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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 37

However, as the following excerpts (from the monograph In- fluenzas, by Douglas M. Borland) demonstrate, there are many types of influenzas, each requiring different remedies. Herein we will consider only a handful of the many which could be present- ed – just a sample to provide you with a concept of the individual- izing detail which leads to the correct prescription. (Note that in homeopathy, the condition and the remedy take the same name).

Gelsemium Sempervirens (Yellow Jasmine)
Gelsemium is somewhat slow in onset, and produces primari- ly a feeling of intense weariness. The patients are very dull and tired, look heavy, and are heavy-eyed and sleepy; not wanting to be disturbed but to be left in peace, and yet – the first outstand- ing symptom – if they have been excited at all, they spend an en- tirely sleepless night, in spite of their apparently dull, toxic state.
The patient is definitely congested, the face slightly flushed – rath- er a dull kind of flush – the eyes a little congested, the lips a little dusky; the skin generally is also a little dusky, and the surface is definitely moist – hot and sticky. Another Gelsemium symptom is that with the hot, sticky sensation, the patients have a very unsta- ble heat reaction. They feel hot and sticky, and yet have the sen- sation of little shivers of cold up and down their backs – not ac- tual shivering attacks but small trickles of cold, just as if some- body ran a cold hand, or spilt a little cold water, down their back.
With their general torpor, Gelsemium influenza patients always have a certain amount of tremulousness, their hands become un- steady much more quickly than you would expect from the se- verity of their illness; they are definitely shaky when they lift a cup to try and drink. Frequently linked with the shakiness is a feeling of instability, and very often a sensation of falling. Par- ticularly when they are half asleep, they wake with a sudden jerk and feel as if they have fallen out of bed.
As one would expect with anyone in this toxic state, the Gelsem- ium patient does not want to make any great effort at all; dis- comforts of every kind are aggravated by moving. With their un- stable circulation, they are definitely sensitive to cold draughts, which make them shiver.