Books

The Celle Seminars_Page 478

George Vithoulkas

Depending on the person, these jealousy scenes may take place once a day or every two or three days.
Because Lachesis patients are so passionate, they imagine that everyone must feel like they do. They do not realize that there may be Natrum muriaticums, Sepias, Causticums, in short, people who correspond to all kinds of other remedies. For Lachesis everybody is Lachesis. Usually if they suppress themselves, they may end a love affair very abruptly because they cannot tolerate the pain. And unless Lachesis patients are involved emotionally, they cannot start another affair; they can remain celibate after that. During these celibate periods, Lachesis becomes tremendously loquacious. This serves to replace the missing contact. Or they may develop Lachesis pathology: high blood pressure, heart problems, headaches; they become extremely vulnerable, easily offended. When this happens you will see another person. Lachesis is described by Kent, and I have also seen it quite frequently, as a passionate person with thick lips. Kent describes Lachesis as having very fleshy, very thick lips, which also make articulation a bit difficult. This is not to say that all Lachesis patients will have thick lips, but you may run across it frequently.
I remember one of my first cases, in 1959 or 1960, of severe insanity in a young man, twenty-one or twenty-two. Virtually his entire family—both parents and two of his three brothers—were in an insane asylum. The patient and one of his brothers were the only ones not interned. A friend of mine, because he knew that I was studying homeopathy and that I had dealt with such cases, said to me, »The boy is completely gone, his mind is completely shot.« The patient was nevertheless a friend of his, so I agreed to see him. I didn’t really know what insanity was until I met this young man for the first time. He came in, sat there awhile, and then he started talking. I didn’t have to ask him a single question; he just went on talking and talking. And then I became afraid, and I thought to myself, »Oh God! What’s this in front of me?!« He was talking about having committed all kinds of sins. I asked him what he had done, whether he had killed anyone, and he said, »I killed the dog!« And tl en I asked a few more questions.

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