and ‘Periodic standstill of thinking’ are symptoms that may now come on. ‘Anxious and restless, with great prostration of the mental capacities.’
Then they become indifferent, the emotions are exhausted. If that state goes further they begin to feel that nobody wants to touch them, to connect with them deeply. This suspicion can lead in turn to a sense that others harbour animosity against them, and if the pathology progresses further, to fixed paranoid ideation; character¬istically the delusion that they are being pursued by enemies. Hahnemann mentions this symptom: ‘Discontent; he considers himself unhappy, and thinks he is hindered and tormented by every one.’ China is one of the main remedies for such delusions.
Their inability to establish deeply intimate and revealing relation¬ships undermines their ability to trust others. Their lack of trust and communication can make the world seem a cold, inimical place. Then, if sufficiently disturbed, they come to believe that they are pursued by enemies; they feel that someone is lurking behind them all the time.
A strong periodicity in mental disease may point to China. Some proving symptoms illustrating the depressive and paranoid tendencies of China are: ‘What usually appears to him bright and joyous seems now unattractive, unworthy and shallow.’ ‘Low- spirited, depressed, gloomy, hopeless mood.’ ‘Gloomy, has no desire to live, finds no pleasure in life’: ‘Delirium after depletion; on closing eyes, sees persons.’
Important Physical Pathology
The abdominal organ that is most frequently affected in China patients is the gall-bladder. There is cholecystitis, often formation of sand or sludge in the gall-bladder, but also of really big stones, with the consequence of colic. Sand goes out from time to