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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1316

of thoughts and liveliness of mind in the evening, however, may make it difficult to fall asleep; the patient cannot sleep before midnight. Lazy sitting around makes him peevish and sleepy, and he becomes averse to everything. He feels better when occupied; mental occupation ameliorates a headache; he feels better when his attention is engaged. On the other hand, many symptoms, including nervousness, are aggravated by mental exertion and are better from lying down and closing the eyes. Exertion of the mind may bring on hyperaemia of head; chorea; or trembling spells.
Fright:
Calcarea has a special sensitivity to fright. These patients startle easily, including from noise or shrill sounds. The day before the menses, disposed to fright; a trifle may give her a great fright.’
Excitement and Irritability:
Emotional influences can also affect the menstrual cycle. Menses can disappear after a fright. Excitement brings on dysmenorrhoea; the least excitement endangers the return of catamenia, or
causes metrorrhagia.
Anger and Indifference:
Thoughts of offences or vexations long past can provoke anger, or can bring on grief and complaint. Calcarea may develop an irritable mood and peevishness with anger, sometimes without any apparent cause; anger and vexation about trivia may bring on ailments like vertigo and sleeplessness. The anger can become really violent.
They behave with excessive mischievousness, with obstinacy; they are intolerably bad tempered, especially in the morning when they are sleepy and have a headache.
Calcarea can become peevish, morose, very cross and indifferent to most important matters, doing everything reluctantly and, as it were, under compulsion. They feel a weakness of will, and yet