Catherine admits violent impulses in therapy

In a tense therapy session, Catherine Cawood reluctantly confronts her repressed rage and violent fantasies after the therapist probes her 'happy sheet' response—where she admitted contemplating killing others. She deflects initial questions about self-harm but eventually reveals a litany of recent murderous impulses: strangling her grandson for a school prank, throttling her son for infidelity, and nearly choking her sister Clare, whose relapse she blames on herself. The therapist connects these outbursts to the unresolved trauma of Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral, a moment that triggered Clare’s relapse and Catherine’s own violent unraveling. The scene exposes Catherine’s self-destructive cycle—her anger as a shield for grief—and foreshadows her inability to separate professional duty from personal vengeance. The therapist’s calm persistence forces her to articulate what she’s spent years burying: that her sadness isn’t just about loss, but about the rage that’s consumed her in its wake. The revelation marks a turning point, where Catherine’s facade of control cracks, and her therapist becomes the first person to name the violence she’s wielding against herself and others.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

1

Catherine finally acknowledges the catalyst for her therapy, Tommy Lee Royce's mother's funeral and Clare's relapse. This causes the therapist to state that they will come back to that topic.

remorseful to resigned

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

7

A volatile mix of defiance and fragility—surface-level flippancy masking deep sadness, guilt, and barely contained rage. Her emotional state oscillates between feigned nonchalance and moments of raw exposure, particularly when discussing Clare and the funeral.

Catherine sits rigidly in the therapist’s room, her civilian clothes—chosen for discomfort rather than comfort—mirroring her resistance to emotional exposure. She begins with sarcasm and deflection, but as the therapist probes, her facade cracks. She admits to violent fantasies with a mix of flippancy and raw honesty, her hands gesturing sharply (e.g., demonstrating Ryan’s 'one inch tall' status) as she enumerates her rage. Her voice tightens when discussing Clare’s relapse and the funeral, betraying guilt she won’t fully articulate. By the end, she’s visibly unmoored, her admission of sadness a rare moment of self-awareness.

Goals in this moment
  • Maintain control over her emotions and narrative (deflecting, using sarcasm)
  • Avoid deeper self-examination (especially about Becky’s suicide and Tommy Lee Royce’s influence)
Active beliefs
  • Her anger is justified and necessary to function (a shield against grief)
  • Admitting vulnerability is a sign of weakness, especially in her professional role
Character traits
Defensive sarcasm as a coping mechanism Suppressed grief manifesting as rage Reluctant self-awareness in moments of vulnerability Physical tension (rigid posture, sharp gestures) Guilt-ridden but unwilling to fully acknowledge blame
Follow Catherine Cawood's journey

Professionally detached but attentive, with underlying empathy. He remains composed, even when Catherine’s rage or sarcasm escalates, using his calm as a counterbalance to her volatility.

The therapist sits calmly across from Catherine, his demeanor unshaken by her sarcasm or outbursts. He uses the 'happy sheet' as a tactical tool, consulting it periodically to ground the conversation in her own words. His questions are precise and probing, designed to dismantle her defenses. He listens intently, waiting for her to fill silences, and connects her violent fantasies to past trauma (e.g., the funeral, Becky’s suicide) without judgment. His calm persistence forces her to confront emotions she’s avoided, though he doesn’t push her to articulate the funeral’s role fully—saving it for later.

Goals in this moment
  • Break down Catherine’s defensive barriers to access her repressed emotions
  • Connect her violent impulses to unresolved trauma (e.g., Becky’s death, Royce’s influence)
Active beliefs
  • Her rage is a symptom of unprocessed grief, not a character flaw
  • Forced confrontation with trauma is necessary for her professional and personal stability
Character traits
Strategic use of silence and pauses Unwavering professional calm Tactical use of written records (the 'happy sheet') Emotionally detached but empathetically observant Patient, allowing her to unravel at her own pace
Follow Psychologist's journey
Supporting 5

Not applicable (as an absent character, her emotional state is implied through Catherine’s reaction—guilt, fear of abandonment).

Clare is the target of Catherine’s third violent fantasy—strangling her for her relapse at Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral. Catherine’s hesitation before admitting this reveals her deep guilt over Clare’s addiction and the funeral’s role in triggering her breakdown. The therapist connects Clare’s relapse to the funeral, forcing Catherine to acknowledge her complicity in the cycle of trauma. Clare’s absence in the scene makes her a vessel for Catherine’s self-loathing, as she blames herself for not preventing the relapse.

Goals in this moment
  • None (as an absent character, her 'goal' is narrative—embodying Catherine’s fear of losing another family member)
  • Serve as a mirror for Catherine’s own self-destructive tendencies
Active beliefs
  • Clare’s relapse is her fault (she enabled the environment)
  • Addiction is a weakness she cannot fix
Character traits
Symbol of Catherine’s failed protection Represents the fragility of recovery and the pull of addiction Catalyst for Catherine’s guilt and rage
Follow Clare Cartwright's journey

Not applicable (as an absent character, his emotional state is implied through Catherine’s reaction—disgust, betrayal).

Daniel is invoked as the target of Catherine’s second violent fantasy—throttling him for his infidelity during Lucy’s hospitalization. His absence in the scene allows Catherine to vent her disgust at his betrayal, which she ties to her broader frustration with family dysfunction. The therapist doesn’t probe this further, but the admission reveals how Daniel’s actions (and her inability to control them) contribute to her sense of powerlessness. His infidelity becomes a metaphor for the larger breakdown of trust in her life.

Goals in this moment
  • None (as an absent character, his 'goal' is narrative—embodying Catherine’s disillusionment)
  • Serve as a target for her projected rage
Active beliefs
  • His infidelity is a personal failure on her part (guilt by association)
  • Loyalty in her family is an illusion
Character traits
Symbol of broken family bonds Represents Catherine’s inability to trust or protect her loved ones Trigger for her moral outrage
Follow Daniel Cawood's journey

Not applicable (invoked as trauma, not as a present emotional state). Her absence is a void that Catherine cannot fill, fueling her sadness and rage.

Becky is never physically present but looms over the session as the unspoken catalyst for Catherine’s emotional state. She is invoked indirectly through Catherine’s admission of sadness (‘I never used to be sad’) and the therapist’s question about counseling after her death. Her suicide is the elephant in the room, the trauma that underpins Catherine’s rage, guilt, and inability to cope with Clare’s relapse or Ryan’s behavior. The therapist’s reference to ‘Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral’ further ties Becky’s death to the present moment, as Royce’s mother’s funeral triggers Clare’s relapse and Catherine’s violent outburst.

Goals in this moment
  • None (as a deceased character, her 'goal' is narrative—serving as the root of Catherine’s unresolved grief)
  • Represent the inescapable past that shapes Catherine’s present
Active beliefs
  • Her death was preventable (Catherine’s guilt)
  • Her legacy is a cycle of violence and trauma (Ryan, Clare, Catherine’s rage)
Character traits
Absent but omnipresent (haunting Catherine’s psyche) Symbol of failed protection and intergenerational trauma Catalyst for Catherine’s self-destructive cycles
Follow Rebecca Cawood's journey
Ryan Cawood
secondary

Not applicable (as an absent character, his emotional state is implied through Catherine’s reaction—frustration, fear of repeating history).

Ryan is referenced indirectly as the target of Catherine’s violent fantasy—setting off a fire extinguisher in a school corridor for a bag of crisps. His prank, though trivial, becomes a symbol of her fraying control and the generational cycle of trauma (his biological father is Tommy Lee Royce). Catherine’s admission of wanting to ‘string him up’ reveals her struggle to separate her grief over Becky from her frustration with Ryan’s behavior. His absence in the scene underscores how her rage is projected onto him as a stand-in for her inability to protect Becky or control the past.

Goals in this moment
  • None (as an absent character, his 'goal' is narrative—embodying the future Catherine fears)
  • Serve as a mirror for Catherine’s failed protection of Becky
Active beliefs
  • Ryan is doomed to repeat Royce’s cycle of violence (her fear)
  • Her rage toward him is a misplaced attempt to control the uncontrollable
Character traits
Symbol of intergenerational trauma (Royce’s legacy) Unwitting trigger for Catherine’s repressed emotions Represents the chaos she cannot contain
Follow Ryan Cawood's journey

Not applicable (as an absent figure, his emotional state is inferred through Catherine’s reactions—paranoia, rage, and guilt).

Tommy Lee Royce is never physically present but is the spectral antagonist of the scene. His influence is felt through Catherine’s violent fantasies (e.g., strangling Clare at his mother’s funeral) and the therapist’s mention of the funeral as the catalyst for her breakdown. His rape of Becky and subsequent manipulation of Ryan and Clare are the unseen forces driving Catherine’s rage. The therapist’s deferral of discussing the funeral (‘We will come onto that’) hints at Royce’s continued power, even from prison, to destabilize Catherine’s life.

Goals in this moment
  • None (as an absent character, his 'goal' is narrative—embodying the trauma Catherine cannot escape)
  • Serve as the ultimate source of Catherine’s inability to heal
Active beliefs
  • His actions are the root of Catherine’s family’s destruction
  • Justice for Becky is impossible, leaving only rage
Character traits
Absent but manipulative (his actions reverberate through Catherine’s family) Symbol of unresolved justice and intergenerational violence Catalyst for Catherine’s professional and personal unraveling
Follow Tommy Lee …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Catherine Cawood's Happy Sheet

The 'happy sheet' is the therapist’s tactical tool for dismantling Catherine’s defenses. She filled it out prior to the session, marking 'Yes' to the question about contemplating harm to others—a response the therapist uses to pry open her repressed emotions. The sheet becomes a physical manifestation of her internal conflict, its blunt admissions (e.g., violent fantasies) forcing her to confront what she’s spent years burying. The therapist consults it periodically, using it to ground the conversation in her own words, making her confront the reality of her rage. Its presence in the room is a constant reminder that her emotions are being documented, analyzed, and cannot be escaped.

Before: Filled out by Catherine prior to the session, …
After: Referenced repeatedly by the therapist, its contents now …
Before: Filled out by Catherine prior to the session, lying on the therapist’s desk with her 'Yes' response circled or highlighted.
After: Referenced repeatedly by the therapist, its contents now a catalyst for Catherine’s emotional unraveling. Physically unchanged but symbolically transformed into a weapon of self-confrontation.
Fire Extinguisher (Ryan's School Prank)

The fire extinguisher is the trivial but explosive catalyst for Catherine’s violent fantasy about Ryan. Though never physically present in the therapy session, it is invoked as the symbol of her grandson’s defiance—a school prank that triggers her rage. She describes it with disdain (‘setting off a fire extinguisher in a corridor at school because someone bet him a bag of crisps’), reducing Ryan’s behavior to a petty act that nevertheless unleashes her fury. The extinguisher represents the chaos she cannot control, a microcosm of her larger struggle to protect her family from the cycles of violence and trauma that began with Tommy Lee Royce. Its absence in the room makes it a potent symbol of the external triggers that fracture her composure.

Before: Discharged by Ryan in a school corridor, its …
After: Mentioned only in Catherine’s memory, but its legacy …
Before: Discharged by Ryan in a school corridor, its foam likely still visible as a mess in the aftermath of his prank.
After: Mentioned only in Catherine’s memory, but its legacy lingers as a source of her guilt and rage.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Therapist's Room

The therapist’s room is a neutral yet oppressive space, designed to force emotional exposure. Its clinical furnishings—likely a desk, chairs, and perhaps a box of tissues—contrast sharply with Catherine’s raw outbursts, making her feel trapped. The confined walls amplify her resistance to therapy, as if the room itself is complicit in her unraveling. The therapist’s calm demeanor and the room’s silence create a pressure cooker effect, where her sarcasm and deflection have nowhere to hide. The absence of windows or distractions ensures that the focus remains solely on her, making the session feel inescapable. The room’s mood is one of tense confrontation, where every pause and glance feels loaded with unspoken judgment.

Atmosphere Tension-filled with unspoken judgment, the air thick with Catherine’s resistance and the therapist’s calm persistence. …
Function A controlled environment for emotional confrontation, where Catherine’s defenses are systematically dismantled.
Symbolism Represents the inevitability of facing one’s trauma—nowhere to run, nowhere to hide.
Access Restricted to Catherine and the therapist; a private, enclosed space designed to prevent distractions or …
Neutral, clinical furnishings (desk, chairs, perhaps a tissue box) No windows or external distractions The therapist’s notes and the 'happy sheet' visible on the desk Fluorescent lighting casting a sterile, unflattering glow

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

1
West Yorkshire Police (Greater Manchester Region)

Calderdale Police is the institutional backdrop to Catherine’s emotional breakdown, though it is only indirectly referenced in this scene. The therapist’s presence and the 'happy sheet' are extensions of the force’s mandatory mental health protocols, designed to assess her fitness for duty after her violent outburst at Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral. The organization’s influence is felt in the therapist’s calm persistence—his goal is to ensure Catherine is stable enough to return to work, even if that means forcing her to confront traumas she’s avoided for years. The police force’s policies (e.g., mandatory therapy) create the pressure that brings her to this breaking point, though the therapist himself is not explicitly tied to the force in this moment.

Representation Via institutional protocol (mandatory therapy for fitness-for-duty assessments).
Power Dynamics Exercising authority over Catherine’s personal and professional life, framing her trauma as a workplace risk.
Impact The organization’s policies force Catherine into a space where she must confront her personal demons, …
Internal Dynamics Tension between the force’s need for functional officers and its duty of care for traumatized …
Assess Catherine’s mental stability to determine her fitness for duty Ensure compliance with police mental health protocols post-incident Mandatory therapy sessions as a condition of continued employment Use of psychological evaluations to justify or deny her return to active duty Institutional pressure to address trauma as a professional obligation

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What this causes 4
Causal

"Catherine's attendance at Tommy Lee Royce's mother's funeral, mentioned as the catalyst for her therapy, directly causes Clare's drunken confrontation and relapse."

Clare’s Drunken Confrontation and Spike’s Interruption
S2E3 · Happy Valley S02E03
Causal

"Catherine's attendance at Tommy Lee Royce's mother's funeral, mentioned as the catalyst for her therapy, directly causes Clare's drunken confrontation and relapse."

Spike Mistakes Catherine for a Cop
S2E3 · Happy Valley S02E03
Character Continuity

"Catherine admits to contemplating killing 'others,' building on the revelation of her murderous tendencies in the initial therapy session when asked directly if she has contemplated killing Tommy or others."

Catherine deflects with peacock metaphor
S2E3 · Happy Valley S02E03
Character Continuity

"Catherine admits to contemplating killing 'others,' building on the revelation of her murderous tendencies in the initial therapy session when asked directly if she has contemplated killing Tommy or others."

Catherine’s lethal restraint and buried rage
S2E3 · Happy Valley S02E03

Key Dialogue

"THERAPIST: 'Have you ever contemplated killing others. Does the ‘yes’ apply there.' CATHERINE: 'Oh yes.'"
"CATHERINE: 'Day before yesterday I could’ve merrily strung my grandson up for setting off a fire extinguisher in a corridor at school... Then last Thursday I could’ve happily throttled my son... Then—when was it? Two weeks ago—I could’ve cheerfully strangled my sister. Clare. She’s an alcoholic... She fell off the wagon. At this funeral. And she said it was my fault.'"
"THERAPIST: 'Tommy Lee Royce’s mother’s funeral. We will come onto that.'"