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Essence of Materia Medica – page 146

no great effort ordinarily, but in Nux there is retching and strain-ing as if the action were going the wrong way, as if it would force the abdomen open; a reversed action; retches, gags and strains, and after a prolonged effort he finally empties the sto¬mach. The same condition is found in the bladder. He must strain to urinate. There is tenesmus, urging. The bladder is full and the urine dribbles away, yet when he strains it ceases to dribble. In regard to the bowels, though the patient strains much, he passes but a scanty stool. In the diarrhoea at times when he sits on the commode in a perfectly passive way, there will be a little squirt of stool, and then comes on tenesmus so that he cannot stop strain¬ing, and when he does strain, there comes on the sensation of forcing back; the stool seems to go back; a kind of anti-peristalsis. In constipation the more he strains the harder it is to pass a stool."
These are the patients complaining of gastritis or ulcer or "spas¬tic colon". They finally go to the doctor, who pronounces their condition psychosomatic and prescribes antiacids, antispasmod-ics, tranquillisers, or even psychotherapy. These merely mask the symptom, usually ineffectively, and consequently worsen the sen-sitivity of the nervous system in general.
The Nux patient, then, is very irritable, but this is a kind of irrit-ability which the homoeopath may find difficult to elicit without care. The Nux patient will tend to hold the irritability inside (at least in this early stage). You ask, "Are you irritable?" The patient says, "No not at all. I never even raise my voice." So you ask, "How about inside? Do you feel irritable inside yourself?" Patient; "Oh yes! Very much!!" It is such people, who are most prone to gastritis and peptic ulcer. If the person were to learn to be more expressive, he would be spared the ulcer—but then, the abuse of coffee, cigarettes, and alcohol might result in the same con¬dition, anyway.
Finally, the pressures become too much and the Nux patient becomes impatient and irritable. He becomes impatient with him-self, and particularly with others, scolding and reproaching others over minor incidents. He reacts impulsively over small distur-bances. Someone quietly whistles a tune, and he yells "Can’t you keep quiet!" He can’t find a pencil, so he slams the desk drawer shut. He has momentary difficulty buttoning his shirt, so he rips the button off. Someone contradicts him, and he stalks out of the