Dear Professor,
I wish to report a possible oversight in the original plan concerning those who accept long term experiments.
It has come to my attention that with those being placed in long term the subjects experiance heavy moods concerning lack of meaningful employment.
Please, I as you understands that their agreement to be permanantly interned into the experiment program is and will be a life long commitment. As with the younger ones who when they find their life styles changed in the drastic manner we both know they experiance, these people accept their life far better than those of older years.
It would seem that those who have accomplished something of value during their lives before joining the testing program, do find their status to be boring in the extreme.
We again both know of one such who after being here just a short time did comit suicide. I had a long talk with Daniel's Mother who did confer at length with her Exhusband living at the Exmoor stud nearby. She reported to me in a very upset and wrathful manner her Ex's disdain toward the maddening boredom he felt.
I believe at least for those who are younger the retainment of human recall and rational thoughts to be authorized as they make the adjustments. Yet too, those of older years or maybe after the age of thirty should be devoid of those memories and made as one might say virgin of past life thoughts, memories, and a rational exsistence.
I know your concerns and have offered Sybil the permanant injection for her to join those being tested in this our wonderful experiment.
Sincerely Yours,
Miss Jane Pennyford