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Essence of Materia Medica – page 118

Emotionally, instead of remaining in the externalised, wild state, the energies turn inward and create a state of over-sensitivity, reservation, and timidity. This is a state in such stark contrast to the other extreme that it is sometimes difficult to believe that one is seeing the same patient.
On the physical level, the externalised phase of Medorrhinum is characterised by an extreme profusion of dischares from all mocous membranes—conjunctival, pharyngeal, urethral, vaginal. We do not have an immediately visible opposite extreme regard-ing discharges, the pathology manifests instead as easy suppres-sion of discharges into more deeply serious Ailments. Medorrhinum discharges, when suppressed by allopathic treatment, for exam¬ple, result in degeneration of deeper organs or further into the mental/emotional spheres.
As mentioned, the extremes of Medorrhinum pathology may man¬ifest fitfully within the same individual. It is also possible to see these extremes as the dominant states in entirely different indi¬viduals; one aggressive and effusive, another timid and reserved—and both may require Medorrhinum.
It is rare in our Materia Medica to find a remedy manifesting such great contrasts. A keypoint to remember in Medorrhinum, however, is that both extremes are extremes in a PATHOLOG-ICAL degree, is not a situation in which there are paroxysms of symptoms and then a return to relative normality. When the pen-dulum swings in Medorrhinum, it goes to the complete opposite extreme of pathology.
For example, you may see one patient who is very fond of ani-mals; if this is a Medorrhinum condition, the fondness will be carried to an extreme degree. The pet becomes the. central focus of the patient’s life, consuming incredible attention and energy, and perhaps even interfering with the patient’s occupation. Another Medorrhinum patient may be the exact opposite. He may display great cruelty towards animals; he ties up his dog and beats it savagely over a minor annoyance. This is a true cruelty; while in this state the patient actually enjoys inflicting pain on animals. Later, however, the pendulum swings back again, and the patient goes into a state of excessive remorse. (Aversion to cats, can’t stand cats, have a real fear of cats. There is an under¬lying tubercular miasm.)