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Essence of Materia Medica – page 89

ferent to being liked by men any more—something cold and hard about her.
You must go slowly with them, because they get irritable and insult you. If you ask about emotional things, the patient may start to cry—she tries immediately to compose herself. She will be withdrawn immediately, reserved. If she can’t control, it comes out as a hysterical crying, when she regains control she will appear as if nothing has happened. Feels crying is the worst thing to do. Will go somewhere to cry alone. Hysterical sobbing and crying. Similar in reserved, introverted respects to Nat. mur. who will overcome her shocks easier. Ignatia will defend herself more from contact. Sudden shock that produces a state when they remain speechless, no way to talk out or cry. This is seen when there is a death in the family, or the severance of a relationship. Ignatia is not an emotionally stable person. Changing of moods very frequently. Can sacrifice herself for her parents. She flies into anger on contrary opinion of them. (When death occurs, she remains speechless because of the guilt). Gets hurt easily in a relationship. As a result, she gets nasty, then gentle, then nasty, so the man gets tired of her. She then becomes overwhelmed by emotion, if an unpredictable element is in her nature; change-ableness. In her grief, she will say unjust things, accuse unjustly, becuase she is under stress.
Physically an emptiness in the stomach, not better by eating. More of a cramp of the solar nerve than the stomach. Affects the vagus nerve on breathing. She wants to breathe deeply; sighing. Either the stomach cramps or the sighing. She wants to eat, but the pain is not relieved. Perfers to be inside and in a dark room. Good food feels heavy in her stomach. Heavy foods have the opposite effect, are better tolerated, worse by fruits; they make her feel heavy. (Aversion to fruits with aversion to eggs—think of Phos.). Cramp can go from peripheral nervous system to deeper and deeper levels. Obstruction of the elctrical flow of the nervous system. Children develop choera-like symptoms, because of the remarks of their school teachers. (That is enough to bring on chorea in an Ignatia patient). Not a natural hysteria. (Hysteria —punishment of self and others, once the desire and the ability to reach out are frustrated. Moschas, Valerian, Lil. tig,) I^.^tia is not such a deep pathology. Cramps; pains or numbness, trom one point downwards. Cough has element of hysteria, seems to