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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 94

Interviewer: ‘Can you tell me how you feel?’
Patient: ‘Umm… ahh… hmm… I… I don’t feel well’
Interviewer: ‘Are you feeling anxious?’
Patient: ‘… umm… I think… wnm… yes.’
(One may wonder from such a response whether the answer is affirmative or not.)
Interviewer: ‘Are you afraid? You feel afraid?’
Patient: ‘Ahh.,. afraid? Umm… umm… I think so… I feel… umm… I don’t feel well.’
(and so on).
Meanwhile, looking at the patient’s face one may observe a deep struggle and a sense of agony. He struggles to find words to de- scribe himself, or even more precisely, he struggles to compre- hend what has happened to him. He rubs his forehead, straining to answer even the simplest question (as if his mind were consti- pated). Even this struggle, though, is not vividly expressed. Rath- er it seems like the effort one makes in trying to wake up from an anxious dream – a nebulous, inscrutable type of struggle.
At this point one must mention that the imagination of Alumi- na seems extremely restricted, and therefore he has difficul- ty in making decisions, perceiving things in their real dimen- sion, and comprehending abstract or complicated ideas. He sits there silently trying hard to comprehend what everyone is talk- ing about, wearing an expression, to the observing eye, of con- stant bewilderment. His associative capacities are minimized or lost; his judgment crippled.
Because of this mental slowness the Alumina patient seems to need a slow, consistent lifestyle. He cannot tolerate pressure, especially time pressure. If allowed to work at a slow, famil- iar pace, the Alumina patient can be a diligent, competent work- er, but he must do things at his own pace and according to an es- tablished routine.
If such a person is rushed, for instance, by someone who hur- riedly says, “We have to leave here in fifteen minutes!” a great commotion will follow. He loses all sense of organization and