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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1463

the inanimate things in the room become alive and terrify him, just as in Phosphorus. These states mostly come on when alone in the dark, and thus, an excessive fear of solitude and darkness is experienced. One prover would not go into the cellar alone at night but always took his little daughter with him, a girl of only 8 or 9 years of age. A tremendous fear of mirrors has been observed; ‘lest he should see himself in them …so excessive was this fear at times in the night that he would have got up and broken the mirrors, only that he was still more afraid to get up alone in the dark. ’ Another fear is that of a murderer standing at the bedside. Terrible fear of nuclear war, of a general catastrophe (Natrum muriaticum).
However, all these fears and delusions have to be understood together with the whole picture of anguish, frenzy, coldness and convulsions in order to prescribe this remedy. When this stage of excitement passes, however, the patient becomes insensible, exhausted, collapsed and cold. There is no reaction to external stimuli, he does not feel anything, all the senses seem to be lost. The patient lies there with closed eyes, as if asleep, cannot be aroused, doesn’t answer any questions, doesn’t want to be touched.
Irritability and Depression
In its chronic condition, Camphora persons are irritable and short- tempered within the family environment. They are easily offended, tend to take everything in bad part, and feel insulted and scolded with no apparent reason. They are quarrelsome and exhibit a dogmatic, ‘know-it-all’ attitude, with an inclination to contradict everybody. They become dictatorial (though not to outsiders). There is a tendency to rule over others; women will be attracted to men who need their help. On the other hand, they can often be indecisive, even timorous; or affected with inferiority complexes, thinking that everyone considers them as failures, which makes them feel wretched.