Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1988

There is great excitement from the slightest irritation of the nerves, which is worse from coming in to contact with any electric appliances, computers, telephones etc. They will complain that they have severe reactions from touching a mobile telephone, or from coming close to a computer. Many times the homeopath will dismiss this as pure imagination, but should not do so with the Colchicum patient.
The intellect is also weak as if paralysed, it cannot process input, cannot digest information. Colchicum is unable to remember, unable to concentrate, loses the thread of his thinking; the capacity to create cohesive reasoning and thinking is impaired. It takes very much exertion to keep to a train of thought; the patient sits there in apathy without answering, as if he has not heard the question. In short there is a difficulty in the absorption of the impulse.
Weakness of memory; he forgets what has just thought, what he wanted to write, forgets the words that are in his mouth, and only with much effort and exertion is able to remember his own thoughts and to continue speaking. In writing he omits letters, syllables or words.
‘Vision is heightened, but intellectual faculties dulled; cannot understand what he reads, not even a very short sentence’. ‘Inability to fix a thought. But if there is a bright light he will go wild from anger’
Mental exertion will aggravate complaints of all kinds, as it exhausts him. ‘Every work exhausts him, especially reading and writing’. The same is true with exertion and motion of the body. Not only states of weakness are aggravated by motion but also conditions of pain in the extremities, or gastric complaints. It is a general modality.
For instance: ‘He was obliged to bend himself up and lie quite still the whole day, without the slightest movement, because