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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 42

Baptisia patients always have intense aching pains all over. Any part they press is painful and tender; they also have acute pains in their joints, a feeling as if they were sprained or had been bruised; moving is very painful.

Bryonia Alba (Wild Hops)
The typical Bryonia influenza develops, like the Gelsemium case, over a period of six to twelve hours. And the appearance of Bryonia patients is not unlike that of Gelsemium patients. They give the impression of being rather dull, heavy, slightly congest- ed, with a rather puffy face.
Although they are definitely heavy looking, they do not have the sleepy appearance that you find in Gelsemium, nor yet the be- sotted look of the Baptisia patient – something between the two.
Mentally, as stated above, Gelsemium patients are dull, sleepy, heavy and do not want to be disturbed. Bryonia patients are al- so definitely dull and do not want to be disturbed – but if they are disturbed, they are irritable. Irritability is always cropping up in Bryonia patients. They do not want to speak, and do not want to be spoken to. They do not want to answer because speaking an- noys them, not because they are too tired to do so.
As, a rule, Bryonia influenzas are very depressed; they are de- spondent and not a little anxious as to what is happening to them; they feel they are ill and are worried about their condition.
To their worry about their impending illness, they add a very def- inite anxiety about their business. They talk about it; if they become more toxic, they are apt to dream about it, and it is an under- lying thought in the back of their minds throughout their illness.
It is also typical of Bryonia influenzas that the patients are diffi- cult to please. They are very liable to ask for something and re- fuse it when it comes. They want a drink, and when it comes, do not want it. Or, they may ask for a fruit juice and, when it comes, say they would much rather have had a drink of plain cold water
– they are very difficult to satisfy.
Typically, they have a good deal of generalized, aching pain. They will tell you that it hurts them to move, and yet, very of- ten, Bryonia patients are constantly on the move. They are rest-