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Essence of Materia Medica – page 193

STRAMONIUM (stram.)
As described by Kent, the first thing which impressed one about Stramonium is the violence of the mental state. It is a very active, agitated, driven state. The person is out of control, destructive, even malicious in behaviour. It is destructiveness of all kinds— against other persons or oneself, striking, biting, tearing, shriek-ing, cursing—but most expecially, smashing things. Such a state may erupt rather suddenly, then subside after a while, but the person is not free of it. Typically, it is a chronic mania, or relaps-ing frequently over a period of time, rather than just a simple paroxysm of rage.
The primary process in the Stramonium state is an uncontrolled eruption of the unconscious, leading to violent, aggressive behav-iour. In the normal sane person, the contents of the unconscious— evolutionary, the animal instinctual level—are kept under tight control by the higher cerebral functions, the conscience, societal and cultural influences, and moral and religious values. When a person becomes insane, almost by definition these controls are loosened, or distorted, so that behaviour deviates from the norm. In the Stramonium state, the unconscious instincts erupt with awesome suddenness and violence and there appears to be no chance for the normal mechanisms to establish any degree of con-trol.
This type of insanity is seen in the most extreme cases. It might be indicated in a mass killer who suddenly begins killing many people indiscriminately; of course, one would never prescribe SOLELY on such an indication (another possible remedy might be Nux vomica for example) but Stramonium would have to be at least THOUGHT of in such a case. One would think of Stra-monium in the type of mental patient in whom there is no choice except forcible restraint in a padded cell.
One limitation of the Repertory is that it does not indicate the STAGES of development of symptoms. Thus, while many reme-dies are listed in the rubric Violent, one has no way to discover at what stage the violence becomes evident. In Stramonium