Books

Essence of Materia Medica – page 188

but the key distinction in Staphysagria is that there is no bitter-ness. The passive suppression of emotions is then the trigger for the pathological picture of Staphysagria. Although she remains sweet in her sense of powerlessness there is a deep weakening of the healing process internally, A kind of hardening or INDU-RATION develops on the mental plane. The emotional wound never quite heals, and the patient’s innate sensitivity increases to an even greater degree. She feels even more vulnerable, less assertive, and consequently suppresses her emotions even more than previously.
The process of induration as a result of suppression is partic¬ularly visible on the physical plane. Wounds do not heal easily. It is not that they fester or become "bitter", to carry further the analogy from the emotional plane. Instead, the damaged tissues become hardened and indurated. There is the development of hard, dead tumours, or chronic indurations of various kinds. This is particularly true in relation to sexual organs (ovaries, uterus, testes)—as one might expect considering the romantic/sexual arousal and sensitivity in the Staphysagria patient. A good exam-ple of this process is found in the evolution of styes. In Staph-ysagria, styes not only come and go as in other people, but they leave small hardened spots of induration which do not go away with time.
Staphysagria is one of several remedies which are characterised by ailments from grief. Again, in Staphysagria there is a kind of "sweetness" in the face of grief. By contrast, Ignatia and Natrum mur. patients who have experienced many griefs become bitter; it is as if there is a thorn inside, and they become hard to reach. If you probe deeply in such patients’, you see a bitterness, a harsh-ness, which is prickly like a thorn. In Staphysagria, on the other hand, your probings encounter a kind of sweet resignation.
A key aspect of the Staphysagria ailments from grief is that they are always in regard to romantic relationships. The long term suf-fering they experience rarely arises out of such griefs as profes-sional setbacks, financial reversals, or even deaths in the family. They are nice people, and they get along well with people; if there is an occupational reversal, they recover easily and move on. By contrast, Aurum patients collapse totally after a business failure; hey suffer a loss and shoot themselves or jump from a high build-