easily put out about trifles’. Where these symptoms dominate there may be a rather contradictory attitude toward human company, as is manifested in this proving symptom: ‘Shuns people and their approach, and at the same time dread to be alone’.
In the context of the menses, there are also states of sensitivity, tearfulness and restlessness. ‘Before the menses, aching in all limbs, with tearful mood, restlessness and anxious worry about trifles’. Or: ‘She is easily moved by trifles, moved to tears’.
In the Chronic Diseases, we even find a veritable weeping fit which later transforms into vertigo and weakness: ‘Paroxysm: alone at home, she feels an inclination to weep; after yielding to it, the weeping changes to a loud sobbing; afterwards flicker¬ing before the eyes and indistinct vision, so that she had to hold on to something when walking; afterwards weariness in all limbs and a dull headache’.
A number of mental symptoms corresponds with the stage of indifference, apathy, emotional paralysis and petrefaction: Very ill-humoured, every afternoon, from 3 pm to 6 pm, as though a great guilt weighed upon him, with paralysed feeling in all the limbs, indifference, and taking no interest in anything’. ‘Morose mood; everything about him makes an unpleasant impression upon him’. ‘Disinclination for work’. ‘No pleasant feelings whatsoever’.
Conium has successfully been used in depressive states, and it is easy to see that the depressive element prevails in the remedy. There is on record a cured case of a woman who fell into a ‘very unhappy mood’ every 14 days. She had no desire to dress, to eat anything, to talk or to see her children.
The periodic recurrence of this unhappy state may be a hint that Conium could also be indicated in cyclic manic-depressive states.