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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1319

restless and kick off the covers during the night like Sulphur or Pulsatilla. It is later, after the age of about seven, that these children begin to manifest the usual chill of Calcarea.
In babies, perspiration of the scalp appears, often enough to soak the pillow; this tendency to perspire is irrespective of the ambient temperature. Calcarea children perspire profusely and easily in the cervical and occipital regions, especially when in bed and in the first part of their sleep. Their feet may be cold and clammy. The perspiration generally smells sour, as does the stool. Calcarea babies may vomit milk, actually vomit, as opposed to simply spit up the milk. They may lose their appetite and refuse to feed well.
Children’s organisms have an amazing ability to select what they need by developing desires and aversions. Almost all Calcarea children have a definite desire for soft-boiled eggs, which Hering says may come on ‘in sickness or reconvalescence, even before they are able to swallow’ (!). It is important to emphasise soft- boiled eggs here because, should the child desire hard-boiled eggs, the remedy, most likely, is not Calcarea carbonica. It seems that the calcium or nutrients that the organism needs to extract from eggs is destroyed through over-boiling.
It is due to paying attention to these kind of small details that the experienced homeopath has a higher percentage of success than the inexperienced one who always gives Calcarea when he hears the symptom ‘desire for eggs’. As few as one out of every ten children is Calcarea if they desire hard-boiled eggs; the remainder of the children are remedies such as Pulsatilla, Causticum or others. These children also have a strong desire for sweets and especially for sugar. The desire for chocolate is not as strong as the desire for sugar in a concentrated form.
Calcarea children, approximately seven to ten years of age, still display the whining, moaning, and whimpering of the earlier years.