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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1798

appeared, he took it onto his lap. She disappeared at once, and went to hide in another room, where she sat trembling with fear.
That is the kind of fear we talk about when we say fear of dogs. This example portrays the intensity of this feeling as well as the introversion of China.
The fear of animals may also relate, for instance, to chickens, to cats, to cows, to sheep, to horses, to any animal; but these are all comparatively big animals. The fear of insects, as found in Calcarea and Natrum muriaticum and Phosphorus, is not known in China, and when Kent mentions a fear of ‘creeping things,’ this applies to animals like snakes, not to insects.
‘Anxious restlessness through the whole body.’ ‘Indescribable anxiety in pit of stomach, with perceptible and visible pulsation there.’ The anxiety may become extremely violent, bringing on a tendency to suicide: ‘Inconsolable anxiety, even to suicide.’ ‘Intolerable anxiety… jumps out of bed and wants to commit suicide, yet is afraid to go to the open window or to approach the knife’.
Insomnia and Exhaustion
The hyperstimulation of the nervous system will lead to a general lack of sleep, China patients usually do not sleep well. ‘Uneasy sleep at night, with dreams that cause anxiety and starting up, on waking from which he cannot collect his senses, or about which he continues to be anxious, is very characteristic of Cinchona’ (Hahnemann).
The insomnia aggravates their exhaustion, and the characteristic China exhaustion is again connected with growing irritability. They are caught in a vicious circle, their condition is slowly breaking down. When they do manage to sleep, they are prone to snoring, and their sleep is full of vivid dreams. Their imagination is so