in car-sickness and so on. The patient sits in a car and cannot stand to look out of the window because the view he sees is in motion, he has to close his eyes. ‘On riding in a car, intense nausea and vomiting’. The same thing is true in the ‘rolling’ or rocking motion of a boat.
It seems as if the whole nervous system has come to a standstill, it transmits the impressions only in slow motion, and so vertigo, nausea or confusion of the head will come on. Cocculus people are unable to travel. They say, Ί cannot travel anymore by car, espe¬cially when I am sitting next to the driver and do not drive myself, because of the visual impressions that I pass with the car. I cannot absorb and accommodate them’.
The seasickness of Tabacum will be much stronger, the Tabacum patient immediately becomes white, develops a tremendous nausea and vomits. Cocculus will not vomit, there will only be this strong nausea pre-eminent. And in Cocculus it is not only this kind of motion that excites nausea and vertigo; the same thing may happen when getting up in the morning. ‘When rising in bed, whirling vertigo and nausea will ensue’.
All kinds of motion, especially motion of the eyes, will have such consequences. ‘Wants plenty of time to turn the head cautiously to see things’. (Kent). There may be a whirling vertigo where the patient might fall backwards, or simply a giddiness ‘as if drunk’.
All this slowness is a sure sign that in this remedy we will find a general tendency to paralysis, heaviness and sluggishness of the whole body. Painless paralysis is the most characteristic state.
The sense of time is also disturbed. ‘Time passes too rapidly’ is a guiding symptom of Cocculus. ‘He cannot realise it has been a whole night. A week has gone by, and it seems but a moment,