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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1720

At the same time extreme sensitivity to ‘having their feelings wounded’; ‘Crying because of a slight offence, even if only existing in his own imagination or if it has happened a very long time ago.’
Moaning and groaning from ill-humour. Involuntary moaning during the period when there is heat of the face.
Nash resumes: ‘The patient is cross, ugly, spiteful, snappish. She knows it, admits it, and so does everyone else. She will return mean, uncivil answers to her best friends, and then confess her fault, to repeat it again and again, and stoutly affirms she cannot help, she feels so.’
There is an important modality of amelioration, especially in children, namely a certain relief from being carried about or rocked.
This is due to the tremendous restlessness of the patient; the child cannot sleep, cannot rest, and unless it is moved all the time it will not stop crying, it will actually be shrieking from discomfort and pain. So we see the mother keeping the child in her arms and carrying it around the room all the time. In adults we see, as Voisin points out, a similar modality, namely an amelioration by passive motion or ‘mechanical vibration’, as in businessmen who only find rest when riding in a train or in a car.
In the constitutional type of Chamomilla you will sometimes get a history of suppressed anger after which neurodermatitis has developed. This is actually a disease which will easily manifest in the chronic state of the remedy. In connection with this development, the patient becomes extremely irritable and antisocial. Any contact with anybody or anything may cause the anger to rise.
However, if Chamomilla persons find somebody who is ready to lend them a sympathetic ear they cannot stop talking about their old vexations. No matter how much they talk about it, they