Books

Essence of Materia Medica – page 194

although the onset of the violent stage may be fairly sudden, there are discernible stages prior to it. Their recognition is very useful in deciding on the prescription.
The original cause of the Stramonium insanity is a sudden shock. There may be a sever fright, an emotional shock, a head injury, or a fever affecting the brain (if the latter, it is quite likel" that there will be spasms or convulsions at even a relatively low level of fever). The emergence of the unconscious then begins to show its appearance by symptoms such as extreme fear of the dark— they need the light on all night. There may be unusual fears such as a fear of cemeteries, (Stramonium is commonly found growing in cemeteries), a fear of tunnels or closed places, fear of even viewing a large body of water, fear of dogs. Particular symptoms may be triggered at night in the dark—there is a definite aggra-vation from darkness—or upon viewing the surface of a body of water. In the books it is said that Stramonium is aggravated by glittering objects such as shining metal, mirrors, fires; from experience, however, this is more commonly seen in relation to the surface of a body of water. Symbolically, such symptoms rep-resent early signs of the eruption of the unconscious, barely con-trolled. Next, there may be spasms in various parts of the body— the eyes, the neck, the limbs.
The culminating stage is a full-blown eruption of the unconscious into violent insanity. You may get a telephone call from a rel¬ative that the patient has suddenly begun smashing windows and furniture and threatening to kill family members. This is the type of patient who would need immediate hospitalisation, restraints, and sedatives in the orthodox approach. When you see the patient, he is aggressive and out of control, or he sits in a chair with a rigid posture and a wild look in his eyes, anxious wrinkles on the forehead, about to jump up and run out of the house at any moment.
On questioning, you discover that he has been urgently insisting that the light be left on at night, and anxiously desiring company at all times. Perhaps he has been staying awake at night weeping, then laughing immoderately during daytime hours.
If left untreated, such a case would inevitably be institutionalized and restrained. With time, the mental state may degenerate into a convulsive disorder, or the common syndromes of organic