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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1412

Appearance:
Calcarea phosphorica individuals tend to be tall and lean, even scrawny, and have an appearance different from the ‘pasty’ appearance of Calcarea carbonica people. Both have a flabby abdomen, which is often large, but which in Calcarea phosphorica may also be sunken. Calcarea phosphorica’s complexion is less chalky-white and tending more to dirty-white or brownish than Calc.
Weakness and Fatigue:
Weakness and fatigue on all levels is a marked characteristic of Calcarea phosphorica. The weariness is worse from going upstairs. The individual wants to sit down and not get up again. There is a predisposition of the lower limbs, abdomen and sacrum to ‘go to sleep’ and thus the individual is unable to rise from his seat.
Weakness and languor may occur during menses or pregnancy, with leucorrhoea, with diarrhoea, in dentition, and after acute diseases. Exertion, especially mental, makes these people feel weak, but so does physical exertion, even just the act of talking. Vexation may also induce states of weakness.
On the physical plane, muscular flabbiness is characteristic of Calcarea phosphorica, and quite often flabbiness of the lower abdomen is a prominent feature. As the Calcarea phosphorica state develops, an individual who may have been muscular and energetic loses his stamina, often rather precipitously; his muscles lose their firmness and strength, and he begins to put on weight. Flabbiness begins to pervade the whole organism.
Some further general qualities of Calcarea phosphorica are: Sensations of crawling or tingling, numbness and coldness are characteristic, as the protagonist of the ‘tissue remedies’, Schussler, perceived; they often accompany pains and convulsions due to anaemic states. There is a tendency for the sensations to
occur in small spots.
Trembling, especially of the arms and hands, is also a