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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1284

good many different kinds of mental affections, loss of memory where there is that vague state of mind. It might be bordering upon imbecility, or might be the borderland of insanity. All day long he finds himself looking into the things that should have been done; they simply escaped his mind; he has forgotten them.
‘So the mind is worn out in places. A state of absent-mindedness. It may come on in an acute state, with unconsciousness. There is a good deal of congestion of the brain, more or less excitement, but more important is prostration of the mind, weakness of the mind; feeble-mindedness; inability to perform intellectual work. It is impossible. He cannot think; the more thought he puts upon a thing the more fatigue he has and the further away that thing seems to be; the more he attempts it the less concentrated is the mind upon a subject. It is not strange, then, that the provers themselves were unable to put these ideas into speech so as to give us an intelligent idea of the proving. ’ (Emphasis GV)
This picture suggests that Caladium may be suitable for persons who have Alzheimer’s disease after a life full of sexual pleasures and mental over-activity.
The things that the patient forgets during the day, however, come to his mind while he is half asleep, during a ‘dizzy sleep’ (as Hering describes it in the proving), or else when his sleep is interrupted and he lies awake in the night. He suffers from insomnia, and cannot get enough sleep. He is extremely sensitive to noise, especially when he wants to sleep. He then becomes more and more irritable, and may even stay awake the whole night.
Sometimes he feels apprehensive before going to sleep, without knowing why. At other times he falls asleep very easily, sleeps for three or four hours till he awakens, and then stays
awake for another two or three hours. This may also be the time that he remembers all the things he has forgotten during the day.