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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1792

nerves are always in a fret, so that these people will say, “Doctor, what is the matter with me, I am so nervous?” ’
The tendency to aggressive reactions is seen in these symptoms: ‘He is peevish, angry, and easily flies into a temper.’ ‘Discontented and sensitive mood, inclined to quarrelling.’ ‘Ill-humour amounting to most violent anger, he’d like to stab someone.’ Sudden changes of mood occur: ‘During a cheerful mood, sudden, transient screaming and tossing about the bed, without any apparent or visible cause.’ ‘From time to time she falls into a tearful mood, without external provocation, on account of a self-made whim, as e.g. from an imagined need, for instance that she could not to eat to satiety.’
That ill humour will rather aggravate from human contact is seen in these proving symptoms: ‘The ill humour is increased by petting and caressing’ and: ‘Inconsolable’ and: ‘The usual cheerful mood is lacking; he prefers to be alone.’
Refined sensitivity, but Very Withdrawn
The increased susceptibility of all the senses and the strong excitability have another consequence: China people have a very refined sense of beauty, the beauty of nature as well as of art. Colours, shapes and forms, sounds and language, all are more vivid for them. On the negative side, however, because everything affects them so much, they will easily experience bright light, noises, and smells (e.g. of cooking or of perfumes) as intolerable.
The excited nervous system of China causes these individuals to think and feel very intensely; this is why many of these people are endowed with great imaginative powers and gravitate to artistic pursuits, especially poetry. Ignatia could be compared here, but Ign. tends more to be a musician, China a poet. Of course, poets and artists do not necessarily have to be pathologically affected (although