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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1503

this is a case of Cannabis indica.’ I asked him if he had ever used cannabis as a drug. After several denials he admitted that he had taken it once. Perhaps his symptomatology wasn’t connected to this drug experience, or perhaps he had a special predisposition to the drug, being severely affected by one single exposure, or maybe he had lied to me and had taken it more often; at any rate, his mind was running out of control.
Emotional Diffusion and Yielding
The emotions of Cannabis patients can suffer from the same tendencies as the mental state: both can be scattered and diffused. Actually the emotions are explained away, they are not experienced as real feelings but rather as states of the mind states of mind. Often these patients recognise their ‘weak point’ in the emotional sphere and attempt, for that reason, to avoid emotional entanglements.
If they do get involved emotionally, they are prone to express themselves in silly, foolish ways. For example, a man goes out with a woman for the first time. As they talk he gets increasingly emotional and excited. He wants to say, “Would you like to go to bed with me?” but cannot. Consequently he says irrelevant things. He wanders from one subject to another. He starts to realise that he is flustered and confused and becomes afraid. In the midst of this emotional upheaval he suddenly loses control and hysterically grabs the woman while saying, “I love you!” Subsequently, when he recalls the event, he may feel humiliated at the way he acted.
The Cannabis state can be constituted by many loving feelings, but these are uncontrolled. There is no power or discipline behind the love to permit it to manifest itself in action. The love exists in the imaginative realm; it seems more fanciful than real. These people can appear quite soft, much like the ‘flower children’ of times past, and in most cases they are very nice to others.