simple task that she used to do while standing’. ‘Much tremor, especially of head; unable to raise it and to hold it’.
The Cocculus paralysis is a painless kind of paralysis. It may be accompanied by general stiffness. The process runs very slowly and insidiously, and finally may become general. Then the condition may arrive at a point which looks like multiple sclerosis; it is a degeneration of the nervous system, developing and aggravating over years, and often vertigo and a dizzy feeling in head will be present with this paralytic state. If such a condition develops after a long period of insomnia, this is a strong pointer to Cocculus.
Profound Sadness
There is a tendency to profound sadness in Cocculus, which may be triggered by mortification, grief or loss of sleep. ‘He is absorbed in the saddest thoughts, and affronts are sitting deep in his heart’. ‘Always sad thoughts, as though he had suffered insults’.
Then the patient tends to sit, introverted and reserved, he retires from reality and his thoughts always dwell on one sad and melan¬cholic subject. ‘Thoughts directed to one unpleasant object; she is absorbed in herself and notices nothing around her. She sits in deep thought’.
Hahnemann writes that spasms and cramps in women may also trigger such a kind of profound sadness. It may be connected with pangs of conscience as if one had committed a wicked deed, and with a desire to escape. In melancholy states there is a great dissatisfaction with himself; the patient does not do anything, does not want anything. ‘He has no desire and takes pleasure in nothing’. ‘No desire to work’.