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Essence of Materia Medica – page 44

the stillness is not so absolute; the person is still animated by a tremendous discontent.
Finally, on the physical level, the Calc. phos. patient experiences a loss of stamina. After a shock or some other stressful event, he notices that he connot play his customary game of tennis with¬out getting out of breath or exhausted. Just as the mind has become flabby, so have the muscles.
The fundamental thing to remember about Calc. phos. is that this lack of vitality on mental, emotional, and physical levels pro¬duces a profound discontent in the person. He realises that some¬thing has gone wrong, but he doesn’t know what he wants. He connot be stisfied by anything. This state can appear similar to Tuberculinum, but it has a completely different origin and does not have the maliciousness of Tuberculinum. It is closer to Cham-omilla, but without the agressiveness and violence of Chamomilla.
The Calc. phos. image in children is helpful in understanding the situation in adults. I remember a doctor’s child who had had a head injury. He became very peevish and irritable. We would ask, "What is wrong? Are you in pain? What do you want?" With each question, he only cried louder and louder. He used to wake up in the night screaming, but he could give no reason. The par¬ents even took him outside for a walk at 3 a.m. but soon he was wailing again. Naturally, I tried Chamomilla in this case, but it did not work. Finally Calc. phos. eleared up the problem.
It is this discontent which characterises the adult state as well. They moan and groan and complain, but there is no way to sat¬isfy them. They sense that something is deeply wrong in their organism, but they can find no way of correcting it. The discon¬tent even penetrates their sleep; they moan in their sleep.
As with many remedies prepared from salts, Calc. phos. com¬bines symptomatology from its components. It has the Calc. carb. aggravation from exertion (although not its endurance for mental exertion), but it has the Phosphorus ability to be stimulated into functioning. It has slowness in learning to talk or walk, like Calc. carb. Unique to Calc. phos., however, is slow closing of the fon-tanelles, and the "growing pains" of children due to slow closure of epiphyses.