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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1753

and jaundice. ‘Thinks she will die’, even ‘wishes to die.’ ‘Brooding over some sort of trouble generally runs through the mental state’ (Kent). Depressed, with a tendency to weep without being able to give a reason for it; restless, goes from one place to the other, with internal anxiety (Farrington).
Margery Blackie describes her experience with depressed Chelidonium patients: ‘They get an awful feeling that they cannot cope with life, and are full of dreads that anything may happen. If they have had any worry they make it the centre of their depression and brood over it. Even sometimes when it is long past and there is nothing more to worry about they will go back and brood over it. They cannot bear being disturbed. They are not the kind that wants someone to come in and cheer them up; they want to be left alone.’
Anxiety About Others
Chelidonium patients are not at all sentimental. They are not easily overtaken by their emotions, nor do they readily express affection. However, they do expect others to display tenderness and affection towards them. In particular, Chelidonium patients develop a strong attachment to one specific person – a husband or a wife, for example. They then suffer considerable anxiety about the well-being of that particular person. It is in this respect that Chelidonium should be added to the rubric ‘Anxiety about others’. For all that, a Chelidonium woman, for instance, who is greatly attached to her husband will not hesitate to dominate him. She may be so forceful in her personality that the husband simply shuts up and lets her do all the talking.
Realists: hard-headed and Practical
Chelidonium people are realists, not intellectuals. They are very