one/someone

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Topstudent

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Client: Is it always so hard for you to accept when a client doesn't want to see you anymore?

Therapist: No. Only when it's one/someone I think I can help.

Client: You can't help me.

Are both 'one' and 'someone' grammatically correct here? Are they equally natural/idiomatic in this context or is one of them more likely?
 
Some people prefer "someone" because they feel "one" is too stuffy, old-fashioned or formal. Such people often substitute "you" for "one".
 
"Someone" sounds better to me as it unequivocally refers to a person.
 
Some people prefer "someone" because they feel "one" is too stuffy, old-fashioned or formal. Such people often substitute "you" for "one".
That's the impersonal 'one'. This isn't - and 'you' can't be substituted for it.
 
The meaning is very slightly different. Using one has a direct anaphoric reference to the uttered words a client. Using someone would mean 'a person, who is a client'.

There's no practical difference between them in this context, since all clients are people and all people referred to are clients.
 
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