Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1314

remedies possess great anxiety about health, and both have a desire for sweets and salt. Where they differ is that in Calcarea the desire for sweets is stronger than that for salt, while in Nit-ac. the reverse is true.
Depression from Grief
Calcarea many times has a depression so severe that it recalls the Aurum state. However, the suicidal disposition is never as strong as in Aur. The Calcarea depression is accompanied by despair and physical fatigue; the patient is unable to do anything; there is no stamina, whether mental, emotional, or physical; and the world looks altogether black for them. They may just sit around and say absolutely nothing. People surround the Calcarea patient and talk, but he or she doesn’t want to do anything, doesn’t want to enter into a conversation and even refuses to speak. When Calcarea persons are alone in such a state, though, they may talk to themselves, as was mentioned earlier.
These patients are tired of life; they do not want to continue living. They have suicidal thoughts, although, as previously mentioned, this symptom is not strong as, for example, in Aurum. A characteristic modality is that both anxiety and the tendency to commit suicide are especially strong during perspiration. They think of stabbing themselves as a means of finishing their lives.
The melancholy and despondency may be coupled with a kind of anguish. They feel dejected and moody and have a strong, irresistible tendency to weep. Weeping may be brought about by criticism or by trifles, and they are inclined to complain and grieve about offences long past. The patients moan and whine, weep and whimper. They feel forsaken and pity themselves and do not want to be consoled. Consolation even tends to aggravate their state.
Many times, though not always, following an experience of grief,