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Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 846

may not need the desire for sexual intercourse. She seems to need little stimulation.
Often one may find a sort of narrow-minded morality in Baryta carbonica. She can become very upset by any ‘bad’ comment or even a subtle reference to her sexual conduct. A Baryta carbonica woman cannot have an extra-marital love affair because if she is recognised with her lover by someone, she will become overwhelmed by the thought that she was discovered, and not because of the larger moral issues such as “Why did I accept the marriage in the first place?” or “Was this marriage right for me?” or “Why did I start another affair?”. She will not be the type of person who says, “If this man is right for me I will divorce my husband and change my life.”. She is preoccupied with a superficial morality instead.
Finally, as a consequence of the continual suppression suffered in the course of the relationship, her mind breaks down. She was previously well-compensated, but now she becomes very childish, her faculties dwindle. She says silly, childish things, things she should know better than to say. For example, she may see a cockerel and childishly ask, “Oh, can he also lay eggs?”
This emotional and mental behaviour is connected to the fact that the genitalia have not developed fully. The uterus is small and looks like a child’s, and the menses start late and are easily suppressed. There is a hypotonic function in this area that is characteristic for this remedy. The Baryta carbonica woman will not be fit to bear a child, not only because of the small uterus but because she actually perceives that she cannot go through with a pregnancy and refuses to undertake the responsibility of having a child. As mentioned earlier, she feels that she is a child herself and does not want to grow up; for a child, the thought of rearing another child is unbearable. Such is the physio-psychic state of a Baryta patient.