worth. I have noticed that people with inferiority complexes at one time or another study psychology books trying to find solutions. With the Baryta carbonica patients I have never encountered this inclination in spite of the fact that their inferiority complexes are almost the worst in the whole materia medica, short perhaps of Anacardium.
This lack of confidence is manifested repeatedly in various other traits as well. For example, Baryta carbonica patients may develop an extreme preoccupation with their appearance. They fear that they are not good looking, and they will dwell on the ‘bad’ quality of their face, or the shape of the eyebrows which are not what they should be, there is excess fat in their belly, their nates are too obese etc. They become very attached to their bodies and their appearances; they may become completely preoccupied by some aspect of their body such as their characteristically small testicles or an obese part in their gluteal region.
It is also true that the Baryta carbonica woman will indeed have a tendency to excess fat on and around the abdomen and gluteal region. It is characteristic for them also to be repulsed by what they may see as disharmonious appearance in the body of others. They seem not to be able to perceive the deeper aspects of the human being and the appearance becomes all important.
This lack of self-confidence may be very evident also in family relationships. The Baryta carbonica patient often feels that brothers or sisters are superior to him. He feels overwhelmed by the other family members even if he is better educated or has more impressive credentials. He feels he is not strong enough to resist. He constantly observes how the parents treat their brothers or sisters and will always reach the conclusion that they are treated with much more sympathy and appreciation than themselves. For instance, a woman may not like to have her sister at home when entertaining people because she feels the sister is overshadowing her.