is also seen in their inquiries about the treatment plan. They continuously ask, “What are you giving me?” and want to know far in advance what is going to happen in the course of the treatment.
The theoretical mentalization of Cannabis is also strong with regard to the anxiety about health. They abound with theories and have a strong urge to explain things (themselves, their condition, the conditions of others, of the society, of the planet, etc.) in detail. The doctor must listen to the patient so as to ensure that they feel satisfied with having said all they have to say. Quite often, though, they may send or telephone in an extra two pages of symptoms that they forgot to relay; this pattern is quite typical.
Another important feature should also trigger thinking of Cannabis: they always feel that their remedy has been antidoted. They provide several reasons, many theories, as to why they have antidoted their remedy. This characteristic is another manifestation of the panic that aggravates any crisis they have; their symptoms are magnified several times over by this panic. For example, a patient may feel a little dizzy, but the panic magnifies the complaint to the degree that he feels that his head is floating or that his arms are dissociated from his body (floating away). These panic states are terrible.
Evasion
This characteristic can be seen in Cannabis patients and reminds one of Thuja. It might present itself as follows: you wish to confirm a symptom, let’s say, by asking, “Are you really thirsty?” and the initial reply may be “Yes”. You inquire again “Very thirsty?” – “Yes,” is the answer. Then you say that you are going to base your prescription on this thirst. The moment you make such a statement, the patient becomes anxious that you will make a mistake by using that symptom, and he develops a theory to discredit it. “But yesterday I took a lot of salt, and the day before I ate sardines. Perhaps my thirst is only a result of that!” “But aren’t you thirsty all the time?” you ask.