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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1869

Pregnant women may have a presentiment that the pregnancy will turn out badly. In one case, for instance, the labour pains suddenly stopped exactly as the patient had obsessively feared and predicted. Cimicifuga succeeded in resolving this dangerous situation within minutes.
In Cimicufuga, fear often predominates, especially fear of death which can reduce a patient to anxious weeping. ‘When falling asleep, starts up suddenly for fear he will fall, or to avoid danger’. ‘Great nervousness, constantly picking at the chair while he talked; felt always as though something might happen; is on the verge of insanity’.
The fear can take many and varied forms: fear of rats and of thunderstorms, a patient’s fear that she may fall in the street, but more characteristic is a desperate fear of never recovering from her disease; she will keep asking for the doctor, and frequently repeats the question, “Are you sure that I will get healthy again?”.
The Cimicifuga woman wants to control: to control her state, to control those she loves, and to control her husband, but at the same time she feels very dependent on him. She eventually becomes very attached to him, but only if she feels that she is controlling the situation. It is interesting to see how their insecurities are expressed through their desire to totally control those who they love. The woman will respond easily to the sexuality of the husband, is easily excited, but she feels best when she controls him.
You have to imagine a woman who is hysterical, suffering with headaches and rheumatic complains, especially around the time of the menses, or in climacteric; who, while her mind is swirling and dull, is driven to talk incessantly; who has an underlying anxiety that she will end up in a chronic condition, and needs reassurance from the husband that he loves her, and from the doctor that things will go well.