a friend about how to reduce the generation gap. Rivers says that he didn't ask her what she was going to do, and she doesn't listen to what he had to say anyway. She says that her work is important, and her life isn't as important as hers is. Rivers