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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1400

grief, especially when the grief is profound and is precipitated suddenly. A sudden insult that is left unanswered can bring about a state of Caicarea phosphorica. In this case one may mistake the patient for Staphysagria.
c) Changes of weather, especially to cold and to wet, often cause severe symptoms. Caicarea phosphorica develops rheumatic pains that are worse in the winter (due to the cold weather), disappear in the spring and return in the autumn. Another modality of rheumatism observed in Caicarea phosphorica is that special times for aggravation are in the autumn and when the snow is melting, i.e. in the spring. This is a valuable and well-confirmed symptom.
Getting wet in the rain often brings on rheumatic pains in the shoulders, chest and extremities; the pain moves about all over the limbs and rump. A kind of dull pain from damp, rainy, cold weather has been observed in the lower limbs, as well as a feeling as if lame and beaten in the buttocks and other parts.
Discontent and Restlessness
A psychological theme central to Caicarea phosphorica is that of discontent. These people never seem to be satisfied with themselves. Their inner discontent renders them aggressive and extremely peevish, causes them to complain and more specifically, to moan and groan.
This characteristic is most readily witnessed in children. They may suffer discontent for a number of reasons (bone pains, teething difficulties, etc.) and moan and whine constantly and for extended periods of time. Parents typically complain that the moaning grates on their nerves. Mothers of Caicarea phosphorica children typically describe their child as a "moaning child’, thus summarising the whole situation in one word and providing the practitioner with the true essence of the case. Caicarea phosphorica should be the first