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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1755

minutes to remember why he had gone there.’ ‘I forget to put on my underpants, and when shaving I stand up from the chair before chin and upper lip are shaved.’ Thinking difficult. She easily forgets what she wants to do or what she has done. Kent comments: ‘With liver troubles, slowing down of the mental state, inability of the mind to work, sluggishness of the mind, inability to think, inability to meditate, slow pulse. Sluggishness of the whole economy.’
Anxiety about Health
Chelidonium patients can have anxieties on the emotional plane. These can include, besides their anxieties about someone to whom they are attached, an anxiety about their own health. The anxiety about health may not be as strong as in other remedies, but it is definitely present. In Chelidonium this is a realistic anxiety. This does not mean that it is fully appropriate to the situation and ‘healthy’ (this would not be a pathological symptom) but has another meaning. These patients will have check-ups by the most qualified doctors, and at the slightest problem will grow anxious and want something practical and tangible to be done right away. This is the anxiety about health that the Chelidonium realists exhibit.
In addition, they tend to be suspicious about what is being done. If the doctor diagnoses colitis, the Chelidonium patient will not be satisfied. He asks, “Are you sure? Could it not be the liver, or the spleen? Have you considered all the possibilities?” His anxiety drives him to cover all areas.
Chelidonium is a slow developer both in its pathology and in its response to the remedy. The practitioner should be in no hurry to change remedies if the response after a month should not be impressive (in chronic cases). Aside from the slowness of response as such, Chelidonium patients are unlikely to report improvement anyway. They are never satisfied until they have tangible,