hot and red cheeks, but it is even more typical if this symptom is one-sided: one cheek red and hot, the other pale and cold. This goes along with hot sticky sweat, generally around the head, more especially on the forehead and hairy scalp, even wetting the hair. Heat and unquenchable, constant thirst is often a con-comitant. When these three symptoms come together in a feverish or painful condition, with the mental characteristics present, Chamomilla should definitely be thought of.
The following are some characteristics (in addition to the over¬sensitivity and the mental symptoms) of the Chamomilla pain: they are often of a drawing and tearing character, and ‘rarely occur without a paralytic or numb sensation in the part’ (Hahnemann). On the other hand, the paralytic or numb sensation produced by Chamomilla will hardly be present without a simultaneous drawing or tearing pain in the part. It is important to emphasise the word ‘sensation’ here, because it is not a real anaesthesia (severe pain occurring at the same time!) but a feeling as if numb or paralysed! It may also be described like this: ‘As soon as the pain begins, immediately a weakness amounting to prostration occurs; has to lie down.’ This sensation may also follow the pain: ‘In the parts where the pain has diminished, sensation of paralysis.’
Another frequent pain quality that was elicited by Hoppe’s provings is stitching: ‘dull stitches at several parts of the body, sometimes simultaneously in several places, sometimes jumping now here, now there (once the prover even compared them to electric shocks), worst deep in the joints.’ The prover stated that he had never experienced so many stitches in so many parts of his body, and they were invariably accompanied by that ‘paralytic sensation’, which, as he puts it, ‘follows the course of the long nerves, besides the stitching pain.’
The Chamomilla pain is invariably worst at night, and Kent points