idea or a ‘picture’ of the kind of confusion and disturbance that this remedy can produce. Old homeopaths used to see the typical Baptisia pictures described below; we are much less likely to see this type of case today, because most patients resort to antibiotics from the very first stage of their acute diseases. Kent again:
‘…offensive stool associated with this typhoid state; the stool is so extremely offensive that you can smell it all over the house. It is death-like, it permeates the house, you can carry it with your clothing. We have extreme offensiveness in Bapt.; it has a little restlessness at times but he will draw up his knees and lie over on one side, and lie there for days and will not speak to anybody; he attempts to answer and falls asleep; if he has wandering, as we sometimes find him, he seems to be scattered all over the bed, and seems to want to get the limbs together; he thinks he is made up of numerous factors; he thinks his limbs are talking to each other and it annoys him; he wants to get them together. ’
Other expressions during the delusion are:
arms do not belong to her;
arms are cut off;
bed is sinking down;
someone is in bed with him;
parts of the body have been taken away;
tosses about bed to get the pieces of his body together;
that toe is conversing with thumb;
imagines limbs are separated.
Sensation as if there was a second self outside of patient.
He thinks his legs are holding a conversation with each other.
Kent again describes:
‘Now, a strange thing that runs through the remedy is a peculiar kind of mental confusion, in which he is in a constant argument with his parts. He seems to feel that there are two of him. He