RELATIONSHIPS
Remedies that follow well: Nitricum acidum, Aconitum, Belladonna, Calcarea
carbonica, China officinalis, Lycopodium, Mercury, Pulsatilla, Rhus toxicodendron, Sepia, Sulphur, Syphilinum.
ANTIDOTES
Antidoted by: Belladonna, China officinalis, Cocculus, Coffea, coffee, Cuprum metallicum, Mercury, Pulsatilla, Spigelia, Solanum nigrum.
Antidote to: Mercury, Spigelia, Chronic effects of alcohol, Kali iodatum.
DOSAGE
From 6x up to the highest potencies.
CASES
1. Mrs. W.L.L., whose family also has several cases of unsound mind; a sister is now committed to a hospital for the insane. This patient has been brilliant mentally but unstable morally and subject to fits of deep depression alternating suddenly with periods of high spirits and great activity. When depressed she could not do housework or care for her baby, was indifferent to everyone and everything.
I gave her Anacardium for the first few months with some improvement, but not much. As soon as I changed to Aurum she snapped right out of it, began to be a responsible housewife and mother and said she had not been depressed for ever so long [when it had been only 2 or 3 weeks]. Whether this will continue time will tell, but it surely is a prompt transformation, stable now for several months.
2. Mr. E. R., a man of large business ability associated with key people in India and New York. There are several cases of insanity in his family; a brother has been in institutions three times.
This patient was sure nothing he attempted would succeed; when it did succeed many times he was as unconvinced as ever. He was sure he was only a trouble to others, that he ought to resign his position, that his mind would not work, that there was no use in anything. He could not read, could not do anything with his hands, could only sit and stare into space. He longed to help in this war; he wanted to get a farm and raise produce, yet was convinced he could have no place in the world.
I deliberated some months before I gave this patient Aurum when presto, everything was changed. He rose up, resigned his position in Washington, although he kept