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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1640

are also cases where tidiness in most things goes along with untidiness in things considered unimportant by the patient.
On the other hand, if we have the second type of Carcinosin patient, we can see total disorder and uncleanliness, absolute indifference to notions of order and discipline. These people might also expect order from others but do not and cannot apply it to themselves.
Anxiety and Fear
All Carcinosin patients tend to be anxious, and fears are an integral part of the picture. There is often a great deal of anticipation anxiety with a fear of failure, especially during examinations, but also in other situations. This is closely related to the fear of humiliation and reproach mentioned above and it can also assume the form of anxiety about the future. Fear of losing control appears, for instance, in the form that the patient says, “I think it is terrible when I’m overstrained. Everything is too much for me”.
Phobias of different kinds have also been observed in Carcinosin cases and have been cured by the remedy. Fear of heights may be very strong in some cases. There is also a fear of narrow places (claustrophobia); fear of busy streets (in a crowd); and many others. Fear of animals is frequent: of dogs, of cats, of birds; of ‘disgusting’ animals, a disgust mixed with fear of frogs, of snakes, of spiders, of all sorts of insects: bees, wasps, and so on.
However, similar to what occurs with regard to the supernatural or huge natural phenomena discussed above (fear of ghosts but also attracted to hear stories of ghosts; fear of thunderstorms but also enjoyment watching a thunderstorm), there may also be an attraction to animals, and Carcinosin people may be great lovers of animals, though not to the same degree as Aethusa patients.