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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1930

thinking’. In this state even suicidal thoughts may occur, but there is no strong impulse to jump as exists in Aurum.
Clematis may also be similar to manic states with increased physical energy; they may lead to trance-like conditions where nothing seems to be perceived or felt any more, especially nothing that concerns the identity of the patient. After these conditions, again prostration will follow, with utter exhaustion of body and mind.
For instance: ‘Involuntary running about the streets with great lightness and unusual rapidity, without being able to find a place to rest in the room or in the open air. This condition lasted two hours, and during this time the prover ran upstairs three or four floors instead of two on several visits; then he fell into a mental state which he was not perfectly able to explain clearly: there seemed to be no feelings, no sensation of any part of the body, no willpower and no ability to think. Afterwards, prostration and soon painful fatigue of all parts of the body came on…’
The intellectual abilities are often markedly impaired in Clematis patients. In particular, the memory becomes ever weaker. ‘During the day a peculiar weakness of memory; it increased so much that it was almost impossible to write down the symptoms’ (proving report). The capacity to think may also be impaired, with ‘relaxation of the intellect’ and ‘disinclination to think’.
These symptoms may take a ‘wave-like’ course as well: first increased tension of the mental powers, then utter relaxation. ‘A peculiar increased excitability of the powers of thinking, which only lasted for half an hour and then was replaced by a morose mood with indisposition to do any mental work’.‘The increased power of thinking and inclination for mental work was followed by displeasure and relaxation of both body and mind’.