awake the whole night. This latter sign may also be seen in women together with a nymphomaniac tendency.
This state can go on for years and will never reach the picture described by Kent, unless they are the type of human beings who pursue sexual pleasures and thinks of nothing else. You won’t often encounter the late stage of Caladium in our day, though you may meet some cases over years of practice.
In this excitement stage, the Caladium person has a constant underlying feeling of being hurried, mingled with anxiety. It is particularly exacerbated when he feels excited. Everything has to be done in a hurry, but he has no energy to do so, or perhaps his lack of energy is the reason he feels he must quickly finish everything he undertakes.
Lack of Enthusiasm
Eventually, the over-excitability stage passes and a state develops that can best be described as a lack of enthusiasm. It resembles indifference or sadness, but this is not really an accurate description, as the person can still be stimulated — mentally, emotionally, or sexually — and then again reacts in an over-excitable manner. The problem is, however, that nothing excites these people that easily any more. They live for years in a state of joylessness and lack of enthusiasm, which worsens with time. Only occasionally do they leave it, i.e. when they are stimulated by the external environment, usually through intellectual discussion or emotional, erotic stimulation. In contrast to Phosphoricum acidum or Aurum, it is not a very painful state; it is neutral. The feelings of joy and enthusiasm are missing, but the patient does not substitute them with negative feelings. The state borders on depression, but is not as painful.
Caladium people are often irritable and depressed. The depression may come on after masturbation or coitus, but may also be