‘Why was he letting this woman play around in his brain in his basement’ asked one fan. Severance fans have been left making the same complaint about the latest episode of the psychological thriller. Starring, Adam Scott and Britt Lower as Lumon employees Mark S and Helly R, the psychological series sees staff undergo a procedure called “severance”, which divides their work and home lives completely in a daring experiment to find a work-life balance.
![[Britt Lower and Adam Scott in 'Severance']](https://static.independent.co.uk/2025/02/07/15/04/Severance_Photo_020306.jpg)
Warning: This article contains spoilers for Severance season two episode six. In the latest episode, Mark continues his reintegration process with the help of former Lumon surgeon Asal Reghabi (Karen Aldridge), who begins to “flood” the severance chip in his brain.
![[Adam Scott, Zach Cherry, John Turturro, and Britt Lower in Severance]](https://static.independent.co.uk/2025/01/28/05/finfin.jpg)
However, after being told that he risks having a haemorrhage Mark refuses to carry on with the operation, which is being performed in his basement and instead goes out to dinner. Mark then goes to a restaurant where he encounters Helly’s “outie”, Helena Eagan, who tells him that she’s heard a lot about his work at Lumon and offers him the chance to meet the rest of her family.
After becoming unsettled by the experience with Helena, Mark returns home and tells Reghabi that he wants to continue the procedure. Viewers are then given a graphic depiction of the operation which involves a hole being opened in Mark’s skull, so the chip can be accessed.
The operation appeared to go successfully but fans were put off by how Reghabi sealed the wound. Although some have suggested that the hole was stitched back together, viewers are only shown the gap being covered by a surgical plaster. Queries about how safe this was soon went viral on X/Twitter with one fan asking: “She really put this over an open wound straight to mark’s brain and called it a day.”.
A second person joked: “No wonder neurosurgery takes 7 years huh.”. A third asked: “Why was he letting this woman play around in his BRAIN in his BASEMENT.”. A fourth proclaimed: “She’s maybe the worst brain surgeon ever.”. In a five-star review of the second season, The Independent’s Annabel Nugent wrote: “Bottling the bolt-from-the-blue brilliance for a second season is infinitely tougher, but Severance pulls it off with style, balancing its various tones as expertly and effortlessly as a waiter during a Friday night rush. Thankfully, it is still one of the best shows on TV – certainly, one worth rushing home from the office to watch.”.