Excitability and restlessness are aggravated by heat, and in a room kept hot at night sleep is difficult. You may also find restlessness with ebullitions, especially after talking. On going to bed the patient starts getting excited, and if the room is heated, or he feels heat in the head he becomes so restless that he cannot sleep. The main hours of sleeplessness are after midnight. The patient usually finds that he cannot sleep from 1-4 a.m., from 2-5 a.m. or after 4 a.m. Sleepless¬ness from heat may last all night.
You will consider this remedy after having prescribed the different Natrums, like Nat-m., Nat-s., Nat-p., or Phos. Borax is not a social being like Phosphorus. He is a serious individual who does not enjoy talking or joking. He is taciturn, timid and indisposed to talk, and in this respect resembles Nat-m. He exhibits dullness in the morning, and excitement in the evening in bed. In general there is amelioration from walking in open air, and aggravation from mental exertion.
On being obliged to concentrate on some serious business the Borax patient becomes irritable, fretful, discontented and morose. He may want to leave or not go to an appointment, particularly if the business is to take place in the afternoon at around 4 p.m. He suffers from irritability after eating. The general bad mood that prevails often makes him quarrelsome, vehement and even violent and abusive. Violence, scolding and swearing take over with small cause, sometimes turning to malice. There may be a disposition to be critical of others and to slander. The mood may turn to weeping, particularly before coughing, before urination and during stool.
As the pathology progresses, Borax patients suffer from weakness of memory and delusions. In general the Borax memory is in a bad condition. You will find vanishing of thoughts; a patient will be obliged to reflect long and hard before being able to remember what he has done through the day, being uncertain for a long time whether