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Essence of Materia Medica – page 140

of this patient. It is an internal sensitivity. Everything bothers him, nothing satisfies him. Noise can bother such a patient, but it is not only noise, even little disturbances which he has in the physical body become great annoyances. In this way, the internal sensitivity is seen to be more of a chronic state of dissatisfication and unhappiness. Cap this with irritability, and we have the pic¬ture of Nitric acid.
They are always complaining. Some may complain openly to other people, whereas many turn their complaints inward. These latter people develop a kind of UNFORGIVENESS. It is very charac-teristic of Nitric acid that he cannot forget a wrong done to him. If the wrong-doer says,"I am sorry. I was wrong. It was in a moment of irritablity that I told you those things." The Nitric acid patient will say,"Yes, yes, it is alright, I do not care." But inside he will never forgive him. This is a symptoms that we can find even in the first stages, in which the pathology is in the physical body.
We see then an individual who lias been disappointed by the world and who has no courage to continue fighting. He lives as if he is just drifiting with the flow, feeling that nothing matters. This is a state of apathy and indifference . It is in this way that the original weakness spreads throughout the three levels, finally reaching a state of great isolation. His feelings become bland. He develops a philosophy to excuse this state. He becomes a nihilist, not believing in anything. He seems to have no force to start something new, no initiative for anything. He has lost hope and urge to do things.
To summarise the psychology of the Nitric acid person; such a person is irritable. He is sensitive both inside and outside: inside because of his own thoughts, and outside because of every little injury he thinks people do to him, noises, or other disturbances. He is unahappy, unsatisfied, unforgiving. He is so engrossed in his own misery and dissatisfiaction that he cannot see anything outside himself.
Within the first stages of pathology, there are mainly physical complaints and weakness, but on occasion the patient may exper-ience strongly a fear of death. As the pathology progresses, we see that development of a tremendous anxiety about health. Even more commonly, however, is the anxiety about health that occurs