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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1791

The extreme sensitivity to slight touch on the physical level is a noteworthy characteristic of China. Hahnemann remarks that not only are the pains aggravated by touch, but even if they are not present at the moment, they are renewed by simply touching the part and then often increase to a frightful severity. Even a current of air blowing on the part causes great pain. This modality has its counterpart in an amelioration by hard pressure, which acts more deeply into the tissues.
Both modalities have an analogy on the mental-emotional plane, in the ‘touchiness’ of China persons. A sensitive, irritated nerve will be aggravated by touch; similarly an area of emotional pain will be intolerant to being touched on. Emotionally this key-note translates to an intolerance of superficial gestures of support or consolation. China persons, when upset, will only be made worse by shallow demonstrations of sympathy. A superficial conversation, e.g. if one starts talking about the weather (as a ‘neutral’ subject of conversation), can make them react quite aggressively.
But if they are given true and deep expressions of concern, genuinely warm feelings, they respond favourably and feel better. And they do have a very refined sensitivity as to the authenticity of these feelings. They can feel the vibrations that ‘come over’ from their partner or the therapist very well. Physically, pressing deeper into the tissues, and emotionally, delving deeper into the person’s feelings, provide relief.
Hering mentions, besides a ‘dreadful feeling of excitement’, an ‘excessive vividness of mind and fancy, with headache’. Note also the proving symptom: ‘Headache, as if the brain was pressed into a ball, with excessive excitement of the mind, restlessness, and excessively vivid imagination, which works too fast.’
Kent: ‘Throughout the body there is a gradually increasing sensitivity, a gradually increasing irritability of the nerves; the