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Essence of Materia Medica – page 102

the mind or sensitivity to noise. It is merely an unwillingness to let go. It may even seem that the patient, living such a highly routinised, systematic, proper life, seemingly deviod of stress, is in fact conserving his energy so effectively that sleep seems as if it would become unnecessary. However, the patient does suffer from the lack of sleep. Because he seldom gets enough sleep. Kali carb. is one of the remedies most strongly manifesting the symp¬toms. Unrefreshed sleep (along with, but for different reasons, Nux vomica, Lycopodium, Sulphur, Phosphorus, Nitric acid, the Magnesias, and Lachesis).
Characteristically, the symptoms of Kali carb, are aggravated between 2 a.m and 4 or 5 a.m. The sleeplessness , the cough , the cardiac dysphonea, are all worse at this time of morning. This is a time when the menta! control mechanisms have their least force. As the control is relaxed, the symptomatic expressions become intensified—hence he wakes up with the characteristic 2 to 5 a.m. aggravations.
As the mental pathology progresses, the Kali carb. patient becomes very irritable. This again is an irritablity arising out of the sense of correctness, the sense of duty, the dogmatism. The Kali carb. patient has a defintie idea of what is "right", or the "right" way to do something, and will not tolerate deviation from that. It is an inflexible state of mind. In this way, he refuses to accept his illness; the symptoms seem to annoy him and then make him peevish and extremely irritable. The wife who is internally both¬ered by her husband’s adulterous behaviour, will not attack him for that but will instead become angry with him over trifling things—something wrong in his way of going about his job, or his household functions. If a Kali carb. prosecuting attorney decides that the defandant is innocent, he will take the case to his superiors and will tolerate no excuses, of, say, political influ¬ences or the necessity to set a legal example; the Kali carb. patient would rather risk his career than compromise his sense of duty, even if this means carrying his inflexible stance to an irrational degree. (He would rather "fight than switch", as the cigarette commercial says.)
As the pathology progresses even further, we see the emergence to prominence of many fears and anxieties which previously played a minor, or unrecognised role in the patient’s life. The