unable to hide it). They do not require consolation, and they tend to keep their problems to themselves.
Irritability and Anger
In our materia medica the Belladonna pathology is presented in such a manner as to make you think that unless somebody is totally psychotic, convulsed or in a delirium you cannot prescribe this remedy. My experience with the chronic patients of Belladonna, with those I call the constitutional type, is quite different. I have seen a lot of Belladonna cases that had no mental pathology at all. As stated, the pathology in constitutional Belladonna is generally confined to the physical plane. But, of course, when the patients’ defenses are extensively harassed, there can be deterioration to deeper levels and then we see a sudden appearance of mental pathology.
We do not see a progressive psychopathological state. The mental- emotional pathology that does finally appear in Belladonna can be seen as an accentuation of the described personality type. The same ‘intensity’ that characterizes the Belladonna physical pathology applies to the mental-emotional pathology; they both come on like a storm.
Irritability, anger, and finally violent impulses and violent mania can be witnessed. Irritability is the one symptom, which is consistently present even in the early stages of pathology. One very often finds a history of impatience and sudden flares of temper. These patients may literally explode with anger. There are paroxysms of anger and shouting, and a patient may say that when he is angry, “The whole building hears me shout!”. The anger is such that it can bring about coughing while the face becomes extremely red. The patient becomes angry even at his own mistakes and then wants to break things. Sometimes the anger alternates with weeping in a state beyond his control.