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Materia Medica Viva Volume 3 – page 757

Aurum Muriaticum
individuals, the most refined of all the Aurums, with a vivid erotic imagination. They will not fall in love with someone with whom it is not possible to have a close relationship, as the Natrum muriaticum patients do, but they are unhealthily romantic in their attachments. There is an element of sadness and pleasure mixed in their romantic attachments. It is the tubercular miasm mixed with syphylis.
Aurum muriaticum are very sensitive people who are deeply affected by grief, by insults, by mortification. They suffer from intolerable and extreme mental or physical restlessness, which must be relieved. This may often involve going out for a walk and spending hours walking in the open air until eventually they feel better. A strong keynote of this remedy is amelioration in the open air, almost more than Pulsatilla ; but what really makes them feel good is the wind blowing in their face. The wind is like a live element that brings life back to them, also an inner calm and joy. The patient loves the wind, "opens her arms to hug it". "He walks the streets slowly, to be in the open air which ameliorates; he is much worse in the house, and in the warm room." There is almost a psychic desire for the wind.
This remedy has a delicate constitution, with refined, romantic, sensitive feelings. Aurum muriaticum people are definitely those human samples of degeneration and refinement that have resulted from generations of syphilitic and tubercular undermining.
Children have a very delicate constitution, with a fine head, fine features, fine hair, small eyebrows, small nose, very white skin and an angelic look with some sadness in it. They will easily develop swelling of the cervical glands, and their intense but hidden emotions can lead them to tuberculosis.
The adults are excitable people who start or jump easily when spoken to, and start in their sleep. When depressed they lose interest in their work and go into a weeping mood. They soon develop an aversion to their occupation. Indolence, aversion to work. Indisposition for mental work. Aversion to business. They feel tired, with loss of energy especially when their feelings are hurt, or when depressed. One point of differentiation from Aurum met. is the fact that usually Aurum muriaticum patients have sadness alternating with periods of excessive elation or joy, whereas Aurum-met. has a constant and deep depression. "Very bright and happy, with occasional fits of depression." These patients can be extremely irritable and capricious. Nothing can be