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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1309

Psychosis
Such a state eventually transforms into real psychosis. The Calcarea psychosis usually assumes a passive form. Calcarea patients have numerous delusions which develop very quickly, such as the person seeing horrid visions upon closing the eyes, grotesque faces, etc. We also find delusions such as the impression that clothing hanging over the back of a chair is really a person sitting there or that someone is walking beside them (similar to Petroleum or Silica). In Hahnemann’s proving, we find the example of an illusion: ‘she heard a rumbling and clattering over her bed, which made her shiver
Concerning Calcarea’s behaviour when in company, they mostly sit and do nothing, or else they do strange little things like play with their fingers all the time, break sticks or cut little pieces of paper. Margery Blackie reports a case where the patient opened and shut her handbag the entire time she was with her.
The general idea in Calcarea psychosis is a passive state with delusions, coupled with the motif of fixation on little things, which was discussed earlier. The delusions may also come on quickly in serious fever cases, as in cases of pneumonia or pyelonephritis. Two examples from Hering’s Guiding Symptoms are: ‘Mania; sees many curs [dogs] crowding around him; fights them off’, ‘Sees and plays with cats and other animals in delirium.’ In these more acute states, we see a greater degree of restlessness and activity. Another example from Hering is: ‘Feels as if she would like to run up and down and scream.’ Kent comments: ‘Feels as if she could not help it, she must scream. That occurs in persons overwrought, dreadfully excited from a loss in the household by death. ’
During an acute exacerbation of this chronic psychosis, a pronounced aggression might surface. Then conditions resembling the following description by Hering ensue: ‘Throws herself forcibly about, rolls on ground, tries to catch hold of bystanders’