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Essence of Materia Medica – page 95

The Kali bich. patient wants to spend time only with his family. He will be unlikely to have many friends outside the family, and whatever friend he may have he will welcome visits only infre-quently. Taken to the extreme, then, Kali. bich. patients become misanthropic and antisocial. They close themselves into their narrow world,
Such a patient can be quite difficult during an interview. He will complain of a specific, concrete pain, and he will not want to go any deeper. If you probe intensively into the emotional or mental realms, he will deny any problems. You get the impres¬sion that he views such things as topics which are not to be dis¬cussed. At most, he may admit to a vague (and minor) irritability whenever he feels interference with his normal life.
There is, of course, a general weakness which affects all three levels of the person. On the physical level, it manifests as a gen-eral weakness, and as characteristic symptoms which will be dis-cussed later. On the emotional level, there is easy discouragement and gloominess. Such patients always feel isolated and apart from social contact. When the Kali bich. pathology overtakes them, they do not share their feelings. Consequently, they become gloomy and ill-humoured. They become easily angered and upset.
Finally, this gloominess may progress into a kind of sullen indif-ference. This is not a true apathy in the sense we see in Phos-phoric acid. It is more of a peevish withdrawal; a sullen indifference and discouragement.
Generally, the mental plane is not as definitely affected as in other remedies. Despite being emotionally closed and antisocial, they still perform their duties quite adequately. In cases in which the mental plane is affected, the first sign might be a weak memory. Next there may be some weakness in concentration, a blandness or dullness in the mind which duplicates the clouded feeling during sinusitis. Beyond that, I have not seen deeper deterior¬ation on the mental level. It would not be difficult to imagine the result however; such a patient would most likely become psy-chotically withdrawn into an extreme misanthropic state.
There is a peculiar characteristic of the mental state which I have noticed in Kali bich. patients; because of their narrowness and lack of social contact, they seem to become excessively conscien¬tious in explaining things to others. For instance, a Kali bich.