When the irritable mood passes, they may go into a self-destructive phase, becoming depressed, sad and despondent. There is a sensation of indescribable wretchedness, discomfort and loathing, bodily as well as emotionally. Feels like weeping but the eyes stay dry. In these stages, a suicidal disposition will be exhibited, with an urge to throw oneself out of a window which may exert a dangerous attraction to the patient.
The depression may also be coupled with a feeling of unusual lassitude and with frequent yawning and stretching, which gradually increases, soon becoming very disturbing and annoying. Even severe cases of agitated depression may be cured with this remedy, as a case of Muller shows (Allgemeine Homoopathisches Zeitung, 1992).
Overall, Camphora people are closed persons. It is characteristic that when they try to say something that has a direct connection with their emotions, their hands freeze as if the blood were cut off.
Loss of Memory and Confusion
The intellectual faculties are strongly impaired by Camphora. A sluggishness and dullness of the mind comes on, with confusion and aversion to all mental work, especially during the chilly stage.
There is a great difficulty in concentration; when reading, the patient is unable to follow a train of thought, to get a clear notion of what the author wants to say. ‘Inability to think, to feel, to remember’ (Hahnemann).
Loss of memory is an important trait. After the mental or sensorial disturbances as described elsewhere, the memory of everything done during that time is often totally lost. Forgetfulness can also be accompanied by flight of ideas. When there is Alzheimer’s disease and at the same time Raynaud’s phenomenon in a case, this should bring Camphora to mind.