Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1306

If, at this stage, some additional stress is encountered (e.g. a grief or an acute illness complicated by allopathic drugging), the patient will progress to a far deeper state of pathology. He will develop a tremendous anxiety about his health and, consequently, a very pronounced fear of cancer or a fear of insanity. The intensity of these two fears — that of cancer and that of insanity — tend to have an inverse relationship; that is, if the fear of cancer is quite strong, the fear of insanity is minimised and vice versa. The patient also has the disconcerting impression that other people can, simply by looking at him, perceive his insecurity and read his mind. These fears will be discussed further in the sections ‘Fear of Insanity’ and ‘Despair of Recovery’.
Calcarea persons are able to endure this state of over-exertion for a long time. Eventually they arrive at a stage where they cannot continue with their business, and, therefore, quitting of business due to over-exhaustion is a key-note of this remedy. Kent describes this situation in the following way: ‘A Calcarea patient sometimes takes an aversion to work, and quits work. He will quit a most thriving business, and go home and do nothing, after being fatigued in carrying on the business until it reaches a most thriving condition. He says business is not good for him. He is tired of business, and when he goes to his business again it seems as if it would drive him crazy. He does not want to see it, he does not want to know anything about it. Of course, you can readily see that it is not so much in the Calcarea patient that he is driven to weakness and fatigue from distress in business, although it has that, but that which I am speaking about is that he has overworked until he has given out, and right in the midst of his success he quits his business and goes home, and leaves all—it looks just as if he were lazy.’
And he adds an important differentiation: ‘It is not such persons as were born that way, born lazy, never would work; but those that become lazy. ’
This is the symptomatology that has given Calcarea the reputation