Books

Essence of Materia Medica – page 184

exhaustion, Helonias; in Helonias the very act of rising from a chair causes great flushing and exhaustion.
Some Stannum patients may not yet have reached such an extreme degree of exhaustion, but in any case fatigue and weakness will be the leading symptom in every Stannum case. Even if he is able to continue working, he is exhausted by his usual standards and takes every opportunity to lie down.
Such extreme aggravation from exertion naturally makes one think of Bryonia, but there is a great deal more animation in Bryonia than in Stannum. Even in a Bryonia patient going toward coma, there still will be a lot of irritability. He may seem to be on his last legs, but if you go near him, he will react. Stanum is far more exhausted than that. He feels so weak that he is certain he is going to die within a few years.
Stannum patients do not actually fear death. They feel so weak that they rationally feel that death is near. They naturally feel a despondency and discouragement. At first they develop an anx-iety about the future. They wonder, "How am I going to live? What am I going to do?" This is an appropriate anxiety, of course, even though it may be carried a bit to an extreme. Finally, they seem to give up the fight against the disease. They do not have the energy to do anything but despair. This is not an anxious despair, like Calc. carb. or Arsenicum. It is a true despair. Because of the tremendous exhaustion, Stannum patients do not want to see people. It is not that they do not like people; indeed, Stannum people are very sweet, undemanding individuals who get along well with people—somewhat like Silica. They are simply too exhausted to cope with the exertion of greeting someone. The books describe this symptom as a "dread" of people, but it is not nearly so strong or fearful a state as dread. It is simply a tre-mendous exhaustion that renders conversation impossible.
Sometimes Stannum patients get into a kind of hysterical state in which they are easily distractable and inefficient. They begin one task, then get ott into another and the another—without getting anything done. A woman may begin doing a particular calculation, then she suddenly recalls that she has to prepare the tea for her husband, then the trash must be taken outside etc. It seems that the