Books

Essence of Materia Medica – page 179

SILICA (sil.)
The key idea describing Silica patients is that they are YIELD-ING. It is a kind of shyness or timidity, but not really a cow¬ardice (like Lycopodium or Gelsemium). It is a submissiveness that arises out of a lack of energy to insist upon his or her point of view, even though it may be strongly heldTThey are quite agree-able and mild, easy to get along with.
Silica patients are intellectuals, but not aggressive or critical like Lachesis. They have highly refined sensibilities, and they are very intelligent. If you try to impose an opinion upon a Silica person, she will not oppose you. She is sensitive to impressions and there-fore takes into account your point of view. She understands very well where you are right and where you are wrong but she holds her opinions to herself. Unlike Pulsatilla, she has an opinion of her own, but she does not want to go to the trouble to impress it upon the world.
Thus, Silica appears mild and reserved—but not at all like Staph-ysagria, Ignatia, or Natrum mur. It is not an isolation. They are capable of freely talking about themselves when circumstances permit, and they make friends easily. They would never become dependent or demanding of the presenter’s time. For example, suppose you have been treating such a patient for some time without effect. The Silica patient will never challenge you or become impatient. She will not become dependent, like Arsen-icum or Phosphorus. Silica does have the mildness of Phosphorus, but not the extroversion or dependency.
Silica patients are tired. They lack stamina, especially concerning mental work. Therefore, they learn to conserve their energies. They apply themselves to essentials, and they don’t agrue about irrelevancies—or merely in order to assert their ego.
Silica patients are very delicate, refined and aesthetic, even aris-tocratic. Consider for a moment what the term "refined" means; when something is refined, the coarse elements are removed from it. This is the case with Silica patients. They are thin, pale, deli-cate, and highly refined. They are intelligent and perceptive, but