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Essence of Materia Medica – page 151

tional plane that the patient is incapable of response; it is as if stimuli are not received by the organism at all. The Phosphoric acid patient himself knows he is devoid of emotional respon-siveness, even if this is not yet apparent to others around him. Just as there is stillness and coldness physically, there is no movement at all emotionally. This state is similar to Aurum and Sepia. In Aurum, there is a deep inner stillness, a deadening, but this is due to profound depression. The Aurum patient has given up, but still has emotions; it is not a true apathy. In Sepia, there is apathy, but it occurs primarily because of a neutralisation of opposing forces rather than from debility following grief; Sepia patients may feel no emotion in their daily existences, but they can be quickly roused if approached in specific ways. Phosphoric acid patients, on the other hand, are unrousable, indifferent to any kind of stimulation.
A dramatic personality change may occur in patients who have undergone a very powerful shock—such as the sudden and unex-pected loss of a loved one. In this circumstance, the physical level may be bypassed; instead , the defence mechianism reacts with emotional paralysis or stillness. Someone who was active and full of life becomes withdrawn into himself. This is not due to actual depression, but more to inefficiency of emotions and mind. Such a patient neither wishes to die nor to live. His house is in dis¬order and dirt piles up on the floor, but he does not want to do anything about it. There may be thoughts of suicide, but he does not have the power to actually carry it out.
After the initial stimulus on the emotional level, degeneration may progress to either the physical level in patients with rela-tively strong constitutions—or to the mental plane in those with very weak constitutions experiencing a sudden loss. We will begin with consideration of cases focussed primarily on the physical level by the time the homoeopath is consulted. A common story is,"I had been very well—quite healthy and active—until a year ago, but there has been a steady degeneration since." The patient is easily tired, whereas his stamina used to be quite good. Upon further enquiry, it is found that the patient had silently suffered a prolonged grief. To most people, the degree of the grief might seem to be insufficient to explain the severity of subsequent breakdown. A woman may complain that her husband pays too much attention to his mother. Or perhaps she has long suspected