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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1896

In a way, Cina children look like Calcarea phosphorica, with their dissatisfaction as a leading mental feature. But the dissatisfac¬tion is even stronger than in Calc, phos; it amounts to a degree that we know from Chamomilla. The patient, whether a child or an adult, becomes very capricious. He does not know what he wants, does not like to be touched, does not like to be approached.
You go to a Cina child who wants something and cries for it, and you ask, ‘Do you want this?’. If you give it to him, he whimpers and cries again and pushes the object away. This is the kind of capri¬ciousness of the Cina child: ‘Give me this, then give me that, then the other’, but nothing satisfies them. They desire many things but reject everything offered.
The underlying feature is a great uneasiness inside, but the patient does not know what to do about it, does not know at all what he wants. It simply seems as if everything is wrong inside. This unease manifests in many behavioural symp¬toms, but also on the physical plane.
The Physical State
There is much itching, especially at the nose, with constant digging and boring in the nose. You often see patients who have bored or picked the nose until blood comes. Children rub their noses against the pillow or their fingers against their noses. The rectum also itches.
We also see grinding of teeth during sleep, which is a symptom that points to irritation of the meninges, and an aggression in general. There is much disturbance during sleep, with weeping, shouting, and screaming, often without waking. But all this is also present during the day; much aggression with striking others, screaming, and then weeping again.