They share a tired, genuine laugh. Then Mary leans her head on his shoulder. The TV flickers with old-school static for a moment between channels. George reaches for the remote, but Mary stops him.
At the doctor’s office, Dr. Hodges (the pediatrician) shines a light into Sheldon’s eyes. Sheldon has been complaining of “visual static” – not blurriness, but a fine, persistent graininess, like a low-resolution JPEG overlaid on reality.
Mary kisses his forehead. “Next year. I promise.” young sheldon s06e19 msv
George is back at the B&B, alone, eating a second piece of anniversary cake. The innkeeper’s cat jumps onto the table. George looks at the cat, then at the cake, then back at the cat.
He doesn’t have a seizure. The results come back clean. The neurologist, a kind woman with a German accent named Dr. Vogel, explains: They share a tired, genuine laugh
“Remember our honeymoon?” George asks, holding out a glass of cheap champagne.
“I’m sorry,” she says.
“I know,” he replies. Then, after a pause: “Is he okay?”