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Essence of Materia Medica – page 65

to one specific person—a husband or a wife, for example. They have then considerable anxiety about the well-being of that par-ticular person. It is in this respect that Chelidonium should be added to the rubric. Anxiety about others. Even so, a Chelidon¬ium woman, for instance, who is greatly attached to her hus¬band will not hesitate to dominate him. She may be so forceful in her personality that the husband simply shuts up and lets her do all the talking.
Chelidonium patients are realists. They are very matter of fact and hard headed. They are definitely not intellectuals; indeed they may be anti-intellectual. Whenever possible, they tend to shun intellectual work, mathematical problems, abstractions, etc. They would never "waste" time analysing their emotions, explaining situations, interpreting behaviour, etc. One could even describe Chelidonium patients as mentally indolent—apathetic and lazy.
Chelidonium patients are not easily overtaken by their emotions. They are not at all sentimental. They do not easily express affec-tion. However, they do expect others to display tenderness and affection toward them.
On the emotional plane, Chelidonium patients can have anxie-ties—anxieties about someone to whom they are attached, and also anxiety about their own health. This anxiety about health may not be as strong as it is in other remedies, but it is definitely present. In Chelidonium this is a realistic anxiety. These patients will have check-up by the most qualified doctors, then, if there is even some slight problem they become anxious and want some-thing practical and tangible to be done right away. In addition, they tend to be suspicious about what is being done. If the doctor diagnoses colitis the Chelidonium patient will not be satisfied. He asks, "Are you sure? Could it not be the liver, or the spleen? Have you considered all the possibilities?’ His anxiety drives him to cover all bases.
Chelidonium patients also can experience deep depressions, but usually only briefly and over relatively minor matters. A Chel-idonium woman may be very demanding of her husband, and then when he does not respond exactly the way she wishes, she broods and falls into a deep depression. But the next day she is over it and remains cheerful until the next minor disappoint¬ment occurs.