bothered by that person. The anxiety of Lycopodium develops the moment he feels he is alone, he has no support.
Take a family situation for example: a married couple with children, and there is some problem at work.
Lycopodium loses his job. Lycopodium May escape from
obligations
immediately will develop anxiety. This anxiety
will lead to strange behaviour, which can take the following form: They just want to leave the family and go away and disappear. Lycopodium may leave his children, his wife, his mother, his father altogether. They simply go away from responsibilities they have created themselves.
Such patients are in constant fear that others will discover the
truth about their inner state of weakness. They are constantly wor
ried about what others think of them. Fear that his
Lycopodium fits highly intelligent and intellectual weakness will be
people. It is found frequently in professions noticed
requiring public performance priests, lawyers, school teachers, even
politicians.
A priest may feel perfectly well before giving a sermon, but upon reaching the pulpit and realising that so many eyes are upon him, he may suddenly suffer from stomach pain or great anxiety.
Such a person may be able to carry out the task properly, but
very often the physical or emotional suffering will
seriously interfere with functioning. Again, this Fear of
responsibility
situation is a manifestation of anxiety in the face
of responsibility, and the patient may well attempt to escape from his profession, sometimes seeming to use the physical illness as an excuse.