The homeopath pays attention to all these little things that make a case so unique and different from others, but always has to be careful to make sure that such states are pathological, that they exceed the natural and really limit the patient.
Depression
Cimicifuga patients become restless and anxious in the first stages of mental pathology, but later on they may go into depression, where they feel gloomy and cloudy, heavy and suicidal, with strong and frequent sighing. ‘Miserable, dejected feeling; mind feels dull and heavy’.
These two stages are quite different. But the ‘black cloud feeling around head’ is a very characteristic symptom of Cimicifuga during all stages. ‘Sensation as if a heavy black cloud had settled all over her and enveloped her head, so that all was darkness and confusion, while at the same time it weighed like lead upon her heart’. ‘Feels grieved and troubled, with sighing’. ‘This depressed state can alternate with a feeling of tremulous joy, with mirth¬fulness, playfulness, and clear intellect’, and here is an illustration of the changeability of the remedy, and also of the possibility of curing manic depression.
‘Melancholy; at times very irritable; relieved when menstruation sets in’. ‘Cannot fall asleep because of agonising depressive thoughts’. ‘Severe depression, weeps with exhaustion’. An inter¬esting symptom in melancholic states is: ‘Saw wires encaging him’.
‘Mental depression, even with suicidal mood; after checked neuralgia’. Kent describes the melancholic states as an ‘overwhel¬ming sadness and gloominess, she is bowed down with sorrow. Sits and mopes in great sadness’. He describes Cimicifuga women who just sit there and say nothing; but ‘when questioned perhaps