he is so dazed’ (Kent). The symptom in Hahnemann’s proving reads: ‘Time passes too quickly, and several hours seemed to him no longer than one hour’.
Cocculus may be a remedy in apathetic states where people lie down with closed eyes, without loss of consciousness; you can talk to them and ask questions, and they will answer correctly, but not before meditating for some time. Cocculus people need time to answer. They have to wait until they have succeeded in under¬standing the question, they need time to let it ‘sink in’.
In this context we find an inability to cope with surprises.‘He dreads everything which suddenly takes him by surprise’, as Hahnemann puts it in the proving. Cocculus people may be slow and vacillating in their actions, unable to finish any task. Even their speech is slow. ‘On speaking she experiences a kind of contrac¬tion of the mouth, and is obliged to speak slowly’.
Loss of Sleep
The slowness is usually the result of exhaustion. The nervous system becomes weak and tired because it has been overtaxed. There is a great sensitivity in Cocculus. It is loss of sleep that will bring about all the worst symptomatology of Cocculus that will remain as a chronic condition. Especially loss of sleep that comes from nursing sick relatives. ‘Slightest loss of sleep tells on him and makes him lose strength; he misses each hour of sleep’. In nursing, there is not only the lack of sleep that produces stress, there is also the anxiety and worry about the sickness.
A Cocculus state may develop in a woman who has been nursing a parent for weeks and months. And should he or she die, she may suffer from grief which will further drain her strength away. She will not be able to cry, to express her sorrow. In her sleep, though, she