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Essence of Materia Medica – page 17

tion to the prescriber. While both have great anxiety about their health, the Phosphorus type will plead for help to the homoe-opath, while the Arsenicum type will demand it. The homoe¬opath is bound to feel the weight with which the Arsenicum patient will cling to him. Once they have reached that stage of development, no patients in our Materia Medica are so clinging and demanding of relief from their anxiety as are Arsenicum and Nitric acid.
It is important to be able to distinguish the peculiar character¬istics of the Arsenicum anxiety about health, as there are many other remedies having this characteristic also. The Repertory lists these thoroughly and in relative strengths but it is unable to describe the particular distinguishing qualities which are so important in separating one remedy from another. If one only knows the fact that a particular remedy has the "anxiety about Health" without knowing how to differentiate it from the others, one will find great difficulty in selecting the precise remedy that fits the patient. This cannot be done by a simple process of reper-torisation; it requires a minutely detailed knowledge of Materia Medica.’
The anxiety about health in Arsenicum is really, deep down inside, a fear of dying. The idea of his own death causes intolerable anguish to the Arsenicum patient. It is not so much the fear of the consequences of a degenerating condition of health, but the fear of the ultimate state of insecurity—death. For this reason the Arsenicum patient will exaggerate many symptoms, blow them out of all proportion. He will come to the conclusion that he has cancer, and will go from doctor to doctor seeking some¬one who will confirm his fear. Even if all the tests are negative, he will not be consoled; his anguished fear and restlessness will continue to lead him to more and more doctors. He will fear that he has cancer, because that is the symbol of fatal disease in our day and age. It is not really the possibility of cancer, but the pro¬spect of death that causes him such anguish. It is not a fear that he will get cancer some time in the future; he fears that he has it now.
Other remedies have a strong anxiety about health also, but in different ways. Calc. carb. has a strong anxiety about health, but more focussed on the possibility of infectious diesase, or partic-ularly of insanity. Calcarea fears the insanity or the infectious