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Essence of Materia Medica – page 11

The Arg. nit. patient becomes temporarily obsessed with such irrational thoughts which possess him for a time and then vanish. A body jerk or sudden movement seems to coincide with the ‘ moment the idea leaves.
For example, a man looking from his window sees a child play-ing in the street. He notices a car which passes the child quite safely. He then starts thinking about what MIGHT have hap-pened had the child been playing in a different part of the street" when the car came. He invents a whole horrible scene in his mind and is so carried away by it that he starts down the stairs to the -street. As he descends, the idea hits him that he is about to slip and fall. He becomes so overwhelmed by this idea that he is sure it will happen. At this moment, he makes a slightly unusual movement, possibly a jerking motion, and the idea leaves him. He is sane enough to realise that he is constantly tormented by these silly ideas but powerless to stop them.
In Arg. nit. we also find a fear of heights, or a fear of high buil-dings. The idea behind these two fears is similar : either he will fall from a height, or a building will fall on him as he crosses a street.
For example, a student who has become overtired from too much study sits at his desk and his mind wanders away from his sub-ject. He glances at an electric socket and suddenly wonders : "I wonder what would happen if I put a wire into that socket?" He gets up and finds a wire and starts toward the socket. He comes back to himself with a jerk just as he is about to insert the wire into the socket.
Another patient during an illness becomes absolutely certain that in three hours when the clock strikes a certain hour he will die. He watches the clock in agony. Kent, in the Repertory, under the rubric "Predicts the time of death", lists Aconite, Arg.nit. Agnus castus also should be included. In each of these remedies the idea is quite different. With Aconite," there is a tremendous, over-whelming fear of death which makes him think he is going to die. With Arg. nit. it is a question of a "fixed idea" that he is going to die at a certain hour.
The Arg..nit.person realises that he is weak mentally. He can easily make a fool of himself in public. In a social situation, an over-whelming fear and anxiety may overtake him. He asks himself,