Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1600

figures. They cannot remain lying in bed after going to sleep from sheer anxiety. They wake at night with delusions and anxiety. Kent writes: ‘There is anxiety, suffering, jerking, twitching, and he has the horrors. Everything is horrible… A peculiar sluggish, death¬like sleep, with visions. The Carbo vegetabilis patient wakens in anxiety and covered with cold sweat.’ Interestingly, a typical feature is not a fear of the dark, but an aggravation from darkness.
Fear, which needs an object that is feared, is not so typical of this kind of Carbo vegetabilis state, but is rather an indefinite, general anxiety coupled with weakness of mind and body. These patients are easily frightened or startled, with a discouraged and dejected mood. Tremulous anxiousness and restlessness, sometimes with weeping, even in the presence of strangers in the street. Eating may also trigger such anxiety states. Or we see a sort of anticipation anxiety: ‘If she is bound to speak in the presence of people, she feels her pulse throbbing everywhere, and her face, usually pale, becomes puffed and bluish red’ (Hahnemann).
However, a fear of accidents has been observed with this apprehensive mood. This fear has to be understood under the idea that the organism cannot support sudden changes, his circulation is too lazy to move suddenly and rescue the patient from a sudden shock. This lack of adequate ability to react can also be seen in some other symptoms: he feels unhappy with every little pain; weepy, everything appeared horrible to him, he was as if desperate. Nevertheless, Carbo vegetabilis is a remedy that you will need most frequently with physical complaints. In my experience, it is rather rare to encounter a Carbo vegetabilis patient who is seriously mentally ill.
The Carbo Vegetabilis Child
An excellent description by Dr. Gounard of a Carbo vegetabilis case in a child (mentioned in ‘A Study on Materia Medica’ by N. M.