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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1949

Anxiety About Others
The anxiety of Cocculus is, in the first place, an anxiety about others and, more especially, about the health of others. This anxiety will often be present when these patients nurse their relatives and loved ones, and it is one of the factors that make Cocculus ill.
But there is also an anxiety about their own health. The proving says, ‘Anxiety concerning the incurability of a slight complaint in the morning’, but also, and more important, ‘Little concerned as to his own health, he is very anxious about others’ sickness’. This symptom may be connected with an inability to cry, to express the grief and compassion that is felt.
This anxiety about others may look like this: a friend of a Cocculus patient is in the hospital, and Cocculus will stay with him all night, without sleeping a single moment. His anxiety that the friend could die is such that he is unable to relax, even for a minute. He seems to feel no fatigue because he is so totally absorbed by his anxiety about others and their health. In some respects, this resembles Phosphorus, but in Cocculus the anxiety is restricted to those he loves.
Weakness Amounting to Paralysis
As said before, the nervous system is weakened and slowed down by Cocculus. This process may go on until there is real paralysis in mind and body. Often it is first felt in the region of the head and neck; the head falls down.
‘Weakness of the muscles of the neck with heaviness of the head. The muscles seemed to be unable to hold the head; he had to lean it against this or that support to prevent the neck muscles from aching; leaning backward ameliorated best’. Also: ‘She is so weak that she has to sit down during a