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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1951

Anxiety and Fright
The anxiety of Cocculus is intense but often not very definite or clear. A fear of ‘unknown dangers’ is listed in the materia medica. The sudden excessive anxiety may be connected with pangs of conscience, with a feeling as of having committed a great crime or having done some evil. A description from Hahnemann:
‘Wanted to sleep because he felt a strong inclination to do so, but on closing the eyes he immediately had to rise again because the sensation he felt in that moment in his brain had been so excessively dreadful, similar to the most frightening dreams he ever had’. Small wonder, then, that there is insomnia from excessive anxiety.
The fear of surprises which is so strong in Cocculus is connected with a tendency to be easily frightened or startled. A slight noise will cause a great fright, and a thrill will be felt in all the limbs. ‘Frequent waking from sleep, as from fright’.
Restlessness
A kind of ‘busy restlessness’ is prominent in Cocculus, and it is particularly a ‘restlessness with the pains’. ‘Colic about midnight, he awakes and flatulence is continuously produced for hours; has to turn from one side to the other and back to relieve the pains ’. In other cases the patients have to walk the floor, or occupy themselves with some similar activity. Restlessness is especially strong in dysmenorrhoea.
The restlessness is often one reason for the loss of sleep in Cocculus. ‘Many thoughts of the business of the day prevented sleep for an hour, and wide awake about 1 o’clock, without being able to fall asleep again’.