answer’. ‘Very vexed and irritable mood; taciturnity’. And, very characteristic: ‘Extreme fretfulness; is not satisfied with anything; extremely impatient; angered because of every word he Is urged to answer, and very embarrassed by it; annoyed by anything, even the most innocent things’.
This gives the idea of an angry person who conveys the impression, “Oh, leave me alone!”. In people who have gone through some bad experiences and who do not express all the anger they feel inside, then terrible spasmodic pain starts in the abdomen.
Hahnemann says in the Chronic Diseases that Colocynthis is particu-larly useful in ‘ailments from indignation and anger, or from a gnawing internal feeling of mortification about an unworthy treatment, either of themselves or of other persons with whom they feel sympathy’. Some ailments enumerated by Hahnemann are cramps of the bowel, spasmodic colic pains, bilious colic etc. ‘Violent colic, especially after vexation’.
Colocynthis may be compared with Staphisagria. But there is a distinction: when ailments appear after the patient has kept anger inside, it is more likely to be Colocynthis, if humiliation has been kept inside, when the main idea is ‘I have been humiliated’, then it is Staph. And the sensitivity to injustice, and intolerance of injustice is a quality that the Colocynthis patient has in common with Causticum. Caust. patients, however, do not keep their anger inside, but they tend to be rebellious and fanatical.
Sometimes Causticum, Staphisagria and Colocynthis are indic¬ated in one case; these three remedies are indicated in a rotation, that means that the symptoms change in such a way that you start with one of these remedies, and the others follow in rotation. They complement each other. Sometimes in very serious conditions, where the organism is really undermined, then there is a peculiar phenomenon when you give a series of remedies and then you start