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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1312

brink of a high place; they shout to the person not to go so close to the edge of the balcony for fear they will fall. They are also afraid to descend stairs, especially if they are stairs without a railing.
Calcarea has a strong fear that a misfortune will happen t© him or to others or that bad news will come. A fear of being alone is also often evident. A special time for their fears is when evening draws near, as was confirmed by Hahnemann.
Other fears that appear often in Calcarea subjects are the fear of: thunderstorms, supernatural things, ghosts, infection and microbes (nosophobia), poverty, mice, insects (entomophobia), spiders (arachnophobia), leaving the house, public places (agoraphobia), narrow places (claustrophobia). There is also an anxiety or anguish that is excited by listening to cruel stories.
In the early stages, these fears and anxieties aren’t usually overwhelming and typically accompany physical ailments. Calcarea patients may have many of these fears, but sometimes they have only a few or even only one.
If we compare Phosphorus with Calcarea carbonica during the stage of fear of thunderstorms and of the dark, we see that Phos. is much more open than Calcarea, and that the Phos. fears are much more accentuated. The fear of thunderstorms is terrible in Phos.·, they express a desire to hide under a table during a storm. Calcarea people would never communicate their fear in such a strong manner. Phos. persons also manifest their anxiety about health in earlier stages than does Calcarea. In Calcarea the anxiety about health develops in association with a pervasive anxiety about life and the future. Phos. could be called a thin Calcarea, with more accentuated fears and with a great desire for cold water. The perspiration in Phos. is less than Calcarea, while their vitality tends
to be higher. Phos. is also more responsive than Calcarea.