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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1754

matter-of-fact and hard-headed and may indeed be anti-intellectual. They tend to shun intellectual work whenever possible, avoiding confrontation with such matters as mathematical problems, abstractions, etc. Chelidonium cases would never ‘waste’ time analysing their emotions, explaining situations, interpreting behaviour, etc. One could go so far as to describe Chelidonium patients as mentally indolent or lazy, with a distaste for mental exertion and conversation.
Thus, Chelidonium individuals do not make good scientists. Instead, they succeed much better in business, real estate, etc. – fields in which their efforts produce tangible results. If you are having problems buying a house or a car, the Chelidonium patient will have plenty of very practical suggestions to make.
Business may also prevail in the dreams of the patients, as was first shown in Hahnemann’s proving: ‘Sleep with dreams of subjects of daily occupation.’ Margery Blackie reports: ‘Every patient to whom I have given Chelidonium for dreams has dreamed about their business. They can also dream of horrible things like corpses and funerals, but business is always more prominent.‘ Their inner insecurity may become apparent in these dreams: ‘… plain, rather worrying dreams about their business, that they have not finished it, that they have not added everything up, that they have not put the papers in the right place, that they will not be at the meeting on time’ (Blackie).
From provings and clinical experience, there is abundant support for the intellectual indolence of Chelidonium: ‘Aversion to mental work.’ ‘Aversion to talking, to conversation.’ ‘Great aversion to work and much sluggishness after dinner, with sleepiness.’
And indeed the intellect and memory may become weak and sluggish. Buchmann emphasises a tendency to absent-mindedness and forgetfulness. From the provings: ‘He goes into another room to fetch a book, but when arriving it takes him several