It’s not self-evident to me that a problem of X must lead to (or even must coexist non-causally with) a symptom of Y. I see how it could, but I don’t see how it necessarily must in a given storyform.
I often understand the disease/symptom theory in an analysis of a finished story, but it’s a whole other challenge to apply this prospectively when I develop a small story idea.
As a result, I’m nervous that my character’s symptom will come across to the viewer as contrived because it will lack a causal relationship to the viewer (since it doesn’t have a clear casual relationship to me, the writer). Just trust it?
I’m not asking for how to generate suitable storytelling examples of a connection between the problem and symptom in a given storyform. I’m asking for a greater (any?) understanding of how a symptom-response pair is necessarily connected to a problem-solution pair for a given storyform. If the answer ends up being it’s the “secret formula of Coca Cola” and no else beyond the formula maker knows, then I can certainly understand and I’ll stop trying to know the unknowable–and find another way to procrastinate actually writing. Thank you.