Prisma
Prisma
Prisma
, Prisma (vml5)
VERMEULEN Frans
[Constantin Hering]
Introduction
PRISMA MATERIA MEDICA wants to point out parallels and similars between
homoeopathic drug pictures and the substances from which they are derived. In
addition, it wants to clarify and illuminate lesser known aspects of smaller
polycrests. Much has changed since the time that Hahnemann and Hering
undertook their provings, not only regarding the criteria of provings but also in
terms of the information on substances. We have much more information at our
disposal today and it seems foolish not to use all available resources to build a
better materia medica. Since it is our sole duty to heal the sick, to paraphrase
Grimmer, "we cannot afford to ignore intelligent help from any source so long as
this aid available is based on law and common sense." The hot debate raging
currently over the question whether homoeopathy is scientific or not, appears to
make the doctrine of signatures its main scapegoat. In faithful imitation of
Hahnemann, who considered it the "folly of the ancients", the doctrine of
signatures meets with fierce opposition, being depicted as the folly of present-
day homoeopathy and a major danger to scientific homoeopathy. The word
'signatures' has indeed a medieval ring to it and may partly explain the sharply
contrasting opinions about it. However, the question remains whether signature
is alien to homoeopathy. Hering observes that this very ancient doctrine "has
much to recommend it on the grounds of similia" and Clarke states, in the
introduction to Magnesia carbonica, that "it is often found that the physical
characteristics of substances correspond with their dynamic influences."
Consequently, in the introduction to Magnesia phosphorica, he remarks that
"there are other means besides provings of finding the keynote symptoms of
remedies." Clarke touches here upon a delicate issue, for the common
assumption that drug pictures derive from provings shows to be erroneous if we
closely study the materia medica. Approximately fifty percent of it comes from
clinical cases. We seem to be so devoted to quantification and to explanation in
terms of cause and result that we tend to overlook the significance of meaning,
connection, and analogy, writes Twentyman in the British Homoeopathic Journal
of Oct.
Hahnemann's statement that "Opium is almost the only medicine that in its
primary action does not produce a single pain" is inconsistent with the results of
other provings, for example those conducted by Jörg in the 1820s, where
frequently pains occur within minutes of the intake of Opium, even in its crude
form. And so on. In addition, provers participating in several provings will tend
to produce an almost identical set of symptoms. Such symptoms belong to their
personality rather than to the proving substance. Should we consider them as
primary or as secondary? The most notorious example is Langhammer - a
member of Hahnemann's provers union - who, irrespective of the proving
substance, invariably comes up with symptoms such as "silent, reserved
disposition", "want of trust in people" and varieties on these themes. No prover
involved in a number of provings will be free from what may be called 'the
personal factor'. Even Hahnemann himself did not escape from it, since he, for
instance, produced five times the
Can it be so that the substance contains the issues and that the prover or patient,
unconsciously or consciously, decides at which pole of those issues he is going
to be?
Completion and addition are more good reasons for including data from natural
sciences into the homoeopathic materia medica. A few examples. The recently
discovered connection between boron and osteoporosis puts the Borax symptom
'fear of falling' into a new perspective. The mind-picture of Manganum reveals
hardly any specific symptoms. A phenomenon known as 'manganese madness' -
which even has been connected with BSE [mad cow disease] - is not included.
The bite by the black widow spider [Latrodectus mactans] may cause a
syndrome named 'latrodectism', much of which is missing in the materia medica.
Although belonging to entirely different plant families, Plantago [plantain] and
Euphrasia [eyebright] have the presence of the rare biological substance aucubin
in common. Aucubin is the main active ingredient of 'anti-smoking compounds'.
Plantago is in homoeopathic literature mentioned for that purpose -
remedies to increase disgust for tobacco - but Euphrasia is not, despite the fact
that two provers developed an aversion to smoking. Demographic studies have
demonstrated the severe mental and physical effects of ergot poisoning [Secale
cornutum]. Much of the mental symptomatology is not included in the materia
medica. The psycho-active properties are thought to be related to the alkaloid
lysergic acid, which naturally occurs in
the fungus and from which LSD is derived. Placed against the background of
medieval beliefs, the alleged bewitchment by the devil would seem intensely
'bad trips' or, more accurately, acute schizophrenic attacks [which LSD is known
to produce].
Every remedy is introduced with a quip or a quote, ranging from deadly serious
to light-hearted.
Taken from every available source, the SIGNS section contains [summarized]
information about the substance from which the drug is derived. Sources are
documented.
Collecting the information for the SIGNS section was like making a journey
through the colourful world of books, articles, internet texts, and websites. And
yet there is still so much to discover.
By going through the proving reports in Hughes and Dake's Cyclopaedia of Drug
Pathogenesy, I came across symptoms which have been overlooked or, in my
opinion, misinterpreted. These are added or corrected, respectively. References
are given for all additions; additions without a reference are mine.
Acknowledgements
Many thanks to all who have contributed to the realization of this book. Many
special thanks to my wife Maud, for gathering so much information; to Jenni
Tree, for diligently proof-reading the manuscript and for her valuable additions;
to Hansjörg Hée, for putting his extensive homoeopathic library at our disposal;
to Karl-Josef Müller, for exchanging ideas by e-mail; to Bert Breuker, for being
Dutch and living in Sweden and for the hours of brainstorming; and to Arne
Milan Vermeulen for installing powerful engines to search the net.
Materia medica
Aconitum napellus
Acon.
A timid person is frightened before a danger, a coward during the time, and a
courageous person afterwards.
[J.P.F. Richter]
Signs
species in about 50 genera, the family is centred in temperate and cold regions of
the Northern and Southern hemispheres. It contains a number of very poisonous
plants, such as Helleborus and Aconitum, and a number of well-known garden
ornamentals. The plants are mostly herbs, rarely woody climbers, such as
Clematis. "The family shows a wide variation in flower structures, and also a
wide variation in pollination methods. The family is insect-pollinated in the
main, although some species of Thalictrum are wind-pollinated. Many of the
annual species are self-pollinated. The remaining insect-
pollinated types are visited for either their pollen or their nectar and they can be
divided into these two types. The genera Anemone, Pulsatilla and Clematis do
not produce nectar and are visited only for their pollen. Nectar flowers with
well-developed nectaries are found in Ranunculus, Aquilegia, Delphinium and
Helleborus. In Anemone and Clematis insects are attracted by brightly coloured
sepals, in Ranunculus by showy petals [with prominent nectar pouches, known
as honey-leaves]; in Aconitum by showy sepals and petals."1
metres on mountain slopes. There are about 100 species, mainly herbaceous
perennials that need cool rich soil and will grow in full sun or partial shade.
When in the plain it is already summer, the high-altitude habitat retains its
cooler, spring-like air. Drought is detrimental to the roots, so the roots must be
kept moist. It likes to follow the course of brooks and water-filled ditches. The
plants should be left alone when well established as they take time to resettle
after being disturbed. The seeds need frost to germinate the next spring.
NAME It is called Monkshood, because of the shape of the flowers, which turn
over and give the appearance of a hood, thrown over the head, but also because
it was associated with political intrigue among the ranks of the Roman Catholic
clergy. The name Wolf's Bane refers to its one time use as poison bait for
wolves. The name Aconitum is said to have been derived from Gr. akon, a dart,
in reference to arrows at one time being poisoned with the juices of the plant, or
from akone, cliffy or rocky, because the species grows in rocky glens. Another
possibility is that the name comes from the Gr. akonitos,
FEATURES "The flowers, shaped like a monk's cowl, are no longer radially
symmetrical like those of the spring Ranunculaceae - anemones, aquilegia,
peony - but are isobilateral. They have given up the radiate flower form and
attained a higher form of symmetry suggestive of the animal kingdom. The
higher invertebrates as well as all vertebrates possess bilateral symmetry as their
fundamental morphological concept. ... It is of interest that Aconitum napellus is
in polar contrast to Helleborus niger, the Christmas rose, which is the most
ancient member of the Ranunculaceae. Aconitum is a more recent representative
of this very primitive family of plants. It shows much more advanced structures,
in the specialised upper sepal which forms a protective covering for the other
parts of the flower, in the deep blue colour of the flowers, and in the arrangement
of the blossoms, not on single stems but in an inflorescence. Seasonally also the
plant is at the opposite pole to the Christmas rose. Instead of pushing its way up
through the snows of winter it springs vigorously upwards to burst into bloom at
the peak of summer. Thus instead of torpor, the characteristic of Helleborus,
there is here a suggestion of terror. Instead of the sluggishness of winter growth
this upstanding summer-flowering plant betokens swift, sudden, strenuous
activity."2
ROOTS The plant Aconitum is perennial; yet each distinct root lasts only one
year, the plant being continued by daughter roots. "At the same time as growth
and development take place above, there is a stir of movement below ground.
The root tuber begins to release the life, which until now it has wilfully held on
to, into an adventitious root that in turn swells to form a tuber. The old root later
dies and the daughter root will in the following year send forth the flowering
plant. The root process thus stands out from the
life pattern of the Monkshood, as something special. It permits only part of the
life of the plant to rise and unfold above ground, forcing another, important, part
to remain forever in the root sphere. The Monkshood overemphasizes the root
life. ... In the midst of a season when the earth element is effervescing, burning
itself up, merging into the cosmic sphere, and the cosmic is entering with might
and main into the earthly sphere, the Monkshood in its tautly gathered,
definitively shaped form, with the helmet and visor of its dark violet or blue
flower, is like a stronghold guarding and containing selfhood, a bulwark of firm
resolve, resisting any inclination towards volatility."3
EFFECTS "In all its parts, but particularly in the root, the aconite harbours one
of the most formidable poisons known. For the old Greeks it constituted the
poison. In their mythology they attributed its origin to the foam spilling from the
mouth of Cerberus, the watchdog of hell. Aconitine, the main representative of a
group of similar alkaloids contained in the plant, is the most poisonous and
swiftest acting alkaloid. Three milligrams are sufficient to kill a horse. More
powerful than hydrocyanic acid, it acts with similar tremendous rapidity. Such
overwhelming power, if released within the human economy, can evoke only one
kind of mental reaction - fear. The expression of fear in its highest degree, the
fear of death, the fear that the end is approaching, will be found only among the
most powerful poisons which attack life at its very source. The condition, which
is most likely to produce this deep-rooted biological fear, is interference
These plants are obviously able to resist the relative anoxia of the high mountain
regions."4 "If monkshood is eaten, symptoms start rapidly with a burning or
tingling sensation of the lips, tongue, mouth and throat. Delayed-onset
symptoms include excessive salivation, nausea, vomiting, tightness and
numbness in the throat, impaired swallowing and possibly speech impairment.
Intermittent visual disturbances can include blurred vision or colour patches in
the visual field and pronounced and prolonged pupil dilation. Dizziness,
prickling skin sensation, muscle weakness and uncoordinated movements can
also occur. In critical cases there are heart rate and rhythm disturbances followed
by convulsions and death. Death may occur as early as a few minutes after
ingestion or as late as four days. Heart rate and rhythm disturbances can be
serious.
Those who survive report odd hallucinations during the poisoning episode and
sensory disturbances for a long time afterward. If the victim does not die,
recovery occurs within 24 hours."5
In the short story 'Der Kardinal Napellus' he describes a secret order called
Blauen Brüder, whose followers let themselves be buried alive when they felt
their end was nearing. After his death, the founder of the order, Cardinal
Napellus, had transformed himself into the first Aconite. To join the order,
novices had to set Aconites in the ground, baptize them with their own blood,
and nurture them with the blood obtained from the wounds of flagellantism. The
symbolic meaning of the blood baptism was to implant the soul magically in the
Garden of Eden and to nurture its growth with the blood of one's desires. The
members of the order used the plant in a psychoactive fashion. After the flowers
had withered in the autumn, the poisonous seeds were gathered and ingested.
Resembling miniature human hearts, the seeds represented, after the secret
tradition of the order, the 'mustard seed' of faith. In the same way that the
dangerous poison affected the heart and brought one in the state between life and
death, so the germ of faith was thought to alter the blood, turning into the
miraculous power that occurs during the hours between the agony of death and
ecstatic elation. 10
TRIBES The Buttercup family is divided into two subfamilies and five tribes.
Clematideae: Clematis.
•• [2] Austrian proving [Gerstel and Arneth] - 15 provers [13 males, 2 females],
1843; method: increasing doses of tincture, every 1-4 days, for periods ranging
from 3 to 6
weeks.
Affinity
Modalities
Main symptoms
M Forethought - knowledge.
• "An insufferable know-it-all. ... death has been at their door. It could come
again.
These subjects will then try to organize themselves to be able to face it: they
must plan everything in advance, know everything there is to know. Anxiety and
fear of death -
M EXCITABLE.
• "Acon. is very excitable. Can flare up al of a sudden. Can get frightened very
easily.
Pain can make him beside himself. This excitement will be manifested suddenly
and violently - violent anger, violent fear etc. with great restlessness; will go up
and down, pace back and forth and show an acute panic reaction. The Aconite
person who is calm can suddenly flare up and start shouting, can get frightened
and start moaning and groaning and can get so panicky that he can start throwing
his arms widely about. Not only his health, but also the health of people around
him causes him great concern; a problem with anyone and he doesn't react in a
cool manner, but always in a panicky, jerky fashion and will raise a big hue and
cry, get worked up - pace back and forth -
summon all the doctors and may even land himself in the hospital after that - so
great is his excitement." [Sankaran]
M Extreme RESTLESSNESS.
And Anguish, FEAR of DEATH.
Hurry.
And Palpitation and tingling sensations throughout the body, but mainly the
extremities.
Often started after a frightful experience, e.g. car accident in a tunnel, or a strong
fright, or being stuck in an elevator, although sometimes without a known
causation [too far back in the past].
[In most cases during the first or second experience of a frightening situation,
e.g.
hyperventilation; after the first occurrence, and noticing that he didn't die, the
patient is more used to the situation and consequently less panic-stricken.]
• "Rhus is easily distinguished from Aconite. The Rhus patient wil tel you it is
no use to prescribe for him - he is going to die any way; while the Aconite
patient is distressed, and predicts the day or hour." [Kent]
M OVERSENSITIVE to:
Pain. ["Even when the pains are slight and bearable, due to his extreme
susceptibility he exaggerates them to such an extent that his own imagination of
the enormity of his complaints overpower him." - Kent]
Trifles. ["He gets vexed at trifles and takes things seriously even when meant in
a joke."
- Kent]
to tone down their degree of panic. They still have a deep active feeling that
something terrible is about to happen. Beyond fear, towards panic. It was a
sudden onset as causation. Near miss in an auto accident, or a bad landing in an
airplane, earthquake, witness violence or a murder, etc. Severe and sudden
unexpected fright [Stramonium often with extreme rage and anger]." [Gray]
[Gallavardin]
• "Esp. applicable to plethoric persons, or those leading sedentary lives; dark hair
and eyes; persons with rigid fibre." [Cowperthwaite]
• "It is particularly useful in sudden, violent and acute cases, which are worse in
the evening. The patients are tortured by fears; afraid of darkness, ghosts."
[Dewey]
ACUTE PAINS.
• "Aconite produces no formation of pus; this is a negative feature. You may give
Aconite where there is redness of the mucous membrane, but when pus forms it
is not indicated." [Kent]
• "The type of the Aconite fever is sthenic and continuous, and not intermittent
or remittent. It has no symptom in its pathogenesis, which points to
intermittence.
Beginning with the initial chill or chills, the dry heat follows and continues until
sweat brings relief. Then the fever is over so far as Aconite is concerned. It has
no typical return of these febrile attacks. Hence, you cannot give Aconite in
intermittent fever. Then, again, it must be borne in mind that sometimes the fever
is not the disease itself, but a symptom which is necessary for the proper
development of the disease." [Farrington]
c The Aconite fever begins in the head and goes down; the cold begins in the
feet and comes up.
INTOLERABLE PAINS; driving him crazy; shrieking with pain; expects to die.
G VERTIGO.
And Bursting headache [as if the brain were agitated and boiling, and as if it
would protrude through the forehead].
And Nausea and vanishing of sight.
P Conjunctivitis.
Child wakes up at night and screams, and puts the hands to the genitals.
Rubrics
Mind
Mental activity alternating with dulness [1/1]. Anxiety > cold drinks [1].
Aversion, has no affection for anybody during pregnancy [1]. Cheerful before
menses [1]. Clairvoyance
[2] [= predicts time of death]. Thoughts of death [3]. Delusion some part of body
is deformed [1; Sabad.]; he was about to die [3]; sees faces grow larger [1; Aur.];
of jostling against everyone she meets [1/1]; mental acts were performed in
stomach [1/1]. Fear of busy street [3] of death during labour [3]; of death during
menses [1; Plat.; Verat.]; of death during pregnancy [3/1]; of narrow places [3];
of suffocation [3]; of tunnels [2].
Hurry, while walking, rudely pushes everyone out of his way [1*]. Indifference
after anxiety [1]. Desire for light [2]. Desire for mental exertion in morning
[1/1]. Restlessness before sleep [2; Phos.; Thuj.]. Slowness while eating [1/1].
Head
Sensation as if hair were standing on end [1*]. Pain, painful spots on hairy scalp,
< cold air [1*], < touch [1*], < strong wind [1*].
Eye
Photophobia during rage [2; Bell.; Stram.]. Eyelids sensitive to cold air [3/1].
Vision
Face
Heat > blowing nose [1/1]. Sensation of swelling, left side of face and forehead,
gradually spreading over entire body [1*]; of lips [1*].
Mouth
Stomach
Sensation as if stomach were alternately distended and fallen in [1*]. Nausea, >
after breakfast [1*], after meat [1*]. Thirst during pains [1; Cham.; Nat-c.].
Rectum
Chest
Oppression > wine [1/1]. Pain, can only lie on back [2; Bry.; Phos.]. Sensation as
if boiling water was poured into chest [3/1].
Back
Limbs
Sensation as if feet were adherent to the ground [1*]. Coldness of feet, in warm
room
[1*], when walking [1*]. Heaviness, lower limbs, on ascending stairs [1*].
Automatic motion of hands, he strikes his face [1/1]. Numbness, of lower limbs,
when sitting [1*], while standing [1*; Sep.]. Tingling in feet extending upward
[3/1]. Weakness, lower limbs, on ascending stairs [1*].
Perspiration
Generals
Catalepsy after fright [2/1]. Faintness after fright [3]. Sensation as if he stood on
the vibrating stool of an electric machine and sparks were drawn from him [1*].
Food
Aversion: [3]: Wine. [1]: Artichokes; bread, wheat [*]; coffee; cold drink; fat; ice
cream; milk; oysters; tobacco.
Desire: [3]: Beer; cold drinks. [2]: Bitter drinks [during fever]; bitter food
[during fever]; wine. [1]: Alcohol; beans and peas; brandy; cabbage; fish;
pungent [during fever]; sour; whisky.
Worse: [2]: Fat; wine. [1]: Alcohol; beer; bitter drinks; butter; coffee; cold food;
fruit; hot food; meat = nausea*]; milk; pork; pungent food; soup; sour; sweets;
vinegar; warm food.
Better: [3]: Wine. [1]: Coffee; cold drinks; cold food; milk; soup.
* Repertory additions [Hughes].
Aesculus hippocastanum
Aesc.
[Marie Antoinette]
[Tennyson]
Signs
NAME Aesculus is the ancient Latin name of an oak or mast-bearing tree. The
name
[from esca, food] was applied originally to a species of oak, which was highly
prized for its acorns. The specific name hippocastanum is derived from Gr.
hippos, a horse, and L.
castanea, the Chestnut tree or Virgil. Some writers think that the prefix 'horse' is
a corruption of the Welsh gwres, meaning hot, fierce, or pungent, e.g. 'Horse-
chestnut' =
the bitter chestnut, in opposition to the sweet one, Castanea vesca [= C. sativa],
although this is an entirely different tree to which it is not even distantly related.
Castanea is one of the eight genera constituting the Fagaceae family; other well-
known members are Fagus
[beech] and Quercus [oak]. Another explanation for the name Horse chestnut is
the resemblance of the large seeds to chestnuts, and because the Turks often
grind them into a coarse flour, which is mixed with other food and given to
horses that are broken-winded
[having short breath or disordered respiration]. The name Buckeye comes from
the resemblance of the seeds to the eye of the buck.
FEATURES All thirteen Aesculus species have large and usually sticky winter
buds, wrapped about with fourteen resinous scales. No frost or damp can thus
harm the leaf and flower. The terminal buds develop with amazing rapidity with
the approach of spring.
The sun melts the resin that binds them together. These splendid trees with
spreading branches, in particular A. hippocastanum, are widely planted in
Europe as ornamental shade trees. A. hippocastanum is indigenous to Eastern
Europe and northern and central parts of Asia. It thrives best in a good, sandy
loam and very rapidly may reach 30 meters in height and as much across, with
five- or seven- five- or seven-lobed leaves and spikes of variegated white and
red flowers, "tapering upwards amidst the foliage like so many wax lights." The
large leaves spread like fingers from the palm of the hand. "All over the small
branches may be found the curious marks in the shape of minute horse-shoes,
from which, perhaps, the tree gets its name. They are really the leaf scars.
Wherever a bygone leaf has been, can be traced on the bark a perfect facsimile
of a horseshoe, even to the seven nail markings, which are perfectly distinct.
And among the twigs may be found some with an odd resemblance to a horse's
foot and fetlock."1
SEED The fruit, a brown nut, has a remarkable shining, polished skin. A large
green husk with short spines envelops it, which splits into three valves when
falling to the ground. The ripe seeds, known in England as 'conkers', are a source
of starch, and fed to stock. Cattle are said to eat them with relish, though pigs
will not touch them. "The method of utilizing them is to first soak them in lime-
water, which deprives them of the well-known bitter flavour inherent in the nuts,
and then to grind them to a meal and mix them with the ordinary provender."2
USES From the wood charcoal is obtained which is used for manufacturing
gunpowder.
The soft and spongy timber is too light to be of much value. The nuts,
unpalatable for humans, are particularly rich in potash [60% of the ashes] and
phosphorus [22%], and have been used as a substitute for soap. To prevent them
from becoming mouldy and rot, the nuts are preserved in sand during the winter.
They reputedly contain narcotic properties. Aescine, present in the nuts, is used
as a sunburn protective. The bark is odourless, but has a bitter astringent taste. It
has tonic, narcotic and febrifuge properties and has been used in intermittent
fevers.
EFFECTS The leaves are poisonous in early spring. Intoxications from eating
the nuts are rare. Symptoms of poisoning may include inflammation of mucous
membranes, vomiting, diarrhoea, violent thirst, facial redness, and anxiety. In
more serious cases nervous disorders, sleepiness, stupor, loss of power to
coordinate action of limbs, and even paralysis of respiration can occur. Aesculus
has properties similar to those of vitamin P [permeability vitamin]: it reduces the
permeability and fragility of capillaries,
FLOWER REMEDY Dr Edward Bach chose the remedy Chestnut Bud [the
green buds of the horse chestnut] for people who repeatedly make the same
mistake but seem unable to learn from it. He says that the cause might be
indifference, inattention or failure to anticipate the outcome of their actions.
These people try to forget the past and in the process, lose a grip on the present
and the future. [Compare the rubric: "Dulness or confusion on waking, morning
or night."]
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: Morning, on waking. After stool. Urinating. WALKING. During and
after sleep.
Better: COOL, open air; cold water. Bleeding [piles]. Kneeling. Continued
exertion.
Comparisons
c VEINS
"The Puls. veins contract in cold weather, and the shrivelling up makes the
patient feel better, but the veins fill and become engorged in the warm air and
after a hot bath. A tepid bath sometimes makes a Puls. patient feel better, but a
Turkish bath is generally distressing. Many of the complaints of Aesc. are of this
sort; Aesc. often feels better in cold air." [Kent]
Main symptoms
• "On waking [from sleep while sitting] cannot recognize what she sees; knows
not where she is; nor whence came the objects about her." [Allen]
Chestnut Bud: Repeating the same faults over and over again, because
experiences are not really digested and not enough is learned from them. Seems
very slow to learn from life. Events are not reconsidered at sufficient depth.
Attempts to forget unpleasant experiences as quickly as possible. Prefers to rush
into new ventures rather than letting past ones have any real effect. Mental
blocks, retarded development.
OR:
M Clearness,
"with light feeling in anterior lobes, but heaviness and dulness in occiput."
[Allen]
M Extreme irritability.
Loses temper easily and gains control over it again but slowly. [Allen]
Dominance.
sometimes too much so for the rest of the household! Early mornings tend to be
their best time of day for strenuous activity, but the strongest of them are still
leaping up on the tables at midnight, singing loudly and waving their arms about.
'Horse chestnut' is a frightfully jolly person! ... All this energetic leaping about in
early life can lead to adrenal over-charging and a constant strain on other
endocrine glands because of it. In the male, especially, there often seems to be
great development in the physical and athletic use of adrenal glands, sometimes
at the expense of the sensual and sexual uses for the prostate gland. Such males
can be gladiators in the sporting world, but find great difficulty with the softer
and gentler hormones used in emotions, in sexual activity, and in physical
comfort. They can, and do, become martyrs to physical competency, training
hard and vigorously to achieve 'perfect' condition. They run up sandhills and
three flights of stairs
at the office, thoroughly enjoying their 'excellent' health. They can even regard
sexual activity in a 'performance' sense, notching up the quantity, and not
necessarily aware of the quality - esp. for their partner! If ever a herb reflected
macho-maleness, it's Horse Chestnut! The female 'Horse chestnut' can be
fearsome! Large arms pummel you on the massage-table, and you can bet she'll
run round the block at the end of the day, just to use up all that excess hip and
thigh energy."1
G WEARINESS.
G Slowness.
G Chilliness.
And Sensation of heat [veins, skin] and burning rawness [mucous membranes].
• "The symptoms pass away after considerable exertion; moving about, doing
something, keeping busy relieves." [Kent]
G < Rubbing.
• "Not the fulness that pits upon pressure, that we cal oedema, but a tenseness."
[Kent]
P Coryza.
P Talking.
• "Aesculus is also a remedy for follicular pharyngitis when the chief symptom is
a dry rough or raw feeling in the fauces, and a sensation of constriction, and esp.
when occurring in haemorrhoidal subjects." [Cowperthwaite]
And Haemorrhoids.
P Constipation.
• "There is little tendency to haemorrhage, but much severe fulness and bearing
down, with constipation." [Kent]
< Walking.
And Constipation.
• "Dry uncomfortable feeling in the rectum which feels as if it had been fil ed
with sticks."
• "Dreadful pain in the anus, could not sit, stand or lie down. The pain was like a
knife, sawing backward and forwards, almost a martyrdom for agony." [Hughes]
More or less constant, and feeling as if the back would give way at that point.
This causes a sense of great fatigue when walking, so that walking is almost
impossible.
P Rheumatic pains.
> Warmth.
Rubrics
Mind
Confusion on waking [2]; knows not where she is [2]. Feeling as if death were
impending during the darting pain in trachea, followed by exalted condition of
brain and nervous system [1/1*]. Dulness in morning on waking [2].
Head
Vision
Colours, black spots before the eyes > fixing eyes on an object [1/1].
Nose
Face
Congestion after rubbing [1/1]. Red discolouration after washing [2]. Swelling of
face after washing [2/1].
Mouth
Speech difficult, inability to speak long words distinctly [1/1*]. Taste like
liquorice
[1*].
Teeth
Throat
Dryness of throat after eating [1; Nat-m.]. Disposition to swallow, from saliva
[1*].
Stomach
Abdomen
Haemorrhoids > warm weather [2/1]. Pain > kneeling [2/1]. Prolapsus at night
[2/1].
Cough
Chest
Back
Limbs
Heat of left arm and hand [1*]; feeling of heaviness and swelling in them [1*].
Pain, broken sensation in hip, as if pelvis were falling apart [1; Tril.]. Sensation
of paralysis of legs [3]. Swelling of hands after washing [1/1]; of feet after
washing [1/1].
Food
Aethusa cynapium
Aeth.
A child, like your stomach, doesn't need all you can afford to give it.
[McKenzie]
Signs
Aethusa cynapium. Lesser hemlock. Fool's parsley. Dog parsley. Devil's Wand.
N.O. Umbelliferae.
under the name of Narthekodes by Theophrastus and the Greek word Narthex
was replaced by Ferula in Latin, the name applied to the dried stalks of
umbellifers such as fennel [Foeniculum] or Ferula. In Greek art Dionysus is
often shown bearing a Ferula or ferule in his hand. Herbs or condiments such as
anise, cumin, coriander, dill and fennel were known to Theophrastus and
characterized by their naked seeds and herbaceous stems. The Umbelliferae
seems to be the first flowering plant family to be recognized as such by botanists
about the end of the 16th century, although only the temperate Old World species
were then known. The Umbelliferae contains about 300 genera and 2,500
NAME The name Aethusa is derived from Gr. aitho, burning, shining, in
reference to the shiny leaves, or from Gr. aithusso, to set on fire, alluding to the
acrid taste of the juice.
The specific name cynapium is composed of Gr. kynos, dog, and L. apium,
parsley.
AETHUSA The leaves of this annual plant are very similar to those of Parsley,
but of a darker, glossy green and when bruised they emit a disagreeable, garlicky
odour. It has white flowers, while those of Parsley are yellow or yellowish green.
Aethusa is the fourth poisonous umbellifer; after Conium, Cicuta virosa,
Oenanthe - in that order. It is in many aspects similar to Conium. The difference
between them consists on the intense garlic smell, instead of the nasty mouse-
urine smell of Conium. Though less poisonous than Conium, Aethusa contains
the same active principle as this plant [coniïne, formerly called cynapine]. Eating
the fresh leaves or roots by mistake for parsley or radishes may in humans result
in death. The dried herb loses most of its toxicity. Allen certainly got it very
wrong when stating, "This plant, formerly supposed to be poisonous, is now
proved to be harmless; large quantities can be taken with impunity."2
EFFECTS "The Fool's Parsley is indigenous to Europe and Siberia, from whence
it has been introduced into this country where it now grows, still sparingly, along
roadsides and waste places about cultivated grounds, in New England, and from
there to Pennsylvania, flowering in July and August. ... By the early writers it is
so often confounded with
Conium, that it is very difficult to trace its history. The first author to
characterize it was Hermoulaus Barbarus, who called it Cicuta terrestris minore;
it is also mentioned by Matthiolus, Jonston, Jungius, Müller and others, all
speaking of its peculiar effects when eaten. Its action has been generally
considered like that of Conium, but milder, and its principal, if not its only use,
was in some forms of obstinate cutaneous disorders."3
TOXICOLOGY The toxic symptomatology is characterized by burning pain in
mouth, throat and gastrointestinal tract, followed by colics, diarrhoea, convulsive
paroxysms with tremor, progressive ascending muscular paralysis [a general
feature of all poisonous umbellifers], evolving to respiratory failure and cardiac
arrest. In non-fatal cases of intoxication loss of hair and nails was observed.
Animals avoid the plant for its repulsive odour, although rabbits, sheep and goats
seem to be immune to its poison.
TRIBES The Carrot family is usually divided into three subfamilies and twelve
tribes. 4
Hydrocotyleae: Hydrocotyle.
Mulineae: Azorella.
• Subfamily Saniculoideae.
Lagoecieae:Lagoecia, Petagnia.
• Subfamily Apioideae.
Echinophoreae: Echinophora.
Coriandreae: Coriandrum.
Dauceae: Daucus.
Allen concluded from these experiments that "it seems established beyond any
possibility of doubt, that the plant is harmless. Our own experiments prove this
conclusively; in New York we had the co-operation of thirty or forty individuals,
who took varying doses of the expressed juice of the plant without the slightest
effect. The editor himself drank it by the wineglassful. A few experienced some
disturbance. It was not attempted to make a proving, as in that case the potencies
would have been tried; we only desired to verify Dr. Harley's observations as to
the poisonous nature of the herb."5
[1] Heywood, Flowering Plants of the World. [2] Allen, Handbook of Materia
Medica.
[3] Millspaugh, American Medicinal Plants. [4] Heywood, ibid. [5] Allen,
Encyclopedia, Vol. 10.
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: MILK. Hot weather. Dentition. Frequent eating. After vomiting. After
stool.
Better: Walking in open air. Rest. Covering. Tightly bandaging the head.
Main symptoms
M Feels different from other people; lives in his own sentimental world.
LOVES ANIMALS, talks to animals, looks after them with unnatural passion.
Emotions strong but kept in, without a clear cause or a traumatic experience.
Love for animals stronger than for humans, because of the idea that interpersonal
communication is apt to fail.
In advanced stage, fear of falling asleep [afraid he will never wake up again] and
fear of narcosis.
[Vithoulkas]
M EXAMINATION FUNK.
Cannot take any more in [comp. with the inability to digest nourishment - milk].
• "Schoolgirls who prefer to play with their cat, because they can't study, they
can't concentrate on their study work."1
• "The remedy is also useful for students who are stuffed with al sorts of
knowledge and who abruptly reject anything to do with their studies."
[Grandgeorge]
M Mother-Infant Misunderstanding
• "This remedy is helpful for babies who never stop crying and are nursed
constantly by the mother. At the breast once every hour or two, the infant is
stuffed, and is subject to digestive troubles: colic, regurgitation of curdled milk.
The key to the remedy is found in the difficulty of establishing communication
between mother and child. The baby cries, the mother doesn't know what she
needs, becomes anxious, and decides to feed her, whether it is at the breast or
with a bottle." [Grandgeorge]
• "The bowels become relaxed, and everything put into the stomach either comes
up or goes right through. This occurs especially in those infants that have been
fed as the ordinary everyday mother feeds her baby, and how is that? Every time
it cries she puts it to the breast or feeds it." [Kent]
Some deep disturbance between mother and child, resulting in closing off the
emotions and hatred. The love that has gone sour is now directed to animals,
creatures incapable of hurting and betraying become their closest friends."2
drops more, which made her deathly sick, but she could bring nothing up but
phlegm."
[Hughes]
• [Female, aged 22, epilepsy; 8 to 10 grand mal, and 2 to 3 petit mal per week.]
"The main point about the case was that the patient gorged herself on milk
before she had the seizures. She just had an irresistible urge to drink gallons of
milk and then it would bring on the convulsions. This fact mainly led me to
Aethusa, but also she rolled the eyes down and this is very characteristic in
Aethusa. Other considerations: clenched thumbs, jaws locked, pupils dilated,
immovable and staring, fear before examinations. ... Immediately after taking the
remedy [Aeth. 200c] she felt much clearer in her head. She had suffered much
congestion. The 'gunge' in her head started to move and clear out through the
nose.
Thick clear mucous came down the nose and she had to constantly blow it to
clear it.
Feeling a lot better and more sociable with people. ... "3
G Chilliness.
Cold and clammy sweat and great coldness in abdomen and of extremities.
• "It has cured dyspepsia from constant feeding, in those nibblers, those hungry
fel ows who are always eating, always nibbling, always taking crackers in their
pockets until there comes a time when the stomach ceases to act. It also suits
cases of indigestion from head troubles, with hot head, vomiting, exhaustion,
sweat and long sleep." [Kent]
G Thirstlessness.
G Convulsions.
And Eyes turned DOWNWARD; red face; fixed dilated pupils; foam at mouth;
trismus; clenched thumbs; perspiration [particularly at night, with desire to be
covered].
< Lying.
• "Another kind of pain begins in the occiput or nape of the neck and goes down
the spine. The only relief is from bending stiffly backward. As soon as she
passes flatus or passes a stool, the headache ceases." [Olds]
P Hands, head and face seem swollen after walking in open air, > indoors.
[Allen]
[1] Gaublomme, Aethusa case, Small Remedies Seminar 1990. [2] Corrie Hiwat,
Two cases of Aethusa, HL 1/95. [3] Francis Bowe, Learning Curve: Treating
Cancer and other serious conditions in a new way; The Homoeopathic Times,
Spring 2001.
Rubrics
Mind
Anticipation before examination [2]. Anxiety in the dark [1]; during headache
[1].
Awkward, drops things [1]. Conversation > [1; Eup-per.; Lac-d.]. Darkness < [2;
=
sensation of suffocation at night, goes to window to have fresh air]. Delirium >
perspiration [1/1]. Delusion persons are animals [2]; sees cats [2], dogs [2], rats
[2]; delusion senses are separated from objects, as if there were a barrier between
them [1/1]
Vertigo
Head
Heat in head after vertigo [1/1]. Sensation as if something were turning around
in forehead [1/1*].
Vision
Ear
Face
Stomach
Eructations > lying [1; Rhus-t.]. Thirst during headache [1]. Thirstless during
heat [2].
Abdomen
Kidneys
Female
Respiration
Chest
Sleep
Perspiration
On beginning to sleep [1; Con.].
Generals
Sensation of boiling heat in blood vessels [1*]. Pain, stitching, burning, like
needles
[1*].
Food
Worse: [3]: Milk. [2]: Coffee. [1]: Alcohol; cold drinks; rich food; wine.
Agaricus muscarius
Agar.
Fear makes fools of two kinds of men: the one who is afraid of nothing, and the
other who is afraid of everything.
[McKenzie]
Signs
KINGDOM FUNGI Fungi have been traditionally grouped with plants, but they
are as distinct from vascular plants as they are from animals. Fungi have no
motile cells at any stage of their life cycles and no direct evolutionary
connection with the plants. Unlike green plants and algae, which contain
chlorophyll, fungi are unable to synthesize their energy requirements from
sunlight. They are all heterotrophs, like animals, meaning that they depend for
their nourishment on organic matter already produced by other organisms.
Therefore fungi are now placed in a distinct kingdom. The cell wall of fungi is
composed of chitin, a polysaccharide that is never found in plants, but that is the
principal component of the exoskeleton of insects and crustaceans. The
durability of chitin allows certain fungi to break through asphalt and to uproot
paving stones. Most fungi reproduce both sexually and asexually. Occasionally
asexual reproduction occurs by fragmentation of the hyphae [thread-like cells],
but most reproduction is through the spreading of asexual spores by wind or
water. Hyphae grow by elongation at the tips and also by branching. The
resulting profusion of hyphae is called the mycelium. Abundant development of
mycelium may result in the formation of large fruiting structures such as
mushrooms and puffballs. Other types of massive hyphal structures enable some
fungi to exist under difficult conditions or to spread to suitable nutritional
sources. Fungi typically obtain nutrients by secreting digestive enzymes termed
exoenzymes into the food source and absorbing the smaller organic molecules
that are released. Although mainly terrestrial, fungi also live in water or other
media that contain organic substances. 1
FUNGI "Fungi are those plants which are colourless; they have no green
chlorophyll within them, and it is this green substance which enables the higher
plants to build up, under the influence of sunlight, the starches and sugars which
ultimately form our food.
Having no chlorophyll, fungi cannot use the energy of the sun and must
therefore adapt another method of life. They either live as parasites on other
living plants or animals, or they live on decaying matter ... Fungi differ from
flowering plants in their chemical influence upon the air. They absorb oxygen
and exhale carbonic acid, performing the same office in this respect as animals,
which they most resemble in chemical composition. The odours they emit in
decay are more like putrescent animal than vegetable matter ... Their office in
the organized world is to check exuberance of growth, to facilitate
decomposition, to regulate the balance of the component elements of the
atmosphere, to promote fertility and to nourish myriads of the smaller members
of the animal kingdom ... Certain of the species represent a danger to our
existing food supply; the parasites on wheat, rye [Secale], corn [Ustilago] and on
potato plants [Solanum tuberosum aegrotans] have of recent years been of study
by scientific agriculturists ... Yet many of them perform useful and even
beneficent functions, such as yeasts ... In ancient times the eating of fungi was a
common practice. The Romans especially favoured the Boleti."2
FUNGUS PHYSIOLOGY Fungi require free oxygen and large amounts of water
and of carbohydrates or other carbon sources for growth. Sugars such as glucose
and levulose are usable by most fungi, but the use of other carbon sources
depends on the ability of the fungus to produce suitable enzymes. Some of the
mycorrhizal fungi may use nitrogen from the atmosphere, but all of the others
depend on nitrates, ammonium salts, or other inorganic or organic nitrogen
compounds. Other elements necessary for fungus growth include potassium,
phosphorus, magnesium, and sulphur. Traces of iron, manganese, copper,
molybdenum, zinc, and gallium and small amounts of growth substances also are
necessary. Some fungi are at least partially deficient in one or more of these
growth substances. The enzymes of fungi enable them to act upon a variety of
substances. A group of enzymes, called the zymase complex, permits yeasts to
carry on alcoholic fermentation. Glycogen, a substance related to starch and
dextrin, is the most common reserve carbohydrate of fungi.
condition. Fungi attack cloth, paint, cartons, leather, waxes, jet fuel, insulation
on cables and wires, photographic film, and even the coating of the lenses of
optical equipment - in fact, almost any conceivable substance. The importance of
fungi as commercial pests is enhanced by their ability to grow under a wide
range of conditions. The qualities of fungi that make them such important pests
also make them commercially valuable. Many fungi, especially the yeasts, are
useful because of their ability to produce substances such as ethanol and carbon
dioxide, which plays a central role in baking."3
species. Some members are poisonous, as the Amanitas [Fly and Deadly
Agarics], whereas others, as Agaricus, Cantharellus, etc., are among the best
edible species.
NAME The name Agaricus probably comes from Agari, a district in Sarmatia. It
was applied by Dioscorides to a peculiar drug supplied by the Polyporus of the
Larch, which was of considerable repute. The specific name is derived from
musca, a fly. It has names that link it with flies in many European languages, e.g.
vliegenzwam in Dutch, flugsvamp in Swedish, tue-mouche in French,
Fliegenpilz in German, moscario in Italian, and mukhomor in Russian. The name
derives from its former use in Germany as an insecticide. The first to record this
was the Dominican Bishop of Regensburg, Albertus Magnus, who died in 1280.
The generic name Amanita derives from the Gr. amanitai, meaning 'fungi
without any details'.
SYMBOLISM The fly agaric has been a symbol of luck and happiness since
ancient times. It is given as a good-luck charm, esp. at Christmas and New
Year's. Ott, author of Pharmacotheon, has suggested that some of the imagery of
Santa Claus is related to the Siberian shamanic rituals surrounding fly agaric.
Santa Claus's ascent of the chimney echoes Siberian festivals in which the
shaman would climb the central post that held up the roof of the winter dwelling
and exit via the smokehole; his clothing of red and white reflects the colours of
the fungus; his flight through the sky is shamanic; modern mythology places
Santa's homeland as Lapland, the region in northern Scandinavia that is also the
homeland of the reindeer. The 'take off' for the shamanic journey to the
Otherworlds was in several traditions around the world symbolically represented
by the
shaman climbing a birch pole, at the top of which he might flap his arms like a
bird's wings. An interesting point here is that the birch tree has a symbiotic
relationship with the fly agaric. According to the famous ethnomycologist R.
Gordon Wasson, chimney-sweeps in central Europe regard the fly agaric as their
own emblem. German names as Glückspilz [lucky mushroom] and
Narrenschwamm [jester's mushroom] testify to folk knowledge of the
intoxicating potential of the cosmopolitan fly agaric. An ancient Indian
manuscript calls Soma "the son of the thunder". The association of Amanita with
thunder and lightning was not uncommon, e.g. with the Mayas.
FOLKLORE The popularity of the mushroom-loving garden gnome is as
persistent as widespread. Garden gnomes seem to fulfil the same purpose as the
Germanic Alrauns; they are placed as symbols of good luck and guardianship,
and, frequently perched on mushrooms, pose like protectors of the lawn or fish
pond. The fly agaric is linked with spirits in Siberia and parts of Europe, and
also in Japan, where it represents flying spirits of the forest that sometimes
appeared as long-nosed humans and alternatively took the form of birds. "In
Germany, fairy rings were supposed to be caused by witches dancing on
Walpurgis Nacht [May Day Eve]. In general, they were the work of fairies. In
Wales, if a fairy ring were found in a field, the landowner left it well alone. The
rings were linked with fertility and doom. Cattle could not eat grass from the
rings, but Welsh mountain sheep were said to thrive on grass growing in these
circles. It was believed that crops grown on the site of plowed fairy rings would
be rich and abundant, but the farmer would from then on be under the threat of
great personal and spiritual danger from the wrath of the fairies. A large body of
Welsh folktales describes the fate of the mortals who entered the ring. The usual
pattern of these tales is that the trespasser finds within the ring a group of spirits
dancing and is forced to dance with them. The land of the spirits operates on a
different time scale to the world of earth, a concept reflected in Europe and also
Japan. A moment of fairy time represents an aeon of mortal time. In the Welsh
tales, the mortals are finally released and allowed to return home. Upon reaching
their houses, they find strange people living there. The disoriented travellers are
offered bread. Upon eating this food, the passage of time that they have been
away manifests itself in their bodies, and they crumble to dust. 5
known far longer. "Some 3,500 years ago, Aryan peoples swept down from the
north into the Indus Valley of India, bringing with them the cult of soma, a god-
narcotic of vegetal origin. ... The cult eventually died out, and for some obscure
reason, the original holy plant was forgotten. For more than 2,000 years the
source of soma has been a mystery.
During the past century, more than 100 suggested identifications of the identity
of the original soma have been offered. Amongst the most widely mentioned
'identifications'
On the basis of meticulous and scholarly study of the vedas and extensive
interdisciplinary research, Wasson has recently identified the original soma as A.
Musical talents sing constantly, some people chatter, laugh, and tell their secrets
to everybody, whereas others behave as if they are under the influence of
hashish. Their concept of space disappears and they make big leaps to step over
a blade of grass or other small objects. Often muscular strength is particularly
increased."8
FRENZY In ancient Greece the dionysia - orgiastic festivals - were staged in the
honour of the God Dionysus [Bacchus]. Inebriating, aphrodisiac beverages were
passed around and the participants sang and danced until their bodies quivered in
ecstasy. It finally ended when everybody fell to the floor completely exhausted.
If the wine was of a good
But if the wine was of a particular good bouquet, Greek sources are silent about
the one plant that was singularly predestined for the wine of Dionysus: the fly
agaric. It could really elicit the frenzy required for his mysteries. "It has been
suggested that the ancient berserker of Scandinavia, who went on periodic orgies
of killing, intoxicated themselves
into a mad frenzy possibly by ingesting fly agaric, but there is not a shred of
evidence for and much against this theory."9
reality as an inner world with a strong feeling of introspection. ... The sense of
ego was maintained throughout the experience. ... People experienced a
particular kind of imagination where thoughts were immediately transformed
into images. This has happened to six people. During the Amanita experience
people complained of a lack of attention with a high involvement in inner
images and sensations and great difficulty in directing concentration. No effects
were reported on memory, which was unimpaired in all throughout the
experience. Nobody has reported feelings of irritation, anger, shame, guilt or
other negative feelings. Sexual feelings and also sensations of love, joy and bliss
were absent. Some people remember a marked sense of detachment and no
emotional involvement. Control of the experience, thought and image was very
reduced because of the absence of volition: the person accepted this situation
with detachment and absence of any criticism. I think that the most powerful
quality of Amanita muscaria is this sense of silent talking to oneself; the kind of
internal dialogue where a person has the feeling of important revelations about
his life, a feeling which is maintained for a long time after the experience. More
research into this is needed, particularly with selected groups of people: I think
this mushroom could have a lot to teach us about ourselves." 11
•• [3] Adler - 20 provers [18 males, 2 females], 1863-64; method: 13 trials with
[mother]
[1] Northington and Schneider, The Botanical World. [2] Grieve, A Modern
Herbal. [3]
Raven et al, Biology of Plants. [4] Grieve, ibid. [5] Morgan, Toads and
Toadstools. [6]
McKenna, Food of the Gods. [7] Gibson, Studies of Homeopathic Remedies. [8]
Ernst von Bibra, Plant Intoxicants. [9] Schultes, The Botany and Chemistry of
Hallucinogens.
[10] Arora, Mushrooms Demystified. [11] Festi and Bianchi, Amanita muscaria :
Mycopharmacological Outline and Personal Experiences, PM and E Vol. 5.
Affinity
Modalities
Main symptoms
M DISTURBED SENSE OF PERSPECTIVE.
[every little problem is exaggerated; small holes appear like frightful chasms;
self-esteem, reciting his exploits; delusions of grandeur; exalted strength].
• "In a minute or two the Caterpil ar took the hookah out of its mouth and
yawned once or twice, and shook itself. Then it got down off the mushroom and
crawled away into the grass, merely remarking as it went, 'one side will make
you grow taller, and the other side will make you grow shorter.' 'One side of
what? The other side of what?' thought Alice to
herself. 'Of the mushroom,' said the Caterpillar, just as if she had asked it aloud;
and in another moment it was out of sight."
Unrestrained. Uninhibited.
[The Dutch have the same word for fungus ["zwam"] as for raving or twaddling
["zwammen"].]
• "I go from one extreme to the other - I am either very excited or very low. ... I
can't keep friends because I get too intimate with them. I start delving into all
their problems. I get too friendly. I want to see them all the time and then after
about four or six weeks I lose interest in them completely."1
• "Fearless, menacing, mischievous frenzy; also, frenzy which causes the patient
to assail and injure himself, with great exertion of power." [Allen]
• "He is intoxicated with fearless frenzy; forming bold and revengeful projects."
[Al en]
• "My dreams have a continuous theme over and over. I'm always fighting with
someone. I'm always the good guy. I'm always defending and helping people.
Hand-to-hand combat. Sometimes I feel very confident; sometimes fearful
because there's more than one combatant. In real life it's not a problem because
I'm a martial artist. I'm dangerous, so two or three opponents are no problem."2
• "She felt so light, that it seemed as though she could run as never before."
c As if distant.
• "Sound as if a nail were being driven into a board at a distance." [Al en]
c Exalted strength.
• "Their biggest fear is about their health and there is always a bizarre
connection with death. An Agaricus person will go to all the funerals in the
neighbourhood." [Vithoulkas]
• "Also when I was a teenager I used to sit up through the night talking with my
father about things like reincarnation, UFO's, ghosts and things like that.
Recently I have felt that I wanted to die - to see what it is like. I want to leave
my job and become a prison warder because I want to find out why they are in
prison. But after about two months I would probably be bored with that job."4
• "The only kind of book I like to read is a book about horror. The book must be
real y gory to be enjoyable. Even when I was a child that was the sort of book I
liked. They don't frighten me at all. I like looking at operations on TV - it's out
of curiosity - I like to see how things work."6
• "Some patients when going on with their own usual vocation are pretty smart,
but if you put some new idea before them, something not in the routine of their
work, they are perfectly idiotic. This is especially noticeable in the morning. He
can't take in anything new in the morning, but he is able to take in new ideas and
is bright in the evening, like the effect produced by alcoholic beverages." [Kent]
• "Very much out of humour al day, and disinclined to answer when asked
questions; great indifference to everything; great selfishness; great
forgetfulness." [Hoyne]
Or: • "Nervous girls prior to puberty who have convulsions from being scolded,
from
Nervous children who constantly lick their lips, giving rise to vesicles filled with
yellow serum.
Growing pains in children [hyperactive, fearless and awkward].
G Suitable for persons with light hair, lax skin and musculature, and pallor of
face.
G COLD.
Sensation as if frozen.
Coldness in small spots. Sensation as if a chunk of ice was resting on the head.
c Frostbite and chilblains and burning/itching, redness, swelling, and < heat.
• "Useful for the symptoms which come on after coition in young, nervous
married women, hysterical fainting after coition." [Kent]
• "Grimacing around the mouth as they are getting ready to say something"
[Morrison].
• "As the patient looks at you there is a pendulum-like action of the eyes, they go
back and forth all the time; they oscillate, though he tries his best to fix his look
on you."
[Kent]
G SPASMS [local].
> Sleep.
And Spine sensitive to touch [esp. cervical region and dorsal region between
scapulae].
G SMALL AREAS.
• "The Agar. patient has spel s in which a little muscle of the face or a few fibres
of a muscle with quiver for a few minutes and stop, and then in another part of
the face the same thing, an eyelid will quiver, and then another set of fibres,
sometimes so bad as to nearly drive him crazy." [Kent]
Compare: • "In the nose we have irritation, spasmodic sneezing and discharge of
pure water from the nostrils, but without inflammatory symptoms. In other
words, all the appearances of a fresh and severe cold in the head that soon passes
off only to return again two or three times during the day or for several days."
[Pierce]
P Epistaxis.
1/94.
Rubrics
Mind
Anxiety > breathing deeply [1]; > perspiration [1; Calc.]. Audacity [1].
Confusion >
eating [1]. Curious [1]. Desires death [1*]. Delirium with exaltation of strength
[2].
Delusion arms don't belong to her [1]; he is a great person [2]; obliged to confess
his sins at gate of hell [1/1]; legs don't belong to her [2; Bapt.]; that she could run
as never before
[1/1]; of being smaller [1]; of being under superhuman control [1]. Dulness >
evening [1].
Frenzy causing him to injure himself [1; Lyss.]. Loquacity but answers no
questions
[2/1]; changes quickly from one subject to another [1]. Memory active in
evening [1].
Mischievous [2]. Mistakes in speaking < after exertion [1/1]. Mutilating his body
[1].
Makes many bold plans [1/1]; revengeful plans [1/1]. Reveals secrets [1; Hyos.].
Runs about in most dangerous places [1/1]. Talks of war [1; Bell.; Hyos.].
Threatening [1; Choc.; Tarent.]. Throws things at persons [1; Bell.; Tub.].
Vertigo
Head
Eye
Vision
Objects seem brighter [1]. Dim < sunlight [1]. Loss of vision, decreasing
gradually when walking in open air [1/1*]. Objects become pale after looking
long [2; Rhus-t.].
Ear
Nose
Mouth
Stomach
Appetite wanting after coition [2/1]. Eructations while smoking [1]; tasting like
apples
[1/1]. Heartburn after meat [1; Ferr-p.]. Trembling sensation on lying down [1;
Cocc.]; from noise [1]. Vomiting from smoking [1].
Abdomen
Rectum
Urine
Male
Female
Itching intolerable [2]; in vagina after coition [1; Androc.; Nit-ac.]. Bearing-
down pain in uterus > lying [2]; at end of or after menses [2/1].
Larynx
Chest
Palpitation when lying on back [1]; from tobacco [1]. Shocks through region of
heart while lying [2/1]; from noise [2].
Limbs
Jerking of single fingers [1*]. Separated sensation, lower limbs, head of femur
[1*]; pelvic bones from sacrum [1*].
Sleep
Perspiration
Skin
Itching after coition [2/1]; > after exertion [1/1]; after mental exertion [2/1].
Generals
Gels.]; > vomiting [1/1]. Faintness from odours, of perfume or vinegar [1/1].
Frosty weather < [2].
Food
Desire: [3]: Alcohol. [2]: Whiskey. [1]: Beer; bread and butter; cold drinks; eggs;
garlic; salt food.
Worse: [2]: Alcohol; cold drinks. [1]: Beer; bread and butter; coffee; cold food;
dry food; meat; plums, prunes; stimulants; tobacco; vinegar, smell of; wine,
smell of.
Allium cepa
All-c.
An onion is a vegetable that builds you up physically and tears you down
socially.
[McKenzie]
Signs
NAME The name Allium derives possibly from the Celtic all, meaning hot. The
specific name cepa probably comes from Celtic cep, a head, in allusion to the
spherical shape of the flowerheads.
HISTORY The first record where the onion is included comes from the Assyro-
Babylonians. The Egyptian Ebers Papyrus, dating back to around 1550 BC also
mentions the onion. It includes more than 700 prescriptions using natural
products such as caraway, coriander, linseed, peppermint, anise, fennel, poppy
seed, and of course garlic/onion. In ancient Egypt the pyramid-builders got paid
in onions. Onions also found a widespread use in mummification and as a form
of snake repellent. The Egyptians saw the onion bulb as a symbol of the universe
and sacred to the mother-goddess Isis. Muslim tradition has it that garlic sprang
from the Devil's left foot, and onion from his right when he was banished from
Eden.
EFFECTS People susceptible to the juice of onions may suffer from local
inflammatory
USES For thousands of years garlic and onion have been used to treat cancers.
Hippocrates wrote about steam fumigation of garlic to treat uterine cancer. The
same and similar stories are also recorded from ancient Egypt, Greece, Rome,
India, Russia, and China. Interestingly, people in Georgia, where Vitalia onions
are grown, have a far lower mortality rate of stomach cancer than in the USA in
general. The rate is as low as one third of the average US level among whites. As
with garlic, this effect can be due to the high concentration of selenium in
onions. "Both garlic and onion oils inhibit the enzymes lipoxygenase and
cyclooxygenase. Each of these enzymes is known to act as one of two parallel
biochemical pathways [within the arachidonic acid cascade] and only by
inhibiting these enzymes can this pathway be arrested. When arrested, the
production of prostaglandin is slowed. Since many cancers are prostaglandin
dependent, this may explain why the allium oils have anti-tumour properties."1
Russian scientists once screened 150 plants for antibacterial properties and found
onions and garlic to be the most potent. Chewing a raw onion for three to eight
minutes proved to render the lining of the mouth completely sterile. "Because of
their strong, pungent properties, onions induce the stomach to initiate actions
that release a 'flood of tears' in the throat and lungs'
Eating raw onions creates a drop in blood cholesterol; the more onions the
steeper the drop; hence the standard prescription of an American heart specialist
for his patients: Eat Raw Onions.
FOLKLORE "Like the ancient Babylonians, Austrian farmers use onions to 'fix
the fates'
on New Year's Eve. They fill twelve onion sheaths with salt, and the ensuing
months of the year will be dry or wet, according to whether the salt in the
corresponding peel remains dry or forms a fluid."2 The Chinese, Egyptians,
Arabs, and other cultures used onions and garlic for their "power to trap any type
of evil influence which had been directed towards the home. The onion was also
credited with the power of protecting the home from contagion during epidemics
and plagues. As recently as the 19th century many physicians still advocated
placing sliced onions in the home as a preventive measure in such cases.
Children wore onions in bags around their necks to ward off colds and other
winter diseases."3 A cut onion was believed to absorb germs as well as all other
bad vibrations or energies in houses. It was therefore inconceivable to keep a
piece of onion peeled and cut in the cupboard or likewise. In medieval Europe
bunches of onions were hung on the doors to ward off the plague. An onion
placed beneath the pillow is said to produce prophetic dreams. Persons finding it
difficult to make a decision, may scratch their options on onions [one to each
onion], and place them in the dark. The first one that sprouts provides the
answer. If one throws an onion after a bride one will throw away her tears.
Onions were used to forecast the weather, as an English gardener's rhyme
explains:
'onion's skin very thin, mild winter coming in; onion's skin thick and tough,
coming winter cold and rough.' English schoolboys recommended that if an
onion was rubbed on a hand before it was caned the pain would be alleviated.
Onions were commonly used for relief of pain: the inside of an onion skin placed
on cuts and scratches acted as a type of
elastoplast; an onion placed or rubbed on a wasp or a bee sting will take the pain
away; carrying a small onion in the pocket may ward off rheumatism. 4
•• [2] Al eborn - 4 [male] provers; method: 1-50 drops of tincture, several days
in succession.
"Dioscorides, the Greek physician, and physicians following him, among the
Arabians, had a glimpse of the truth of similia, for they used the onion to cure
the symptoms they knew it was capable of producing; but with Galen all
reasonable investigation ceased."6
[1] Lucas, Nature's Medicines. [2] Weiner, Weiner's Herbal. [3] Lipp, Herbalism.
[4]
Affinity
MUCOUS MEMBRANES [NOSE; EYES; larynx; bowels]. Nerves. * Left side.
Left to right.
Modalities
Worse: WARM ROOM. Wet feet. Singing. Dampness. N.E. winds. Spring.
Evening.
Main symptoms
M Dreams.
• "The patient and al the phases of his 'cold', his coryza, his laryngitis, his cough,
al his complaints, are aggravated by warmth, are worse in a warm room,
excepting the tickling in the larynx, which is sometimes aggravated by drawing
in cold air." [Kent]
G < Morning.
< Evening.
[all catarrhal symptoms and pains; heat of face; eructations; flushes of heat;
thirst]
G Coffee <.
P BLAND LACHRYMATION.
P Coryza and catarrhal symptoms; > OPEN AIR and < heat.
And Hunger.
P Hay fever with acrid discharge from nose and bland lachrymation [reverse of
Euphr.].
P Pain in eyes.
• "Pains in the eyes as if they would be torn out, as if the eye hung loose
posteriorly, on a string, and could be bored into with the fingers and torn out."
[Hering]
• "The teeth are a smutty yel ow in the morning, they remain so the whole day, in
one who has very white and sound teeth; continues three to five days." [Allen]
< Sitting.
> Motion.
Rubrics
Mind
Absentminded in afternoon, after coffee or wine [2/1]. Confusion after coffee [1;
Arg-n.; Calc-p.; Mill.]. Dulness after wine [1].
Head
Fulness occiput on coughing [1/1]. Pain, > during menses [1; Verat.; Zinc.]; >
open air.
Vision
Hearing
Nose
Coryza, from flowers [3]; with hunger [1; Hep.; Sul-ac.]; from odour of peaches
[3/1]; from odour of roses [1]. Sneezing, < rising from bed [1; Stach.]; in warm
room [2; Puls.].
Teeth
Back teeth as if too long, at night in bed [1/1*]. Pain > perspiration [1].
Throat
Stomach
walking [2].
Abdomen
Flatulence and weak sensation in limbs [1/1*]. Pain < coffee [1*]; cramping pain
from getting feet wet [2/1].
Rectum
Diarrhoea after onions [1*]. Stitching pain extending down lower part of rectum
[1*].
Bladder
Pain after coition [2/1]. Retention of urine after getting feet wet [2].
Prostate
Male
Urine
Limbs
Excessive tired feeling in region of hips, on rising from sitting, on walking, esp.
on ascending stairs [1/1*]. Weakness in hips at night [1/1*].
Sleep
Generals
Food
Aloe socotrina
Aloe
[Thomas Fuller]
Signs
Aloes are leaf succulents; they store water mainly in the leaves. They have deep
or broad root systems and are native to either deserts or semi-arid brushlands.
The strong and fibrous perennial roots push up a rosette of narrow, tapering,
thick and fleshy leaves, with spiny teeth at the edges. Succulents 'breathe'
through small mouthlike structures on the surface of the leaves and stems. These
'stomata' are closed during the day - thereby minimizing the loss of water during
the hot, dry daytime hours - and open at night. The uptake of carbon dioxide
occurs in the dark. Fixed into malic acid, the carbon dioxide is stored in cellular
vacuoles until the energy from sunlight is available for photosynthesis.
GENUS The genus Aloe comprises some 300 species of shrubby or arborescent
xerophytes mostly from tropical and South Africa, Madagascar and Arabia.
Aloes have been introduced into the West Indies, where they are extensively
cultivated, and into tropical countries. They will even flourish in countries
bordering the Mediterranean. In temperate climates they are cultivated as
houseplants. The nomenclature has been somewhat confused, as the plant has
been known by a variety of names, most notably A.
VARIETIES Aloes require two or three years' standing before they yield their
juice. In Africa the drug is collected from the wild plants. In the West Indies the
drug is collected from plants cultivated on plantations. The chief varieties of
Aloes are Curacao or Barbados [A. barbadensis], Socotrine and Zanzibar [A.
perryi], and Cape [A. ferox Miller, A. Africana]. The German homoeopathic
pharmacopoeia is strict in its directions for the preparation of Aloe: the remedy
should be made from the dried and concentrated juice of various species of Aloe,
in particular Aloe ferox Miller, known in commerce as Cape Aloes. Pharmacists
are advised against the use of Barbados Aloes [A. barbadensis Miller].
Interestingly, this 'forbidden' variety currently is immensely popular under the
name Aloe vera. Its industry is flourishing and Aloe gel is being used in many
products.
NAME The name Aloe comes possibly from Arabic alloch or from Hebrew
allal, both meaning bitter. In Sanskrit its name is Kumari, meaning 'young girl or
virgin', because the plant supposedly imparted the energy of youth and brought
about the renewal of female energy. In flower symbolism Aloe represents acute
sorrow and bitterness. The variety Hering was looking for was cultivated on the
African and also on the Arabian mainland, and on the island of Socotra [hence
the name A. socotrina]. An island in the Indian Ocean, at the mouth of the Gulf
of Aden, Socotra was known since biblical time for its myrrh, frankincense and
aloes. By some the spelling of the name is considered to be obsolete. It arose
from the erroneous supposition that the plant was indigenous to the island of
Socotra, but was really derived from succus, juice, and citrina, lemon-yellow, in
allusion to the yellowish colour of the crystals from the sap.
HISTORY Aloe's earliest documented medicinal history goes back to 2200 BC,
when the Sumerians describe on a clay tablet its virtues as a laxative. Some 700
years later, the Egyptian Ebers Papyrus gave the first detailed discussion of
Aloe's medicinal value. The document presents twelve formulas for mixing Aloe
with other agents to treat both internal and external disorders. 400 BC the Arabs
started an extensive export trade of Aloe plants and processed products
throughout western Asia. In India the use of Aloes
gave the first detailed description of the plant [A. vera], telling that the more
bitter the Aloe is the more effective it is as a medicine. Among its multiple
merits were the stopping of hair loss and the cure of tonsillitis. In Rome
appeared a mixture called 'Hiera Picra', which literally meant Sacred Bitters. It
had the reputation of being a cure-all medicine and was composed of socotrine
aloe, cinnamon, spikenard, mastic, saffron, honey and Asarum xylobalsamum.
The prescription lasted for centuries, occasionally undergoing some revision,
except in the case of Aloe which remained constant. In the 14th century dried
Aloe sap, imported from Africa mainly from the islands of Socotra, was
introduced to English medicine as a purgative and as a treatment for external
wounds and diseases. Two centuries later Spanish conquistadors and
missionaries brought the plant to the new world, where it was planted around
Catholic missions. Its use as a universal healing agent spread quickly throughout
the Caribbean Islands, and Central and South America. In 1820 the United States
pharmacopoeia listed Aloe officially as a purgative and a skin protectant. Well
over hundred years later Collins and son report on the use of Aloe on fifty
patients with radiation injuries, burns, ulcers, and dermatitis, stating that all fifty
patients were successfully healed. Collins' study is one of a flood of papers and
references published by physicians and laymen world-wide, resulting in FDA
approval of development aimed at the eventual use of Aloe vera in the treatment
of cancer and AIDS. 2
USES In 1992, the FDA proposed a ban on aloes in oral menstrual drug products
because it has not been shown to be safe and effective for its stated claims. The
activity that Aloe has demonstrated against many common bacteria and fungi in
many studies is truly amazing, says Murray. The antimicrobial effects of aloe
extracts compare quite favourably to those of silver sulphadiazine, a potent
antiseptic used in the treatment of extensive
HERING "One of the oldest and most famous drugs, largely cultivated, and in
use as a horse-medicine, hence rarely to be obtained pure from the shops," says
Hering in his introduction to the materia medica of Aloe. Hering went to great
pains to obtain pure Aloes, as is illustrated by a note on April 23, 1869, from the
diary of Calvin Knerr, Hering's son-in-law. "I went to a druggist in Philadelphia
by the name of Morris to buy some Aloes. He showed me two kinds. I told him
that both of them were adulterations.
He sent his boy out to all the drugstores in town for more samples. An immense
heap of Aloes was collected, all of them bogus. The druggist was chagrined. He
sent to New York for more samples. I came to examine this large assortment but
did not find a single genuine specimen among them. At last I noticed that the
druggist held back a small package, carefully wrapped in paper, which he did not
seem willing to show me. I asked to see it. He handed it over, smiled as I said:
'This is genuine aloes. Where did you get it?'
•• [4] Hering - self-experimentation; method: 'took one dose of gr. 1/2 of the 1x
trit., and subsequently the 3rd.'
[1] Grieve, A Modern Herbal. [2] Historical data derived from Aloe Myth-
Magic-Medicine, Universal Graphics, 1989. [3] Murray, Healing Power of
Herbs. [4-5] Grieve, ibid. [6] Knerr, Life of Hering.
Affinity
ABDOMINAL VEINS [RECTUM; liver; colon; pelvis]. Lumbar region. Head.
Female organs. * Left side.
Modalities
Worse: HEAT. Damp heat. Summer heat. Early morning [in bed]. After
dysentery.
Stepping hard. Evening. Sedentary life. Hot dry weather. After EATING or
drinking.
Standing or walking.
Better: Cool open air. Application of cold water. Cold weather. Passing flatus or
stool.
Main symptoms
M Contentment - discontentment.
• "Irritable, he cannot endure the visit of many people, they are repugnant to him
[24th day]."
Anthropophobia.
• "Il -humour; peevish about himself, so that he insults and blasphemes; worse
afternoons, [3rd day]."
• "Very discontented and unhappy mood, since the forenoon, with confused head
and lack of inclination to labour; better in the evening [24th day]."
• "Peevish towards himself without reason [second day]." [all quotes from Allen]
• "Mental dissatisfaction and bad humor about himself, more esp. during
constipation or when he suffers from pain." [Lippe]
M Self-absorbed.
Insecurity.
• "Very peculiar vertigo each day, after taking the third trituration; during
motion, he feels as if he ought to lie down; while standing and walking, an inner
sensation which makes everything seem insecure, and which makes him very
anxious; then nasal catarrh, first on the left side, then on the right, with copious
secretion of mucus, which soon becomes thick; afterwards, no more vertigo."
[Allen]
• "Feeling as if one doesn't oneself know what is the matter, whether one has
appetite or not." [Allen]
• "In a general way this is a hot remedy, many sensations are those of heat; the
skin feels hot, hot flatus is passed, and the piles have a sense of heat in them.
Nearly all the symptoms are like those of its relative, Sulphur, better from cold."
[Boger]
G < WARMTH.
• "Weariness, weakness, and creeping coldness, when he comes from bed into a
hot room." [Allen]
Awakening at night.
• "Rather an inner sensuality than irritation of the parts compels him to satisfy
himself [at evening, on going to bed, 5th day]."
• "Probably one of the best remedies to repress a too lively desire, esp. in
children which only a few remedies do." [Hering]
And Cold extremities and irritation of stomach and bowels, with frequent,
painful stool.
Gelatinous secretions.
P Uterus.
• "Cases of menorrhagia are benefited by it, the menses appear too early and
there is a sense of weight and heaviness in the pelvis and pressing downward
towards the rectum giving the sensation of a plug between the tubes and
coccyx." [Blackwood]
Rubrics
Mind
Activity alternating with exhaustion [2/1]. Anger from contradiction [1]; with
himself [1; Sulph.]. Anxiety < motion [1]. Contemptuous [2]. Intolerant of
contradiction, has to restrain himself to keep from violence [1; Sil.]. Fear of
failure [1]; of men [1]; from noise
[1]. Fraternised with the whole world [1/1]. Abundant ideas, clearness of mind at
night
[1]. Indolence on waking [2]. Irritability in cloudy or rainy weather [1; Am-c.].
Active memory alternating with lassitude [2/1]. Repulsive mood, repels
everyone [1/1].
Vertigo
Head
Numbness moving over the scalp [1/1*]. Pain, < darkness [1; Carb-v.; Sil.].
Sensation as if head were separated from body [1; Psor.].
Vision
Mouth
Taste like ink [1; Calc.; Sep.*].
Stomach
Appetite increased in morning, after breakfast [1; Tax.]. Emptiness after stool
[2].
Sensation of fulness after drinking [1; Manc.]. Indigestion after sour food [1;
Ant-c.; Nux-v.]. Vomiting of mucus after drinking [1/1].
Abdomen
Rectum
Diarrhoea after acids [2], after beer [2], during headache [1; Cham.; Podo.;
Verat.]; >
Male
Sexual desire increased after eating [1]; wanting after waking [2].
Female
Limbs
Sensation as if a hair were lying on dorsum of hand, and also on back of fingers
[1/1*].
Sleep
Waking in morning, toward 5 a.m. , with urging to stool [2].
Dreams
Of being crazy and that everybody is watching him [1/1*]. Soiling himself with
excrements [1].
Generals
Congestion of blood, internally [2]. Lassitude alternating with activity [2; Aur.].
Warm and wet weather > [2].
Food
Desire: [2]: Apples; salty things. [1]: Alcohol; beer; bitter drinks; bread; fruit;
honey; juicy things; meat; refreshing; tonics.
Worse: [2]: Acids; beer; fruit; oysters. [1]: Bitter drinks; vinegar.
Alumina
Alum.
One of the great disadvantages of hurry is that it takes such a long time.
[Chesterton]
Signs
CLAY Alumina is pure clay. Natural clay is mainly aluminium oxide with
impurities of various sorts, but chiefly silica. "Nature seems to expect aluminium
to remain clay. The metallic condition is unnatural for it; the metal is not only
difficult to extract, but the extraction would immediately be undone if a peculiar
circumstance did not protect it from attack. Like an impenetrable armour,
aluminium oxide immediately covers the metal with a fine protective layer of
patina, a 'noble rust.' We may well call it this, for aluminium oxide as a mineral
can achieve the noblest form of which the metal is capable; it can appear as
corundum, sapphire, or ruby, those unusually hard and costly jewels. In contrast
to the precious metals, the most precious condition of aluminium is not its purity,
but its rust."2 The key process for fertile soil is the formation of clay. Both the
physical and the chemical properties of soil depend on the amount and kind of
clay particles they contain. The supply of minerals to plants depends on the
presence of clay particles, which have a net negative charge, in the soil. Many of
the minerals that are important for plant nutrition, such as potassium,
magnesium, and calcium, exist in soil as positive ions chemically attached to
clay particles. To become available to plants, the positive ions must be detached
from the clay particles, which is accomplished by reactions with protons
[hydrogen ions]. The protons trade places with ions such as potassium and
calcium on the clay particles, thus putting the nutrients back into the soil solution
and thereby determining the fertility of the soil. Clay particles, however, do not
hold and exchange negatively charged ions, which results in the leaching from
the soil of important negative ions such as phosphate, nitrate, and sulphate. To
replace them elements as nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium are commonly
added to agricultural soils. 3
worn with the metal lining on the outside it will shelter against heat, and when
reversed, it will keep one warm. Curtains made from it will let in light but keep
out the heat if hung with the metal facing the outside on a hot summer day. In
winter the metal surface of the curtains should face the room and it will keep the
warmth in.
WATER The relation with water is shown by the fact that hygrophytic plants
contain more aluminium than plants preferring dry habitats. Aluminium
promotes the absorption of water. Its main functions are holding and retaining
water.
Aluminium has been detected in the brain cells of patients with Alzheimer's
disease, but it is not known whether the metal's presence is a cause or an effect
of the disease."5
TOXICITY Aluminium has moderate acute toxicity [but high chronic toxicity]
to aquatic life and high acute toxicity to birds. Acid rain has virtually eliminated
the fish populations in acidified lakes in some parts of the world. It has been
suggested that much of the toxicity to fish is actually due to increased aluminium
concentrations, rather than being directly attributable to acidic water. Aluminium
is almost completely insoluble in neutral or alkaline water, but, due to a
decreasing pH as a result of acid rain, concentrations of dissolved aluminium in
some lakes have increased to levels toxic to fish and other aquatic organisms.
The Chamorro people of the Mariana Islands in the western Pacific Ocean,
particularly Guam and Rota, have an unusually high incidence of
neurodegenerative diseases associated with nerve cell loss and neurofibrillary
degeneration of the Alzheimer's type.
Garruto et al [1984] noted that the volcanic soils of the regions of Guam with a
high incidence of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and parkinsonism-dementia
syndromes contained high concentrations of aluminium and manganese and
were low in calcium and magnesium."7
mg per litre. Plant-based foods like soy milk are usually higher in aluminium
than those from animal sources. It was calculated from these figures that
between the ages of 0 and 4 months, an infant fed cow's milk formulae will
receive between 0.2 and 0.55 mg aluminium per week, and one fed soy milk
formulae will eat between 2.5 and 4.9 mg of the mineral per week. Both intakes
are well below the joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives
recommendations that the Provisional Tolerable Weekly Intake on aluminium is
7 mg per kg body weight."8
SYMBOLISM Symbolically, clay [or mud] signifies the union of the purely
receptive principle [earth] with the power of transition and transformation
[water]. Clay is regarded as the typical medium for the emergence of matter of
all kinds. Plasticity is one of its essential characteristics. By analogy, clay is
related with biological processes and nascent states.
[1-2] Pelikan, The Secrets of Metals. [3] Purves et al, Life: The Science of
Biology. [4]
Merck Index. [5] Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. [6] Merck Manual. [7]
Klaassen, Casarett and Doull's Toxicology. [8] Melvyn, Vitamins and Minerals.
Affinity
Right side.
Modalities
Worse: WARMTH; WARM ROOM; bed. Food [artificial; potatoes; salt, wine,
vinegar, pepper, spirituous drinks, soup]. Speaking. Dry [cold] weather. Awaking
early. Sitting.
After menses. Winter. Alternate days. New and full moon. During micturition.
Comparisons
c PHOSPHORUS
Homoeopathically, Alum. and Phos. share many rubrics, such as: Anxiety on
waking at night. - Vertigo after eating. - Pressing frontal headache > open air.
Electric-like shocks through head. - Changing colour of face. - Long, narrow
stool. -
Weakness [and trembling] from hunger. - Weakness after menses. - Twilight >. -
Salt food <.
Main symptoms
• "A numb feeling in the head as if his consciousness was outside of his body;
when he says anything, he feels as if another person had said it; and when he
sees anything, as if another person had seen it, or as if he could transfer himself
into another and only then could see." [Hahnemann]
• "Groans at night, and says it is not him, and wants them to stop." [Guernsey]
[Leeser]
• "The situation of Alumina arises from conflict between parent and child where
the child is not being given identity. Whatever the child does they say no, not
this. His identity and individuality has been broken down, whatever the child
says is not right -
you are no one, you know nothing and then comes despair. I don't know what to
do, I don't know what I am, I don't know who I am. I don't know what I want, I
don't know
[Sankaran]
• "His real identity is being suppressed, is being pushed in, so he has to mould
himself according to what people want." [Sankaran]
• "Aluminium oxide is the hard substance that forms on Aluminium that gives
the hardness to the metal since Aluminium is the soft, easily malleable metal.
The feeling of Alum. inside is too soft and easily mouldable so that there is no
identity. So he needs to be hard and rigid to keep up his identity. In the coped up
state the Alum. patient can be quite hard and rigid." [Sankaran]
M CLARITY.
c Lack of clarity:
IDEAS are very VAGUE and HAZY, like undefined shadows, And Difficulty in
expressing what is happening.
• "Various objects occupy his mind, but none is distinctly impressed upon his
recollection." [Allen]
Or the opposite:
c Lots of clarity:
• "I have never heard a homoeopath talk very enthusiastical y about the inherent
possibilities our Aluminium 'personality] has. I have never heard any
homoeopath talk about the sense of humour, the quiet wittiness that I have
witnessed in several Alumina cases. I have never heard about the tenacity they
can display in sticking to a course of action, even while very confused. Nor have
I heard about the opposite of mental confusion as an inherent quality: mental
clarity. It may be noted that Aluminium metallicum is used to build aeroplanes.
Aluminium may be of help in getting an overview. Aluminium may be of help in
giving direction, in giving perspective. From the confusion, open-minded self-
determination may emerge. An aspect of Alumina's qualities is the ability to cut
crap surgically [with a knife]? To divide and separate crap from essence?"1
M Restlessness.
• "Uneasiness when sitting or lying; she had to shift the position of her hands and
feet."
M Somnambulism.
• "Rising from bed without being aware of it and going anxiously from one room
to another, rubbing his firmly-closed eyes." [Allen]
M Violence.
• "Alumina should come to mind whenever the homeopath comes across a case
which combines mental confusion with violent thoughts and impulses. Alumina
feels violent at times towards herself, and at other times towards those around
her. She may be subject to sudden bouts of rage, although often she will not take
out her rage on others, but rather slam doors and smashes things, or curses out
loud. Alumina is usually a quiet, gentle person who hates her violent side. ...
These violent thoughts nearly always involve cutting, be they suicidal or
homicidal. ... There is often a marked increase in moodiness before the menses.
Both despair and aggression may increase at this time, along with the fear that
the patient will hurt herself." [Bailey]
• "The disturbance of the mucous membranes are for the most part to be
compared with those of the skin. The mucous membranes are dry and covered
with tenacious deposits or crusts, thus in the nose where the crusts are offensive,
the picture of a chronic atrophic catarrh occurs. It is the same in the posterior
nasal or pharyngeal space where dryness, burning, tenacious mucus and crusts,
stitches as from splinters on swallowing, stitches towards the ears on
swallowing, suggest the chronic retronasal and pharyngeal catarrh."
[Leeser]
• "The basic function of Alumina is holding and retaining, as it does through the
layers of clay which hold and retain the water. ... The main points of attack of
Alumina are the organs where the general function of reception has its particular
seat: the pharynx and stomach receive the food, the larynx is the first receptacle
of air, and the bladder and rectum are the receptacles for the body waste before
its elimination. ... Turning to the characteristic mental symptoms we find:
inability to concentrate, wandering thoughts, very poor memory, fear of one's
own impulses, fear of losing one's reason. Again the faculty to hold, to hold and
retain one's thoughts, to take a hold of and control one's impulses, to retain one's
reason, is impaired. When one prover experiences a sensation 'as if the mind
were outside his body, as if what he speaks is spoken by someone else, and what
he sees is seen by someone else', we encounter finally a phenomenon of
exteriorisation, a loss of the ego function as an expression of inability to hold
and retain the very 'I', the ego itself. ... In the sphere of the unconscious,
expressed in a symbolic language through dreams, we find dreams of thieves.
Also in this sphere the inability to hold and retain what belongs to one is
symbolically expressed. ... Aggravation from dry weather, better from wet
weather, is natural in the 'dry' Alumina case. Warmth aggravates due to its
drying-up effect. Alumina is one of the remedies which has a definite
aggravation from moon phases, new and full moon, which influence the tides
and the flow of water. Aggravation after menses which constitute a loss of fluids.
... When man for the first time wanted to hold the precious liquid he stretched
out his hand - for clay to form the first vessel to hold water. And in the myth of
creation man himself is formed from clay as a vessel to hold and contain the
spirit of life." [Gutman]
DRYNESS.
Diminished secretions.
• "Excessive dryness of the scalp; it goes to sleep; feels light, and the hair fal s
out."
G Aged persons of spare habits, girls looking wrinkled and dried-up at puberty.
• "A peculiar Alumina symptom, always repeated and obviously confirmed, but
up to now never explained, should be specifically mentioned: stomach
complaints are worse from eating potatoes. Potatoes contain normally 3-20 mg
percent, sometimes up to 43 mg percent solanin. Even when cooked and
according to the type of potato and its preparation, traces of solanine may
remain. Solanine produces, like the related alkaloids of Belladonna, dryness of
the mucous membranes and inhibits the stomach secretion. A sensitive prover,
subject to the 'drying' toxic effect Alumina has also on the mucous membranes
of the stomach, would be naturally aggravated by any trace of an additional
'drying' agent as contained in potatoes, and so will the Alumina patient who
reacts like a sensitive prover." [Gutman]
[Hahnemann]
• "In the morning, the urine is slower to pass than after he has moved about and
warmed up a little. His limbs are stiffer in the morning and in the morning he has
to whip up his mental state. He wakes up confused and wonders where he is.
You will see that in children especially - they wake up in the morning in a
bewildered state, such as you will find in Alum., Aesc., Lyc. He has to put his
mind on things to ascertain whether they be so or not, as to how things should
look and wonders whether he is at home or in some other place." [Kent]
> Twilight.
• "There are many paraesthesias: feeling of crawling on the skin of the face or
other places, feeling of tension, a peculiar sensation on the face or on other
uncovered areas as from dried egg or spider web [as Borax!]. These sensations
are so disturbing that the pain seeks to rub the part constantly. The extremities go
to sleep on sitting or from light pressure, a numbness of the heels develops on
standing, pain in the soles of the feet on stepping as if they were too soft and
swollen, a band sensation on the body or about a part, the prover cannot hold
objects [observed with Alumen], sticking and burning in the back and a pain as
though a hot iron had been pressed through the lowest vertebra, drawing and
beating pains in the back like electric shocks through the body, contractions of
the extremities, lancinating pains. All these symptoms are more or less common
in the course of posterior columns degeneration in tabes." [Leeser]
G RETENTION.
And Nausea.
Rubrics
Mind
Anguish in morning [2]. Anxiety from thinking about it [1]. Aversion to the
colour red
[2/1]. Awkward from haste [1]. Cannot look at blood or a knife [3/1]. Confusion,
knows not where he is on waking [1]; after smoking [1]; when spoken to [1].
Excitement on walking in open air [1]. Fear of his own impulses [3/1]. Sudden
impulse to kill [3].
Vertigo
In morning, > breakfast [2]. Can't walk with closed eyes [2; Stram.]. Wiping
eyes >
[2/1].
Head
Empty sensation in forehead [1; Caust.]. Pain, > on going to bed [2]; from
looking downward [1]; in forehead on blowing nose [1/1].
Eye
Vision
Colours, white sparkling stars on blowing nose [1/1]; yellow halo around the
light [3; Sarr.]. Images too long retained [1; Lac-c.; Nat-m.].
Mouth
Dryness during coryza [1/1]. Bitter taste after eating apples [1/1].
Throat
Food is felt until it enters the stomach [1]. Swallowing difficult at night [2], on
waking
[2].
Stomach
Diarrhoea in dry weather [1; Asar.]; > wet weather [1; Asar.].
Prostate
Larynx
Chest
Oppression < bending head forward [3/1]; while lying on back [1]. Palpitation
before menses [1; Spong.]; on turning in bed on right side [1/1].
Limbs
Chill
Generals
Faintness at sight of blood [3; Crat.*; Nux-m.; Verat.]. Lassitude after talking
[2/1], >
* Repertory additions.
Food
Desire: [2]: Beans and peas; charcoal; cloves; coal; coffee; cold drinks; dry food;
dry rice; farinaceous; fruit; indigestible things; lime; soft food; starch; strange
things [during pregnancy]; tea grounds; vegetables. [1]: Cabbage; chalk; coffee
beans; coffee, burnt; fried potatoes; pickles; potatoes; pungent; raw, uncooked
food; sour, acids; tea; whisky.
Worse: [2]: Cold drinks; potatoes; milk; salt; vegetables. [1]: Alcohol; apples;
artificial food; beer; farinaceous; soup; cold food; onions; pepper; vinegar; warm
food; wine [1].
Ambra grisea
Ambr
Praise is like ambergris; a little whiff of it, by snatches, is very agreeable; but
when a man holds a whole lump of it to his nose, it is a stink and strikes you
down.
[Henry Hillman]
Signs
Ambergris.
AMBERGRIS Ambergris, a waxy substance that is lighter than water and floats,
is formed in the lower intestine of the sperm whale [Physeter macrocephalus]. It
consists of 80% ambrein, a cholesterol derivative which may be either an
indigestible component of the squid or a secretion of the whale's gut in response
to the constant irritation caused by the sharp beaks of the squid. It is used chiefly
as a spice in the East, and in the West it was used to fix the scent of fine
perfumes [now replaced by synthetic fixatives]. It is thought to form as a
collection of faeces around squid beaks and indigestible parts of
other prey of the sperm whale. Whether it is physiologic or pathologic has not
been determined. Fresh ambergris is soft and black and has a disagreeable odour.
When exposed to sun, air, and sea water, it hardens, fades, and develops a
pleasant odour.
Compared to musk, civet and castoreum [three other animal extracts used in
perfumery], ambergris has the longest duration of evaporation, the fragrance
lasting for months. It was often used to perfume gloves, because it had the
advantage of retaining its scent after repeated washings. Despite its unlikely
origins, it was employed, heavily diluted, to give sexiness to a perfume. The
smell of crude [fresh] ambergris was trenchantly described by the German
chemist Wilhelm Homberg: "... a vessel in which I had made a long digestion of
human faeces had acquired a very strong and perfect smell of ambergris,
inasmuch that anyone would have thought that a great quantity of essence of
ambergris had been made in it ... the perfume was so strong that the vessel was
obliged to be moved out of the laboratory."1
'dragon's spittle perfume', because it was thought that it originated from the
drooling of dragons sleeping on rocks at the edge of the sea. In the Orient it is
still known by this name and is used as an aphrodisiac and as a spice for food
and wine. The Japanese have also known ambergris from ancient times and
called it kunsurano fuu, 'whale droppings'.
It was used to fix floral fragrances in perfumes. Ambergris was known to the
Arabs as
'anbar' and was originally called amber in the West. It was used by the Arabs as a
medicine for the heart and brain. The Arabs believed that raw ambergris
emanated from springs near the sea. In the Thousand and One Nights, Sinbad is
shipwrecked on a desert island and discovers a spring of stinking crude
ambergris which flows like wax into the sea where it is swallowed by giant
fishes and vomited up again as fragrant lumps to be cast up on the shore. The
Greeks also believed that ambergris came from springs in or near the sea. They
believed that it enhances the effects of alcohol when smelled before drinking
wine or when it is added to wine. Many a bacchanal profited from a pinch of
ambergris, no doubt. To the earliest Western chroniclers, ambergris was
variously thought to come from the same bituminous sea founts as amber, from
the sperm of fishes or whales, from the droppings of strange sea birds [probably
because of confusion over the included beaks of squids] or from the large hives
of bees living near the sea. Marco Polo was the first Western chronicler who
correctly attributed ambergris to sperm whales which he saw hunted on the
island of Socotra in the Indian Ocean but which he also thought vomited it up
after having eaten it in the depths of the sea."2
rough, opaque masses, of spongy consistence, and can easily be broken up into
rough, uneven pieces, externally of a brownish-grey colour, internally permeated
by yellowish, reddish, and blackish fibres intermingled with whitish, very
odorous points, somewhat greasy to the touch, and of faint but very refreshing
fragrance. ... By the warmth of the fingers it becomes soft as wax, by the heat of
boiling water it melts into oil, at the same time exhales a strong, very agreeable
fragrance, and on heated metal burns quite away.
On applying a light to it it quickly takes fire, and burns with a bright flame.
Alcohol dissolves it very sparingly, but sulphuric ether dissolves it almost
completely, and on adding alcohol a white wax-like substance is thrown down.
Its feeble odour is much increased by this solution, as also by triturating it with
other substances."5
SPERM WHALE The great sperm whale, also called cachalot, is a blunt-snouted
whale of the family Physeteridae, belonging to the cetacean suborder
Odontoceti, which includes the dolphin, sperm whale, narwhal, beluga, porpoise,
and killer whale. Its Latin name Physeter macrocephalus derives from physeter,
'blower', makros, 'long' or 'great', and kephale, 'head'. Males attain a maximum
length of about 19 m, weighing 45-70
tonnes. Females are much smaller [11-12 m] and weigh 15-20 tonnes. Newborns
weigh a tonne at birth. The sperm whale has a robust body. Its dark grey or
brownish grey corrugated skin gives it a shrivelled prune-like appearance. The
distinctive huge squarish head occupies at least one-third of its body and projects
up to 1.5 m beyond the lower jaw. The teeth, which are very few, often erupt
only at sexual maturity and then, in males, only in the lower jaw. However, the
teeth are not used for chewing, since the sperm whale eats its food whole.
SPERMACETI The head contains a cavity called the spermaceti organ [hence
the name sperm whale] which is a mass of web-like tubes filled with two to four
tonnes of a pale yellow liquid. This liquid was the main reason sperm whales
were hunted as the liquid, when cooled, could be made into candles. Formerly
the crude oil was employed for lighting, lubrication, and the manufacture of
varnish, leather, linoleum, rough cloth [esp.
jute], and bottled gas for railway and similar uses. Upon being treated with
sulphur, it provides lubricants that are resistant to extreme pressures. Refined
sperm oil, after removal of spermaceti, is used for lubricating high-speed
machinery and precision instruments and for textile lubrication. It is believed
that the fluid-filled spermaceti organ in the head of the whale acts either as a
cushion to protect the whale's vital organs from the water pressures of the ocean
depths, or as part of the animal's sonar. 6
SPECIAL SENSES Like all members of the suborder Odontoceti, sperm whales
have no sense of smell. Hearing, on the other hand, is exceptionally well
developed. A variety of sounds are used to communicate socially, while high-
pitched clicks are produced for echolocation. Staccato bursts of clicks bounce off
objects and echo back to the whale where they are received through nerve
receptors in the jaw.
DIGESTION Since sperm whales don't chew their food, they are equipped with
a specialized multichambered stomach [for prolonged digestion] and extremely
long intestines [leaving nothing behind]. They feed mainly at night. [Ambra
grisea patients have digestive symptoms worse at night.] Their usual food is
squids and cuttlefish less than three feet in length and the amount a whale
consumes can be enormous. Thirty thousand beaks have been found in a sperm
whale stomach indicating they had eaten 15,000 squid as squid have upper and
lower mandibles. Sperm whales are notorious sufferers from colic and when they
are basking on the surface quietly it is easy to hear
great rumblings in their guts punctuated by monumental belches which can be
heard at great distances over the sea.
DIVING Being mammals, they must come to the water's surface to breathe
through blowholes. Their single blowhole is located left and forward on the
head. The breathing sequence involves from 10-11 minutes on the surface with
60-70 breaths during that time.
This respiratory rate is much faster than that of baleen whales. On this amount of
air sperm whales can remain in a dive for 60 minutes and reach depths of 1,100
m or more.
The longer and deeper the dive, the higher the spout from the blowhole, coming
out diagonally forwards at 45o with an explosive force. It is believed that large
males make these extreme dives to battle and consume giant squid, which can
reach lengths of 18 m.
Proof of such battles are the scars found on sperm whales bodies. The sperm
whale rarely shows much of its body above the water, although it reportedly can
jump clear of the water. Recent research shows that sperm whales spend hours
and hours underwater spiralling about one another, never losing tactile contact.
LIFESTYLE Sperm whales are cosmopolitan in deep waters of all seas except
close to ice edges. They seasonally migrate from breeding grounds near the
Equator towards the higher latitudes. Males and females travel separately in their
own distinct pods for most of the year. Females undergo less extensive migration
than males, usually staying in the temperate zones. Males travel far beyond and
may be seen in polar regions. "Sperm whales generally live in social groups or
schools although old solitary males are not uncommon. The harem or nursery
school consists of 20-30 mature females and nursing and older calves with a
master bull who dominates the herd and drives away rival males.
Bachelor herds are smaller."7 They frequently assist congeners that are in
trouble. They will stand by or support wounded or sick animals. Females assist
each other in giving birth, and mothers shield their young. "Sperm whale photo-
identification data, spanning 12 years of study around the Galapagos Islands,
were examined to investigate the size, variability and stability of social units.
Adult females and immature whales of both sexes have two types of associates:
'constant companions' which are members of an individual's
'stable' social unit and 'casual acquaintances', which are temporarily associating
members of different units. We analyzed long-term association patterns, and
calculated that individuals have a mean of 11.3 constant companions. Estimated
social unit size ranged from 3 to 24 individuals. Evidence of splitting and
merging of units, and of transfers of individuals between units is presented. The
estimated overall frequency of these unit membership changes is 6.3% per
individual per year. These forms of unit dynamics are rare in species with male
dispersal and matrilineally related social groups, and cannot easily be explained
in this species. There is considerable variation in unit size [perhaps caused by
demographic processes], suggesting that the benefits of remaining in a social
unit usually outweigh ecological benefits for optimal unit size. However, the
occurrence of merging and transfers suggests that the ecological or social
cost/benefit of leaving one's matrilineal unit may sometimes outweigh the
cost/benefit of staying."8
SYMBOLISM As in the Old Testament symbol of Jonah, the belly of the whale
is both a place of death and rebirth. In Christianity the whale depicts the Devil;
being swallowed by the whale is entry through the gates of hell [its jaw] into the
darkness of death [its belly]; emerging from the whale, after the traditional
period of the three days of the dark of the moon, is the emerging from the
obscurity of initiation into new life, resurrection. In Islamic tradition, the whale
is seen as a bearer of the cosmos, a symbol of the Earth's
foundations. Other creatures, such as the elephant, tortoise and crocodile, may
also play this role. "Islamic tradition relates that once the Earth had been created,
it floated on the waters. God sent down an angel who took the Earth on his
shoulders. God then created a green rock to give him a firm footing and rested
the latter upon the horns and back of a bull with forty thousand heads and
hooves which stood upon a huge whale. As Tha'labi said: 'God created Nun, the
great whale.' Given that the Earth rests on the angel, the angel on the rock, the
rock on the bull, the bull on the whale, the whale on the waters, the waters on air
and air on darkness, and that the whole structure depends upon the whale's
movements, the Devil, Iblis, is supposed to have tempted the whale to rid itself
of its burden and earthquakes are caused by the whale's wriggling. The whale
was, however, brought under control. 'God promptly sent a little creature down
to the whale. It went into one of its nostrils and reached its brain. The great
whale groaned and besought God who let the little creature out. However, it
remained facing the whale and threatening to go in once again every time the
whale was tempted to move about."9 Magical attributes of the whale include
"the sea, music, long life, family, friends, trust. Developing psychic and
telepathic abilities. Using sound and music to balance and heal."10
[1] Trueman, The Romantic Story of Scent. [2] Ralph, Ambergris: A Pathfinder
and Annotated Bibliography; website. [3] Thompson, Ambra grisea. [4] Leeser,
BHJ, Oct.
Affinity
NERVES [pneumogastric; solar plexus; spinal]. Mind. Female organs. One side.
Modalities
Better: Cold drinks. Cold food. Rising from bed. Lying on painful part. Slow
motion in open air.
Main symptoms
M EASILY EMBARRASSED.
• "It is the situation where you are sitting on the toilet, someone opens the door
and there is a crowd of people there laughing at you. Imagine how embarrassed
you would feel. ...
People who need Ambra mention privacy and embarrassment when talking
about their bowels." [Thompson]
• "Many people are embarrassed about talking on the phone and wil only answer
it if there is no one else at home; do ask about this habit, they may need Ambra
grisea."
[Thompson]
Business embarrassment.
• "They have a disgust at the laughter of others; esp. if people are tel ing jokes
about sex or other bodily functions which would embarrass them!" [Thompson]
• "You may also use Ambra during the lying-in period, especially when
constipation is severe. It is suited to those nervous women who are thin and
scrawny-looking, who have ineffectual urging to stool accompanied by great
anxiety and restlessness, and inability to pass stool while the nurse or any one
else is in the room." [Farrington]
• "They are particularly afraid of people when they need to have a bowel motion.
This can also apply to urination. It is not in the rubric 'Constipation when away
from home' or
'Constipation from travelling' but is certainly one of the remedies to think of.
This is because being away from home nearly everyone is a stranger, esp. if in
another country."
[Thompson]
M < CONVERSATION.
Vanishing of thoughts.
• "Talking irritates her; she is attacked with trembling through the whole body,
especially in the lower extremities, and has to be alone for some time in order to
rest herself."
[Hahnemann]
M Family.
• "Ambra grisea has a special relationship with the family. They are very
attached to their family to the exclusion of outsiders. Their attention is focused
inside their clan, not on the world at large. This is the reason that the death of a
family member is such a devastating event for Ambra grisea. They do not like
strangers, which means anyone not in their immediate family. Now we can
understand why they are so timid, shy and reserved. They do not want
interaction outside their family circle."1
• "He himself may have thought these symptoms unimportant, or - and this is
characteristic of the Ambra patient - have withheld them from his own and from
outside attention because of their secret affective meaning. ... The aversion to
showing his emotional over-excitability is downright characteristic of the Ambra
patient." [Leeser]
• "Unless there are some nervous symptoms present in the case, you can hardly
expect it to do good service. ... This remedy is particularly indicated in thin,
spare men, who have a decidedly nervous temperament, in whom nervousness
predominates at the expense of nutrition. ... It is a very quick-acting remedy. We
may, therefore, give it in nervous diseases when there is defective reaction."
[Farrington]
Or: "As soon as he goes into company there is flushing, trembling, nervous
excitement and the thoughts vanish. With these symptoms the patient imagines
that he is going out of his mind, and finally he settles down into a state of
melancholy, sadness and despair, and does not want to live." [Kent]
M < Music.
• "Congestion to head from music; very painful tearing on top of the head and as
if in the whole upper half of the brain, and pale face and coldness of the hands."
[Still]
G Persons who are prematurely old; suffering from mental weakness.
G Easily heated.
• "He feels sleepy but as soon as his head touches the pil ow he wakes up."
• "At night the mind dwel s on unpleasant things and sleep comes not or if it
does is disturbed by anxious dreams."
• "On waking in the morning the patient finds the tongue, mouth and lips not
functioning. The arms 'go to sleep' easily, particularly when resting on them.
When carrying anything, danger of dropping it because of the tingling and
numbness." [Clifton]
G Seashore.
• "I have had Ambra patients from families who lived by the sea and have even
been involved in the fishing industry. ... An important point is in an animal
remedy proving like Ambra grisea provers did not develop a connection with
whales, the sea and water.
This is because the provings only reveal uncompensated symptoms which have
to match with the uncompensated state in a patient. Other expressions such as
animal rights supporters involved in Save the Whale campaigns are usually
compensated symptoms in the patient. However if we find one or two symptoms
of Ambra in a case and they have a fear of water, a passion for swimming, an
interest in diving, a desire to live by or on the sea then Ambra can be prescribed
with success." [Thompson]
G < MORNING.
< Waking.
G > Slow motion in open air [= distraction and invigorating the circulation].
G GREY discharges.
[1] Johnston, I can't take any more [two Ambra grisea cases], HL 3/96 and 4/96.
Rubrics
Mind
Absentminded when spoken to [1]. Repeats the question first before answering
[1].
[1]. Lack of reaction to danger [1]. Delusions, diabolical faces crowding upon
him [2]; of too much light in room on falling asleep [1/1]. Fear of others
approaching him [2].
Vertigo
Head
Eye
Face
Mouth
Sour taste after milk [1; Phos.; Sulph.].
Throat
Stomach
Rectum
Female
Copious menses < exertion [3]. Metrorrhagia < lying on back [1; Cham.]; after
slight exertion [3]. Burning pain in uterus while urinating [2].
Respiration
Asthmatic, > eating [1; Graph.]; after emotions [1]; < music [1/1].
Cough
Exciting eructations [2]. Milk < [1]. Music < [3]. On talking loud [2].
Back
Limbs
Blue swelling [from varices] of left leg during menses [1/1]. Trembling from
conversation [2/1]. Weakness of fingers [from numbness] at night [1/1].
Sleep
Position, sleeps on back with hands flat under occiput [1; Nux-v.]; sleeps with
elbows and knees bent [1]. Sleepiness when retiring, but wide awake as soon as
head touches pillow [3/1].
Dreams
Perspiration
Generals
Orgasm of blood from nervousness [1]. Trembling, externally, > when alone
[1/1].
Food
Worse: [2]: Hot food; milk; warm drinks; warm food; warm milk. [1]: Alcohol;
coffee; wine.
Better: [2]: Cold drinks during heat. [1]: Cold drinks; cold food.
Ammonium carbonicum
Am-c.
Hatred does a great deal more damage to the vessel in which it is stored than the
object on which it is poured.
[McKenzie]
Signs
readily ignite.
Ammonia combines with rain and becomes available to green plants as dilute
nitric acid.
Ammonia is also derived from the breakdown of proteins that constitute plants
and animal cells. This chemical, combined with the products of photosynthesis,
is used to form amino acids, which are the basic components of plant proteins.
Animals eat the plant proteins, break them down into amino acids during the
process of digestion, and recombine them to form their own particular forms of
protein in order to build tissues and organs of their body. Certain soil bacteria
convert nitrogen-containing compounds into ammonia and atmospheric nitrogen,
a process known as denitrification. These bacteria obtain energy by breaking
down not only nitrogen compounds urea and uric acid that are excreted by living
animals, but also the nitrogen compounds produced by decaying organic
matter."1
REFRIGERANT The use of ammonia for cooling applications dates back to the
mid 1800's. The early 1900's largely perfected its use as a refrigerant in a closed
cycle of evaporation, compression and condensation. At present, freon
[chemicals containing fluorine] competes with ammonia as the main refrigerant.
EFFECTS Ammonia fumes can irritate the eyes and upper respiratory tract,
causing vomiting, conjunctivitis and inflammation of the lips, mouth and throat.
Toxic inhalations cause airway obstruction, pulmonary irritation with swelling,
cyanosis, bronchitis and pneumonia. Ammonia has been shown to produce skin
cancer in humans in doses of 1,000 mg/kg of body weight. It can damage cells
directly, and skin contact can lead to dermatitis; ingestion can burn the
oesophagus. Intoxication by ingestion is treated by drinking water or milk in
order to dilute or neutralize the ammonia; vomiting is to be avoided, as the
substance can burn the mouth or throat. 2 Contact with the compressed ammonia
gas can cause frostbite.
identified by the Greeks with Zeus, and by the Romans with Jupiter. Like the
Sun, the planet Jupiter is primarily composed of hydrogen and helium. "Jupiter's
atmosphere contains trace amounts of water, ammonia, methane, and other
organic [carbon]
km in altitude. The lowest are made of water ice or droplets, the next are crystals
of a compound of ammonia and hydrogen sulphide, and the highest are ammonia
ice."5
•• [3] Rendel - self-experimentation, 1881; method: 'I took one dose of Am-c.
1M
[Fincke], and on the 27th day took a dose of 10M [Fincke]. On the 72nd day,
being completely exhausted by the severity of the symptoms, I having become
very thin and weak, I took a dose of Lachesis CM [Fincke]. All the symptoms
were greatly ameliorated by next day, and most of them soon ceased.'
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: COLD [CLOUDY DAYS; DAMP; raw, open air]. Falling asleep; 3-4
a.m.
Comparisons
c INTOLERANCE of INJUSTICE
"We can see that Am-c. is similar to Caust. in many ways, neither of them can
tolerate the injustices and abuse of values in society. But in Caust. the feeling of
injustice is predominant, while Am-c. has more resentment. As they get older the
provocative behaviour changes into a more cynical and reserved kind of attitude.
They are very disappointed in their old ideals, they think that society is rotten
and corrupt."
c SUPPRESSED ANGER
"The anger is kept inside. The reservedness of the Ammoniums is also present in
the Natrums, but in the Natrums the grudge is absent, they don't really have this
type of anger. The difference between the two is very clear when we compare
Nat-c. with Am-c.
Nat-c. is usually refined and dignified, while Am-c. can be very blunt and
resentful."
Main symptoms
M Disappointed resentment.
• "They think that society is rotten and corrupt. They feel that al ideals have been
sacrificed to pragmatism and greed. They become the angry and rebellious
young men."
[Scholten]
• "Think of everything which others have done to displease me; lie awake al
night to lay plans to talk to them about it, but forget it in the morning."1
M Mistakes.
• "Loss of train of thoughts when tel ing a story, and hitting upon wrong thoughts
and expressions." • "Incorrect speech, using one word for another."
• "Uses wrong letters and figures in writing and ciphering." [Al en]
G AVERSION TO WASHING.
G Ailments and great prostration, great dyspnoea, coldness and puffiness of face.
G MALIGNANT scarlatina.
G CHILLY.
Very susceptible and sensitive to cold; readily catch cold in the winter.
GENERALLY < COLD but [asthmatic or cardiac] dyspnoea < warm room.
G LOW VITALITITY.
• "Broken-down feeling of the whole body, lack of tone and weeping mood early
in the morning on rising." [Hahnemann]
WEAK HEART.
• "Hearing others talk, and talking myself, makes me very weary and nervous;
cannot bear it; must get away from it and people."1
Orgasm of blood at night. "Seems as if the heart and veins would burst."
G Sleep.
• "The earlier she goes to sleep, the better is her sleep; the later she goes to bed
the less she can sleep." [Hahnemann]
[Compare with: "When feeling ill liable to frequent recourse to the bottle of
'smelling salts'."]
G < 3 A.M.
P Obstruction of nose at night [esp. when bedroom is warm]; nose feels blocked
in spite of watery discharge.
"Swelling and pain in breasts before menses, were removed by the proving."
"Used to suffer very much during menses; this has ceased since the proving, but
I have congestive headache instead."
"Since an illness six years ago, the muscles and tissues have seemed to be bound
together, not moving freely on each other as they used to; could not lie on back,
there
seemed to be such a tightness of the flesh from the chest to abdomen; can now
lie on back with ease, and the muscles of body seem to act freely and natural;
can walk with much greater ease since taking the Am-c."
Rubrics
Mind
[1]. Revealing secrets in sleep [1]. Sadness > after eating [1]. Indisposed to talk,
desire to be silent, taciturn, during menses [2].
Vertigo
Head
Sensation as if brain falls to side to which he moves his head [1/1]. Heaviness
while lying in bed [1/1]. Pain, > smoking tobacco [1].
Eye
Vision
Colours, white stars when sneezing [1/1]. Diplopia when looking intensely [1].
Sparks, on waking at night [2].
Ear
Noises, as if a bird or a large insect were fluttering its wings close to left ear
[1/1*]; reports as of distant shots [1; Dig.]; whispering [1]; sound of wind [1].
Nose
Coryza during menses [2]. Discharge excoriating during menses [1/1]; watery
during menses [1/1]. Red discolouration of tip when stooping [2/1].
Face
Discolouration, pale before menses [1]; red spots after washing [2]. Dryness of
lips, as if they would crack open when moved [1*]. Feeling of tension in skin in
morning on waking [1/1].
Mouth
Teeth
Biting teeth together sends a shock through head, ear and nose [1/1]. Feeling as
if teeth were not her own, but made of china [porcelain] [1/1*].
Stomach
Abdomen
Pollutions when talking with women [1; Clem.]. Sexual desire increased when
talking with women [1; Clem.].
Female
Menses copious at night [2], < cold air [1; Ip.]; while sitting [2/1]; < standing [2;
Cocc.;
Chest
Sleep
Sleeplessness when going to bed late [1/1]. Waking from hunger [1].
Dreams
Generals
Faintness in a crowded room [2]. Lassitude > walking in open air [2; Alum.].
Trembling from [loud] noise [1*].
Food
Aversion: [1]: Meat; milk; cooked food; ooked food during menses.
Desire: [2]: Sweets. [1]: Alcohol; beer; bread; bread during menses; chocolate;
coffee; cold drinks; cold food; cold food during menses; pungent; sour; sugar.
Worse: [2]: Hot food. [1]: Potatoes; sweets [= toothache]; warm food.
Better: [1]: Sweets; warm food.
Ammonium muriaticum
Am-m.
Night brings our troubles to the light, rather than banishes them.
[Seneca]
Signs
HISTORY "Known as sal ammoniac in the West, nao sha in China, nao sadar in
India, and nushadir in Persia and Arabic lands, the chloride of ammonia first
became known to the West in the Chou-i ts'an t'ung ch'i, a Chinese treatise of the
2nd century AD. It was to be crucial to alchemy, for on sublimation it dissociates
into antagonistic corrosive materials, ammonia and hydrochloric acid, which
readily attack metals."1 Mercury ammonium chloride was the sal alembroth of
alchemy, also called salt of wisdom. The eagle, queen of birds, signifies sal
ammoniac, because of its lightness in sublimations. [In many places Paracelsus,
however, uses it for precipitated mercury.]
EFFECTS "Salmiac dissociates as the salt of a strong acid and in contrast to the
carbonate is stronger electrically and less hydrolytic. The lack of odour of this
salt suggests that no ammonia is set free. Therefore in the organism the
liberation of ammonia is less stormy so that the elaboration to urea and the
excretion through the urine and sweat in general is more extensive. With larger
doses an increased secretion of a urinous smelling sweat is observed. One may
expect from ammonium muriaticum a more prolonged ammonium action and
moreover in the liberation from hydrochloric acid and its neutralization [through
sodium] an approximation of Muriaticum acidum and Natrum mur. Likewise
Magnesia muriatica is recalled particularly by the gastrointestinal symptoms. In
being less hydrolytic, it lacks the hydrogenoid trend and the aggravation from
damp and cold of Am-c."2
DARK - LIGHT Sal ammoniac clarifies and sal ammoniac blurs. As a coating
on dark objects that are about to be photographed it adds detail to the subject and
thus improves the picture. Employed in heater coils it produces smoke, a popular
effect used in theatrical productions.
Affinity
Modalities
Better: Open air. Rapid motion; continued motion. Rubbing the part. Warm bath.
Comparisons
Cracked lips. - Sour taste in mouth after eating. - Extreme thirst. - Frequent
urination at night. - Copious menses at night; dark, black, clotted. - Letting limbs
hang down >. -
• "Less stormy."
M Anxious dreams.
• "Very critical, not even the smal est matter escapes their criticism."
• "They feel that there is very little gentleness and love left in this world. If they
do happen to come across some expression of this love, they are very quick to
kill it with their criticism. Not many people can stand this cynicism for very long
and people soon give up trying to be kind to them. This keeps the vicious circle
going, the Ammonium muriaticums become hard and they feel that they have to
be in order to protect themselves against the hardness of other people."
[Scholten]
G Sensitivity to COLD.
Leading to obstruction of nose and loss of smell, but without the paroxysmal
respiratory dyspnoea as with Am-c.
Sneezing in sleep.
G < MORNING.
G > LYING.
> LYING on the BACK. [Cough worse when lying on the back.]
G > Bathing the affected part.
G CHRONIC SPRAINS.
< Morning.
P Paleness of face.
But: "The face reddens during a short, animated conversation, esp. so in a warm
room."
Left-sided.
Rubrics
Mind
Abusive; children insulting parents [1]. Anger with taciturnity [1]. Anxiety as if
paralyzed [1; Cob-n.]. Aversion to certain persons [2]. Blasphemy and cursing
[1].
Delusion enemy is under the bed [1/1]; head is surrounded by fire [1/1]; a grief
weighed upon him [1; Con.]; sword hanging over head [1/1]. Envy and hate [1].
Irritability > after eating [1]. Desire for light [2]. Sadness, in darkness [1]; > after
eating [1]; but cannot weep [2].
Eye
Burning pain in eyes in morning > washing [1; Alum.; Nicc.], > bright light
[1/1], >
Vision
Foggy, in bright light [1/1], in sunlight [1], > washing [1; Alum.; Caust.].
Nose
Constant inclination to blow the nose from sensation of a large body in nose [1;
Teucr.].
Coryza during menses [1]. Epistaxis preceded by itching [2]. Sneezing wakes
him from sleep [3/1].
Teeth
Stomach
Eructations > after eating [1]. Sensation of fulness during hunger [1].
Rectum
Urine
Female
Menses, copious at night [2]; > motion [1]. Prolapsus, uterus, walks bent [2].
Respiration
Difficult, on motion of arms [2], on stooping [2].
Chest
Back
Limbs
Heat palms of hands in evening after lying down [1; Nux-v.], heat soles of feet in
evening after lying down [1; Nux-v.; Sulph.].
Sleep
Dreams
Horse biting him in arm [1/1]. Difficulties [3]. Falling into water [2]. Difficulties
on journeys [1]. Being lost in a forest [1].
Food
Desire: [2]: Lemonade. [1]: Brandy; chocolate; coffee; pickles; sour; sugar;
sweets.
Anacardium orientale
Anac.
The man who sees both sides of a question is a man who sees absolutely nothing.
[Oscar Wilde]
Signs
NAME The name Anacardium derives from Gr. ana, up or without, and kardia,
heart, referring to the fact that the pulp of the fruit, instead of having the seed
enclosed, has the nut growing out at the end of it. The specific name orientale
refers to its eastern, Asiatic habitat.
CONSTITUENTS The family is best known for its phenols and phenolic acids
causing serious skin irritation - anacardol, anacardic acid and relatives. The
irritant substances may be distributed throughout the plant body or concentrated
in particular organs, e.g. in the fruit wall of the cashew or marking-nut.
Anacardic acid reportedly has anthelmintic activity.
OIL Trade in the marking nut is very ancient. It was the "golden acorn" of Galen
and Avicenna. The kernel of the nut contains a small quantity of sweet oil. The
oil is a powerful antiseptic and cholagogue. Ingestion of leaves and drupes [esp.
unripe ones] can cause gastroenteritis, haemorrhoids, headaches, and even death.
Externally the nut enters
into the composition of caustic applications for warts and piles. The fixed oil is
used in India as an application to floors of houses, serving as a repellent to
termites. The shell liquid [oil] is used to mark laundry; hence its name.
American servicemen stationed in India experienced dermatitis around their
necks and waistlines, those places where a laundrymark had been placed in their
uniforms. Since boiling does not destroy the resin, the mark may continue to
provoke dermatitis for the life of the garment. Indian natives employ the oil for
producing fictitious marks of bruises. These can be distinguished from actual
bruises caused by blows, by their deep bluish-black colour and from their
presenting small vesicles or minute blisters on their surface. Bruised nuts applied
to the os uteri can procure abortion.
cultures.
"Ayurvedic
Indian
medicine
including
compounds
of
[1985] in a study of 250 cancer cases having different types and sites of
malignancy. The cases were divided into four different treatment groups. [1]
Ayurvedic drug and chemotherapy [2] Ayurvedic drug and radiation [3] radiation
[4] chemotherapy. The maximum response and longevity with minimum
mortality was observed in those patients who were treated with the combined
treatment of chemotherapy and Ayurvedic drug. Notably, this combined therapy
was most effective in leukaemia and particularly those cases with splenomegaly
and breast cancer."2
LIVER CANCER Various animal studies indicate that the nut milk extract of
Semecarpus anacardium counteracts hepatocellular carcinoma induced by
aflatoxin B [1]
There is evidence from east African studies that aflatoxins cause liver cancer in
humans.
The data from the studies were strong enough to prompt the Food and Drug
Administration to develop strict regulations to control levels in food and animal
food sold in the USA. Aflatoxin can also cause acute poisoning, particularly
acute liver damage, in
[esp. pig liver and kidneys] are additional sources of human exposure because
the animals have been fed low-grade animal feed contaminated by the fungus. 4
days.
•• [3] Stübler - 19 provers [14 males, 5 females], 1966-68; method: daily doses
of 4x, 6x, or 12x for several weeks. 5
Affinity
MIND. Nervous system. Stomach. Skin. Palms. Muscles. Joints. * Left side.
Right side.
Modalities
Motion. Drafts. Open air. Cold. Long after eating. Fasting. RUBBING.
Main symptoms
• "He is at odds with the whole world, and has so little confidence in himself that
he despairs of being able to accomplish what is demanded of him."
[Hahnemann]
M Fastidious.
WEAKNESS OF WILL.
FEEBLE-MINDED persons.
They are secure in their niche within the rank and file. These individuals will do
anything required of them in order to remain securely in the pack, even if this
involves committing acts that go against their own personal sense of right and
wrong, but a conflict will arise within them that cannot be resolved. Thus they
become split or 'doubled'." [Zaren]
M Antagonism.
They worship authority, yet they fear it. They believe in traditional values but
can live in opposition to these values. They are obedient in some ways and, in
other circumstances, they are disobedient. They are fearful of aggression, yet
they can be highly aggressive themselves. They can be either likeable and
endearing or mean and spiteful. They want to avoid punishment, yet their
behaviour may bring it upon themselves. These people are
full of these contradictions because their anxiety propels them from one
psychological state to the extreme of the opposite state." [Zaren]
• "Life is a series of choices. Children, for example, must decide whether to stay
little or grow up. Anacardium cannot make decisions and thus is slow, constantly
hesitating.
This person has a difficult character. Is it better to be an angel or a devil?
Anacardium patients, victims of their indecision, constantly change doctors,
babysitters; even their address changes frequently. They are always on the
lookout for something better, but are never satisfied, always sorry they didn't
take the other option. ... It is a remedy for fits of nerves in students who don't
know what subject to choose, nor what answers to give [the worst of all:
multiple choice tests]. ... Anacardium is a very useful remedy when twins run in
the family." [Grandgeorge]
M FEELING OF SEPARATION.
From the world; from society; from social laws; from mankind; from their
family; from reality; from time; from himself; from their emotions; from
morality; from religion.
• "Separation of the function of the nerves resulting in the fact that the patient
hears colours and sees music. This event occurs in the use of LSD which is one
of the main causes which produces Anacardium cases in our days." [Ghegas]
• "Individuals who are fighting the establishment, not driven by the idea of
justice, but because they live in another world which they believe is better."
[Ghegas]
G Diminution of senses.
• "They smel filth wherever they go and esp. when smelling their own clothes or
body."
[Pierce]
G Chilly.
G Constant thirst.
G > Eating.
Symptoms DISAPPEAR WHILE EATING, and come back some hours after
eating.
Eats hurriedly.
• "That's why you wil often see that they are obese, or that they just can't follow
a diet.
They sometimes say they are not themselves any more when they are eating, or
when they buy food in a shop." [Ghegas]
G PRESSING PAINS.
G Injuries of tendons.
• "It should be noted that this is a remedy with an affinity for the tendons [a word
whose root in Latin, tendere, also gives us 'tend' and 'tendency', implying
movement in a particular direction, while our Anacardium, indecisive, remains
torn among several possibilities." [Grandgeorge]
P Gastrointestinal tract.
P Rectum.
• "Great desire for stool, but with the effort the desire passes away without any
evacuation. The rectum seems powerless, as if paralyzed with a sensation as if it
were plugged." [Blackwood]
Rubrics
Mind
Abusive, husband is insulting wife before children or vice versa [2]. Answers,
reflects long [2]; slowly [2]. Antagonism with herself [2]. Anxiety, as if pursued
when walking
[2]. Forgetful in morning [3]; > afternoon [2/1]. Makes gestures with great
perseverance
[1/1]. Lack of reverence for those around him [1]. Feels as though she must
shriek [2].
Unfeeling [3/1]. Weeping > symptoms [2]. Feels as if he had two wills [3].
Vertigo
When looking at moving objects [1]. Objects seem too far off [1; Puls.].
Head
Empty sensation in morning [1]. Boring pain above right eye > coffee [1*];
pressing pain in forehead > breakfast [1*];
Vision
Dim, alternating with clear vision [1; Euphr.]; > winking [1]. Objects seem
distant [2], on waking [1/1].
Face
Mouth
Teeth
Sensation of elongation at night in bed [1; Mag-c.].
Throat
Dryness > eating [1; Cist.; Phos.]. Pain, rawness, after eating [2/1].
Stomach
Contraction < raising arm [1/1], > stooping [1/1], < turning body [1/1]. Nausea
on mental exertion [1; Arg-n.].
Abdomen
Rectum
Itching after coition [1/1]. Urging, great desire passes away with effort [3/1].
Chest
Limbs
Sleep
Dreams
Excelling in mental work [1]. Graves [1]. High places [1]. Threats [1].
Skin
Generals
Faintness, > continuing walking [2/1]. Injuries, tendons [2/1]. Weakness >
resting head on something and closing eyes [1/1].
1972 Heft 2.
Food
Worse: [2]: Warm food. [1]: Alcohol; coffee; cold drinks; soup.
Better: [3]: Eating. [1]: Cold drinks during heat; cold water.
Anhalonium lewinii
Anh.
With Peyote MAN is alone, desperately scraping out the music of his own
skeleton, without father, mother, family, love, god, or society. And no living
being to accompany him. And the skeleton is not of bone but of skin, like a skin
that walks. And one walks from the equinox to the solstice, buckling on one's
own humanity.
[Antonin Artaud]
We are bored by the whole question of drugs and paradise. It would be better if
drugs could give us a little knowledge. We do not spend a century in paradise.
[Henri Michaux]
Signs
peyote be removed from Echinocactus and placed in the new segregate genus
Anhalonium, thus making the binomial A. williamsii, a name which soon
became widely used throughout Europe and the U.S. Much earlier [1839]
Lemaire had proposed the name Anhalonium for another group of spineless
cacti, now correctly classified as Ariocarpus. Anhalonium must be considered as
a later homonym for Ariocarpus, so, according to the International Rules of
Botanical Nomenclature, it cannot be validly used as a generic name for any
plant. Ariocarpus superficially resembles peyote, but clearly is a different genus.
... Finally, in the same year [1894] Coulter proposed a new genus for peyote
alone: Lophophora. This helped clarify the nomenclatural situation because
peyote had been included in at least five different genera of cacti by the end of
the nineteenth century. The group of plants commonly called and used as peyote
is unique within the cactus family and deserves separation as the distinct genus
Lophophora."1
NAME The genus consists of two species: Lophophora williamsii and L. diffusa.
Its name derives from Gr. lophos, a crest, and phoreo, I bear. The name
Anhalonium refers to the fact that this cactus doesn't have spines: an = without,
helos = needle, spine. Spines are present only in very young seedlings. Adult
plants produce spine primordia but they rarely develop into spines. It has the size
of a small apple. The characteristic wool-filled centre of the plant gave it its
native name peiotl, meaning caterpillar. When the top of a peyote dries, the soft
fleshy tissue is reduced greatly in volume, whereas the proportion of wool to
what formerly was the fleshy part is greatly increased. Other theories to explain
the etymology of the word peiotl refer to the Aztec words pepeyoni or pepeyon,
meaning
FEATURES The area on the stem that usually produces flowers and spines is
well pronounced in peyote and is identified by a tuft of hairs or trichomes.
Ranging in colour from deep reddish-pink to nearly pure white, flowers arise
from within the centre of the plant. There are no visible leaves in either juvenile
or mature plants. Leaves are greatly reduced and only microscopic in size; even
the seed leaves [cotyledons] are almost invisible in young seedlings because they
are rounded, united, and quite small. Fruits develop for about a year and then
elongate rapidly at maturity. Usually, only the upper
half of the fruit contains seeds. Peyote plants may occur as single-headed
individuals or may form dense clumps up to two meters across with scores of
heads. The latter occurs through the activation of adventive buds that appear on
the tuberous part of the root-stem axis below the crown. Such growth often is the
result of injury and almost always occurs if the top of the plant is cut off. They
rarely rot if injured or cut, so excised pieces will readily form adventitious roots
and can become independent plants. Peyote is one of the slowest-growing plants
in existence. The period from germination until blooming for the first time is
approximately thirteen years. Mature specimens may attain a diameter of 12
cm, rising some 3-6 cm above the surface of the ground. Yet, the long, tapering
root may reach a length of 30 cm or more at maturity. A greater concentration of
mescaline appears as the plant gets older. The Indians revere the oldest plants
and keep them as personal amulets or place them on the crescent altar to
represent 'Father Peyote.'
sinensis
[Orange],
Selenicereus
grandiflorus
[Cactus
grandiflorus
in
Many synthetic drugs, such as ecstasy [MDMA] and 2C-B, are phenethylamines,
and are related to the chemistry of mescaline. Mescaline occurs naturally in
several cactus species, most notably Lophophora and many members of the
genus Trichocereus.
"generally indicate that peyote and mescaline are 'warmer' and 'more earthy' than
LSD, which is usually seen as being more 'cerebral.' The mescaline present in
the cactus appears to increase considerably a feeling of fellowship that is only
sometimes prompted by LSD. Shulgin remarks that under mescaline 'There is a
benign empathy shown to both inanimate and living things, especially to small
things.' Allen Ginsberg and others have
LSD "Virtually all American users of entheogenic drugs claim to have tried
mescaline at some point in their careers. Clearly, the great majority have simply
tried LSD or PCP
'sophisticated' users, when confronted with these facts, will usually claim that
they have certainly tried the real thing, that they know the difference between
LSD and mescaline, being connoisseurs; that LSD has this or that attribute,
whereas mescaline may be distinguished by various superior qualities. To put it
bluntly, this is hogwash. Not only have the great majority of entheogen users
never tried authentic mescaline but, I submit, under proper experimental
conditions, many would be unable to discern much difference between mescaline
and LSD. In fact, peak effects of these compounds are remarkably similar, and
these drugs [as well as psilocybine and psilocine] show cross-tolerance,
suggesting they produce their effects by similar neural mechanisms."4
USES For millennia the Huichol have rubbed the juice of the crushed peyote
into wounds to prevent infection and promote healing. It has been shown that
hordenine shows an inhibitory action against at least 18 strains of penicillin
resistant Staphylococcus bacteria. In many Indian languages the word for
medicine is the same as for peyote. Women of the Menomini tribe use peyote for
childbirth, earaches, or to be inspired to weave intricate spiral patterns.
RITUALS Peyote has many ancient ritual uses. The Huichol, for example, make
a yearly pilgrimage, the peyote hunt over 600 km of rugged desert country. The
journey involves
many ritual steps and many days of journey involving hardship. The participants
often paradoxically speak the opposite of what is intended. The quest comes to
an end when the spiritual leader rushes ahead and fires arrows to enclose the first
peyote on all quarters.
He then cuts the plants leaving some root to re-grow new crowns. The return to
Wirikuta
Health, luck, and life are to be gained by gathering the cactus, the gourd of the
God of Fire; but inasmuch as the pure fire cannot benefit the impure, men and
women must not only remain chaste for the time being, but must also purge
themselves from the taint of past sin."6 During the past two centuries the
religious use of peyote has spread northward into the United States and Canada
among many of the Plains Indian Tribes such as the Navajo, Comanche, Sioux,
and Kiowa. In 1918 the use of peyote was incorporated as a sacrament into the
Native American Church. This was an adaptation of the Mexican ritual adopted
by Indian tribes in the north. It is commented that Jesus came to the white man
as flesh and blood, but to the Native American as peyote.
NATIVE CHURCH "Some of the crucial factors are a positive expectation held
by the Peyotists, an emphasis on the real interpersonal world rather than the
world within the individual, emphasis on communion rather than withdrawal
during the drug experience, emphasis on adherence to the standards of society
rather than on the freeing of impulses, and certain practices during the meetings.
... The whole spirit of the [peyote] religion seems best characterized as
communion - with God and with other men. Meetings are experienced as a time
of being close and growing closer to one another. It is acceptable and expected
that if someone in a meeting expresses a strong feeling, the others present feel it
with him and tell him so. If there is a tendency to lose old features of one's
identity, there is an equally strong tendency to acquire stronger identity as a
member of the group.
As a member of the church, each person is assured of his own significance and
of group support for his own needs to be self-assertive in the outside world. ...
Meetings are conducted in a strict and organized way. Distortions in time sense
are counteracted by the various events of the service that take place at precisely
defined times of the night.
Almost everything is done in a ritualized way that requires attention to the detail
of one's movements and speech. The drum, ceremonial tobacco, and other
important objects are passed only in a certain way. In moving about the hogan or
tepee, one walks only in a certain direction. All these details are invested with
considerable emotion, and some Peyotists say that this keeps them "thinking in
the right way." The ceremony is experienced as beautiful, but much of the beauty
is the beauty of orderliness. ... Roadmen
They are all spirits, of course, for the duration of the journey. But he more than
any other man must transcend the limitations of his bodily self and achieve that
unique breakthrough that sets the shaman apart from ordinary men. If he lacks
these qualities he will never 'complete himself.' ... It is my impression that this
special condition of the shaman cannot be faked - that not only he himself but
his companions really do know whether or not a man who lays claim to being a
mara'akáme has what the Huichol call
'balance' - that special, ineffable capacity to venture without fear onto the
'narrow bridge'
across the great chasm separating the ordinary world from the world beyond. In
the summer of 1966 Ramón gave us a memorable demonstration of the meaning
of 'balance.'
make a great leap to the other side of the rushing water, never showing the
slightest concern about the obvious danger that he might lose his balance and fall
into space. We were frankly terrified, even annoyed, at such 'foolhardiness', but
neither his wife nor the other Huichol watching showed any real apprehension.
The demonstration ended as abruptly as it had begun, without any explanation of
Ramón's strange behaviour. The following day he asked if we thought he had
been showing off. He said, "Perhaps you thought, 'Ah, Ramón is drunk with too
much beer.' But no. I took you there to show what it means 'to have balance.' So
you could see and understand. Because when one crosses over as a shaman one
looks below, and then one perceives this great abyss filled with all those animals
waiting to kill one. Those who do not have balance are afraid. They fall and are
killed."8
PILGRIMAGE "So intense is the drama of the actual hunt for the Deer-Peyote in
Wirikúta that certain prior events of crucial importance for the success of the
quest tend to be overshadowed. The first of these is the ritual of confession and
purification through which the participants are initiated into the sacred enterprise
of the pilgrimage. This is an extraordinary ceremony. Everyone - peyoteros as
well as those who remain at home - is required to acknowledge publicly all his
or her sexual adventures, from the beginning of adulthood to the present.
Further, each sexual partner must be identified by name, regardless of the
presence of spouses or lovers, although old people are allowed to telescope their
love affairs and be less precise about names. No display of jealousy, hurt,
resentment, or anger is permitted; more than that, no one is even allowed to
entertain such feelings 'in one's heart.' Any show of hostility and any deliberate
omission of sexual intimacy or a lover's name would jeopardize not only the
offender but also his companions and the entire sacred enterprise. The quest for
life could prove fruitless. At the very least, even if the peyote country were
reached, those who had failed to purge themselves or who carried 'bad thoughts
in their hearts' would probably fall victim to sorcerers, suffer terrible
hallucinations, and perhaps even die. An extraordinary spectacle indeed - doubly
so if one has been taught to regard jealousy and its expression as a
'confession', except that of course in the context of the peyote quest sexual
intercourse per se is disapproved and hence a 'transgression.' ... Metamorphosis
is implicit in the confession ritual. The peyotero has been made over, 'become
new.' He has shed one state of being, maturity, and assumed - or reassumed -
another, that of childhood innocence. At the same time, transformation has
occurred on another level, for the peyotero has
'become' the likeness of one of the supernaturals of the original peyote quest.
More than merely child, he has had to become spirit, for the gates of the
Otherworlds will open only for one who is spirit."9
EXPERIMENTS Heffter did some experiments with the new drug [mescaline]
he had discovered. The following is an excerpt from his laboratory notebook.
"Experiment performed on 23rd July, 1897. 12:09 p.m. One gram of the sulphate
salts of the alkaloids corresponding to 16.67 g of the drug was dissolved in water
and taken orally. Pulse rate 76 per minute. 12:33 p.m. Occipital headache. Limbs
feel heavy. 12:45 p.m. Pulse rate 66 per minute. 1:00 p.m. Nausea. Pulse rate 60
per minute. 1:15 p.m. Pulse rate 68 per minute. While reading, green and violet
spots appear on the paper. The same occurs when I look up at the bright sky.
After shutting the eyes visual images occur which are initially pale but gradually
become more clearly defined and brighter. In this particular experiment
landscapes are less frequent and I have predominantly images of kaleidoscopic
figures, patterned carpets and cloth, luxurious articles of clothing and
architectural scenes. The predominant colours are orange, red and green, with a
little blue and occasionally yellow. On this occasion images occur in a
completely darkened room, i.e. in a photographic darkroom, while my eyes are
open, but they are not as vivid and clear as when I keep my eyes shut. The
capacity for visual images lasts in this experiment for an extraordinarily long
time. Even on the following morning coloured [green and violet] spots still
appear when I shut my eyes. Other symptoms were as follows: dilatation of the
pupils, dizziness, very distressing nausea which lasted on this occasion until 8
p.m. , loss of appreciation of time, impaired hearing and a feeling of tiredness in
the limbs. All these symptoms, which were identical to those observed in the
experiment performed on the 6th July, disappeared gradually during the evening.
On the following morning only the pupils were still slightly dilated. In this
experiment my consciousness again remained clear, but I found it hard to
concentrate on calculations and while talking.
When the eyes are closed, colours, freed from the fetters holding them to objects,
continue to live a life of their own ... The experience of time and space is largely
laid aside, whilst the faculties of thinking and memory are retained. Every single
experience
'means' something, for example a picture not hanging straight that the world will
perish in three days' time. The life of the will is completely paralysed, and a
person under the influence of mescaline sees no reason why he should do or
bend his will to anything in particular."11
masses, or if so, the tone was very delicate. I was further impressed, not only by
the brilliance, delicacy, and variety of the colours, but even more by their lovely
and various textures - fibrous, woven, polished, glowing, dull, veined, semi-
transparent - the glowing effects, as of jewels, and the fibrous, as of insects'
wings, being perhaps the most prevalent. ... I awoke at the usual hour and
experienced neither sense of fatigue nor other unpleasant reminiscence of the
experience I had undergone. Only my eyes seemed unusually sensitive to colour,
esp. to blue and violet; I can, indeed, say that ever since this experience I have
been more æsthetically sensitive than I was before to the more delicate
phenomena of light and shade and colour."12
LIGHT "It is worth considering the fact that the little Mexican cactus, peyotl, in
its natural habitat in Central and Northern Mexico, is subjected to inordinately
intense light, and that experiences of light are characteristic of peyotl-mescaline
intoxication. Similar connections between their toxic action and the conditions
under which they grow are visible in the case of henbane, thorn apple and deadly
nightshade. ... My own experience of peyotl intoxication illustrates the essential
difference between one type of intoxication and another. [Earlier], I described
my experiment with black henbane and portrayed the plant as a gloomy, sinister
growth. In the peyotl intoxication everything was bright and clear, luminous, of
unearthly beauty, encompassed by a multitude of sweet sounds. ... The most
active element of the peyotl cactus, the alkaloid mescaline, is mainly
accumulated in its centre. One can take either the interior of the plant, or
synthetic mescaline. I have tried both. The difference was considerable. Under
the influence of the isolated alkaloid mescaline the course of intoxication was
briefer and more violent, more of a shock, than after taking the whole plant
substance. My sensations after eating the plant were gentler and more natural;
they took longer to pass - intoxication often lasted for several days -
and my recollections of the experiment was clearer. ... The fragment of peyotl
which came into my possession was fibrous, brown and desiccated. It was bitter
and unpalatable, but I forced myself to swallow it. ... I went through all the
terrors and torments of thorough-going poisoning. My legs gave way, a yawn
grew into a spasm, my chest ached and a boundless, crushing melancholy took
possession of my soul. The horrible city was bare, bleak and cold, while the
shivers and the terrible numbness of my brain caused me unspeakable anguish.
The morning after a night's heavy drinking can be pretty grim, but it is generally
relieved by a touch of philosophical humor. This remnant of consolation was
denied me. Trembling muscles and leaden exhaustion made it hard for me to
walk. I felt that the waves of light were coming to meet me like a solid and
impenetrable wall. But there is one thing I must not forget to add: I was
trembling not only with the freezing cold I felt in spite of the almost African heat
- I was also trembling with a strange tension, a wonderful sense of anticipation,
as though I were about to be visited with a new life. My cold shivers were at the
same time shivers of rapture, although none of my agonies abated. ... Things
were revealed in a flash and then sank quickly back into the void. Excitations
and sensations arose in irregular jerks, like gentle explosions, leaving behind
them a depressing nausea, a profound pessimism that saw no beauty, no hope
and not a trace of joy. Once in my room, I closed the wooden shutters in front of
the windows, undressed and lay down. At the time I imagined I was unable to
stretch out. I seemed to be sitting upright on the bed, and yet I was lying flat in
the ordinary way. Then I found it possible to lie down and sit up simultaneously,
and this filled me with profound satisfaction. Nausea, constriction of the chest,
muscular tremors,
numbness of the brain and the terrible grey pessimism vanished as though blown
away.
As soon as I shut my eyes, a mighty but inaudible stream flowed past me, a river
of colour and radiance. ... This wakefulness was scintillating, crystal-clear. I was
bathed in invigorating, animating, purifying air. ...
They drew together gracefully and with indescribable grandeur. I myself was the
walls.
This went on for perhaps a year or maybe two. In reality everything was
timeless, without past and without future. ... The greatest gain and the greatest
loss consisted in this: While the colours were revealing themselves to me as
rivers, ribbons, sounds and tangible substances, I believed that I could read in
them the meaning of life and all things. The one great ultimate truth was about to
become clear to me at the next heartbeat. But every time this blissful, perfect
moment approached I let it slip. I saw myself lying there smiling happily. I saw
myself exactly as though a stranger were lying there. I watched the ultimate
revelation fritter away."13
OTHER EFFECTS "About half an hour after ingesting the buttons the first
effects are felt. There is a feeling of strange intoxication and shifting
consciousness with minor perceptual changes. There may also be strong physical
effects, including respiratory pressure, muscle tension [esp. face and neck
muscles], and queasiness or possible nausea.
Any unpleasant sensations should disappear within an hour. After this the state
of altered consciousness begins to manifest itself. The experience may vary with
the individual, but among the possible occurrences are feelings of inner
tranquillity, oneness with life, heightened awareness, and rapid thought flow.
During the next several hours these effects will deepen and become more visual.
Colours may become more intense. Halos and auras may appear about things.
Objects may seem larger, smaller , closer or more distant than they actually are.
Often persons will notice little or no changes in visual perception while
beholding the world about them, but upon closing their eyes they will see on
their mind-screen wildly colourful and constant changing patterns. After several
more hours the intensity of the experience gradually relaxes. Thought becomes
less rapid and diffuse and more ordered. In the Navajo peyote ritual this change
of thought flow is used wisely.
During the first part of the ceremony the participants submit to the feeling and
let the peyote teach them. During the latter part of the ritual the mind turns to
thoughtful contemplation and understanding with the conscious intellect what
the peyote has taught the subconscious mind. The entire experience may last
from 6 to 12 hours depending upon the individual and the amount of the plant
consumed. After all the peyote effects have passed there is no comedown. One is
likely to feel pleasantly relaxed and much a peace with the world. Although
there is usually no desire for food during the experience one would probably
have a wholesome appetite afterwards."14
INFINITY "I was living in a timeless pulsation that bridged the gap between all
barriers.
I reached many eternities, and felt akin with infinity. At long last I knew the
relation all things had for one another! All objects seemed to be complete in
themselves; as I searched the depth of an object I would see many worlds buried
in it. And as I examined each world, I saw that each had objects of its own which
were seen as worlds and objects endlessly. Everything had a new interest for me,
for everything was continuously in flux, and each new thing became newer than
it was the instant before. All my senses merged and acted as one as they caressed
and encompassed everything they perceived. A thousand sense feelings closed in
upon me, stirring up within waves of climaxes that kept sending my mind to
even greater, undreamed-of heights. The beginning was forgotten and no end
was in sight. I had arrived back to the place of my origin. As each mystery
exposed its true nature to me, each revelation was accompanied by vast
explosions of vibratory colour, flowing liquid blending perfectly together to
form a sea of radiant beauty. A consummation of me, my purpose and creator
unfolded and seethed to further heights undreamed of; a tremendous upsurge of
blissful emotion poured its intention into a tiny shell that expanded larger and
larger. It reached its unbearable breaking point, and then release as the shell burst
and a huge burning white flower grew bigger and bigger at a slow unceasing
rate; the petals reached out to their fullest extreme, and then closed at the same
unceasing rate, to rest... I continued to float in this heaven of satisfaction and
contentment for an immeasurable time. Then far off in the distance I heard a
thunderous sound which vibrated my world of infinite colour; the sound became
louder, and I was wisked backwards through the velvet curtain of confusion once
again."15
CASTANEDA Castaneda describes at length his experiences with the cactus. "I
felt a strong, pungent bitterness; in a moment my whole mouth was numb. The
bitterness increased as I kept on chewing, forcing an incredible flow of saliva.
My gums and the inside of my mouth felt as if I had eaten salty, dry meat or fish,
which seems to force one to chew more. ... But when I tried to speak I realized I
couldn't; the words shifted aimlessly about in my mind. ... I experienced a very
confusing moment, and became aware of the fact that although there was a clear
thought in my mind, I could not speak. I wanted to comment on the strange
quality of the water, but what followed next was not speech; it was the feeling of
my unvoiced thoughts coming out of my mouth in a sort of liquid form. It was
an effortless sensation of vomiting without the contractions of the diaphragm. It
was a pleasant flow of liquid words. ... The passage from my normal state had
taken place almost without my realizing it: I was aware; my thoughts and
feelings were a corollary of that awareness; and the passing was smooth and
clear. But this second change, the awakening to serious, sober consciousness,
was genuinely shocking. I had forgotten I was a man! The sadness of such an
irreconcilable situation was so intense that I wept."16 For American
psychologist DeMille and peyotl expert Weston LaBarre, Castaneda's
experiences are very much open to doubt. DeMille maintains that Castaneda
invented Don Juan, and LaBarre stresses the fictitious nature of Castaneda's
books, calling them "intellectual kitsch."
ARTS Aleister Crowley, nicknamed "The Great Beast" and a member of the
Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, believed himself to be the first to introduce
mescal into European artistic circles, stating that he made many experiments on
people with mescal from 1910 onwards. Among them was Katherine Mansfield,
but, according to reports, it only made her feel sick and rather annoyed at the
sight of a picture hanging askew on the wall. Soon after the end of the First
World War, the German scientist Kurt Beringer, an associate of C.G. Jung and
Herman Hesse, conducted about sixty mescaline sessions, using as subjects male
and female physicians and medical students. One of his subjects became
fascinated with trying to put the "furious succession" of mescaline images on
film; later, Walt Disney hired him as the chief visualist for Fantasia. More recent
publications on self-experimentations with mescaline by novelists like Aldous
Huxley
on himself as well as on three artist friends [among them the poet Yeats]. Weir
Mitchell sent some buttons to the psychologist William James as well, but James
got a severe stomachache after eating only one and declared that he would "take
the visions on trust."
An artist friend of Havelock Ellis [probably Yeats] took four mescal buttons and
experienced the following 'proving' symptoms. "Now also began another series
of extraordinary sensations. They set in with bewildering suddenness and
followed one another in rapid succession."18
• "My right leg became suddenly heavy and solid; it seemed, indeed, as if the
entire weight of my body had shifted into one part, about the thigh and knee, and
that the rest of my body had lost all substantiality."
• "With the suddenness of a neuralgic pang, the back of my head seemed to open
and emit streams of bright colour; this was immediately followed by the feeling
as of a draft blowing like a gale through the hair in the same region."
• "At one moment the colour, green, acquired a taste in my mouth; it was
sweetish and somewhat metallic; blue again would have a taste that seemed to
recall phosphorus; these are the only colours that seemed to be connected with
taste."
• "My reason appeared to be the sole survivor of my being. At times I felt that
this, too, would go, but the sound of my own voice would establish again the
communication with the outer world of reality."
HEART Clarke states that Anhalonium doesn't produce any of the "terrible heart
symptoms of the other Cacti." The experiments of Havelock Ellis provide
evidence to the contrary:
• "There were paroxysmal attacks of pain at the heart and a sense of imminent
death, which naturally alarmed the subject."
• "Persistent, also, was the feeling of nausea. This, when attended by a feeling of
suffocation and a pain at the heart, was relieved by taking brandy, coffee, or
biscuit."
drops for 3-4 weeks; 3x, thrice a day 5 drops for 4 weeks; in-between the various
potencies medicine-free intervals of 1-2 months. For months after the proving,
both Unger and other provers experienced a continuation of their visual
hallucinations, predominated by the colours blue and green [the peyote cactus is
bluish green!]. To one female prover the white keys of her typewriter appeared
to be bluish green during a period of two years after the proving. According to
Unger the element boron and its compounds, which naturally occur in
Lophophora, account for the effects of peyote.
•• [2] Herrick - 10 provers, 1994; method: 30c, taken from one to three times
over a three week period.
[1-2] Anderson, Peyote: The Divine Cactus, The University of Arizona Press
1980. [3]
Affinity
Modalities
Main symptoms
Self-contained.
• "I was about twenty-one years old when some men told me, 'There's a new,
powerful medicine. It's going to whirl you around. It will make you see God.' ... I
wanted to experience this and I went to their first meeting in a lonely shack. Six
men were sitting on the floor of an empty room. They had a half-gallon can full
of cut-up peyote. ... I felt strange taking this new medicine and took only a few
tablespoons at first. The peyote was powerful. The drum got into me. The gourd
got into me. There were voices coming to me out of that rattle. ... By midnight I
was having visions. First I saw a square turning into a circle, into a half moon,
into a beaded belt - green and blue - which was spinning around me. I could see
myself as if looking down a high mountain, sitting with the other six men, seeing
myself crouching in the corner of that log house. Suddenly I was back within
myself. My eyes were on the logs, which seemed very close by, like looking
through a magnifying glass. I saw something crawling out between the chinks. It
was a big ant, maybe ten feet high, the biggest ant there ever was, all horns,
spiny like a lobster. As the ant grew bigger, the room expanded with it. I saw
insects starting to eat me. I got scared and tried to get away but couldn't move.
The leader, the roadman, could tell that I was seeing something. He knew how I
felt. He whirled his gourd around, shook his fan of feathers at me. I came back to
life, back from someplace outside the log house, it seemed to me. I was
confused. ... I tried to think about animals, but was unable to concentrate.
The men had told me, 'Eat this and you will see God.' I did not see God. I
couldn't think in complete words, only in syllables, one syllable at a time."1
• "Sense of continuum. With places and people that you meet. A feeling of
having been here before. Of coming back again. God is one. Everything is one.
Lifetime is short but there is something that will continue on. Or: Everything is
diffused." [Shah]
Disorientation.
• "The child that is brought in for ADD may most likely be confused for
Cannabis indica, Baryta carbonica, or Helleborus. The child has two sides to
herself. She is ritualistic, liking to wear the same clothes, eat the same foods or
mimic certain people.
She also has a contrasting side; she appears to be very free, easily transitioning
from one event to another going along with any suggestion and, 'being so
mellow that she is not
with the program.' When you ask the parents what they mean, they explain, 'She
misses a lot of her day. It's like she is dreaming. It's like she has some idea and is
so into it that she misses what's going on around her.'" [Herscu]
Multiple colours; or blue and green increased, with red and yellow decreased.
• "The visual aberrations are among the richest in our materia medica.
Outstanding are noise and touch seen as colour, perspectives completely
distorted. The visual impression may be so powerful as to drown out all mental
functions. Blue and green perception is increased; red and yellow decreased. In
this, the objective red and yellow of consciousness has been displaced by the
more subjective blues and greens, closer to the ultraviolet in the visual spectrum.
A unique symptom was green experienced as a metallic taste; also, two
dimensional objects appear multi-dimensional." [Stephenson]
• "Others love them, love their perceptions and ability to be empathic. They have
the enviable meditative, ecstasy side, the side that sees, hears, and feels beauty,
the side that suspends time and feels like they are one with God. However, over
time, the ability to maintain themselves, to maintain their own desires, their own
ego sense, disappears. Now others affect them too much. Now everyone needs to
be careful of how they act around this person. Now the Anhalonium is too
perceptive. The process of self-degradation continues. Whereas before, the
patient felt love and joy looking at scenery, at life and nature, music, and loving
different aromas, they are now accosted by these very same stimuli. Now all
these external stimuli are too much to bear. They stop feeling the borders."
[Zaren]
become autocratic, divorced from any mental control. Most of the classic
symptoms of religious experience can be found here - the euphoria, the bliss, the
loss of mundane time sense, the loss of self-consciousness and the feeling of
union with the greater self, and the eternal renunciation of the world. Among
delusions there is the classic schizophrenic one that 'faces appear mask-like'."
[Stephenson]
M Weakness of will.
Obstruction of the will. Lack of initiative. Unable to make up one's own mind.
Flight and withdrawal when faced with decisions.
M Split personality.
G Ailments from:
• "They also tend to produce and be aggravated by losing fluid through some
form of discharge such as repeated or severe diarrhoea or blood loss. This could
be due to injury, or due to bleeding per vagina or rectum. They may also perspire
a great deal or have tremendous mucus production, with sinusitis, repeated colds
or mucous diarrhoea."
[Herscu]
G FATIGUE.
• "Feels like doing things in slow motion, like mind and body moving through
thick molasses." [Herrick]
• "As if any ability to maintain proper body temperature has been lost or as if
they had
And Congestive frontal headache [esp. behind the eyes or above left eye].
G Motion.
P Migraine.
* Unger, Das Arzneibild Peyotl, Allg. Hom. Zeitung, 1958 Heft 11 + Heft 12.
Summary of proving in Journal of American Institute of Homeopathy January
1961.
1 John [Fire] Lame Deer and Richard Erdoes, Lame Deer, Seeker of Visions;
New York 1994.
Rubrics
Mind
Head
Vision
Colours, blue light around objects [1*]. Dim during headache [1; Cycl.; Iris;
Sulph.].
Stomach
Nausea > brandy [1*; Ars.]; > coffee [1*; Alet.]; > lying down [1; Alum.; Nux-
v.]; during pain in heart [1*; Spig.].
Chest
Sensation of numbness in heart region [1*; Cact.]. Paroxysmal pain in heart with
sensation of imminent death [1*; Cact.].
Limbs
Food
* Repertory additions.
Appendix anhalonium
It has been known for some years that the Kiowa Indians of New Mexico are
accustomed to eat, in their religious ceremonies, a certain cactus called
Anhalonium Lewinii, or mescal button. Mescal - which must not be confounded
with the intoxicating drink of the same name made from an agave - is found in
the Mexican Valley of the Rio Grande, the ancestral home of the Kiowa Indians,
as well as in Texas, and is a brown and brittle substance, nauseous and bitter to
the taste, composed mainly of the blunt dried leaves of the plant. Yet, as we shall
see, it has every claim to rank with hashish and the other famous drugs which
have procured for men the joys of an artificial paradise. Upon the Kiowa
Indians, who first discovered its rare and potent virtues, it has had so strong a
fascination that the missionaries among these Indians, finding here a rival to
Christianity not yielding to moral suasion, have appealed to the secular arm, and
the buying and selling of the drug has been prohibited by Government under
severe penalties. Yet the use of mescal prevails among the Kiowas to this day.
It has indeed spread, and the mescal rite may be said to be to day the chief
religion of all the tribes of the southern plains of the United States. The rite
usually takes place on Saturday night; the men then sit in a circle within the tent
round a large camp fire, which is kept burning brightly all the time. After prayer
the leader hands each man four buttons, which are slowly chewed and
swallowed, and altogether about ten or twelve buttons are consumed by each
man between sun-down and daybreak. Throughout the night the men sit quietly
round the fire in a state of reverie - amid continual singing and the beating of
drums by attendants - absorbed in the colour visions and other manifestations of
mescal intoxication, and about noon on the following day, when the effects have
passed off, they get up and go about their business, without any depression or
other unpleasant after-effect.
There are five or six allied species of cacti which the Indians also use and treat
with great reverence. Thus Mr. Carl Lumholtz has found that the Tarahumari, a
tribe of Mexican Indians, worship various cacti as gods, only to be approached
with uncovered heads.
When they wish to obtain these cacti, the Tarahumari cleanse themselves with
copal incense, and with profound respect dig up the god, careful lest they should
hurt him, while women and children are warned from the spot. Even Christian
Indians regard Hikori, the cactus god, as coequal with their own divinity, and
make the sign of the cross
in its presence. At all great festivals Hikori is made into a drink and consumed
by the medicine man, or certain selected Indians, who sing as they partake of it,
invoking Hikori to grant a "beautiful intoxication"; at the same time a rasping
noise is made with sticks, and men and women dance a fantastic and picturesque
dance - the women by themselves in white petticoats and tunics - before those
who are under the influence of the god.
In 1891 Mr. James Mooney, of the United States Bureau of Ethnology, having
frequently observed the mescal rites of the Kiowa Indians and assisted at them,
called the attention of the Anthropological Society at Washington to the subject,
and three years later he brought to Washington a supply of mescal, which was
handed over for examination to Drs. Prentiss and Morgan. These investigators
experimented on several young men, and demonstrated, for the first time, the
precise character of mescal intoxication and the remarkable visions to which it
gives rise. A little later Dr. Weir Mitchell, who, in addition to his eminence as a
physician, is a man of marked aesthetic temperament, experimented on himself,
and published a very interesting record of the brilliant visions by which he was
visited under the influence of the plant. In the spring of the past year I was able
to obtain a small sample of mescal in London, and as my first experiment with
mescal was also, apparently, the first attempt to investigate its vision-producing
properties outside America, I will describe it in some detail, in preference to
drawing on the previously published descriptions of the American observers.
On Good Friday I found myself entirely alone in the quiet rooms in the Temple
which I occupy when in London, and judged the occasion a fitting one for a
personal experiment.
The appearance of vision with closed eyes was very gradual. At first there was
merely a vague play of light and shade which suggested pictures, but never made
them. Then the pictures became more definite, but too confused and crowded to
be described, beyond saying that they were of the same character as the images
of the kaleidoscope, symmetrical groupings of spiked objects. Then, in the
course of the evening, they became distinct, but still indescribable-mostly a vast
field of golden jewels, studded with red and green stones, ever changing. This
moment was, perhaps, the most delightful of the experience, for at the same time
the air around me seemed to be flushed with vague perfume - producing with the
visions a delicious effect - and all discomfort had vanished, except a slight
faintness and tremor of the hands, which, later on, made it almost impossible to
guide a pen as I made notes of the experiment; it was, however, with an effort,
always possible to write with a pencil. The visions never resembled familiar
objects; they were extremely definite, but yet always novel; they were constantly
approaching, and yet constantly eluding, the semblance of known things. I would
see thick, glorious fields of jewels, solitary or clustered, sometimes brilliant and
sparkling, sometimes with a dull rich glow. Then they would spring up into
flower-like shapes
beneath my gaze, and then seem to turn into gorgeous butterfly forms or endless
folds of glistening, iridescent, fibrous wings of wonderful insects; while
sometimes I seemed to be gazing into a vast hollow revolving vessel, or whose
polished concave mother-of-pearl surface the hues were swiftly changing. I was
surprised, not only by the enormous profusion of the imagery presented to my
gaze, but still more by its variety.
Perpetually some totally new kind of effect would appear in the field of vision;
sometimes there was swift movement, sometimes dull, sombre richness of
colour, sometimes glitter and sparkle, once a startling rain of gold, which seemed
to approach me. Most usually there was a combination of rich, sober colour, with
jewel-like points of brilliant hue. Every colour and tone conceivable to me
appeared at some time or another.
Sometimes all the different varieties of one colour, as of red, with scarlets,
crimsons, pinks, would spring up together, or in quick succession. But in spite of
this immense profusion, there was always a certain parsimony and æsthetic value
in the colours presented. They were usually associated with form, and never
appeared in large masses, or if so, the tone was very delicate. I was further
impressed, not only by the brilliance, delicacy, and variety of the colours, but
even more by their lovely and various textures -
Weir Mitchell found that he could only see the visions with closed eyes and in a
perfectly dark room. I could see them in the dark with almost equal facility,
though they were not of equal brilliancy, when my eyes were wide open. I saw
them best, however, when my eyes were closed, in a room lighted only by
flickering firelight. This evidently accords with the experience of the Indians,
who keep a fire burning brightly throughout their mescal rites.
The visions continued with undiminished brilliance for many hours, and as I felt
somewhat faint and muscularly weak, I went to bed, as I undressed being greatly
impressed by the red, scaly, bronzed, and pigmented appearance of my limbs
whenever I was not directly gazing at them. I had not the faintest desire for
sleep; there was a general hyperaesthesia of all the senses as well as muscular
irritability, and every slightest sound seemed magnified to startling dimensions. I
may also have been kept awake by a vague
After watching the visions in the dark for some hours I became a little tired of
them and turned on the gas. Then I found that I was able to study a new series of
visual phenomena, to which previous observers had made no reference. The gas
jet [an ordinary flickering burner] seemed to burn with great brilliance, sending
out waves of light, which expanded and contracted in an enormously
exaggerated manner. I was even more impressed by the shadows, which were in
all directions heightened by flushes of red, green, and especially violet. The
whole room, with its whitewashed but not very white ceiling, thus became vivid
and beautiful. The difference between the room as I saw it then and the
appearance it usually presents to me was the difference one may often observe
between the picture of a room and the actual room. The shadows I saw were the
shadows which the artist puts in, but which are not visible in the actual scene
under normal conditions of casual inspection. I was reminded of the paintings of
Claude Monet, and as I gazed at the scene it occurred to me that mescal perhaps
produces exactly the same conditions of visual hyperaesthesia, or rather
exhaustion, as may be produced on the artist by the influence of prolonged visual
attention. I wished to ascertain how the subdued and steady electric light would
influence vision, and passed into the next room; but here the shadows were little
marked, although walls and floor seemed tremulous and insubstantial, and the
texture of everything was heightened and enriched.
About 3.30 a. m. I felt that the phenomena were distinctly diminishing - though
the visions, now chiefly of human figures, fantastic and Chinese in character,
still continued -
and I was able to settle myself to sleep, which proved peaceful and dreamless. I
awoke at the usual hour and experienced no sense of fatigue nor other unpleasant
reminiscence of the experience I had undergone. Only my eyes seemed
unusually sensitive to colour, especially to blue and violet; I can, indeed, say that
ever since this experience I have been more æsthetically sensitive than I was
before to the more delicate phenomena of light and shade and colour.
The symptoms came on very suddenly, and when I arrived they were already at
their height. As the experiences of this subject were in many respects very unlike
mine, I will give them in his own words: "I noticed first that as I happened to
turn my eyes away from a blue enamel kettle at which I had been unconsciously
looking, and which was standing in the fender of the fireplace, with no fire in it,
it seemed to me that I saw a spot of the same blue in the black coals of the grate,
and that this spot appeared again, farther off, a little brighter in hue. But I was in
doubt whether I had not imagined these blue spots.
When, however, I lifted my eyes to the mantelpiece, on which were scattered all
sorts of odds and ends, all doubt was over. I saw an intensely vivid blue light
begin to play
around every object. A square cigarette box, violet in colour, shone like an
amethyst. I turned my eyes away and beheld this time, on the back of a polished
chair, a bar of colour glowing like a ruby. Although I was expecting some such
manifestation as one of the first symptoms of the intoxication, I was nevertheless
somewhat alarmed when this phenomenon took place. Such a silent and sudden
illumination of all things around, where a moment before I had seen nothing
uncommon, seemed like a kind of madness beginning from outside me, and its
strangeness affected me more than its beauty. A desire to escape from it led me
to the door, and the act of moving had, I noticed, the effect of dispelling the
colours. But a sudden difficulty in breathing and a sensation of numbness at the
heart brought me back to the armchair from which I had risen. From this
moment I had a series of attacks or paroxysms, which I can only describe by
saying that I felt as though I were dying. It was impossible to move, and it
seemed almost impossible to breathe. My speedy dissolution, I half imagined,
was about to take place, and the power of making any resistance to the violent
sensations that were arising within was going, I felt, with every second.
"The first paroxysms were the most violent. They would come on with tingling
in the lower limbs, and with the sensation of a nauseous and suffocating gas
mounting up into my head. Two or three times this was accompanied by a colour
vision of the gas bursting into flame as it passed up my throat. But I seldom had
visions during the paroxysms; these would appear in the intervals. They began
with a spurting up of colours; once, of a flood of brightly illuminated green
water covering the field of vision, and effervescing in parts, just as when fresh
water with all the air bubbles is pumped into a swimming bath.
At another time my eye seemed to be turning into a vast drop of dirty water in
which millions of minute creatures resembling tadpoles were in motion. But the
early visions consisted mostly of a furious succession of coloured arabesques,
arising and descending or sliding at every possible angle into the field of view. It
would be as difficult as to give a description of the whirl of water at the bottom
of a waterfall as to describe the chaos of colour and design which marked this
period.
"Now also began another series of extraordinary sensations. They set in with
bewildering suddenness and followed one another in rapid succession. These I
now record as they occur to my mind at haphazard: [1] My right leg became
suddenly heavy and solid; it seemed, indeed, as if the entire weight of my body
had shifted into one part, about the thigh and knee, and that the rest of my body
had lost all substantiality. [2]With the suddenness of a neuralgic pang, the back
of my head seemed to open and emit streams of bright colour; this was
immediately followed by the feeling as of a draft blowing like a gale through the
hair in the same region. [3] At one moment the colour, green, acquired a taste in
my mouth; it was sweetish and somewhat metallic; blue again would have a taste
that seemed to recall phosphorus; these are the only colours that seemed to be
connected with taste. [4] A feeling of delightful relief and preternatural lightness
about my forehead, succeeded by a growing sensation of contraction. [5] Singing
in one of my ears. [6] A sensation of burning heat in the palm of my left hand.
[7] Heat about both eyes. The last continued throughout the whole period, except
for a moment when I had a sensation of cold upon the eyelids, accompanied with
a colour vision of the wrinkled lid, of the skin disappearing from the brow, of
dead flesh, and finally of a skull.
"Throughout these sensations and visions my mind remained not only perfectly
clear, but enjoyed, I believe, an unusual lucidity. Certainly I was conscious of an
odd contrast in
hearing myself talk rationally with H. E., who had entered the room a short time
before, and experiencing at the same moment the wild and extraordinary pranks
that were taking place in my body. My reason appeared to be the sole survivor of
my being. At times I felt that this, too, would go, but the sound of my own voice
would establish again the communication with the outer world of reality.
"Tremors were more or less constant in my lower limbs. Persistent, also, was the
feeling of nausea. This, when attended by a feeling of suffocation and a pain at
the heart, was relieved by taking brandy, coffee, or biscuit. For muscular
exertion I felt neither the wish nor the power. My hands, however, retained their
full strength.
"It was painful for me to keep my eyes open above a few seconds; the light of
day seemed to fill the room with a blinding glare. Yet every object, in the brief
glimpse I caught, appeared normal in colour and shape. With my eyes closed,
most of the visions, after the first chaotic display, represented parts of the whole
of my body undergoing a variety of marvellous changes, of metamorphoses or
illumination. They were more often than not comic and grotesque in character,
though often beautiful in colour. At one time I saw my right leg filling up with
delicate heliotrope; at another, the sleeve of my coat changed into a dark green
material, in which was worked a pattern in red braid, and the whole bordered at
the cuff with sable. Scarcely had my new sleeve taken shape than I found myself
attired in a complete costume of the same fashion, mediaeval in character, but I
could not say to what precise period it belonged. I noted that a chance movement
-
of my hand, for instance - would immediately call up a colour vision of the part
exerted, and that this again would pass, by a seemingly natural transition, into
another wholly dissimilar. Thus, pressing my fingers accidentally against my
temples, the fingertips became elongated, and then grew into the ribs of a
vaulting or of a dome-shaped roof. But most of the visions were of a more
personal nature. I happened once to lift a spoonful of coffee to my lips, and as I
was in the act of raising my arm for that purpose a vision dashed before my
closed [or nearly closed] eyes, in all the hues of the rainbow, of my arm
separated from my body, and serving me with coffee from out of dark and
indefinite space. On another occasion, as I was seeking to relieve slight nausea
by taking a piece of biscuit passed to me by H. E., it suddenly streamed out into
blue flame. For an instant I held the biscuit close to my leg. Immediately my
trousers caught alight, and then the whole of the right side of my body, from the
foot to the shoulder, was enveloped in waving blue dame. It was a sight of
wonderful beauty. But this was not all. As I placed the biscuit in my mouth it
burst out again into the same coloured fire and illuminated the interior of my
mouth, casting a blue resection on the roof. The light in the Blue Grotto at Capri,
I am able to affirm, is not nearly as blue as seemed for a short space of time the
interior of my mouth. There were many visions of which I could not trace the
origin.
"There were spirals and arabesques and flowers, and sometimes objects more
trivial and prosaic in character. In one vision I saw a row of small white flowers,
one against the other like pearls of a necklace, begin to revolve in the form of a
spiral. Every flower, I observed, had the texture of porcelain. It was at a moment
when I had the sensation of my cheeks growing hot and feverish that I
experienced the strangest of all the colour visions.
It began with feeling that the skin of my face was becoming quite thin and of no
stouter consistency than tissue paper, and the feeling was suddenly enhanced by
a vision of my face, paper-like and semitransparent and somewhat reddish in
colour. To my amazement I saw myself as though I were inside a Chinese
lantern, looking out through my cheek
into the room. Not long after this I became conscious of a change in the visions.
Their tempo was more moderate; they were less frequent, and they were losing
somewhat in distinctness. At the same time the feeling of nausea and of
numbness was departing. A short period followed in which I had no visions at
all, and experienced merely a sensation of heaviness and torpor. I found that I
was able to open my eyes again and keep them fixed on any object in the room
without observing the faintest blue halo or prism, or bar of glowing colour, and
that, moreover, no visions appeared on closing them. It was now twilight, but
beyond the fact of not seeing light or colour, either without or within, I had a
distinct feeling that the action of the drug was at an end and that my body had
become sober suddenly. I had no more visions, though I was not wholly free
from abnormal sensations, and I retired to rest. I lay awake till the morning, and
with the exception of the following night I scarcely slept for the next three days,
but I can not say that I felt any signs of fatigue, unless, perhaps, on one of the
days when my eyes, I noticed, became very susceptible to any indications of
blue in an object. Of colour visions, or of any approach to colour visions, there
was no further trace; but all sorts of odd and grotesque images passed in
succession through my mind during part of the first night. They might have been
the dreams of a Baudelaire or of an Aubrey Beardsley. I would see figures with
prodigious limbs, or strangely dwarfed and curtailed, or impossible
combinations such as five or six fish, the colour of canaries, floating about in air
in a gold wire cage.
But these were purely mental images, like the visions seen in a dream by a
distempered brain.
"Of the many sensations of which my body had been the theatre during three
hours, not the least strange was the feeling I experienced on coming back into a
normal condition.
The recovery did not proceed gradually, but the whole outer and inner world of
reality came back, as it were, with a bound. And for a moment it seemed strange.
It was the sensation - only much intensified - which everyone has known on
coming out into the light of day from an afternoon performance at a theatre,
where one has sat in an artificial light of gas and lamps, the spectator of a
fictitious world of action. As one pours out with the crowd into the street, the
ordinary world, by force of contrast with the sensational scenes just witnessed,
breaks in upon one with almost a sense of unreality. The house, the aspects of the
street, even the light of day appear a little foreign for a few moments.
During these moments everything strikes the mind as odd and unfamiliar, or at
least with a greater degree of objectivity. Such was my feeling with regard to my
old and habitual self. During the period of intoxication the connection between
the normal condition of my body and my intelligence had broken - my body had
become in a manner a stranger to my reason - so that now on reasserting itself it
seemed, with reference to my reason, which had remained perfectly sane and
alert, for a moment sufficiently unfamiliar for me to become conscious of its
individual and peculiar character. It was as if I had unexpectedly attained an
objective knowledge of my own personality. I saw, as it were, my normal state of
being with the eyes of a person who sees the street on coming out of the theatre
in broad day.
"This sensation also brought out the independence of the mind during the period
of intoxication. It alone appeared to have escaped the ravages of the drug; it
alone remained sane during a general delirium, vindicating, so it seemed, the
majesty of its own impersonal nature. It had reigned for a while, I now felt, as an
autocrat, without ministers and their officiousness. Henceforth I should be more
or less conscious of the
I next made experiments on two poets, whose names are both well known. One
is interested in mystical matters, an excellent subject for visions, and very
familiar with various vision-producing drugs and processes. His heart, however,
is not very strong.
While he obtained the visions, he found the effects of mescal on his breathing
somewhat unpleasant; he much prefers hashish, though recognising that its
effects are much more difficult to obtain. The other enjoys admirable health, and
under the influence of mescal he experienced scarcely the slightest unpleasant
reaction, but, on the contrary, a very marked state of well being and beatitude.
He took somewhat less than three buttons, so that the results were rather less
marked than in my case, but they were perfectly definite.
He writes: "I have never seen a succession of absolutely pictorial visions with
such precision and such unaccountability. It seemed as if a series of dissolving
views were carried swiftly before me, all going from right to left, none
corresponding with any seen reality. For instance, I saw the most delightful
dragons, puffing out their breath straight in front of them like rigid lines of
steam, and balancing white balls at the end of their breath! When I tried to fix
my mind on real things, I could generally call them up, but always with some
inexplicable change. Thus, I called up a particular monument in Westminster
Abbey, but in front of it, to the left, knelt a figure in Florentine costume, like
someone out of a picture of Botticelli; and I could not see the tomb without also
seeing this figure. Late in the evening I went out on the Embankment and was
absolutely fascinated by an advertisement of 'Bovril', which went and came in
letters of light on the other side of the river. I can not tell you the intense
pleasure this moving light gave me and how dazzling it seemed to me. Two girls
and a man passed me, laughing loudly, and lolling about as they walked. I
realized, intellectually, their coarseness, but visually I saw them, as they came
under a tree, fall into the lines of a delicate picture; it might have been an Albert
Moore. After coming in I played the piano with closed eyes and got waves and
lines of pure colour, almost always without form, though I saw one or two
appearances which might have been shields or breastplates - pure gold, studded
with small jewels in intricate patterns. All the time I had no unpleasant feelings
whatever, except a very slight headache, which came and went. I slept soundly
and without dreams."
The results of music in the case just quoted - together with the habit of the
Indians to combine the drum with mescal rites, and my own observation that
very slight jarring or stimulation of the scalp would affect the visions - suggested
to me to test the influence of music on myself. I therefore once more put myself
under the influence of mescal [taking a somewhat smaller dose than on the first
occasion], and lay for some hours on a couch with my head more or less in
contact with the piano, and with closed eyes directed toward a subdued light,
while a friend played, making various tests, of his own devising, which were not
explained to me until afterwards. I was to watch the visions in a purely passive
manner, without seeking to direct them, nor was I to think about the music,
which, so far as possible, was unknown to me. The music stimulated the visions
and added greatly to my enjoyment of them. It seemed to harmonize with them,
and, as it were, support and bear them up. A certain persistence and monotony of
character in the music was required in order to affect the visions, which then
seemed to fall into harmony with it, and any sudden change in the character of
the music would blur the visions, as
though clouds passed between them and me. The chief object of the tests was to
ascertain how far a desire on the composer's part to suggest definite imagery
would affect my visions. In about half the cases there was no resemblance, in the
other half there was a distinct resemblance, which was sometimes very
remarkable. This was especially the case with Schumann's music, for example,
with his Waldscenen and Kinderscenen; thus
It would be out of place here to discuss the obscure question as to the underlying
mechanism by which mescal exerts its magic powers. It is clear from the
foregoing descriptions that mescal intoxication may be described as chiefly a
saturnalia of the specific senses, and, above all, an orgy of vision. It reveals an
optical fairyland, where all the senses now and again join the play, but the mind
itself remains a self-possessed spectator. Mescal intoxication thus differs from
the other artificial paradises which drugs procure. Under the influence of
alcohol, for instance, as in normal dreaming, the intellect is impaired, although
there may be a consciousness of unusual brilliance; hashish, again, produces an
uncontrollable tendency to movement and bathes its victim in a sea of emotion.
The mescal drinker remains calm and collected amid the sensory turmoil around
him; his judgement is as clear as in the normal state; he falls into no oriental
condition of vague and voluptuous reverie. The reason why mescal is of all this
class of drugs the most purely intellectual in its appeal is evidently because it
affects mainly the most intellectual of the senses. On this ground it is not
probable that its use will easily develop into a habit. Moreover, unlike most other
intoxicants, it seems to have no special affinity for a disordered and unbalanced
nervous system; on the contrary, it demands organic soundness and good health
for the complete manifestation of its virtues. Further, unlike the other chief
substances to which it may be compared, mescal does not wholly carry us away
from the actual world, or plunge us into oblivion; a large part of its charm lies in
the halo of beauty which it casts around the simplest and commonest things. It is
the most democratic of the plants which lead men to an artificial paradise. If it
should ever chance that the consumption of mescal becomes a habit, the
favourite poet of the mescal drinker will certainly be Wordsworth. Not only the
general attitude of Wordsworth, but many of his most memorable poems and
phrases can not - one is almost tempted to say - be appreciated in their full
significance by one who has never been under the influence of mescal. On all
these grounds it may be claimed that the artificial paradise of mescal, though less
seductive, is safe and dignified beyond its peers.
At the same time it must be remembered that at present we are able to speak on a
basis of but very small experience, so far as civilized men are concerned. The
few observations recorded in America and my own experiments in England do
not enable us to say anything regarding the habitual consumption of mescal in
large amounts. That such consumption would be gravely injurious I can not
doubt its safeguard seems to lie in the fact that a certain degree of robust health
is required to obtain any real enjoyment from its
visionary gifts. It may at least be claimed that for a healthy person to be once or
twice admitted to the rites of mescal is not only an unforgettable delight, but also
an educational influence of no mean value.
Antimonium crudum
Ant-c.
Vision is definitely affected by glasses, esp. after they have been filled and
emptied several times.
[McKenzie]
Signs
[formerly 5A] of the periodic table. It has a flaky texture. It doesn't often form in
its elemental state and is far more common in sulphides and sulphosalts such as
stibnite, tetrahedrite, and jamesonite. The chief ore stibnite occurs in massive
forms in gneiss and granite. It is also found in limestone, presumably deposited
by hot springs. This steel-greyish mineral has a brilliant metallic lustre.
ppb] and in the sun [1 ppb]. It occurs in large amounts in the Black Forest and
Harz Mountains of Germany. It is rare in North America. The biggest producing
countries are China, Bolivia, Peru, Mexico, Italy, and France.
sulphur. Stibnite may have fine crystal clusters and long curved crystals. The
slender curved metallic blades resemble Arabian swords. The curving of the long
bladed crystals is due to twinning where one twin plane bends the crystal one
direction and another twin plane bends it in the other direction. These crystals
possess the remarkable property of bending without breaking.
Under ordinary conditions antimony is stable and not affected by air or moisture,
but when it is heated it can be oxidized easily by oxygen, sulphur, and the
halogens.
precipitates upon cool surfaces like hoar frost or ice flowers on a window. ...
Like quicksilver, it alloys readily with almost any metal, lending hardness and
brittleness to the mixture. Unlike iron, antimony is aloof to magnetism; placed
between the two poles of a horseshoe magnet, it does not lie in a straight line
between the two poles, but diagonally. It is diamagnetic, in contrast to such
paramagnetic metals as iron, nickel, and cobalt. But it is not only passive toward
magnetism; it also rejects electrical forces in a curious way. When
electrolytically refined from a solution of chloride of antimony, it precipitates on
the cathode as a metal in the form of a blackish powder. When scratched,
rubbed, or heated, this powder changes with 'thunder and lightning', i.e. , with
radiations of heat and light and small explosive noises, back into the normal
antimony form. This explosive antimony is less formed and also lighter than the
normal metal. It has retained certain forces of heat, light, and levity by which it
defends itself against the gravity of the world of matter as well as against the
sub-material world of electricity."1
USES "In its pure state antimony has no important uses, but, when combined
physically or chemically with other substances, it is an extremely useful metal.
Because some antimony alloys expand on solidifying [a rare characteristic that
they share with water], they are particularly valuable as castings and type metal;
the expansion of the alloy forces the metal to fill the small crevices of casting
moulds. Moreover, the presence of antimony in type metal, which also includes
lead and small amounts of tin, increases the hardness of the type and gives it a
sharp definition. Even when added in minor quantities, antimony imparts
strength and hardness to other metals, particularly lead, with which it forms
alloys used in plates of automobile storage batteries, in bullets, and in coverings
for cables. Combined with tin and lead, antimony forms antifriction alloys called
babbitt metals that are used as components of machine bearings. Antimony
compounds [esp. the trioxide] are widely used as flame retardants in paints,
plastics, rubber, and textiles."2
EYES In its sulphide compound antimony had been known since ancient times.
Middle Eastern women used it to darken their eyes and eyebrows, in order to
increase their seductiveness. There are several references to this practice in the
Bible, the best known involving the notorious Jezebel, who 'painted her eyes and
adorned her hair, and stood looking down from a window'. 3
cause metallic taste, nausea, sore throat and irritation of the air passages. Skin
contact causes an itchy rash. Repeated exposure may cause headaches, poor
appetite, dry throat, loss of sleep, as well as damage to the liver and the heart
muscle. Use of antimony near acid or acid mist can cause release of a deadly
gas, stibine. "In poisoning by antimony vapours stupefaction and frontal
headache appears, then chest symptoms, severe painful cough, partly dry, partly
with tenacious sputum difficult to evacuate, and piping and rales in the chest.
Then the gastrointestinal symptoms, pustules on the genitals were observed,
finally great prostration, decrease of sexual potency and swelling of the testes. ...
Soon after an intravenous injection, there are muscle pains, particularly drawing
pains between the shoulders, in the upper arms, in the back muscles, with a
feeling of stiffness in the entire musculature, even in the muscles of the jaw. This
sensation may persist 1-2 days and impair movement."5
"a heavenly medicine to prevent and to cure all kinds of disease and ailments of
the human body." He recommended it in the treatment of gout, leprosy,
apoplexy, dropsy, epilepsy, catalepsy and analepsy, hectic, pest, and fever. His
description of its effects in leprosy reminds of Hahnemann's concept of psora.
"To begin with the patient is given six drops on an empty stomach. And arrange
it so that the unclean person is alone without the company of any healthy people,
in a separate and convenient place. For his whole body will soon begin to smoke
and steam with a stinking mist or vapour. And on the second day his skin will
start to flake and much uncleanness will detach itself from his body. He should
then have three more drops of the medicine ready, which he should take and use
in solitude on the fourth day. Then on the eight or ninth day, by means of this
medicine and through the bestowal of Divine mercy and blessing, he will be
completely cleansed and his health restored."6
ALCHEMY Possibly because of its low melting temperature [it fuses easily even
in the flame of a match], antimony was a favourite material of the alchemists. It
had its own symbol: a circle topped by a cross, representing the intellectual soul
alive with all its virtues and faculties.* The medieval alchemists occupied
themselves extensively with its mysteries. They regarded salt, mercury, and
sulphur as the three forms of earthly substantiality.
The
salt
[king] the impurities were alloyed with antimony, which was added to the melt.
As antimony attracted and swallowed impurities, it was called the 'philosophers'
magnet', the
NAME Its name is derived from Gr. anti, against, and monos, alone, in reference
to it
being an element rarely found alone. Another possibility is that the name comes
from Gr.
anthemion, the diminutive of anthos, a flower, after the form of the crystals. The
explanation that it derives from anti-monakhos, anti-monk, involves a nice story
about the 15th-century abbot and alchemist Basil Valentinus. "One day after
work Valentinus is said to have emptied some crucibles containing antimony out
of his cell window. This was eaten by pigs, which then became sick. When the
pigs recovered they ate vast quantities to make up for their lost weight. But
because they were pigs, and lived up to their name, they ate far too much,
rapidly putting on excess weight. Valentinus seized upon this as an excellent way
of fattening up the monastery pigs for Christmas. Then he decided to go one step
further. As abbot, he felt the monks in his charge were also in need of a little
fattening up for Christmas, so he covertly introduced some antimony into their
diet. Unfortunately, many of the ascetic monks had bodies so weakened by
fasting that they died before they could fatten themselves up. The substance they
had eaten became known as 'anti-monakhos' [anti-monk, thence antimony]. A
likely story. Sadly, spoilsport modern commentators have pointed out that the
name antimony was mentioned a few centuries prior to the legendary Valentinus,
by Constantine of Africa in his translation of Avicenna's pharmacopoeia."8
* A cross inscribed within a circle, was the sign for "green" and denoted the
vegetative soul or the physiological world. A cross placed below a circle was the
sign for Venus and corresponded to instinctive behaviour or the base urges.
[1] Pelikan, The Secrets of Metals. [2] Encyclopaedia Britannica. [3] Strathern,
Mendeleyev's Dream.
[4] Melvyn, Vitamins and Minerals. [5] Leeser, Hom. MM, Inorganic Medicinal
Substances. [6] Bacon, Tract on the Tincture and Oil of Antimony. [7] Roob,
Alchemy and Mysticism. [8] Strathern, ibid. [9] Bott, Anthroposophical
Medicine.
Affinity
Modalities
Comparisons
Main symptoms
versus
• "Sulky children who do not wish to speak or be spoken to; angry at every little
attention." [Mathur]
And Chronic blepharitis; red inflamed lids, itching in the canthi causing rubbing
of the eyes.
• "Continuous state of enthusiastic love and ecstatic longing for an ideal woman,
which quite filled his fantasy; more while walking in the pure, open air than in
the room; disappeared after several days with a seeming diminution of the sexual
impulse."
[Hahnemann]
• "In some cases, there is a slightly erotic condition of mind, connected with
sexual erethism. The patient becomes ecstatic and fancies that some beautiful
female is the object of his sentimental love." [Farrington]
• "It is suited to the mental condition of some young person passing through the
critical pubescent period, whose growing interest in the opposite sex tends to
centre unhealthily in some bright Prince Charming, or in some idealized, and
perhaps self-created maiden.
Has amorous longings, not for any living creature, but for some unseen seraph."
[Talcott]
• "Nervous, excitable hysterical girls that are overcome by mellow lights, and as
a result there is an outburst of affection, as is observed in the sick, and those who
are suffering from the effects of disappointed affection." [Blackwood]
• "We see the Antimonium feeling of being let down and disappointed by others,
and therefore the need to narrow one's circle, to isolate oneself. Also present are
the Sulphur symptoms of theorizing and fantasizing. These combine to make
Ant-c. a person who has narrowed himself down, and who starts fantasizing. The
patient finds the world around him so disappointing that he simply shuts it out,
and conjures up an illusionary world that he starts living in." [Sankaran]
M Anxious dreams.
• "As if he would be wounded; he jumps up from sleep and struggles with hands
and feet."
• "Dreams of his own family at home, with whom he quarrelled; disturbs his
night's
rest."
• "Vexatious dreams, ful of quarrels with relatives, rouse him at night from
sleep."
[Hahnemann]
M • "Ant-c. children are very interesting. They are always fat, rather over-
weight, usually pale and they have a very marked tendency to redness round the
eyes, and moist eruptions behind the ears. Mentally they are interesting because
they are such an apparent contradiction. They are irritable children, peevish, and
they get more and more peevish the more attention they get; the kind of child
that will cry if anyone looks at it and the more you attempt to soothe it the worse
it gets. The Ant-c. child has night terrors, and is cross and irritable; and the more
the mother attempts to nurse it the worse it becomes.
Walking it up and down drives it nearly distracted. Then, in contrast to that, they
are very impressionable children, sensitive, easily upset emotionally, very liable
to burst into tears from any emotional stress if their feelings are touched at all;
and under stress they become pale and liable to faint." [Borland]
G Hydrogenoid constitution; young people that grow fat, and can't bear cold
water.
P Nose.
Stoppage of the nose especially in the evening; with dryness when walking in
the open air, scarcely permitting him to talk.
Coryza, with sore, cracked crusty nostrils; dry or fluent, especially in the
morning.
P Gastric and intestinal disturbances from bread, pastry, acids, vinegar, cold
bathing; overheating; hot weather.
Daisy falls in love, gets disappointed and her life is shattered. She wanted to
shoot herself as she can't fulfil her fantasies. The boyfriend leaves her, she goes
to America and finds a job in a cosmetic firm, where she has to draw and paint
landscapes, which she is very good at. She also writes romantic poems and love-
letters to her boyfriend whom she still loves very much. She comes back to
England very rich and gets married to the same guy.
She looks after her sister in the best possible way she can." [Sudhir Baldota]
Rubrics
Mind
Anger when touched [2]. Answers snappishly [2; Cham.; Staph.]. Delusion
someone calls [1; Plb.]. Ecstasy when walking in moonlight [3/1]. Grief causing
stomach trouble
[3]. Love, lovesick [2]. Sentimental during diarrhoea [2/1]; before menses [2/1];
in moonlight [3/1]. Suicidal thoughts, drive him out of bed [2/1]. Aversion to
being touched
Vertigo
On ascending stairs [1; Calc.], and pain in forehead [2], and pain in vertex [1].
Head
Pain, after candy [1/1]; from becoming heated [3]; from exposure to sun [3].
Shaking sensation during menses [1].
Eye
Lachrymation when looking at the fire [1]. Photophobia from snow [1; Ars.].
Face
Eruptions, acne, with stomach complaints [2; Carb-v.; Nux-v.]; itching pimples
when warm [2]. Twitching of corners of mouth [1; Bry.; Chel.; Ign.; Op.].
Teeth
Grinding of teeth in morning as soon as awake [1]. Pain, before menses [2], >
walking in open air [3]. Sensitive, cannot bear dental operation [3].
Stomach
Ravenous appetite in morning [1]. Disordered after acids [2]. Nausea from
amorous caresses [1; Sabad.], after being overheated [2/1].
Male
Female
Menses absent, molimen only [2]; copious from cold baths [1/1].
Larynx
Voice, hoarseness after a cold bath [2/1], from being overheated [2]; lost, from
being heated [2], in a warm room [2]; > using voice [1].
Back
Limbs
Bubbling sensation in nates [1], while standing [1/1]. Nails do not grow [2/1];
split nails
[3].
Sleep
Sleepiness during hot weather [3]. Waking from hunger [1; Lyc.].
Dreams
Native country [1]. Feasting [1]. Solemnities [1/1]. Being wounded [1].
Skin
Eruptions, urticaria after meat [3/1]. Warts, horny [3]; smooth [3].
Generals
Faintness from summer heat [2]. Exertion in sun < [3/1]. Weakness during
headache [3];
Food
Aversion: [2]: Drinks; vinegar. [1]: Bread; fat; mother's milk; pork; smell of
food; wine.
Desire: [2]: Cucumbers; drinks; pickles; sour; vinegar. [1]: Beer; bread; fat;
indigestible; pickled meat; pork; raw food; spicy; vegetables.
Worse: [3]: Bitter; sour; vinegar. [2]: Bread; cold drinks; cold food; fruit; fruit,
sour; milk; pork; pungent; sweets; water. [1]: Alcohol; butter; cider; drinks; fat;
food, sight of; food, thought of; juicy fruit; pancakes; pastry; rich food;
stimulants; strawberries; wine.
Antimonium tartaricum
Ant-t.
[Seneca]
Signs
Antimony potassium tartrate. Tartar Emetic.
EXCRETION Tartar emetic promotes body waste and the rapid excretion of
waste products. In small doses, it stimulates the secretions of the stomach and
intestinal canal, the salivary glands, liver and pancreas. In larger doses, it
produces vomiting and purging, with evacuations much like the 'rice water
discharges' of cholera. In toxic doses it paralyzes the heart muscles, combines
with red blood cells, depressing their oxidizing power, lowering the blood
pressure, and reducing the temperature. Being eliminated by all the excretory
organs, including the skin, it excites follicular inflammation therein, resulting in
a papular eruption on the skin, which becomes vesicular and pustular, the
pustules being umbilicated, like those of variola. This may also be produced by
rubbing tartar emetic into the skin. 1
POISONING "The substance has been used for homicidal purposes, though
much less frequently than arsenic. It produces symptoms very similar to those
resulting from arsenic poisoning, but the symptoms are more rapid in onset and
graver in effect ... The symptoms of acute poisoning are instructive. On
swallowing a dose there is an immediate onset of symptoms - a metallic taste in
the mouth, burning in throat and stomach, violent and incessant vomiting, severe
purging and tenesmus. Profound depression follows with vertigo, extreme thirst,
subnormal temperature, thready pulse, cyanosis, cramps, coma, collapse, and
death in twelve to twenty-four hours. The skin is cold and covered in clammy
sweat. Chronic poisoning is characterized by anorexia, nausea, vomiting,
diarrhoea, emaciation and great depression, associated with headache, giddiness,
mental confusion, dimness of vision and drowsiness. Finally extreme exhaustion
ends in death."2
FRUIT ACID Tartaric acid is one of the most widely distributed of fruit acids. It
is found in grapes and other fruits, either free or combined with potassium,
calcium or magnesium. Deposited in wine, its crystals are called "the precious
stones of noble wines." Tartaric acid is chiefly manufactured as a by-product of
the wine industry. It is widely used as an acidulant in fizzy drinks, effervescent
tablets, gelatine desserts, and fruit jellies. As effervescent acid it is used in bath
salts, denture powders, nail bleaches, hair-grooming aids, hair rinses,
depilatories, and hair colouring. As additive E334, it occurs in products as
confectionery, jams, marmalades, tinned tomatoes, tinned asparagus, processed
tomato concentrates, tinned fruits, cocoa powders, and frozen dairy products.
"Antioxidant; capable of increasing the antioxidant effect of other substances
powders."3
PROVINGS The homoeopathic drug picture is mainly based on experiments
with the crude substance and on intoxications. A good example of the dedication
of experimenters is Noebeling, source nr. 11 in Allen's Encyclopedia. Noebeling
took daily small doses, gradually increasing them to 0.013 gr., for seventeen
consecutive days. Though he after the 8th day was prevented from continuing
the experiment, due to extreme weakness and prostration, his heroic proving
begins to look like self-punishment when he starts on the 11th day to inject
himself with strong solutions. "I had scarcely emptied the syringe when I
experienced a raging headache, saw sparks of fire, had burning heat in the face,
and distressing pressure in the brain; at the same time there was violent
precordial anxiety. I suffered from dyspnoea, it became black before the eyes, I
reeled, so that I was obliged to sit down; I vomited green masses with great
effort. At the same time there was very free haemorrhage from the place of the
injection, which was stopped only by persistent compression. Through the day I
felt very weak, as after a terrible illness. Unfortunately it had been impossible to
count the pulse, on account of the violence of the symptoms." On the 17th day
he injects himself again, "in spite of the unpleasant remembrance of the former
injection." The result is the same: a frightful headache, heat of the face, vision of
sparks, and very anxious sensation in the stomach. He then takes the appearance
of albumen in the urine as an indication to discontinue further self-
experimentations. By then, he has lost seven pounds in weight, and he frequently
suffers from digestive troubles for more than two months afterwards.
Affinity
Modalities
Better: Expectoration. Sitting up. Motion. Cold open air. Lying on right side.
Main symptoms
• "Everything displeases her of which she thinks [after two hours]." [Al en]
• "Dreaded to be left alone even for a few moments, lest he 'should be dreadfully
nervous and not know what to do with himself.'" [Allen]
Defective
RELAXED.
G Ailments from bad effects of vaccination when Thuj. fails and Sil. is not
indicated.
G Apparent death.
• "Apparent death from drowning, from mucus in bronchi, from impending
paralysis of lungs, from foreign bodies in larynx or trachea, with drowsiness or
coma." [Mathur]
G Pregnancy.
G Irresistible thirst for cold water; vomits the smallest quantity taken.
After every drink, nausea and pressure in the pit of the stomach.
G < Milk.
• "The chest seems to refil constantly with foamy mucus. At the beginning the
patient can evacuate some tenacious light, white mucus by retching, but finally
he is unable to do so, an asphyxial state impends and signs of collapse with cold,
clammy sweat, white ala nasae and hippocratic facies is noted. The increasing
weakness expresses itself in the type of cough: attacks of coughing decrease
slowly in duration and severity with increasing weakness; the cough alternates
with yawning." [Leeser]
• "No remedy in the material medica can equal this drug in this painful malady;
if given so that it will produce slight nausea, it will cure about every case."
[Burt]
Rubrics
Mind
Head
Eye
One eye open only [1/1]. Shooting like electric shocks in inner canthi [1/1*].
Face
Upper lip drawn up, exposing teeth [1]. Twitching when coughing [3/1].
Mouth
Stomach
Ravenous appetite while walking [1]. Nausea after fruit [2]. Thirst after
perspiration [2], for small quantities often [1].
Abdomen
Rectum
Respiration
Difficult after midnight, 3 a.m. [3], > expectoration [3]. Gasping inspiration,
expiration long and slow [2; Op.].
Cough
Chest
Sensation of heat in region of heart [2]. Sensation as if the heart were revolving
[1/1].
Back
Perspiration
Skin
* Repertory additions.
Food
Aversion: [2]: Milk. [1]: Alcohol; apples; bread, during pregnancy; cold drinks;
cold food; fruit; mother's milk; sour; tobacco.
Desire: [2]: Fruit; cold food; juicy things; sour. [1] Alcohol; apples; beer;
buttermilk; cold drinks; fruit, sour; milk, sour; refreshing.
Worse: [2]: Hot food. [1]: Alcohol; apples; beer; butter; eating; fat; food, sight
of; food, thought of; fruit; fruit, sour; milk; pork; sour; vinegar; warm food.
Better: [3]: Cold water. [2]: Cold drinks. [1]: Cold food.
Apis mellifica
Apis
A bee is never as busy as it seems; it's just that it can't buzz any slower.
[Kin Hubbard]
Signs
Bees have given up the carnivorous lifestyle of their wasp ancestors and gather
protein from flowers as pollen. The Hymenoptera are the principal insect
pollinators of flowering plants, to the extent that many plants cannot reproduce
without the helpful intervention of an insect species belonging to this order.
They are abundant in most habitats, in particular in tropical and subtropical
regions. In the United States bees pollinate more than one hundred different
agricultural crops worth about ten billion dollars. Another phenomenon of
perhaps even greater ecological significance in the order Hymenoptera, is that of
parasitism. Hymenoptera, the most prevalent and successful of insect parasites,
exert a profound control over populations of other insects and certain other
arthropods-groups that might otherwise overpopulate.
HONEYBEES Any insect of the tribe Apini [family Apidae], which includes all
bees that make honey, in a broad sense is a honeybee. In a stricter sense,
honeybee applies to any of the four members of the genus Apis. Usually the term
is applied to one species, Apis mellifera [formerly called A. mellifica], the
domestic honeybee; mellifera means honey-carrier. The other Apis species are
confined to Asia. There are also a number of races, or subspecies, and strains of
Apis species. 1 Three of the most common European races of bees include Apis
mellifera mellifera [Dark Bee], Apis mellifera ligustica [Italian Bee], and Apis
mellifera carnica [Carniolan Bee].
After emerging, the queens fight among themselves until only one remains in the
hive.
She then attacks the old queen, who leaves the nest with a swarm to form a new
colony. 2
QUEEN Queen bees have smaller brains than workers, but their ovaries are
enormous.
disturbance within the hive is heightened and the workers inform each other
about the loss by means of scent dispersion. They immediately set about rearing
a new queen from any larva she may have left in a worker cell. Some of the
workers may start laying eggs themselves, but they will be capable only of
laying unfertilized eggs, hatching only drones. If no new queen is reared, the
colony will probably die.
WORKERS Worker bees carefully look after the inmates of royal cells. Yet little
respect is paid to the queen once she has emerged. Only when she is ready for
her life of egg laying - that is after the mating flight - her royalty is fully
acknowledged by all.
Honeybees collect nectar and convert it into honey. They also collect pollen,
which provides the essential proteins necessary for the rearing of young bees,
and propolis, a resinous material from buds of trees. Propolis, also called bee
glue, is used for sealing cracks in the hive or for covering foreign objects in the
hive that can't be removed. Water is also used to dilute the honey when they
consume it.
TEMPERATURE Honeybees take great care to cool the air when it becomes too
hot.
Tiny droplets of water are brought to the top of the hive, where a group of
worker bees are fanning ceaselessly with their wings to evaporate the water.
"The bees maintain a uniform temperature of about 34o C in the broodnest
regardless of outside temperature.
In turn, the blooms are ready, using their own internal clocks to trigger the
release of nectar or open petals in welcome. By dividing the day up between
them, flowers avoid competing for the bees' attention.
DANCING Bees communicate with each other by means of scent dispersion and
through the medium of dance. Foragers or scouts return to the hive with
information about the sources of food [flowers]. A "round" dance is performed if
the source of food is relatively close to the hive. If the distance is greater, a
"waggle" dance is performed, consisting of a figure of 8 with a straight run
between the loops. The provided information includes the type of the source of
food, particularly its quality [the higher the quality, the more intense the dance is
performed], and their distance and direction from the hive. New food discoveries
are only reported when the colony needs additional food sources, when the new
source's distance from the hive is not too great, and when it concerns good
quality and adequate quantities. "The most far-reaching research, and research
that promises to join mathematics and biology, has been conducted by a
mathematician at the University of Rochester, Barbara Shipman. She has
described all the different forms of the honeybee dance using a single coherent
mathematical or geometric structure [flag manifold]. And interestingly, this
structure is also the one that is used in the geometry of quarks, those tiny
building blocks of protons and neutrons. From this and technical evidence too
complex to present for our purposes, Shipman speculates that the bees are
sensitive to or interacting with quantum fields of quarks. Researchers have
already established that bees are sensitive to the planet's magnetic field, but they
have always attributed it to the presence of a mineral in the bee's abdomen.
Shipman's research indicates that the bees perceive these fields through some
kind of quantum mechanical interaction between the quantum fields and the
atoms in the membranes in certain cells. Shipman says simply,
'The mathematics implies that bees are doing something with quarks.' If
Shipman is correct and bees can 'touch' the quantum world of quarks [without
'breaking' it as we do when we try to detect a quark], scientists say it would
revolutionize biology, and physicists would have to reinterpret quantum
mechanics as well."6
COLOUR PERCEPTION "Bees have three colour receptors to give them full-
colour vision, but they see the world differently. One of their receptors is
sensitive to ultraviolet
[UV] light - a wavelength that we simply cannot see - and, in turn, bees cannot
see red; to them it would appear black. In effect the whole of their vision is
shifted away from the red end of the spectrum towards ultraviolet, giving them a
totally different perception of colour. If we were to perceive the world as bees
do, as well as seeing the eerie glow of ultraviolet light, we would find that
familiar colours such as purple were replaced by the baffling mix of ultraviolet
and yellow known as 'bee's purple'. Overlaying many of these colours would be
patterns that had previously been invisible. Flowers would reveal strange
markings and the sky would display concentric patterns. We humans cannot see
the ultraviolet waves that make these signals visible, but many creatures do peer
into this hidden world. ... Because many insects see ultraviolet, flowers use
secret markings in this colour to attract insect pollinators. Floral decorations,
invisible to human eyes, guide insects such as butterflies and bees to the nectar
and pollen at the centre of the flower."7
Bees trained to red or black cannot discriminate between these two colours, or
between them and dark grey. 8
We can relate to what he says. We know about grief and distress calls. We hum
too when we are content and emit all manner of sounds to express how we feel
as we go about our day. ... Those who do spend time with bees report that they
are calming to be around and invoke peacefulness. The bees' contentment is
apparently contagious. ... Before the industrialized age, people all over the world
linked bees to peace, harmony, propriety, renewal, fertility, industry, and
eloquence. Bees' historical association with peace, harmony, and propriety, for
instance, is so strong that people believed that in times of war
bees would sicken and die, and that a hive would not do well if it were stolen. It
was also believed that bees would react to the immorality of their beekeepers
with a stinging fury, and this notion of honeybees as guardians of morals is still
common in France."9
STING Bees can kill each other with their stings, but if they attack human
beings they cannot withdraw the sting from human flesh, and so die. Queen bees
usually only sting other queens, while workers will only sting other workers and
then usually only to defend themselves. For the worker bee the sting seems to
represent her power to defend her home, while the queen uses it to defend her
status.
EFFECTS OF STING "The bee, like the wasp, has two kinds of glands, one
secreting an acid poison into a reservoir-bag; the other [Dufour's gland]
producing an alkaline oily liquid, secreted directly into a pear-shaped receptacle
at the top of the chitinous sting.
Through regulating valves the bee can discharge either the acid or the alkaline
fluid into the sheath of the sting. Only the acid secretion stored in the poison sac
is supposed to be toxic, while the alkaline secretion serves to clean and lubricate
the sting, and perhaps for other purposes within the hive. ... Systemic effects of
bee stings do occur, although they are relatively rare, considering the frequency
of the incidents. The symptoms, whether one explains them as 'allergic' or not,
are there: confusion of thoughts, confused and incoherent speech for a short
while, a heavy, dull head, unconsciousness or fainting, alternating heat and chill,
great anxiety and dyspnoea, prostration with chilliness and a slight rigidity of the
neck, spasmodic contractions of the extensors of the legs, twitchings of many
muscles; palpitations with strained heart beat, while the peripheral pulse was
feeble or imperceptible."10 The typical dermatological expression for honey bee
venom is a raised white weal with central red spot of about 10 mm which
appears a few minutes after the sting, and lasts for about 20 min. There may be
oedema and pruritus; the initial intense pain will last only minutes and symptoms
should resolve in a few days.
PROTECTION "Certain types of clothing can be good protection against a bee
sting; white or light-coloured clothing with a smooth finish is less likely to
excite bees to attack.
Leather is particularly irritating to bees, but they will also become disturbed with
brightly coloured, dark, rough or woolly material. Bees also seem to become
irritated over perspiration odours, perfumes, suntan lotions and hair sprays."11
VENOM It takes ten thousand bees to produce one gram of pure venom. Bee
venom is a highly complex chemical substance which contains haemolysing
agents similar to those found in snake venoms, further histamine, small amounts
of formic acid, and some protein-like substances. When locally applied the latter
produce coagulation of fibrinogen and an increased permeability of the
capillaries of the skin. Due to the lowered surface tension the osmotic pressure is
reduced, thus making diffusion easier, so that fluid can enter a given space more
readily. Any application of cold reduces oedema by impeding the diffusion of
fluid and decreasing the permeability of the capillaries. According to the chief
neurologist of the MS Center at Georgetown University Hospital, USA, apamin
might help MS patients to improve the conductivity of nerve sheaths. "The
active components of honey bee venom include enzymes, other smaller proteins
and peptides, and amines. The principal small proteins and peptides are melittin,
apamin, and peptide 401. Melittin constitutes about 50% of the venom dry
weight; it hydrolyzes cell membranes causing changes in permeability and is
most responsible for the pain associated with the sting. Peptide 401 is also
known as 'mast cell degranulating peptide'
FATALITIES Most fatalities from bee [and wasp] stings occur in hypersensitive
individuals; death is most often induced by a single sting, and occurs most often
within 1
hour after the sting. The victim is typically over 40 years of age and stung on the
head or neck. Most deaths are caused by respiratory dysfunction with the second
most common cause being anaphylaxis; arteriosclerosis may be a compounding
factor. Large numbers of bee stings can also cause death in non-hypersensitive
individuals. The LD50 of bee venom for a human has been estimated to be 500-
1500 stings. Mejia et al cites five people receiving >1000 stings, who manifested
acute renal problems, yet four of the five survived. 13
Of these, 13.3% reported only 'local' reactions; 16.1% reported 'slight general'
reactions, in which there might be such symptoms as a few hives or itching
beyond that which local swelling and pain might be expected to produce; 43.6%
reported 'moderate general'
'delayed' reactions, in which the time of onset of reactions was an hour or more
after the sting. Symptoms indicating 'severe general' reactions were dyspnoea,
swelling in the throat, shock, and unconsciousness, the latter affecting 62.2% of
the persons in the
'severe general' reaction group. A sharp rise in the proportion of serious reactions
in both sexes after age 30 suggested increasing sensitivity as the total number of
stings received would mount over the years. A particularly disquieting finding
was that responses to stings might be completely normal before the occurrence
of a particular sting that produced a life-threatening allergic response."14
SPEECH As the "birds of the Muses" bees were bestowers of eloquence [by
association with 'honeyed' words] and song. Greek poets and orators such as
Homer, Pindar, Sappho and Sophocles were believed to have their lips touched
with honey in infancy. "The Greeks, charmed by the magic of the spoken word
and the sound of the human voice, compared their greatest orators and singers to
the bees who by the work of their mouths produce delicious and strengthening
honey; and also another honey, spoken of by Xenophon, Horace, and Pliny,
which after a moment begins to trouble the hearer's thought and to keep it in
confusion. Pertaining to the first of these two kinds of honey, that is, to wise and
virtuous eloquence, are the fables telling how the bees of Thrace died all at once
at the moment when the heart of the inspired singer Orpheus ceased to beat; also
how the bees of Hymettus put drops of honey on the lips of the child Plato as he
slept, and fed with their finest nectar the baby who was the future poet Pindar.
This legend was later transposed in The Golden Legend to apply to one of the
most eloquent of the Christian pontiffs, St. Ambrose, the illustrious bishop of
Milan: as a sleeping baby,
it was said, the bees came to him and one by one entered his mouth and from
there shot skyward like arrows. Seeing this, his father cried, 'Blessed be the
Lord! My son shall be holy before him and great in the company of men.'
Among the Hebrews, the bee was related to the idea of language because of its
name, dbure, and the Hebraic root dbr, which means word or speech. In the
Orient, the Hindus dedicated the bee to the cult of the divine Word, Bhagavat,
represented as within a white tent, robed in yellow and girdled with a rope of
sweet-smelling flowers which the bees are busily plundering."15
MYTHOLOGY Since prehistoric times bees and honey have assumed a sacred
role in the mythology of cultures worldwide. Beelike creatures were found on
cave paintings dating fifty thousand years ago. Chinese legends speak of a giant
race of bees living in the K'unolun Mountains. Ancient cultures believed bees to
be endowed with divine gifts and mysterious powers. Wherever the Earth
Mother or Great Mother was worshiped - the goddess of fertility, wildlife, and
agriculture - bees also had a sacred status. Analogous to the Earth Mother's
annual renewal of fertility, bees disappeared in the winter and reappeared in the
spring. Mohammed taught that the bee is the only creature ever spoken to
directly by God. In Islamic tradition bees represented intelligence, wisdom,
harmlessness, and faithfulness. Bees were thought to "practise useful things,
work in the daytime, and obey their ruler." They were attributed numerous
virtues: they don't eat food gathered by others, dislike dirt and bad smells, "they
dislike the darkness of indiscretion, the clouds of doubt, the storm of revolt, the
smoke of the prohibited, the water of superfluity, the fire of lust." [Ibn al-Athir].
In this traditional mode, honeybees and their hive symbolize the social virtues
that make nations great: respect for authority, submission to law, honest hard
work, economy, and justice. The ancient Greeks called Zeus the Bee Man
because as an infant he was hidden in a cave and guarded by bees that nourished
him with honey. To the Greeks, bees symbolized fresh incarnations; "Bee" or
"Melissa" was the name given to a soul about to be born. Souls were believed to
come down from the Moon goddess Artemis in the form of bees. Only those
souls who had lived a righteous life were called Melissae, returning afterwards
to heaven, as the bee returned to her hive. 16
CHRISTIANITY Peter of Padua called Christ "Apis Aetherea", for, "as the bee
flies up into the air, she is a symbol of the soul who enters the kingdom of
heaven." Following the Egyptian myth that bees were born from the tears of the
sun god Ra, Christian legend has it that bees were created from the tears Christ
shed on the cross. The sweetness of honey and the sting of collecting it became a
metaphor for the nature of Jesus himself and the agony of his passion. To obtain
higher knowledge one has to suffer. Regarded as never sleeping, the bee
represented Christian vigilance and zeal. In addition, the beehive became a
Christian metaphor for the ordered, chaste and charitable life of monastic
communities. The misconception that bees reproduce as chastely as the flowers
they pollinate made them emblems of the Virgin Mary. The biblical land of
Canaan flowing with milk and honey was an image of spiritual as well as
physical plenty. 17 The concept of the hive as a community life that is wisely
ruled, peaceful, and fruitful, and under the governance of one single head, made
some big monasteries in medieval France take a name derived from the life of
the bees [French abeilles], such as the Cistercian abbey of Melleray.
Virgil has sung of the pure life of the bees "who do not abandon themselves to
love nor
weaken themselves with pleasures, and know not either the union of the sexes
nor the labour of giving birth." Plutarch goes further and assures us that bees
become angry if a man approaches them directly from a woman's bed, and will
aim their stings at libertines.
18
RESURRECTION "Being one of the few preservatives the ancients knew, along
with salt, honey was widely regarded as a substance of resurrection-magic. In
Asia Minor from 3500 to 1750 BC the dead were embalmed in honey and placed
in foetal position in burial vases or pithoi, ready for rebirth. 'To fall into a jar of
honey' became a common metaphor for 'to die.' The pithos represented the womb
of the Goddess under her name of Pandora. 'All-giver', and honey became her
sacred essence. Myths present many symbolic assurances that the Goddess
would restore life to the dead through her magic 'bee-balm.'
Worshippers of Demeter called her 'the pure mother bee', and at her
Thesmophoria festivals displayed honey-cakes shaped like female genitals. The
symbol of Aphrodite at Eryx was a golden honeycomb. ... Bees are still called
hymenoptera, 'veil-winged', after the hymen or veil that covered the inner
sanctum of the Goddess's temples, the veil having its physical counterpart in
women's bodies. Defloration was a ritual penetration of the veil under the
'hymeneal' rules of the Goddess, herself entitled Hymen in the character of
patroness of the wedding night and 'honey-moon.' The honeymoon spanned a
lunar month, usually in May, the month of pairings, named after the Goddess as
the Virgin Maya. In an archaic period, sacred kings seem to have been destroyed
after a 28-day honeymoon with the Goddess, spanning a lunar cycle, as the
queen destroys her drone-bridegroom - by tearing out his genitals. As applied to
ordinary weddings rather than sacrificial dramas, the honeymoon of a lunar
month would include a menstrual period, the real source of what was
euphemistically called moon-honey. A bridegroom contracted the source of life
by copulating with his bride during menstruation, according to the oldest
Oriental belief. ... A combination of honey and menstrual blood was once
considered the universal elixir of life, the 'nectar' manufactured by Aphrodite
and her sacred bees, which kept the very gods alive. Similarly, the great secret of
Norse mythology was that the gods' nectar of wisdom, inspiration, literacy,
magic, and eternal life was a combination of honey and 'wise blood' from the
great Cauldron in the belly of Mother Earth - though a late patriarchal revision
claimed this hydromel or 'honey-liquid'
was a mixture of honey with the blood of a male sacrificial victim known as
Wisest of Men."19
PARALLELS "It is known that cold weakens the virulence of bee venom,
whereas heat intensifies its effect. It is also known that bee stings are more
dangerous on hot days and in the tropics than in cool weather and colder
climates ... The very characteristic thirstlessness in the symptom picture of Apis,
even during fever, can be traced to what appears as the key condition of Apis -
oedema - as the patient is so to speak internally drowned in his own fluids and
his reflex stimulus of thirst inhibited, to protect the
organism against the additional intake of fluid ... The common field of action of
Apis is represented by the cavities of the body, the brain ventricles, the pleural
cavity, the pericardial sac, the abdominal cavity, the synovial cavities of the
joints, the cavity surrounding the testicles, the amnion sac in the case of
threatened abortion, cysts, which are pathological cavities filled with serum, like
the ovarian and other cysts, and finally the whole system of intercellular spaces,
countless microscopic cavities, spread throughout the entire body, and filled with
fluid when oedema occurs, as in nephritis. ...
Lauck, ibid.
[10] Leeser, Actions and Medicinal Use of Insects, BHJ, April 1959. [11]
Turkington, Guide to Poisons and Antidotes. [12-13] Vetter and Visscher, Bites
and Stings of medically important venomous arthropods; website. [14] Ebeling,
Urban Entomology, chapter 9, Pests Attacking Man and His Pets; website. [15]
Charbonneau-Lassay, The Bestiary of Christ. [16-17] Dale-Green, Apis Mellifica
: A Study in the Symbolism of the Honeybee, BHJ, July 1959. [18]
Charbonneau-Lassay, ibid. [19] Walker, The Women's Encyclopedia of Myths
and Secrets. [20] Gutman, Apis Mellifica - A Remedy Study, BHJ, April 1960.
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: HEAT [ROOM; weather; drinks; fire; bed]. TOUCH. After sleep. Late
afternoon
Main symptoms
Brought up in a family where one of the parents [most likely the mother] was
paramount, the Apis patient encountered from an early age a life full of rules,
duties and tasks. With one of the parents absent [most probably the father],
whether physically or psychologically, there was no escape from the penetrating,
dictatorial and restraining influence of the mother, who ruled the family like a
godmother. This situation inhibited the Apis patient, usually female, in her
natural development towards freely engaging in activities normally performed
by people of her own age. Apis patients seem to end up easily in similar
behavourial patterns as their mother [or father], thus sacrificing their need for
personal development. Housewives, for example, would have liked to continue
with their studies [the absorption of fertilizing, stimulating elements from
outside the hive], but instead, felt forced to submit themselves to the traditional
role patterns of family orientation. Instead of "swarming" - to leave behind their
background or conditioning, and, as an act of faith, to take a leap in the dark -
they remain in the hive.
Dreaming of freedom [flying away], her life is a life of service to the hive, and
its consequential strict bee-hive-iour. The jealousy of the Apis patient is directed
towards women who were able to break this pattern of submission. In fact, Apis
patients may well be compared with honeybees that didn't take time to savour
the honey of their endeavours. They never grew their own blossoms. Activities
would be more productive and sweeter if they would take the time to enjoy
them.
'workaholics.' ... Very strong focus on business and work. They want to achieve;
they are very ambitious. But it is not an egotistical type of ambition. Generally,
these are not egotistical people. Rather, they are industrious for its own sake.
They just like to be doing things. "1
M Neglect.
• "I have wondered since reading about bees, whether it could be useful for
women who feel neglected by their husbands. They are like the worker bees;
their life is joyless, their lives full of care and toil in a possibly sexless existence.
When women revolt against this
they may well feel towards their husbands as the workers feel towards the drones
who eventually, when they get older, are denied food and are evicted from the
colony. Some of the mental symptoms extracted from the provings of Apis speak
for themselves in this regard, for example:
• Lets everything fal out of her hand, or breaks things and laughs over it.
• Cannot bring her thoughts to bear upon anything definite or any subject
continuously.
• Loquacity.
Here we see even more clearly the relationship between Apis and Natrum mur.;
and probably Sep. also." [Thompson]
• "Thus it seems that the primary action of this remedy, the peculiarity of its
effect in the proving, is to produce a state of cheerful levity, from a mild mirthful
restlessness up to a fruitless, frenzied, uncontrolled activity. The greater the
intensity of the Apis state, then the more exaggerated will be this state. The
stupor, the debility, and even loss of consciousness as Hering describes, are all to
be expected after such intense frenzied delirium - these are an expected
[secondary] response of a normal organism to such a primary reaction. Now, if
the Apis disease is less intense, then the reaction will be more of simple mirth
and frivolity, rather than of the extreme busy, delirious frenzy. ... The patient
suffering Apis disease, may 'tell' us they are well not only verbally, but even
physically, through their gestures, motions, behaviour, etc."2
The jealousy may be directed against any female who questions their efficiency
and organisation skills, in household or at work; e.g. mother-in-law, sister-in-law,
daughter having her own family, new colleague at work, etc.
M CAUSELESS WEEPING.
[Compare: Fear that something will burst, which physically is expressed by fear
of having a stroke, and fear something will burst in abdomen when coughing or
straining.]
M Children.
• "The Apis child is always restless, always wants to keep himself busy. These
children have a kind of fickle inconsistency and slow march of ideas. Remember
Apis when this kind of dulness is present along with restlessness and [busy]
activity - the child constantly changes his occupation. ... I have found Apis
indicated very often in high society pampered children."3
• "They are individualists, and find it difficult to integrate into community life."
[Grandgeorge]
May be chilly [mainly felt in the extremities], but even then there is a desire for
cool air.
> Motion.
Burning and stinging pain in swollen parts, as if the parts were pricked with pins
and needles, < touch.
Angioneurotic oedema.
Oedema glottidis.
G Vertigo.
P Thyroid dysfunction and ovarian troubles [mostly on the right side]. [Gibson]
[1] Morrison, A series of Apis cases: Revealing new essence information, IFH
1991. [2]
Dimitriadis, Developing an image of Apis mellifica, HL 2/93. [3] Shah, The Bee
or not the Bee, HL 2/96.
Rubrics
Mind
Plays antics [1]. Desire to break things [2]. Busy [2]. Childish behaviour [2],
after delivery [1/1]. Confusion of mind > eating [1]. Thoughts of death without
fear [1].
Delirium, declares she is well [2], indistinct loquacity [1]. Delusion, he himself
was dead
[1], she is pregnant [1], he cannot walk, must run or hop [1]. Fear of birds [1], of
organic heart disease [2], of pins [2]. Frivolous [1]. Insanity, busy [3]; erotic [3].
Irritability when questioned [1]. Jealousy [2]. Mirth, simulating hilarity when
feeling wretched [1/1].
Shrieking, feels as if she must shriek [1]. Stupefaction during heat [2]. Weeping,
cannot weep though sad [1].
Vertigo
Head
Pain, > bending head backward [1], > exertion [1], on moving the face [1], from
becoming heated by a fire or stove [2].
Eye
Lachrymation at night [2], on looking steadily [2; Seneg.]. Looking steadily, <
white objects [1/1]. Winking when looking at bright objects [1].
Vision
Teeth
Rectum
Diarrhoea after acids [1], during climaxis [1; Lach.]. Electric-like shock in
rectum before stool [1/1].
Urine
Scanty, with amenorrhoea [1], with brain affection [2], during fever [2], before
menses
[2].
Female
Pain, ovaries, after coition [2], from continence [2], before menses [2].
Chest
Limbs
Numbness, upper limbs, holding anything in hands [2], > motion [2]. Sensation
of swelling, soles of feet [1*], when walking [1*].
Dreams
Being a crazy man [1/1]. Physical exertion [1]. Flying [2]. Being a girl [1/1].
Generals
Lassitude in spring [1]. Suppression of sexual desire < [3]. Seeing or hearing of
running
Desire: [2]: Cold drinks; cold food; cold milk; sour. [1]: Green vegetables; meat
fat; oysters; vinegar.
Aranea diadema
Aran.
I do not believe in a fate that falls on men however they act; but I do believe in a
fate that falls on them unless they act.
[G.K. Chesterton]
Signs
At present the name Araneidae is preferred, whereas in the older literature the
family was called Argiopidae. It is a large family with more than 2500 species
worldwide. [In general, there are 35,300 described species of spiders!] In Europe
17 genera with 50
FEATURES Spiders differ fundamentally from insects. Insects have three body
sections, spiders have two: the cephalothorax, comprising the fused head and
thorax [in most species clearly arranged in two regions], and the abdomen.
Insects have three pairs of legs, spiders have four pairs, all joined to the
cephalothorax. Insects have mandibles or true jaws, spiders have none and feed
only on liquids. Insects have both compound and simple eyes, antennae and,
usually, wings; spiders lack compound eyes, antennae and
wings. The legs of most spiders are dorsally covered with fine sensory hairs,
which are extremely sensitive to vibrations, including air currents. The legs are
extended by means of a hydraulic system of fluid. "The blood of spiders has
some unusual features. It has been found to be poisonous when injected into the
blood system of mice, using controlled experiments. It is also transparent, since
it contains pale blood cells. And unlike vertebrates, the blood is not circulated
within closed tubes, so a spider can quickly bleed to death if the cuticle of its
abdomen is punctured."2
COURTING Courting is not without peril. The male must convince the female
of his good intentions by sending the correct set of vibrations through her web; if
not, he can well end up as her meal. "The male uses the female's sensitivity to
web vibration to his advantage. He remains on the perimeter of her snare, well
away from the sticky threads, and plucks at the spokes in a lively manner to
entice her from the centre of the wheel.
Should she accept his advances, the two meet and both display great excitement,
waving their limbs and touching one another."4
become larvae and dwell inside the sac until their next moulting. The larvae are
similar to adult specimens but without poison. After a third moulting period the
larvae become nymphs [spiderlings] that prey upon their weaker siblings.
Following spring the nymphs hatch from the sac and leave it as soon as they are
able to feed themselves. Spiders this size need at least two, sometimes three,
overwinterings to mature. This is depending on the climate. Cold winters make
them grow slower. Females can live for five to six years when kept indoors."6
Araneus females leave their egg sac unattended. The newly hatched spiderlings
are afforded no protection by their mother. Packed up in a ball-like structure,
they remain together for several days and then disperse.
WEB All cross spiders make round webs that are big in relation to the spider. In
the centre the web is denser. Due to its size - males measure 8-10 mm, females
10-15 mm -
Araneus is one of the most spotted spiders. It has a black to pale beige colour,
with the typical cross marking on its back. It weaves a circular web with a sticky
fluid on the threads in woods, heaths and gardens - often near water. The web,
which often has a diameter of 30 or more centimetres, is [re]constructed nearly
every day just before sunrise. If it is damaged by weather conditions [wind and
rain] or by a large prey, the spider to conserve protein eats it. The cross spider
sits in the middle of the web and waits for prey. The slightest tremor of the web
induces the spider to drop on to the victim caught in the web, paralyzing it with a
poisonous bite while wrapping it in silk. Bright warning colours of bees and
wasps don't deter the spider because of its poor eyesight.
WEB STRUCTURE In weaving its web, Araneus diadematus first lays down a
set of radiating spokes and some framework threads. Working from the inside
out, it then lays down a temporary or 'auxiliary' spiral linking the spokes. A
permanent sticky 'capture'
spiral laid from the outside in supersedes this. A few final tweaks at the hub, and
the spider has finished its job. Research has shown that light has no effect on the
web structure of the cross spider, whereas in response to wind a significant
reduction in the surface area of the web was demonstrated. The latter probably is
to avoid web damage. 8
FOOD Catching prey in sticky snares is not merely a matter of luck and awaiting
one's opportunity. There are web weavers who "incorporate sheets of ultraviolet
silk in their webs that, to the fly, look like glistening escape routes. The flies are
trapped as they make their getaway. Some spiders have refined this basic design
by constructing an inconspicuous web beneath the ultraviolet lure to catch any
escapees. There are even spiders that entice insects directly with an abdomen
glowing with reflected ultraviolet light. Some spiders attempt a different
approach, weaving into their webs ultraviolet designs that mimic the honey
guides of flowers."9 Catching many harmful insects, spiders play a very
important role in our ecosystem. "In a study, the Panamese wheel spider was
observed for a year. It consumed an average of 1.63 insects [= 0.089 g] a day.
diadematus sometimes eat their webs. The reason is that the web is covered in
pollen grains, which serve as a source of food for the young spiders in the
absence of insect prey. This provides a temporary solution, for the spiderlings
are only able to moult when they have consumed animal prey.
This gland is the main organ of digestion and is capable of taking up very large
quantities of food at one time, storing it, and then gradually absorbing it. This
enables spiders to go for long periods without taking food, though they must
have water quite often. 11
since humans usually express a duality in their reactions to spiders. Spiders are
feared as well as respected. In medieval Europe, for example, the cross spider
was considered sacred on account of the cross marking on its back.
SYMBOLISM The spider is associated with the moon. Lunar goddesses are seen
as
'weaving' the cosmic veil, enmeshing the human destiny in its threads. Since it
holds sway over the whole phenomenal world [for all phenomena are subject to
growth and death], the moon weaves the thread of each man's destiny.
Accordingly, the moon is depicted as a gigantic spider in many myths. The
spider's life of weaving and killing, creating and destroying, is an allegory of the
ceaseless alternation of forces on which the stability of the cosmos depends. This
continuous sacrifice symbolizes the means of man's continual transmutation
throughout the course of his life. Even death itself merely winds up the thread of
an old life in order to spin a new one. The spider sitting in its web is a symbol of
the centre of the world, and is hence regarded in India as Maya, the eternal
weaver of the web of illusion. 13 For the Greek the spider was an attribute of
Athena as a weaver of the world and of Persephone, Harmonia and of the Fates,
the Moirai, as spinners of destiny. Clotho, the first Fate, presided over birth and
drew from her distaff the thread of life; Lachesis, the second Fate, spun life's
thread and determined its length; Atropos, the eldest of the three Fates, severed
the thread of life. The two section spider body, in conjunction with its eight legs,
gives it a figure eight kind of appearance, representing the wheel of life, the
eternally spiralling movement of life. Interestingly, most spiders possess eight
eyes!
A later echo of this idea comes from Vulson de la Colombière: 'It is the symbol
of the corrupt judge and the inequality of the laws, as the wise Solon said, who
compared the laws with spider webs because they hold small flies but are not
strong enough to retain the big ones which pass through them; as in the same
way it is the little people who are
enslaved by the harshness of the law, of which the great ones of the world take
no account'."15
FATE "The belief that fate could enter and influence a person's life was generally
accepted in ancient cultures. It is one of the reasons the intelligent and cunning
spider had a dual role in many mythologies - both helpful and deadly. The web
of protection, for instance, under certain circumstances could be viewed as a
spinning illusion, a web of entrapment, or a poisonous plot. Twists and turns on
one's path, especially those which are wholly unexpected, were also accepted as
the work of the gods, and in many cultures it was believed to be a result of a
spider god twisting the threads of fate. ... The Trickster, in its spider or other
manifestations, personifies the energetic power of the total psyche to overthrow
the personality's best ideas about how to proceed, tricking it into taking
unexpected action. ... Although feared as an upsetting, unpredictable influence,
the Trickster was also considered a cultural hero and sacred creator of the world
who brings to people the inspirations and energies of creativity. ... Both bad luck
and good reside in the Trickster's domain. As a spoiler of plans, the Trickster
often brings loss and what we perceive as bad luck, entering a situation to punish
pride, arrogance, and insolence. The Trickster also chastises those who seek
closure prematurely and, in doing so, cut off the creative possibilities of a
situation. When the Trickster presence is felt in our life, it helps to know that this
energy is aligned with an authentic push in our psyche toward expansiveness.
Although the Trickster's lack of concern for our fears, the culture's taboos, or
social appropriateness is unnerving and can feel punitive, its demands for a
change of direction or stillness is a call for a necessary alteration of some kind.
Far from being unreasonable, its energies try to align us with deeper patterns of
fulfilment, presenting opportunities for growth disguised as frustration, pain, and
misfortune. ... Although Western culture doesn't acknowledge this archetype
known as the Trickster, except to call it bad luck, it still operates within us and
our society. We tend to think we left behind this energetic pattern and its chaotic
influence with the advent of our control-oriented technologies, but we didn't. We
left behind only the context through which we might understand its
emergence."16
THEMES Unexpected behaviour and lack of concern for culture's taboos and
social appropriateness may well prove to be keynotes of the spider remedies.
That spiders go with the winds of change, or even throw to the winds, is shown
by a phenomenon called ballooning. When dispersing from their nest site and
wishing to travel, young spiders raise their abdomen high and release an
abundance of liquid silk, which dries immediately the air touches it. "This is
caught by the breeze and the air currents lift it up into the sky. Ballooning
spiders have been found 4,300 metres up in the sky, having attached themselves
to aircraft. ... The majority of Araneomorphs disperse by ballooning to different
locations. Often during mass migrations, the ground, grass and foliage of an area
can be seen to be covered with masses of flocculent silk as a large population of
spiderlings attempts to become airborne. This method of dispersal is unique to
spiders and is the reason why spiders are often early colonisers."17 How far they
will travel depends mainly on the wind. Only a few of the aeronauts will survive;
many fall victim to birds, or they land in some wholly unsuitable environment.
•• [2] The main source is the clinical experience of von Grauvogl [1811-1887].
Aranea
•• [3] Eccius - 4 provers [3 females, 1 male], 1965; method: three times daily 7
drops of 6x for 3 weeks.
[1-2] Simon-Brunet, The Silken Web. [3] Foelix, Biology of Spiders. [4-5]
Simon-Brunet, ibid. [6-7] Widman, Cross spiders in Sweden. [8] Hieber,
Orientation and modification of the web to wind and light by the spiders
Araneus diadematus and Araneus gemmoides [Araneae: Araneidae]. Zeitschrift
für Tierpsychologie, 65: 250-260; 1984. [9] Downer, Supernatural. [10]
Nieuwenhuys, Spiders of North-West Europe. [11]
Affinity
Modalities
Strong.
Periodicity.
Sensitive persons [to touch, noise, light]. Don't like to be touched or direct
contact.
> Tobacco.
M Restlessness / Busy.
• "I'm very nervous and treat everybody badly. I can't bear having pain; it is
something that sets a limit to me and I am a very active woman. I like working
and moving. I never stand still and the pain constrains me to do things I want to
do and the way I want to do them."1
• "It's a very lively child, but above al very active. He's not lively and disturbing
but he always got something in his hands to bustle about. He never keeps still,
not even during the night. He continuously tosses in his bed and uncovers
himself and then he wakes up because he's cold."2
• "Cannot tolerate damp or wet weather, or damp habitations, even being on the
water."
[Hering]
G > SMOKING.
[Compare strong desire for smoking in both Aranea ixobola and Theridion.]
P Sudden violent pains in teeth of whole upper and lower jaw, at night,
immediately after lying down.
[1] Mangialavori, "I let myself go in the wind," a case of Aranea diadema, HL
2/96. [2]
Rubrics
Mind
Delusion, his own voice seems distant [1]; he is falling [1]; everything seems
unreal [1].
Head
Icy coldness of left temple, with stitching pain in it; sensation of coldness
extends to left ear [1/1*]. Pain, < talking of others [1].
Eye
Face
Mouth
Bitter taste > smoking [1/1]; unpleasant taste after drinking milk [1/1].
Stomach
Female
Menses copious [1]; too frequent [1]; offensive, like ammonia [1; Lac-c.].
Chest
Cutting pain through heart, as from a knife [1*]. Violent palpitation, awakening
her [1*].
Back
Pain as from an iron band around shoulders and nape of neck [1/1*]. Sensation
as if back were made stiff by an icy cold, sticky fluid [1/1*], extending to upper
and lower limbs
[1/1*].
Limbs
Pain in right thigh extending to left thigh [1*]. Tingling of soles of feet at night
on awaking [1/1*].
Sleep
Generals
Food
Argentum metallicum
Arg-met.
Words are like money; there is nothing so useless, unless when in actual use.
[Samuel Butler]
Signs
Argentum. Silver.
OCCURRENCE Silver occurs in the earth's crust in 0.08 ppm [parts per
million], gold in 0.005 ppm, and copper in 70 ppm. Gold is approximately
hundred times more expensive than silver. Through history, man has won
roughly one million tons of silver, against merely 120,000 tons of gold. Oceans
are relatively rich in silver [which might explain the mythic connection between
the moon and the tides]. Silver is sometimes found in relatively pure native form
but more often in silver sulphide ores. In its mineral form silver is distributed in
limited amounts in the upper areas of more extensive ore deposits.
DISTRIBUTION Silver lacks the ability to form any sizeable deposits of its
own.
Mexico, Canada, Peru, and the U.S. are the principal silver producers [up to 75%
of the world production]. 1 "In the distribution of silver over the globe, we find
Mexico to be the richest silver country, then the United States, South America
[Peru and Chile], and Canada. Although most of the silver found on solid land is
concentrated in the west, in the new world, once it has been won by the hand of
man it has always followed a curious course towards the east. The silver mined
in Spain during antiquity wandered toward the Orient; the Phoenicians grew rich
trading in it. To this day, the peoples most attracted to this metal are those of
India and China. Their money is based on a silver standard. In contrast, the bulk
of the world's yield of gold streams toward the west. America hoards most of the
gold, though the deposits are largely in Africa. In the social sphere, gold follows
the course of the sun, which sets in the west. Silver flows to the east, opposite to
the course of gold."2
NAME The South American republic Argentina, 'silvery', is said to owe its name
to the Spanish conquistadors who where impressed by the silver ornaments of
the Indians. The Latin name Argentum comes from the Sanskrit 'argenta'
meaning 'light-coloured' or
'white and shining', an apt description for this heavy metallic element with its
brilliant white lustre. The metal has been used as currency since ancient times.
HISTORY Silver has been known since ancient times. It is mentioned in
Genesis. Slag dumps in Asia Minor and on islands in the Aegean Sea indicate
that man learned to separate silver from lead as early as 3000 BC Silver
ornaments and silver vessels, found in ancient Egyptian and Hittite graves, are
an estimated 6000 years old. In pre-Islamic Arabia, as in other Semitic cultures,
the cult of the moon prevailed over sun-worship. For that reason Mohammed
forbade the use of any metal in amulets except silver.
PROPERTIES Pure silver has the highest electrical and thermal conductivity of
all metals, and possesses the lowest contact resistance. Heat imparted to any
portion of a silver mass is immediately spread through the rest of it. These
properties make it valuable in critical electrical contacts, switches, printed
circuits, solders, long-lasting batteries, and many forms of electrical and
electronic equipment. "Silver wire is used in the most sensitive physical
instruments; it is from silver that vital terminals in various relays are made. The
numerous automatic devices, rockets and submarines, computers and nuclear
installations, means of communication and signalling systems - none of these
can do without contacts. During its life every one of them is brought into
operation millions of times. In order to be able to withstand such colossal strain,
the contact must be wear-resistant, reliable in exploitation and must meet a
number of specifications. The contacts are usually made of silver. Specialists are
well satisfied with this metal - it does its difficult job perfectly. But silver
displays even more valuable properties once rare-earth elements are added to it.
The life of contacts made from such silver increases several times over."3 It is
also used for dental alloys. Next to gold and perhaps palladium, it is the most
malleable and ductile metal known. Its softness, however, limits its use, unless it
is alloyed with copper.
OXYGEN Melted silver greedily sucks in the oxygen from the air - up to 22
times its own volume. But as soon as silver solidifies, it suddenly loses this
retentive ability, and expels the oxygen with explosive violence. This belching of
air is termed 'spattering of silver'. It creates craters on the smooth surface of the
solidifying silver, which show a remarkable resemblance with moon-craters.
TONE "The structure of silver has an inward nobility that manifests in its pure
ring.
Silver flutes and silver bells sound especially pure and clear. Coins with a high
silver content have a good ring. This is unusual, since soft metals generally have
a poor tone, like lead. They have to be rapidly cooled if they are to have a good
tone. Silver does not keep the sound to itself, but permits it to go forth freely as
tone, changing it as little as possible by its own nature."4 Nothing surpasses a
silver tuning fork for attuning.
silver and is used for jewellery, silverware, etc. where appearance is paramount.
Silver coins remained the universal currency from classical antiquity well into
the 19th century, when most countries changed to a gold standard. In its meaning
of both silver and money, the French word "argent" still reflects this ancient
correlation. The use as coinage [old silver dollars are 90% silver and 10%
copper], silver plate and sterling ware, is now of minor importance compared to
its application in photography. Because of marked light-sensitive properties of
silver, about 30% of the U.S. industrial consumption of silver goes into usage in
photography. As the value of silver is now greater than their exchange value,
silver coins have largely been replaced with coins made of other metals [mainly
copper, nickel and zinc].
"Nothing of its own nature is mixed with this light; neither colour, as with gold
or copper, nor turbidity, as with, antimony, etc. Look into a silver mirror and you
see nothing but mirror-pictures; the silver itself withdraws completely."5 When
freshly deposited, it is the best of all natural reflectors of visible light. It returns
the instreaming light undimmed and almost unchanged. However, it is rapidly
tarnished and then loses much of its reflectance.
containing silver and exposed to sunlight, didn't contain any silver in their ashes.
Moreover, the amount of absorbed silver turned out to depend on the lunar
phase! During full moon the silver absorption was highest. In addition, the
anthroposophical researcher Kolisko was able to show by capillary-dynamolytic
techniques that the patterns of silver salts on filter paper were drastically
changed during lunar eclipses.
[Tomato; 1.4 ppm], Quercus rubra [Northern Red Oak], Carya glabra [Pignut
Hickory], Lactuca sativa [Lettuce], and Prunus domestica [Plum]. Foods contain
very little silver.
PHYSIOLOGY "Low intakes are reflected in low tissue levels which vary
between 0.001 mcg silver per g tissue [lymph nodes] to 0.0025 mcg per g heart
muscle and 0.006
mcg per g in liver. Hair is richer with levels between 0.13 and 0.60 mcg per g.
Chronic and acute renal failure are conditions where liver silver is markedly
elevated. When given intramuscularly or by intravenous injection, administered
silver is readily excreted, mainly [93 per cent] via the faeces. Oral silver is 99
per cent excreted in the faeces. ...
Within the body, silver interacts metabolically with copper and selenium. Silver
accentuates signs of copper deficiency and the latter mineral can reverse the
silver toxicity symptoms of depressed growth, low haemoglobin and lowered
elasticity of the aorta."7
EFFECTS Repeated exposure to fine silver dust or fumes can cause blue-grey
staining of the eyes, mouth, throat, internal organs and skin. This condition
called argyria occurs slowly and may take up to 20 years to develop. Once
present, it doesn't go away.
Repeated exposure also can cause clouding in the cornea of the eye, resulting in
problems with vision, esp. at night. High exposure to silver may cause kidney
damage. Chronic toxic effects may include shortened lifespan, reproductive
problems, lower fertility, and changes in appearance or behaviour.
the Oriental proverb: 'Speech is silver, silence golden.' The Silver Age was
emblematic of lost innocence, perhaps because, as the malleable metal of much
ancient coinage, silver had some negative associations - famously so as a symbol
of Christ's betrayal for 'thirty pieces of silver'."8
WISDOM The heart represents the central wisdom of feeling; it is the symbolic
source of spiritual illumination, intuition and truth; it is the seat of the Self. As
seat of the wisdom of reason, the head should reflect [mirror] the heart's wisdom
[Self-reflection].
Let the heart rule the head, being expressed through speech. The symptom
picture of Argentum metallicum shows the opposition of heart and head, instead
of the conjunction.
•• [2] Huber - self-experimentations, 1845; 6th dil., increasing the dose each day
with 10
drops, for 7 days; 5th dil., idem for 6 days; 4th dil., idem for 7 days; 3rd trit.,
increasing from 3 to 16 grains in 8 days; 2nd trit., from 5 to 15 grains in 5 days;
1st trit., from 5 to 15 grains in 3 days.
"Many [of the above] symptoms continued for some days after the cessation of
the proving [on June 10th], and some new symptoms occurred up to 24th June,
which were evidently owing to the silver. These were: drawing tearing in right
zygomatic process. A pain brought on by a draught of air in cricoid cartilage of
larynx, lasting half a day; it felt like a cork in the throat; when pressed caused
bruised pain. Before midnight, in bed, desire to sleep, but inability to go to sleep
on account of heat and pricking on skin, and when he fell asleep attack of
giddiness in head so that he felt as though his head would tumble out of bed,
followed by a violent convulsive shock like epilepsy, when the vertigo and
sleepiness went off. Feeling in anus as if long air-bubbles were passing away. On
sneezing a cutting dislocation pain on the cartilages of the left false ribs in
horizontal direction on the left side of the scrobiculus cordis."9
[1] Trueb, Die chemischen Elementen. [2] Pelikan, The Secrets of Metals. [3]
Venetsky, Tales about Metals. [4] Pelikan, ibid. [5] Venetsky, ibid. [6] Pelikan,
ibid. [7] Mervyn, Vitamins and Minerals. [8] Tresidder, Dictionary of Symbols.
[9] Hughes, Cyclopaedia.
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: USING VOICE [talking, singing, reading aloud]. Mental strain. Noon.
Cold damp. 3 to 5 a.m. TOUCH. Pressure. Lying on back. Entering warm room.
Sun.
Main symptoms
M Loss of control.
over intellect: can't think properly [as from intoxication, as if smoke were in the
brain].
• "When pleased, excessively merry, but cries a long time about a trifle."
[Clarke]
M Inability to think.
• "In the mental sphere it affects the intellect more than the affections." [Clarke]
• "He cannot think properly; also when sitting and reflecting." [Due to attacks of
vertigo]
• "It comes on in persons who are in the habit of labouring with the intel ectual
faculties.
Businessmen, students, readers, and thinkers. Reasoners come to the point when
they can no longer reason, and the slightest mental effort brings on vertigo. ...
For a moment appearing to be very intense and active in mind, and forgets all
that he was talking about.
The Argentum metallicum situation is one where the person has to perform
intellectually and express himself through speech, singing, writing, etc., and also
has to defend himself by intellect, speech and words." [Sankaran]
• "Seem soft and yielding, but there is a dictatorial side underneath [wanting to
show their abilities] which is only expressed at home." [Scholten]
M Similar to Arg-n.: fear of high places, fear of narrow places, fear of crowds,
anticipation, desire sweets. BUT: more reserved, far less impulsive, a kind of
restrained haughtiness, and chilliness. [Scholten]
G Nervous and broken down; suffer from loss of muscular power and trembling.
G Painlessness.
• "The more deeply seated the troubles are the more likely are they to be
painless."
[Clarke]
• "Closer study brings out no evidence of any action on the cartilages as such;
rather it seems that there is pain without swelling around the joints."1
G Hungry.
• During his proving, Huber experienced [three times] a feeling of hunger [with
an attack of nausea] after lying down to sleep in afternoon or evening.
Or: Loss of appetite [easy satiety or aversion to even the thought of food].
G Little thirst.
• "On going to sleep was prevented doing so first by an electric shock in right
lower extremity, and then by two similar shocks of upper part of body, which
had their exploding spot close to occipital foramen." [Hughes]
G < NOON [the greatest height, the culminating point of the sun].
G < Descending.
TENDERNESS.
• "An important symptom for silver in general is vertigo and lack of recollection,
'a kind of intoxication', according to Hahnemann; in one case 'semi-sleep with
vertigo with a kind of convulsive shaking of the body as in epilepsy' occurred.
This type of vertigo has become the homoeopathic indication for the use of
silver in epilepsy, for the so-called epileptic vertigo or for epilepsy with much
vertigo, particularly at night." [Leeser]
• "There is an old tale from Hel as about the birth of Pal as Athena. Zeus became
aware that his wife Hera had become pregnant without help from God, Hero or
mortal. He became so anxious about the implications of this event that he
developed a bad headache.
This became so bad that he sent for the Eileithyiai who were the Olympian
midwives and asked them to examine him. They confirmed his suspicions that
he was pregnant.
Meanwhile Hera had given birth to Hephaestos, the Olympian smith, and in the
manner of the immortals he had rapidly grown up. Zeus sent for him and
commanded him to take his axe and cleave his skull and deliver him. This
Hephaestos did, rapidly departing as Pallas Athena leapt fully armed from her
father's head. Thus was Zeus' migraine cured. A year or two ago I noticed in a
medical journal a comment characterizing migraine as cephalic dysmenorrhoea
and dysmenorrhoea as uterine migraine. Argentum metallicum and nitricum are
characterized by intense unilateral headaches, surely migraines, and by
headaches with a sensation of great swelling, as if the head was becoming larger
and larger, surely an excellent description of cephalic pregnancy."2
P Prolapsus uteri and pain in LEFT ovary; ovarian cysts and tumours.
• Shortly before fal ing asleep observed when inspiring quietly two tones [a
higher and a lower one] as from the mouth-piece of an oboe, coming from low
down in throat."
Rubrics
Mind
Anxiety, as if clothes were too tight when walking in open air [1/1]; about health
[2]; on waking [1]. Delusion head were falling out of bed [1/1]; she would break
down [1]; he is drunk all the time [1/1]; floating in air [2]. Excitement during
pain [1]. Fear of apoplexy
[2]; to speak [1; Lil-t.*]. Loquacity during daytime [1/1]. Mania alternating with
depression [1]. Sense of heavenly peace [1/1]. Sadness during menopause [2].
Starting, as if electric, on falling asleep and during sleep [2]. Desire to talk to
someone [2]; indisposed to talk in company [1].
Vertigo
Nose
Face
Mouth
Stomach
Sensation of emptiness not > eating [2]. Sensation of fulness during hunger [1].
Nausea from dreams [1; Arg-n.], from thought of food eaten [1; Sars.].
ABDOMEN: Bubbling sensation in sides [1].
Rectum
[1/1].
Urine
Copious during pain [1]. Offensive odour during fever [2], sweetish [2].
Female
Larynx
Mucus in larynx on laughing [2]; mucus comes up when stooping [2/1]. Voice
changeable [2; Arum-t.].
Respiration
Chest
Limbs
Clenching of fingers when seizing something [1; Dros.]. Cramps lower limbs on
descending stairs [1/1]; cramps in calves > motion [1]. Sensation of paralysis in
upper limbs during motion [1/1].
Dreams
Generals
Food
Desire: [3]: Sweets. [1]: Chocolate; coffee; frozen food; fruit; meat [*]; raw meat
[*]; refreshing; sour; wine.
1992.
Argentum nitricum
Arg-n.
[Oscar Wilde]
[Cynthia Heimel]
Signs
Silver nitrate.
EFFECTS Eye contact can cause severe burns, with permanent blindness. Skin
contact can cause severe irritation and burns. Repeated exposure to silver nitrate
dust or fumes can very gradually cause the eyes, nails, inner nose, throat, body
organs and skin to turn a blue-grey colour. This condition called argyria occurs
slowly and may take up to 20 years to develop. Once present, it doesn't go away.
Ingestion of silver nitrate causes violent abdominal pains, vomiting and
diarrhoea.
EYES The eye symptoms of Arg-n. are too numerous to mention, says Kent.
"'Ulceration of cornea in newborn infants; profuse purulent discharge from the
lids,' and this is what the 'Regulars' in former days and almost up to date have
been using for the eyes, treating them with Argentum nitricum."3 Most probably,
Kent is referring to gonorrhoeal ophthalmia. This condition appears 2 to 5 days
after birth and produces an acute purulent conjunctivitis, and severe eyelid
oedema, followed by chemosis and corneal ulcerations.
The US Centers for Disease Control as well as the Canadian Paediatric Society
recommend routine use of 1% silver nitrate, erythromycin, or tetracycline
ophthalmic ointments or drops instilled into each eye after delivery. This in spite
of the fact that the incidence of gonorrhoeal ophthalmia in the USA is 2 to 3 on
10,000 live births. And:
"Silver nitrate is not a perfect agent. It does not prevent all cases of gonococcal
ophthalmia, and in most infants it causes transient chemical conjunctivitis, which
has been thought by some to interfere with mother-infant bonding."4 The
possibility of intervening with mother-infant bonding, by interfering with eye
contact, was one of the mains reasons for widespread abandonment of silver
nitrate prophylaxis in the 1980s in favour of antibiotic ointments.
silver nitrate, with 2-3% silver chloride to toughen it. It darkens on exposure to
light. The white or greyish, hard rods or thin small cones are employed as a
caustic for removing warts and granulation tissue and for cauterizing wounds
and ulcerations.
PROVING •• [1] Mül er - 7 provers, 1845; method: 1x trit., 3-6 doses in 3-6
days; 2x dil., 3 doses, effects observed for 8 days; 6x dil., 3 doses in 5 days.
[1] Merckx Index. [2] Potter, A Compend of Materia Medica. [3] Kent, Lectures
on Hom. MM. [4] Canadian Paediatric Society, Recommendations for the
prevention of neonatal ophthalmia. [5] Twentyman, Argentum: A study in
correspondences, BHJ July 1982.
Affinity
MIND.
NERVES
[cerebro-spinal;
ABDOMINAL].
MUCOUS
MEMBRANES
Modalities
Drinking. Crowds. Cold food. Ice cream. After eating and drinking.
Better: COLD [AIR; open air; washing with cold water]. Hard pressure [tight
bandage around head]. Motion. Wind blowing on face. Eructations. Sitting.
Main symptoms
M IMPULSIVENESS.
Irrational, does strange things and comes to strange conclusions: does foolish
things.
• "He wil give peculiar, altogether foolish explanations of what he was trying to
do."
[Vithoulkas]
• "The emotions predominate and the governing power of the mind is for the
time being held in abeyance so that all sorts of ill-considered ideas fill the brain,
the patient doing the queerest things upon the impulse of the moment; he seems
to be governed by his impulses." [Boger]
c He needs an explanation for his peculiar behaviour, and thus: Simulates being
ill. Laments about his sickness. Deceitful. Sly.
• "The imagination is so fertile that any symptom can occur. They can take in
anything they hear and make it their own. It is an expression of their gullibility."
[Herrick]
• "The condition of the mind in sleep seemed but an extension of its state in
working hours, for the prover stated that all through the day he was disinclined
to talk, but took a morbid delight in building air-castles. ... He did not fall asleep,
but lay enchanted by a vivid imagination. This Elysian state lasted till nearly 10
o'clock, and then slowly faded away." [Hughes]
• "Will not consult a physician for fear he may be told he has a serious ailment."
[Bryant]
• "He fears that he may be seized with an impulse he cannot control." [Kent]
Fear of examination. Fear what physician will reveal. Fear for his health when
he is travelling. [Argentum patients always carry an emergency kit when they
travel.]
Argentum patients usually bring a thick file of investigations, which may contain
10-15
and:
Many PHOBIAS
[fear in a crowd; fear in the street; fear when alone; anticipation, stage fright;
fear of being too late; claustrophobia; fear of high places; fear of fainting].
M Lack of self-confidence.
Fear of undertaking anything. Delusion everything will fail.
• "He is ful of deception and cowardice, and he knows it, and makes a great
effort to keep others from finding out." [Kent]
M HURRY.
Inaccurate judge of distances. Cannot look down or up. Delusion that the walls
will crush him. Distances seem enlarged. Objects seem enlarged.
M Impressionable.
• "Persons who are warm-blooded; want cold, open air, cold drinks, cold food;
suffocate in warm clothing, ill-ventilated or closed rooms; feel suffocated if
other people are in the room." [Kent]
• "He craves the cold wind blowing in his face and lungs." [Kent]
G Sensation of ENLARGEMENT.
Pain radiating in every direction, but esp. to the chest [= difficult respiration].
• "With the gastrointestinal troubles, the urine is general y very scanty; with the
nervous symptoms it may be profuse; in paralytic troubles there may be
incontinence." [Allen]
P Palpitation of heart.
Rubrics
Mind
Anxiety in morning after rising [1], when anticipating an engagement [3], with
heat of face [1], if a time is set [2], when walking in open air [2]. Confusion,
after coffee [1], >
cold bath [1]. Delusion he is a bottle of soda [2/1], a heavy black cloud
enveloped her [1], he has an incurable disease [2], that everything will fail [2],
that he has neglected his duty
[2]. Fear, of being late [3], of open spaces [2]. Forsaken feeling on waking [2].
Hurry while walking [3]. Anxious restlessness, compelling rapid walking [2].
Loss of self-control [1]. Desire to talk to some one, even wakes them at night
[2/1].
Vertigo
Head
Enlarged sensation > bandaging [2/1], during menses [1; Glon.], during
pregnancy [3/1].
Pain, from strong and agreeable odours [1/1], > wine [1]; in right side and
dimness of left eye [1/1].
Eye
Photophobia after straining the eyes [3/1], during headache [2*]. Dilated pupils
before epilepsy [3; Bufo].
Vision
Nose
Mouth
Speech, difficult, from dryness of palate and throat [1*]. Sour taste in mouth at
height of attack of left sided prosopalgia or migraine [1/1].
Throat
Catarrh of smokers [1; Caps.*], with sensation of hair causing cough, > again by
smoking [1/1*]. Choking with cardiac pain [1; Cact.].
Stomach
Sensation as if stomach would burst when yawning [1/1*]. Desire for sweets in
evening
[2/1]. Eructations difficult, causing faintness [1/1*]. Nausea causes palpitation
[2/1], from smell of coffee [1], from sweets [2].
Rectum
Diarrhoea > after acids [1/1], from exalted imagination [2/1], < lying on left side
[2], after weaning [1].
Larynx
Respiration
Chest
Sensation as if heart ceases to beat while sitting [2*; Gels.]. Pain in heart when
lying on right side [1]. Palpitation from incarcerated flatus [2].
Limbs
Coldness during menses [1], of hands during menses [2], of lower limbs during
nausea
Sleep
Dreams
Food
Aversion: [3]: Sweets [L]. [2]: Cheese; pork.
Desire: [3]: Salt + sweets; salty food; sugar. [2]: Cold drinks; fat + sweets. [1]
Brandy; cheese; cheese, strong; chocolate; coffee; fat; fat + salt; ice; ice cream;
plums, pungent; sauce; sausages; spicy; sour.
Worse: [3]: Sweets. [2]: Alcohol; cold food; mother's milk; sour. [1]: Apples;
bread; cheese; coffee [= < mental symptoms]; cold drinks; fat; frozen food; ice
cream; meat; pastry; rich food; salted, pickled fish [= distension of stomach];
sour; tea [= palpitation of heart]; tobacco, smell of [H]; water.
Better: [2]: Sweets. [1]: Coffee [H; > headache]; cold drinks; cold food; pungent
[>
Aristolochia clematitis
Arist-cl.
[Maxim Gorky]
Signs
It escaped from such gardens and managed to hold its own in cooler climates to
this very day. At one expense, however: it seldom produces ripe fruits in cooler
climates, despite all its 'sexual' activities, but reproduces by vegetative
propagation. .
NAME The name derives from the Greek aristos, best, and lochia, childbirth, in
allusion to the curved form of the flower with base and top together recalling the
human foetus in the correct position for birth. 1 The specific name clematitis
means 'clematis-like' and refers to its climbing habit.
Satisfied with the visitor's performance, the stiff hairs will wither, allowing the
insect to escape.
Aristolochia clematitis, however, was also known. Knowing the plant very well
from German vineyards, German settlers introduced it in Pennsylvania.
•• [2] Robbins, Reijonen and Evans - 21 provers in Australia, Finland and New
Zealand; 1998; method: single dose of 30c, also contains data from three dream
provings.
[1] Hyam and Pankhurst, Plants and their Names. [2] Grieve, A Modern Herbal.
Affinity
Worse: Before and especially after menses. Bending forward. Cold food. Light.
Reading.
Suppressed
secretions;
suppressed
menses;
delayed
menarche.
Menopause.
Better: Cool air; open air. Motion. Menstrual flow. Humid compresses, cold.
Main symptoms
M Psychosomatic condition < before and after menses, > DURING menses.
• "Much irritability before, during and after menses; in morning and evening;
before getting a cold. I was irritated as soon as I woke up in the morning. As if
my hands were bound and that I am not capable to work out my day as I wanted.
Programmed by other people also for the rest of the whole week. I am still
irritated and angry, dissatisfied, aggressive. Usually I can cry out this kind of
dissatisfaction - now not!" [Robbins]
M < Consolation.
• "They are not easily comforted like Pulsatil a but rather inconsolable and cross
when in the depression, yet not actively aggravated by consolation like Sepia."
[Whitmont]
Or:
M Extremes of moods.
M Connections.
• "One of the central themes was about losing connections. ... Some traumatic
experience leads to a state of indifference and exhaustion which goes to a
disconnection, an unbalanced and confused state with blocked feeling, or flu like
state. ... Disconnection, forgetting and losing of a painful or traumatic
experience." [Robbins]
M Self disgust.
• "Self disgust, sexuality increased and anger coming up. Desire to feel and to
have salt-baths in order to clean oneself, depressed. Eating is disgusting as well
as drinking. Ugly state - feeling that I am ugly. Everything I touched seemed to
be dirty. Desire to wash hands frequently. Dreams of putting out the garbage
with difficulty. Sensation of being small enough to crawl under the carpet. The
Aristolochia plant pollinates by attracting flies with the smell of garbage."
[Robbins]
M Indifference and exhaustion. 'What's the point.'
The following symptom, from the proving by Robbins, seems to support the
theme of confinement / restraint: "As if my hands were bound and that I am not
capable to work out my day as I wanted. Programmed by other people also for
the rest of the whole week."
Loss of conception of time. Makes mistakes in time, day, dates, etc. [Robbins]
• "Other symptoms are better from local heat and worse from cold, particularly
the facial neuralgia, toothache and cough." [Mezger]
G Insatiable hunger.
• "Several provers awoke at 2-3 a.m. and could not fall asleep before 4-5 a.m. "
[Mezger]
G > Motion.
[general; joints]
G Metallic feeling.
As if blood vessels were metallic. As if nerve paths were like thin metal wires.
• "One may very often replace the hormonal treatment of women with
Aristolochia, or where there is disability from hormone treatment where women
in the height of sexual activity after labour or similar situations lose their
menses, Aristolochia is particularly indicated." [Mezger]
[Whitmont]
G P.M. S.
c Acne.
c Abdominal cramps.
c Distension of abdomen.
c Heaviness in legs.
c Joint pains.
G Menopause.
• "This remedy is a right side remedy. Somehow I have a need, a want to drag
the right foot. Wandering pains of short duration mainly on the right side of the
body. Tingling cold chill down right leg and right side of body on falling asleep.
Sciatic nerve pain, right side. Right sole numb, soles burning and spongy
feeling." [Robbins]
• "Excel ent remedy for irritability of the bladder following cystitis from cold.
The main indication is frequent nocturnal urging, awakening the patient every 15
to 30 minutes.
[Mezger]
Blisters from rubbing shoes, rowing, garden work, horseback riding, etc.
• "Excellent remedy for girls with acne and delayed menarche." [Mezger]
• "In the skin we have blisters, pimples, a violently itching and burning eczema,
particularly on the neck, the scalp, the forearm and the vulva with the formation
of crusts.
This is particularly the case during the menopause from ovarian insufficiency.
Eczemas and dermatitis, particularly baker's eczema or from wetting." [Mezger]
Rubrics
Mind
Anger before menses [1R], with trembling [1R], with weeping [1R]. Anxiety in
morning on waking [1R], anticipating an engagement [1R], with cloudiness,
confusion [1R], about future [1], about health [1R]. Aversion to husband [1R].
Confusion, loses his way in well known streets [1R]. Dancing [1R]. Delusions,
being abused [1R]. blood vessels as if metallic [1/1R], body is diminished [1R],
he is dirty [1R], everything is dirty [1R], being fat, swollen [1M], hands being
bound to body [1R], that someone were holding one's hand [1/1R], being kissed
on the lips on falling asleep [1/1R], that he is separated from the world [1R].
Fear of being alone [2], of failure [1R], of forgetting [1R], of losing one's
feelings [1R], panic attacks during menses [1R], of people [2], being ugly [1R].
Forsaken feeling, sensation of isolation [1]. Undemonstrative grief [1R].
Indifference in morning on waking [1R], to one's children [1R], to death of loved
one [1R], to everything [1R], to one's family [1R]. Industrious [1]. Irritability
alternating with loquacity during menses
[1R]. Loquacity during menses [1R]. Restlessness in bed [1], before menses [1].
Sadness
> open air [1], during menopause [1], before menses [1R], during menses [1R],
> menses
[1]. Suicidal disposition; detached and unreachable [1R]. Time passes too
quickly [1R].
Vertigo
In bed [1R]. With nausea [1]. From sunlight and heat [1R].
Head
Eye
Sensation of eye falling out when falling asleep [1/1R]. Lachrymation < bright
light [1],
< reading [1]. Burning pain < bright light [1], < reading [1].
Vision
[1/1R]. Loss of vision, darkness before eyes on rising [1]. Zigzags before
headache [1R].
Nose
Coryza > morning on rising [1], > open air [1]; profuse [1]. Smell acute for
odour of coffee [1R].
Mouth
Stomach
Appetite decreased [1], ravenous during nausea with vertigo [1/1], ravenous and
chilliness [1/1].
Rectum
Discharge of mucus, without stool [1]. Constant urging after eating [1], after
stool [2].
Bladder
Prostate
Female
Itching voluptuous [1], > leucorrhoea [1]. Menses black, with clots [1], copious
[1], too frequent [2], painful [1], scanty [2], suppressed from cold [1].
Larynx
Back
Pain, cervical region extending to occiput [1R], sore, bruised, lumbar region,
over kidneys [1R].
Limbs
Awkwardness, hands, drops things [1R]. Sensation of heaviness in legs > menses
[1].
Tearing pain in joints during pregnancy [1R]. Swelling of feet before menses [1].
Tension and swelling of varicose veins during menses [1].
Sleep
Dreams
Babies [1R]. Breastfeeding [1R]. Childbirth [2R]. Danger [1R]. Disgusting [1R].
Losing things [1R]. Rape [1R]. Shock [1R]. Threats [1R]. Stories of trauma
[1R].
Chill
Perspiration
During slight exertion [1R]. At night during menses [1]. Offensive odour [1R].
Generals
Food
Aversion: [1]: Coffee [R]; salt [R]; spicy [R]; sweets [R]; tea [R]; wine [R].
Desire: [1]: Bacon [R]; bitter [R]; black tea [R]; chocolate [R]; coffee [R];
orange juice
[R]; salty fatty meat [metwurst] [R]; salty and spicy [R]; sweets [R]; tasteless
food [R; on account of very acute taste]; tea [R].
Worse: [1]: Cold food; fats and rich food [R]; milk [diarrhoea]; sauerkraut [=
vomiting].
Arnica montana
Arn.
Signs
N.O. Compositae.
HABITAT Arnica is very much an alpine plant. It prefers open landscapes and a
massive flow of incoming sunlight at high altitudes; the higher it grows the more
aromatic it becomes. Growing naturally on places where climbing accidents and
falls can occur, Arnica
has
proved
effective
for
circulatory
problems
and
exhaustion
from
NAME The name is derived from the Greek anakis, lambskin, in allusion to the
texture of the leaves; the specific name montana refers to its natural habitat in
Central Europe, being relatively high mountain meadows around the 1,000 metre
mark.
WOLF "Arnica carries the wild nature of the wolf after whom she is named. Her
flowers are like yellow wolf's eyes in which the captured mountain sun glistens.
'Wolf's Eye',
'Wolf's Yellow', Wolfesgelega - these old German names tell us about the wild,
self-willed, even dangerous power of Arnica. ... And in the leopard names that
she attracts in the English-speaking world lie her elegance and wild beauty. ... A
plant with such strong radiance has always attracted people and inspired
different names. Most of them refer to Arnica's healing properties: Fallherb in
English and, in German, 'Wellbestow',
TORN "On mountain slopes, at an altitude of about 3000 feet grows Arnica
montana.
Where trees have been felled, in clearings of the woods, the plant thrives on a
specific soil: It seeks an environment of peat-moors where the debris of plants
and soil meet to
form a layer of decay. There the plant sends its root deep down until it reaches a
humus layer below. From this zone of debris, where 'torn' parts of earth and plant
life mix, it raises its beautiful orange coloured head on a hairy stem of a length
of eight to twenty inches. The petals, always very regularly arranged in the
relatives of the family of composites, show with Arnica a strange unique
irregularity, which gives the appearance as if the leaves of the crown were torn
apart. Also in a rather unique way the crown attracts many insects which not
only live in it, but also of the plant. One of them a fly, Tripeta arnicivora and its
larvae, like larvae of another fly, Tetritis arnicae, live and find their nourishment
in the bottom of the crown. In addition, a number of fungi grow as parasites on
the surface of the plant. In an environment of the remainders of cut-down trees,
with its root anchored in a zone of decay, Arnica montana seems to thrive on
debris. Where the soil is 'torn apart', where insect life tears and wears the life
substance, Arnica apparently develops substances through which it withstands
the dangers of injury from below and above."3
GOETHE The German poet Goethe used Arnica to strengthen his heart. From
his deathbed, he wrote: "When life and death began their struggle within me, I
sensed how the hosts of life, this flower on their standard, forced the issue, and
the stagnating forces of the enemy, the deathly oppressive powers, meet their
Austerlitz. Rejuvenated in my recovery I praise this herb most highly, yet in truth
it is nature who praises herself, she who is truly inexhaustible, who creates this
flower with its healing powers, and in doing so once more proclaims herself to
be eternally procreative."4
These look like petals because the corolla tube is slit open and spreads out
horizontally, like a tongue or strap. The disk-florets [tubular] tend to be
hermaphrodite and have stamens and pistils, whilst the ray-florets are female,
with pistils only. If the whole capitulum consists of ligulate florets, these are
hermaphrodite. In some species, all the florets are tubular. Thus the thistles
produce only tubular florets, chicory and dandelion only ligulate florets. The
sunflower, ox-eye daisy, garden marigold and arnica appear to have achieved
perfection in this respect, for they produce a distinct periphery and centre, outer
circlet and disc, and the whole is in equilibrium. ... In all, the Compositae type
may be said to be very plastic and variable, with little tendency to harden. It is
intimately bound up with the cosmic spheres, the world of light, and shuns
darkness and proliferative moisture."5
•• [2] Jörg - 11 provers [10 males, 1 female], 1823; method: repeated doses of
1/2 to 8
to 16 days.
Affinity
Modalities
After sleep. Motion. Old age. Alcohol. Rest, lying long on one side. Damp, cold.
Blowing nose. Sugar.
Better: Lying [with head low; outstretched]. Open air, cold bathing. Uncovering.
Main symptoms
Wants to know better than everybody; no one can take him up.
• "The need to be able to face an ordeal with the fear of failure behind it. In order
to overcome the obstacles placed before them they must be strong and not lose
control, acting as if they know better than the other person does. They will even
push themselves way past what would be normally required of them. Even when
they are unwell they will keep on pushing themselves to finish the task at hand
because of this fear of failing. ...
Consider the situation in which the plant is found, on the mountain side, a place
common for trauma and away from any further assistance, the injured would
need to be able to rally themselves in those instances to push on for more
assistance. Here it would draw on one's reserves to keep going, even when more
than likely you felt it would be best to stop.
• "Whatever the injury an 'It won't real y hurt me' attitude. A reaction of the
'hero.' If there is lung cancer, still continuing to smoke, getting on with their
normal life. It is a demonstration that they can overcome everything. No
surrender. Dictatorial behaviour,
with the same weakness of all dictatorial people. Black and white thinking, very
rigid.
You don't find them so much in a place of power, it is more apparent in the way
they behave and think. This is the way things are and that's it! They can not
deviate from their own way of thinking. The thought that another person might
enter this tower, feels like an injury. In our culture we occasionally find this kind
of very superficial attitude, for example in single-minded sportsmen. ... The
main idea is to be conservative and to retain one's structure. They need to be
conservative in order to do so."2
• "Arnica corresponds to people who 'push themselves too hard' and work
themselves to death. They want to be indispensable, and throw themselves into
great, heroic activity, where they are certain to receive the maximum number of
blows, the greatest amount of distress. If the first marathoner had taken Arnica,
perhaps he would not have died at the end of his run. Why did he want to run so
fast without stopping? Why did he not pass the baton to another? Arnica must
learn that no one is alone on this earth, that we must delegate to others, not
sustain them by our effort alone." [Grandgeorge]
• "This is what I often find in the case histories, a tendency to injure or hurt
themselves
Fear of TOUCH.
• "Patients who are fearful but fear remains at night after an accident [Fear
persists day and night: Op.]." [Mathur]
M Ailments from injuries, physical [esp. soft parts] or mental [trauma or grief;
remorse; sudden financial loss; fright, anger].
G < NIGHT.
Pain as if beaten.
G OFFENSIVE discharges.
[breath, taste, eructations, vomit, flatus, stool, sweat, smell of spoiled eggs]
delivery." [Mathur]
G Left-sided paralysis.
And Unconsciousness.
P Ménière's disease.
And Vertigo [inclined to fall to the left], salivation, deafness, vomiting, coldness
in occiput.
[1] Avedissian, "I am o.k. , are you o. k?", Arnica montana and its use in
constitutional cases, HL 1/97. [2] Mangialavori, "Someone who doesn't forget
pains", Arnica montana, HL 1/97 [3] Avedissian, ibid.
Rubrics
Mind
Anger alternating with lamenting [1/1], when obliged to answer [2]. Answers,
stupor returns quickly after answering [2]. Delirium declares she is well [2].
Delusion is going to have a heart disease and die [1]. Dictatorial, talking with air
of command [1]. Fear of others approaching him [3], lest he be touched [3/1], of
death at night [2], of death when alone [2; Crot-c.*], of sudden death [2], of
touch [2]. Obstinate, declares there is nothing the matter with him [3]. Desire to
be useful [1; Aur.*; Cere-b.].
Vertigo
Head
Pain on being roused from sleep [2]; as from a nail during menses [1]; as if hair
were pulled out of occiput [1].
Vision
Ear
Hearing
His own voice seems distant [1]. Impaired after concussion [3].
Nose
Mouth
Putrid odour[breath] after anger [1/1]. Taste like rotten eggs [3].
Teeth
Stomach
Rectum
Kidneys
Female
Chest
Back
Sleep
Dreams
Being buried alive [2]. Dogs [2]; black dogs [2/1]. Graves [2]. Lightning [2], and
thunderstorms [2]. Repeating [2].
Generals
* Repertory additions.
Food
Aversion: [2]: Food; meat; milk; smoking; soup. [1]: Brandy; cold drinks;
tobacco.
Desire: [2]: Brandy; sour; whisky. [1]: Alcohol; beer; cold drinks; pickles;
vinegar.
Arsenicum album
Ars.
A perfectionist is a man who takes infinite pains and gives them to others.
[Alan Benner]
Dust thou art, to dust returnest, was not spoken of the soul.
[H.W. Longfellow]
Signs
parts per million, placing arsenic as the 52nd out of 103 elements. Native arsenic
is rare; native antimony is nearly indistinguishable from it. Arsenic in its
elemental state is found in silver ore veins. Over 150 minerals contain arsenic
but the main sources are sulphides and sulphosalts such as arsenopyrite [iron
arsenide sulphide], orpiment [arsenic sulphide], realgar [arsenic sulphide],
lollingite [iron arsenide], stibarsen [antimony arsenic], and tennantite [copper
arsenic sulphide]. Its main natural occurrences include Europe
PROPERTIES When heated to burn in air, it will burn with a bluish flame and
give off
an odour of garlic and dense white fumes of arsenic trioxide. It is stable in dry
air, but tarnishes on exposure to humid air, forming a black modification.
USES Metallic arsenic is used in metallurgy for hardening copper [improving its
corrosion resistance and thermal properties], lead [improving the roundness of
lead shot], non-ferrous alloys; in automotive body solder; in semiconductor
materials; in the manufacture of low-melting glass [serving as a decolourizer]; as
growth stimulant for plants and animals [livestock and poultry]; as wood
preservative, herbicide, and pesticide.
HISTORY "A hundred years ago the total world production of arsenic trioxide
was about 10,000 tons. At that time, arsenic compounds were used in the
manufacture of lead shot and glass, as well as in medicine. Copper hydrogen
arsenite, generally known as Scheele's green, was widely used as a pigment in
wallpaper and textile printing and even in confectionery. By the early part of the
20th century, arsenic compounds were being used in wood preservatives, sheep
dips, fly papers and a variety of agricultural pesticides.
Today the total consumption of arsenic is about 50,000 tons; a further quantity of
at least 10,000 tons is added to the environment each year through the burning of
coal."2
USES Arsenic trioxide is the primary material for all arsenic compounds. Used
in the manufacture of glass, Paris green [insecticide containing arsenic and
copper], enamels, weed killers, metallic arsenic; for preserving hides; killing
rodents and insects; in sheep dips; textile mordant. Formerly used as parasiticide,
also for parasitic skin and blood diseases; in rheumatism, asthma and heaves,
and as an alterative. Arsenic compounds are also used in certain paints,
wallpaper, and ceramics.
DUST Arsenic is shapeless and exists merely as a kind of dust, being found in
traces in ores of other elements. Expressing a state of utmost dryness, it seems
not to be able to build crystalline structures of its own. It is in a permanent state
of disintegration and dust-like dissolution. 3 To conceal their declining beauty, to
renew their faded charms, or to obtain "a fresh complexion, a round form,
smooth skin, and shining hairs, many ladies, including actresses and courtesans"
made use of arsenic intentionally and consciously. 4
PHYSIOLOGY "From arsenic-containing soils arsenic passes into plants and for
this reason it is not surprising that the animal body, likewise the human, contains
light traces.
burned is always free from arsenic. ... Even if arsenic is not a physiologically
necessary constituent of the body, still frequently traces are found in the normal
and it is remarkable that the thyroid seems to be the depot while the skin and
accessory structures are excretory sites with definite affinity. ... The sensitization
for arsenic through hyperthyroidism, which we also found in phosphorus, has
been experimentally confirmed."5 According to recent research, however, most
dietary arsenic ends up in the liver and muscle. Arsenic has a predilection for the
skin and is excreted by desquamation of skin and in sweat, particularly during
periods of profuse sweating. It also concentrates in nails and hair.
Recently, Engel and Smith [1994] found an increase in mortality from vascular
disease for U.S. counties where arsenic in drinking water exceeded 20mg/dl but
the authors recognize that the relationship may be spurious."6 Overexposure has
been associated with an increased risk of skin, liver, bladder, kidney and lung
cancer. Skin contact can cause burning, itching, thickening, rashes, and
darkening or loss of pigment in patchy areas. Some persons develop white lines
on the nails. Organic forms [arsenic combined with carbon and hydrogen] are
less harmful than inorganic forms. The most reliable test for low level arsenic
exposure is measuring arsenic in the urine, which must be done soon after
exposure since arsenic stays in the body only a short time. The test for high
levels of arsenic exposure [over longer periods], is measuring arsenic in hair or
fingernails.
Arsenic in nails produces transverse white bands across fingernail [Mee's lines],
which appear about 6 weeks after the onset of symptoms of toxicity.
Excessive thirst [due to loss of fluids]. [6] Scanty, bloody urine. [7] Collapse:
cold, moist skin, slow and shallow breathing, rapid, thready pulse, etc. [8] Coma
and convulsions may occur before death, which results in from six hours to two
days. In some cases there may not be much nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea. The
patient suddenly goes into collapse, has a few convulsions and dies. If the patient
recovers from the acute symptoms, paralysis of the muscles of the extremities
may result, causing 'drop feet' or 'drop hands', from which he usually recovers,
however. ... Since arsenic is excreted much slower than it is absorbed,
cumulative symptoms, or chronic arsenic poisoning is very common. It usually
occurs from the continued medicinal use of arsenic preparations. It may also
result from inhaling fumes of arsenic, in rooms papered with wall paper
containing
arsenic dyes, from wearing clothes dyed with arsenic, or by eating food coloured
with arsenic dyes. The following symptoms, in the order of their onset, are
noticed after prolonged administration. Often the later symptoms appear before
the earlier ones. [1]
Itching of the eyelids. [2] Redness of the conjunctiva of the eyes. [3] Puffiness
about the eyes, esp. in the morning. [4] Sneezing, 'running nose' [coryza]. [5]
Tightness in the throat. [6] Hoarseness. [7] Loss of appetite, heaviness in the
stomach, nausea and vomiting. [8] Skin eruptions; red spots, areas of brownish
discolouration [very often they look like freckles] on the face or the abdomen.
Dark discolouration on the skin of the abdomen, which look like pencil marks.
In severe cases, the hair and nails may fall off.
[9] Cramplike abdominal pains. [10] Diarrhoea, with 'rice water' stools; the rice
water appearance of the stools is due to small flakes of the lining membrane of
the intestine which they contain. The following symptoms appear later and only
in severe cases: [11]
Persistent headache. [12] Pains around the knee, ankle, foot and hands. [13]
Redness and swelling of the hands and feet. [14] Areas of skin, esp. on the
extremities, which are very sensitive to touch, to pain, to heat and cold. [15] In
severe cases there are paralyses of the extensor muscles of the hands and feet,
resulting in 'drop feet' and 'drop hands'."7
TOXICOLOGY Arsenic enters the environment from its use as a pesticide and
as a wood preservative, and from emissions from smelting industries. It has a
high chronic toxicity to aquatic life, and moderate chronic toxicity to birds and
land animals. Drinking water usually contains a few micrograms of arsenic per
litre or less. Although most major U.S. drinking water supplies contain levels
lowers than 5 mcg per litre, it has been estimated that 350,000 Americans might
drink water containing more than 10 times that amount. Some mineral springs or
well waters, e.g. in Japan, Argentina, Italy, Taiwan, and Chile, contain even
higher concentrations. "There is a cloud of gloom overpowering the otherwise
sleepy town of Samta in Jessore, a northern district of Bangladesh. Almost every
home you visit there has a child or adult suffering from a mysterious disease.
Many have died and the villagers have lost count of the casualties, most of them
small children.
The symptoms are frightening: watery eyes, chronic indigestion, colds and
stomach cramps in the early stages and swollen limbs with bleeding gangrene-
like wounds in severe cases. This silent killer is arsenic which has contaminated
the drinking water of many villages in northern Bangladesh. ... According to the
World Health Organization,
POISONERS During the Middle Ages, professional poisoners sold their services
to royalty and the common populace. During the French and Italian Renaissance,
political assassination by poisoning was raised to an art by Pope Alexander VI
and Cesare Borgia.
"In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries those 'Olympic' poisoners, the Borgia
family, made full use of arsenic in their cantarella, aqua di Napoli and other
subtle poisons that
could kill quickly or by slow degrees, as seemed most expedient. There was no
Marsh Test to detect the presence of arsenic, and the victims appeared, as far as
symptoms went, to have died of natural causes. Such was at any rate claimed to
be the case. A famous vendor of poisons in the seventeenth century was La
Tofania, who distributed her 'Aqua Tofa'na' to 'distressed, adulterous, neglected
or jealous wives over wellnigh all Europe.
DECAY The ancients had the idea that the bodies of those who have been
poisoned decay rapidly. "Even so lately as 1776 we find Gmelin stating in his
History of Mineral Poisons, that the bodies of those who have died of arsenic
pass rapidly into putrefaction, that the nails and hair often fall off the day after
death, and that almost the whole body quickly liquefies into a pulp. ... Loebel
also asserts he found by experiments on animals, that after death from arsenic
putrefaction took place rapidly, even in very cold weather. ...
But it has been proved in recent times that in general arsenic has rather the
contrary tendency, - that, besides the antiseptic virtues which it has been long
known to exert when directly applied in moderate quantity to animal substances,
it also possesses the singular property of enabling the bodies of men and animals
poisoned with it both to resist decay unusually long, and to decay in an unusual
manner. ... In every instance putrefaction made more or less progress at first; but
in a few days a peculiar garlicky odour arose, from which time the progress of
decay seemed to be arrested; and the bodies underwent a process of hardening
and desiccation which completely preserved them. ...
ENDURANCE "The term poison is a relative one. The degree of toxicity will
depend on several factors - the size of the dose, the form in which it is
administered, the portal of entry into the body, and of special significance, the
susceptibility or otherwise of the
dosee. In his book on poisons, Schenk attests - 'I have seen and spoken to many
arsenic eaters in Styria, Lower Austria and Carinthia. Woodcutters, hunters and
mountain guides in these districts believe that arsenic makes the breathing easier
and the step more certain.
I myself saw a porter in Deutsch-Landsberg at the foot of the Kor Alp consume a
lump of arsenic the size of a pea. I estimated it at almost half a gram - four times
the fatal dose."11 As a tonic, arsenic, in small doses, was popular with Victorian
businessmen.
Charles Dickens also resorted to it. The habit of eating arsenic was not restricted
to Europe. It seems to have been quite common in 19th-century Canada and
America, where
"it is largely consumed by the young ladies. ... One of the benefits said to accrue
from its use is that it gives a plumpness to the figure, softness to the skin,
freshness to the complexion, and brilliancy to the eye. For this purpose, young
men and maidens resort to it, to increase their charms, and render themselves
acceptable and fascinating to each other."12 The Far East knew the habit as well:
Mongolian hunters consumed arsenic to enable them to endure cold when
patiently lying on the snow to entrap martins. In China, divers took it before
plunging in cold water to catch fish.
SOURCES Fish and shellfish build up organic arsenic in their tissues; hence
these, particularly shellfish, are the richest food source of arsenic. Some meats,
esp. poultry and pigs, contain organic arsenic because they have been given
traces of arsenic in their feeds to improve growth and to control disease.
"Arsenic compounds were originally used to treat coccidiosis, a wasting disease
in chickens; the growth-promoting effects was discovered accidentally. A bottle
of wine may contain as much as 50 mcg of arsenic, from pesticides used in
vineyards. Seaweed [or kelp] tablets, sold in health food shops, contain
significant amounts of arsenic. A person who eats fish every day may take in as
much as 250 mcg of arsenic per day - but even this amount is unlikely to be
dangerous."13 Plants with the highest amounts include Isatis tinctoria [dyer's
woad], Fucus vesiculosus [kelp], Rhodymenia palmata [dulse], Chondrus crispus
[Irish moss], Citrus paradisi [grapefruit], Citrus medica [citron], Cetraria
islandica [Iceland moss], and Vicia faba [broadbean].
'Salvarsan'. Produced in 1909 by the German chemist Ehrlich, the drug was part
of Ehrlich's search for the 'magic bullet', a drug that would destroy bacteria
circulating in the blood without killing or seriously damaging the patient. Ehrlich
believed that organic compounds of arsenic would provide such a drug and
invented them by the hundred.
Number 606 was not successful against the infection for which it was intended,
but turned out to be very effective in the treatment of syphilis. Number 606,
afterwards named salvarsan, was much used for many years to combat syphilis,
until superseded by penicillin. Salvarsan was the first man-made chemical to be
effective against a major disease; its appearance marked the beginning of
modern chemotherapy. 14 At the end of the 1990s the uses of arsenic as a
medicine again came into fashion. "Two years ago, Chinese researchers reported
that low doses of arsenic trioxide induced remission in patients with acute
promyelocytic leukaemia [APL], prompting physicians in the West to undertake
their own pilot study. ... In the pilot study, 12 patients who had relapsed from
conventional therapy were treated with low doses of arsenic trioxide. Eleven of
the 12
could not be evaluated in the study. Once remission was achieved, each patient
received a brief treatment break, which was followed with repeated courses of
arsenic trioxide therapy every three to six weeks thereafter. After two cycles of
therapy, the investigators conducted additional tests to determine whether any
molecular evidence of leukaemia remained. Three patients tested positive for
molecular evidence of the disease and later relapsed with APL, while eight
patients tested negative for molecular evidence of APL
times daily for 5-15 days; 8th trit., 3 daily doses for 4 days; 13th trit., 3 daily
doses for 9
days.
[1] Merck Index. [2] Lenihan, The Crumbs of Creation. [3] Hauschka,
Substanzlehre. [4]
[6] Klaassen, Casarett and Doull's Toxicology. [7] Blumgarten, Materia Medica
for Nurses. [8] People and the Planet Vol. 6/3, 1997. [9] Gibson, Studies of
Homoeopathic Remedies. [10] Christison, A Treatise on Poisons. [11] Gibson,
ibid. [12] Cooke, The Seven Sisters of Sleep. [13-14] Lenihan, ibid. [15] Arsenic
Shown To Induce Remission Of Promyelocytic Leukaemia, New England
Journal of Medicine Nov. 1998.
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: COLD [ICE CREAM; COLD DRINKS; COLD FOOD; cold air].
EXERTION.
Two THEMES:
PRESERVATION
• Sensitiveness to food that isn't entirely fresh [mouldy cheese; spoiled food; bad
meat; rancid fat; spoiled fish].
• "In general, these individuals dress in black and their symptoms are worse at
midnight
[the midpoint of the night, the darkest of the dark] or at midday, the midpoint of
the day, when the sun's light begins to decrease. ... The colour black symbolizes
the lack of hope in the face of death [it is not a colour, but the absence of colour,
neither reflecting nor transmitting light], and the ill person improves greatly once
he understands that the death of the body means only that 'the soul must go on!'"
[Grandgeorge]
Looks on the dark side of things. Believes that everything is tending to the worst.
• "Not only fear for themselves but for everyone connected with them. If
relations late, sure they're run over - certain everything going wrong - if anyone
coming to stay, dinner will never turn out properly. ... Distressing thoughts which
distress him - fearful, depressing. At first can put off these thoughts by talking to
someone, so always desires company, but later fear and depression may be
constant."2
Attention to detail.
Gets security from order.
Collects all kinds of material objects [valuable and old, antiques], likes comfort
and money [security].
• "General y they wil favour practical security over emotional satisfaction when
an opportunity for the latter may endanger the former." [Bailey]
M TREMENDOUS RESTLESSNESS.
• "Doesn't wish to be spoken to, but neither that one should leave the room."
[Charette]
• "When alone thinks about disease and similar things, from which it is difficult
to free his mind." [Allen]
M Anxiety when something is expected of him.
• "Comes in definitely on spot - Tells story punctuated with extreme worry and
anxiety.
Thinks they have got something definite and serious or they may be hopeless
and rather despairing. Thinks it's rather hopeless telling you about it. Impossible
for you to do them any good."3
• "Definite desire for sour things, coffee and very often for milk. Also
particularly sensitive to anything that isn't quite fresh. Something that most
people can take will upset Ars. May be upset by watery or juicy fruit - melons,
pears. Causes diarrhoea - not good on vegetarian diet. Digestive upset from
vegetables and iced food in hot weather. Any alcohol <."4
Drinks often and little at a time [small sips to moisten lips and mouth].
Gangrenous diseases [or tendency to ulceration], burning like fire, but > warmth.
Vomiting and diarrhoea, and fear and restlessness, after eating ice cream.
P Asthma.
Rubrics
Mind
Confusion on waking at night from an anxious dream [1*]. Delusions, body will
putrefy
[2; Bell.], contaminates everything she touches [1/1], everyone is looking at her
[3], has offended people [3], his family will starve [1], she is being watched [3].
Desires more than she needs [2]. Fear of being alone lest he die [3], of death
when alone [3], of being disabled [3]. Irresolution about trifles [1]. Joy at the
misfortune of others [1/1]. Laughing, never [3]. Cannot rest when things are not
in proper place [2]. Restlessness, wants to go from one bed to another [3].
Revealing secrets in sleep [2].
Vertigo
Head
Eye
Vision
Colours, blue sparks [1/1], white points [1]. Objects seem to be moving up and
down [1].
Sparks, during headache [1], during vertigo [1].
Ear
Nose
Face
Stomach
Anxiety rising high up at night [3/1]. Coldness after cold drinks [2], after fruit
[2].
Flushes of heat extending over body [1]. Sensation of a lump after cold drinks
[2].
Rectum
Diarrhoea after anxiety [2], after ice cream [3], at seashore [2].
Kidneys
Female
Larynx
Respiration
Asthmatic, after midnight, 2 a.m. [3]. Difficult, from dust [3].
Chest
Sleep
Dreams
Skin
Sensation as if skin would burst when moving about [1/1]. Coldness during pain
[1/1].
* Repertory addition.
Food
Aversion: [2]: Cold drinks; fats and rich foods; food, smell of; meat; sausages;
sweets.
[1]: Alcohol; beans and peas; butter; cereals; cooked food; farinaceous; flour;
fruit; gruel; meat, boiled; meat, smell of; milk; olive oil; pastry; pudding; soup;
watery fruit.
Desire: [3]: Cold drinks; olives, olive oil; warm drinks, during chill; warm food.
[2]
Brandy; bread; bread, rye; coffee; meat; milk; refreshing; sour fruit; sweets;
whiskey; wine. [1]: Bacon; beer; fat food; fat + sweet; fruit; hot food; ice; lard;
lemons; mustard; pickles; pungent; sausages; sour; vegetables; vinegar.
Worse: [3]: Cold food; fruit; meat, bad; sausages, spoiled; wine. [2]: Brandy;
butter; cheese, old; cold drinks; fat; food, smell of; frozen food; ice cream; milk;
sour; vinegar; watery fruit. [1]: Beans and peas; beer; cabbage; cheese, mouldy;
coffee; fish; fish, spoiled; flatulent food; high game; honey; hot food; meat,
fresh; meat, odour of cooking; pastry; pepper; pickles; pork; pungent; rancid fat;
raw food; salads; salt; sauerkraut; sweets; tea; veal; vegetables; water.
Better: [3]: Hot food; warm drinks. [2]: Coffee; brandy; cold drinks, during heat;
milk; vinegar. [1]: Water; wine.
Arsenicum iodatum
Ars-i.
[Arthur Schopenhauer]
Signs
Arsenic triiodide.
THYROID Both iodine and arsenic affect the thyroid. The symptoms of Ars-i.
resemble those
of
hyperthyroidism:
nervousness,
increased
activity,
increased
sweating,
male, and decreases in size with advancing years. "It is believed that in the lower
forms of life the thyroid was a sex gland and was a link between the sex glands
and the brain -
the lower quaternary and the higher triad respectively in the human body. The
thyroid is the gland that produces land animals and is very important in the
evolution of forms, and also progression. The feeding of a thyroid to a Newt
transforms it into a salamander - a land-breathing animal. The thyroid is
occasionally referred to as the vanity gland, because functional disorders in it
have a tendency to produce disproportion in the parts of the body and destroy the
pleasing aspects of the personality. This gland has a tendency to
'regulate the speed of living', and as it loses tone, the appearances of age
manifest themselves in all parts of the body. Located, as it is, in what Plato calls
the isthmus between the body and the head, the thyroid is the mediator between
the emotions and the thoughts, and the common denominator of the animal and
intellectual life."2
days.
[1] Merckx Index. [2] Hall, Man, The Grand Symbol of the Mysteries.
Affinity
* LEFT SIDE.
Modalities
Worse: Dry, cold weather. Windy weather. Exertion, physical. In room. Apples.
Cold bath. Lying on painful side. Warmth, warm room, warm wraps. Walking
fast, ascending; during menses. Wet weather. When hungry.
Main symptoms
[Morrison]
G Typical Arsenic picture but HOT and VERY RESTLESS [may be cold].
G Tubercular diathesis.
G BURNING.
G Prostration.
• "Prostration of mind and body, literally too weak to talk, therefore the patient
seems reticent or indifferent, and totally disinclined to conversation. If
questioned too closely, will answer in monosyllables." [Kirchbaum]
P Hot, green, acrid discharge from nose alternating with or preceded by thin,
watery, excoriating discharge; reddens upper lip.
Hay fever.
grippe, and which now is spoken of as virus, where there is a good deal of
weakness following the acute stage with an inability to sleep and intense
intestinal disturbance, essentially flatulence." [Sutherland]
Rubrics
Mind
Anxiety from heat of bed [2/1]. Colours, aversion to dark colours [1], aversion to
red [1], desire for lemon yellow [1; Ign.; Sep.]. Delusions, sees dead persons [1].
Fastidious about his possessions [1/1]. Hurry [2]. Impatience [2]. Indifference to
happiness [1/1], to loved ones [1]. Sudden impulse to kill [2]. Restlessness <
warm bed [2]. Sensitive to sensual impressions [1]. Inclination to sit [2].
Aversion to being spoken to [2].
Head
Eye
Nose
Coryza, annual, with asthmatic breathing [2], on becoming cold [1]; with
discharge >
open air [1]. Discharge, yellow, like honey [3/1]. Obstruction at night [1], in
warm room
[2].
Face
Mouth
Stomach
Rectum
Diarrhoea in morning after rising and moving about [1]. Urging on motion [1].
Respiration
Asthmatic at night, 11 p.m. to 2 a.m. [2/1]. Difficult > open air [1], during
palpitation
[1].
Chest
Dreams
Skin
Eruptions, itching when undressing [2]; scaly, ichthyosis [2]. Rough [2].
Generals
Clothes as if cold [1/1], as if on fire [1/1]. Desire for motion [2]. Weakness from
perspiration [1]. Warm south wind < [2].
Food
Arum triphyllum
Arum-t.
[Anon.]
Signs
DISTRIBUTION Many Araceae come from the depths of damp tropical forests;
the northern species are frequently marsh or water plants.
FEATURES Many Aroids contain latex, which is often very poisonous. The
rhizomes of others contain starch and are used as food. The cuckoo pint [Arum
maculatum] is a common woodland plant in Britain and Europe. Among the
more popular of the tropical species grown as house plants and decorative
objects in hotel lobbies are species of Anthurium,
Philodendron,
Monstera,
Dieffenbachia,
Contact sensitivity to some of the species grown as house plants has been
recorded.
Arisaema,
Arum,
Caladium,
Colocasia,
Dieffenbachia,
Monstera,
Philodendron, and Xanthosoma. A few Aroids are grown for food, e.g. Colocasia
for taro, Monstera for its fruits [Mexican breadfruit].
GENUS The genus Arisaema contains 150 species. Arisaema triphyllum is very
common in eastern North America. It can almost always be found near
waterfalls or where water is running or splashing. The plant grows 1 to 3 feet
high. The leaves are trifoliate; hence its specific name triphyllum. The flowers
appear through the spring and into the summer. Later in the summer, a black
seed cluster that turns red in autumn replaces the flower. "The green spathe,
broadly striped with brown purple, arches over and encloses the spadix. ...
Spadix club-shaped, shorter than spathe, rounded at end, contracted at base,
surrounded by stamens or ovaries; the upper portions of the spadix withers
together with the spathe whilst the ovaries grow into a large compact bunch of
shining scarlet berries. ... The corm is smaller than the English species [Arum
maculatum], 1/2 to 2 inches broad and about half as high. It is very acrid when
fresh, but loses this property when cooked, or particularly when dried."1 "The
common folk name is perfect. The long spathe looks like an old-fashioned
pulpit, complete with overhead baffle to amplify and project sermons throughout
the church in the days before public address systems. For the plant, however, the
hood is simply an umbrella, preventing the vertical, tubelike spathe from filling
with rainwater that could drown the flowers or wash away their pollen. 'Jack' is
the spadix, the clublike, flower-bearing stick that stands erect in the pulpit with
just the tip protruding to survey his 'congregation.' Jack was a common
NAME The name Arisaema combines the genus name Arum, coming from the
Arabic word for 'fire', and the Greek aima, blood-red, in allusion to the red
blotches on the leaves of some species.
USES North American Indians, in particular the Pawnee and Hopi, used dried,
powdered roots, taken in water, as a contraceptive, inducing permanent sterility
by increasing the dose and water temperature. 5 In addition, the Pawnee
pulverised and dried the roots and dusted the resulting powder on the head and
temples to relieve aches. The young men of certain American Indian tribes had
to eat one of the fiery roots before they could officially enter manhood. In his
Manual of medical botany of the United States [1828], Rafinesque states "that
the Indians can handle rattlesnakes with impunity, after wetting
[10-30].'
"It had been proved by Dr. Jeanes, in 1844, long before it came into use, and in
1867 one of the best theses was handed to the Homoeopathic College of
Pennsylvania, by G.E.
Gramm, which was partly printed in the Hahnemann Monthly. For two years Dr.
Gramm had made provings on himself and a woman; besides confirming the
formerly known effects of the drug, he very much widened its range of
usefulness."8
[1] Grieve, A Modern Herbal. [2] Sanders, Hedgemaids and Fairy Candles. [3]
Schultes, The Healing Forest. [4] Millspaugh, American Medicinal Plants. [5]
Bown, Encyclopedia of Herbs and their Uses. [6-7] Erichsen-Brown, Medicinal
and Other Uses of North American Plants. [8] Hering, Guiding Symptoms Vol.
1.
Affinity
* LEFT SIDE.
Modalities
Main symptoms
Contrary.
M Irritation.
• "Everything about this patient was tel ing me about her nature. Her movements,
actions, gestures and language. What are the themes of the case? This is seen in
the simple language. Straight; upright; stand up; honesty and lies; trust; to the
point; irritating; pressing and picking. ... The most characteristic symptom of the
whole case was her habit of boring into her nose; just as she bored straight past
me when I opened the door."1
• "In the light of this cured case, the remedy Arum-t. should be added to the
following rubrics: Concern over social position, Dictatorial and Fastidious. In
Chinese medicine the nose relates to social position and middle age."2
• "Typhoid fever and other ailments and constant picking of lips and nose until it
bleeds." [Hering]
Child refuses food and drinks on account of soreness of mouth and throat; is
sleepless.
G Vertigo.
P Scalp.
P Nose.
Rubrics
Mind
Bites fingers [2], himself [1], nails [2]. Delirium, with picking at nose or lips
[2/1].
Head
Sensation of coldness in vertex, as if cranium were open [1/1*]. Pain, < hot
drinks [2], from exposure to sun [2], < warm food [2].
Eye
Nose
Discharge, copious, with stuffing of head [2]. Obstruction, left [2], sensation of,
with watery discharge [1]. Sneezing at night [2].
Face
Red discolouration after eating [1]; red lips [1]. Excoriation of lips from acrid
saliva [1].
Heat during coryza [3]. Stiffness lower jaw when swallowing [2/1].
Mouth
Stomach
Abdomen
Larynx
Chest
Limbs
Food
Asa foetida
Asaf.
It's no fun to suffer in silence unless you first make enough noise to attract
attention and sympathizers!
[McKenzie]
Signs
Ferula
assafoetida.
Ferula
foetida.
Devil's
Dung.
NAME Ferula derives from ferire, to strike - the stems were formerly used for
punishment; asa derives from the Persian aza, mastic, a pale yellow gum;
foetida, foetid,
refers to its overwhelming odour which has given rise to its popular name,
Devil's Dung.
RESIN Incision of the green matured roots [just before flowering] yields a milky
sap that hardens into gum resin. This takes five to six weeks, during which time
the root is shaded from the sun. Several species of Ferula yield Asafoetida. The
oldest plants are most productive, yielding up to 2 lbs. of gum resin. Plants less
than four years are considered virtually worthless. The major biochemical agents
responsible for its characteristic odour are three sulphur-containing compounds,
two of which have pesticidal properties. These compounds are very similar to
the essential oil of garlic, for which it is commonly substituted in food
preparations.
USES Asafoetida occurs in commerce in three forms: soft mass, paste and tears.
"The tears can retain the original colour for years and gradually darken to a
reddish brown colour. The tears are commercially sold in Chinese pharmacies
and characteristically may have fragments of root and earth. The paste may also
contain extraneous matter. As a condiment for cooking beans and an ingredient
in curry, flavouring for sauces and pickles and a substitute for garlic it is
commonly powdered and adulterated [to increase the weight] with various
substances such as gum arabic, other gum resins, gypsum, red clay, chalk, barley
or wheat flour, slices of powdered dried potatoes, etc."1 It is an ingredient of
Worcestershire sauce. A 2% suspension is used as a repellent against dogs, cats,
rabbits, and deer. In veterinary practice it has been used as a carminative, and
externally to prevent bandage chewing by dogs. 50-100 mg resin reportedly
caused convulsions in nervous people.
EFFECTS The volatile oil is rapidly excreted and can be detected in the urine,
milk and sweat, imparting a garlic-like odour. Intoxication symptoms may
include swollen lips, gastric burning, garlicky eructations, flatulence, diarrhoea,
burning during urination, headaches, dizziness, and even convulsions. Since it is
reputed to affect the menstrual cycle and to be an abortifacient, its use in
pregnancy and lactation is to be avoided.
Aegopodium
[Goutweed],
Ammi
visnaga,
Angelica,
Athamantha
[Fennel],
Levisticum
[Lovage],
Myrrhis
[Sweet
Cicely],
Pastinaca
[Parsnip],
[1] Tierra, Asafoetida: for digestive weakness, food allergies and candida. [2]
Walter, Hints and Pinches. [3] Grieve, A Modern Herbal. [4] Potter, A Compend
of Materia Medica. [5] Grieve, ibid.
Affinity
NERVES. Mind. Gullet. Digestive tract. Periosteum [ears; nose; tibia]. * LEFT
SIDE.
Modalities
Worse: Night. In room. Rest. After eating. Suppression. Mercury. Noise. Sitting.
Warm wraps. TOUCH. Cough.
Main symptoms
• "Like most substances of strong taste and penetrating odour, the pathogenesis
is dominated by mental and nervous phenomena. ... First of all, we note
hypersensitiveness to external impressions. Noise, touch, mental excitement are
sources of aggravation."1
M CRAVES SYMPATHY.
G PUFFED, venous, fat, flabby patients with a PURPLE face; purple when out
in the cold, purple when excited.
• "They get no sympathy when sick because they look so well." [Kent]
• "The remedy has done excel ent work in thin, pale, sickly individuals also.
External appearance must take second place as compared with subjective
symptoms."3
• "It is a sensitiveness comparable only with that of Lachesis - and, like the latter
there is the apparent contradiction in painful ailments where the surface remains
unbroken, namely, relief from pressure. Instances of this are found in neuralgic
pain in the head, eyes, legs, colic, etc. Pains in the eyes, head and elsewhere,
cease when the part is touched and appear somewhere else. Even convulsive
symptoms may be allayed by the touch of another person."4
G Eating <.
G Offensiveness.
P REVERSED PERISTALSIS.
• "Flatulence is nearly always a prominent feature of the case, and tends to press
upwards, sometimes with such vehemence as to cause gasping for breath, and
reflexly, occipital headache, vertigo, fainting, twitching of muscles, trembling,
etc."5
Rubrics
Mind
Anxiety alternating with gouty pain in joints [1/1]. Confusion while sitting [1].
Excitement after suppressed leucorrhoea [1/1]. Fear arising from abdomen [1/1].
Hysteria after suppression of discharges [3; Lach.]. Irresolution > open air [1/1].
Joy with excessive laughing [1; Verb.].
Vertigo
Head
Bubbling sensation in head [1]. Empty, hollow sensation [1]. Pain, > motion [1],
> touch
[1]; as from a plug, peg or wedge in sides [2]; in occiput while pressing at stool
[1], >
Eye
Vision
Dim during vertigo [1]. Exertion of vision < [1]. Lost during vertigo [1].
Face
Throat
Stomach
Abdomen
Coldness after drinking [1]. Heaviness, as from a load after drinking [2/1]. Pain
in region of umbilicus after sour food [1/1].
Rectum
Female
Menses scanty [2], too short [2].
Respiration
Chest
Milk, non-pregnant women [2]. Pain in heart at night, when lying on back [1/1];
sensation of bursting in heart, when lying on back at night, > sitting up [1/1].
Palpitation during deep inspiration [1], while sitting [3]. Sensation of swelling of
heart [2].
Back
Limbs
Dreams
Skin
Cicatrices black [1], blue [1], break open [1], become painful [1].
Generals
Food
Asarum Europaeum
Asar.
It's when a man gets tight as a drum that he makes the most noise.
[McKenzie]
Signs
FEATURES Most of them are shade-loving plants, forming dense ground cover
in summer, particularly in leafy soil underneath tall trees and shrubs. Dried or
cooked with sugar, the aromatic rootstock makes a spicy substitute for Ginger.
The shining dark-green
Roth states that high doses of asarone induce visual hallucinations and
psychedelic effects similar to those of LSD.
USES The plant has been used as a purgative and as an ingredient for snuff.
"The dried and powdered leaves of Asarabacca are used in the preparation of
cephalic snuffs, exciting sneezing and giving relief to headache and weak
eyes."2 "It has been used as a substitute for Ipecac for producing vomiting; the
French use it for this purpose after
drinking too much wine. ... Although the leaves are used as an emetic, human
experiments have shown that the effect is not as pronounced as that of other,
more effective drugs. On the other hand, the expectorant properties of infusions
and decoctions of both the roots and leaves of A. europaeum are quite good,
based on experiments on humans."3 North American Indians a decoction of the
boiled root and rhizome of Asarum canadense as a oral contraceptive to induce
temporary sterility.
Among the Meskwaki Indians the root was chewed and "the fisherman uses the
spittle on the bait, it enables him to catch catfish. ... A good many mud catfish
are caught in the Iowa River which flows through their reservation and the use of
wild ginger in cooking them destroys the mud taste and renders them palatable.
It is also used to cook some animal that has died, such as a hog or a cow, and has
been given them by some farmer.
When used in this way, they claim there is no danger of ptomaine poisoning."4
In its topical use by the Meskwakis for external ear infections, wild ginger owes
its activity to aristolochic acid, which is known to have antimicrobial properties.
The leaves of various Asarum species reportedly cause dermatitis.
•• [2] Mezger - 18 provers [16 males, 2 females], 1950; method: 1x, 2x, or 6x,
three times daily 5 drops for periods ranging from 13 to 46 days.
[1] Sanders, Hedgemaids and Fairy Candles. [2] Grieve, A Modern Herbal. [3]
Weiner's Herbal. [4] Erichsen-Brown, Medicinal and Other Uses of North
American Plants.
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: PENETRATING SOUNDS. Dry, cold weather; icy cold or clear fine
weather.
Emotions.
Better: Cold bathing; of face; eyes. Damp, wet weather. Open air.
Main symptoms
M EXCESSIVE NERVOUSNESS.
Overworked women.
• "Several years ago I attempted to prove the effect of the A. canadense on some
women
students, but the daily records were not properly written up, and the following
fragmentary observations are all I have. ... During the proving [which was
continued over a period of about two months] most of the experimenters were
excessively nervous, with dull stupid feeling during day, and restless sleep at
night. After a few days they suffered much from chilliness, as if insufficiently
clothed, but did not seem to have any fever or any unusual thirst. There was
muscular twitching in various parts of the body, as if cramps were setting in; but
this did not occasion much inconvenience." [Winterburn, cited in Hughes]
• "Mental condition as if just fal ing asleep; a gradual vanishing of the thought."
• "Thoughts so overstrained that they vanish completely." [Hahnemann]
• "In some cases total revulsion to sex, even in thoughts and speech. Wil leave
the room when a sex joke is being told. Aversion to a kiss from grandparents,
child will go and wash his mouth." [Vithoulkas]
G Weakness; exhaustion.
G CHILLY persons who are worse in cold, dry weather and feel better in damp
wet weather [Caust.]; ALWAYS FEEL COLD.
P The scars of life do not show on the Asarum face. They may have a harrowing
emotional history but present a smooth, young complexion. [Springer]
Rubrics
Mind
Confusion in morning after rising [1]. Delusions, as if she didn't touch the bed
when lying
[1]; one would die from weakness [1]; floating in air while walking [1/1].
Deficiency of
ideas > vomiting [1/1]. Desire for light [1]. Sensitive to slightest noise [3].
Starting from sudden noise in the street [1*]. Vanishing of thoughts on mental
exertion [2].
Vertigo
Head
Sensation of being headless [1]. Pain, in dry, cold weather, [2]; pressing in
temples when shaking head [2; Chin.].
Eye
Lachrymation during headache [1]. Pain, from strong light [2].
Vision
Dim, > cold bathing [1], during headache [1], < sunlight [1].
Face
Stomach
Eructations, like spoiled eggs, after eating [1*]. Nausea from mental exertion
[1], from pressure on abdomen [1].
Abdomen
Rectum
Larynx
Chest
Constriction lungs as with a wire [1/1]. Sour smelling perspiration in axillae [1].
Back
Pain as if dislocated, cervical region, extending over head and shoulders [1/1];
pressing, as from a tight collar, cervical region [1/1]. Sensation as if cool wind
were blowing on back [1].
Limbs
Coldness of hands, knees, feet, in hottest weather [2/1]. Pain lower limbs,
sciatica, < cold
[1], > wet weather [1/1]; needle-like stitches in fingertips [1*]. Weakness upper
limbs, >
Sleep
Dreams
Of humiliation [2].
Generals
Bathing affected part > [3], cold bathing > [2], bathing face > [2].
Food
Aversion: [1]: Cooked food; fat; fish; garlic; meat; onions; smoking.
Desire: [3]: Alcohol. [1]: Beer; fruit; milk; nuts; salads [*]; sour [*]; tobacco;
vinegar.
Better: [2]: Cold drinks [during heat]; cold water; vinegar. [1]: Warm food.
Aurum metallicum
Aur.
[English proverb]
Signs
Aurum metallicum. Gold.
CLASSIFICATION This dense, 'butter' yellow precious metal was probably the
first pure metal known to man. Gold and silver are two of the least chemically
reactive of the transition elements. Both are found in nature in the free state.
Silver and copper have the same crystal structure as gold - a face-centred cubic
structure. Moreover, the size of the atoms of gold and silver is nearly identical.
"Thus, during the process of crystallization, some silver atoms can take the place
of gold atoms without disrupting the structure. In fact, silver and gold atoms can
substitute for each other in any proportion, so that it is possible to find natural
alloys of silver and gold in which the amounts of the two metals are
approximately equal. The reason for the small amount of copper generally found
in natural gold is the smaller size of the copper atom, which makes it a poor 'fit'
for gold, although the crystal structure of the two metals is the same."1 All three
fall in group 11 of the periodic table. Lead [plumbum] lies in group 14, but
crystallizes with the same structure as the elements of group 11. Mercury is also
included in this so-called Gold Group. The symmetry of this group is the highest
symmetry allowed in a three dimensional system.
OCCURRENCE Minerals of gold, silver and copper are all found in relatively
large concentrations in the earth's crust. The occurrence of gold in the earth's
crust is 0.005
parts per million. Gold is usually found in nature in a comparatively pure form.
There are very few true gold ores because gold doesn't readily react to or
combine with other elements, which is shown also by the fact that gold is the
least reactive metal at interfaces with gas or liquid. It forms a major part of only
a few rare minerals, such as nagyagite, calaverite, sylvanite and krennerite. In a
few other minerals it is found as little more than a trace, or it is alloyed to a
small extent with other metals such as silver, copper or lead. It occurs in minute
quantities in all igneous rocks and in seawater. One of the only elements that
gold can easily bond with is tellurium. Gold obviously has an affinity for
tellurium.
DISTRIBUTION Of the world's known mineral reserves of gold ore, 50 per cent
is found in South Africa, and most of the rest is divided among Russia, Canada,
Australia, Brazil, and the United States. "Paradoxically, although gold is rare and
precious, it is widely prevalent. ... Rich gold deposits are to be found on all
continents. A close look at the deposits shows that they frequently lie in
uninhabited places, even in deserts. Africa, the continent with the largest deserts
on earth, the lion continent, is at the same time the richest in gold. But Africa is
also the continent that, in its climatic structure, most clearly shows the effects of
the sun. ... It may be stated further that those areas that became solid land early
in geologic history show rich gold deposits. In addition to South Africa, this
means Australia, India, Canada, and Scandinavia. ... Among the deeds and
sufferings, blessings and curses of the precious metal, it once formed the
implements and images of the gods; later, it was a noble material for the artist;
now it is an anonymous factor in the abstract world of economic thinking. But
are these two realms not also connected with the sun? The one, forever life-
engendering, making the plant forms into images of constantly renewed life; and
the other, in which all life ceases, having its image in the desert? The creative
and the demonic - both pertain to the sun as well as to gold."2
PROPERTIES Gold has unique qualities. While the rocks enclosing the quartz
veins are slowly altered by chemical processes and the veins themselves are
fragmented by mechanical weathering, gold remains unchanged. It is virtually
indestructible, and yet the most malleable, ductile and sectile of metals; it can be
pounded into other shapes, stretched into a wire, cut into slices [without
breaking], carved, buffed to a glowing polish, heated repeatedly without
discolouring, joined to itself and other metals by hard soldering without the use
of fluxes, and hammered into the thinnest sheet of any metal
[gold leaf]. "Gold reveals the strongest forces of cohesion and the highest
capacity of extension. More than any other substance gold can change from a
three-dimensional body to a flat, two-dimensional condition without
crumbling."4 Moreover, it is a good conductor of heat and electricity. Because of
its high electrical conductivity and inertness, the largest industrial use of gold is
in the electric and electronics industry for plating contacts, terminals, printed
circuits, and semiconductor systems.
Despite these very low intakes, gold is present in all human tissue and blood.
Typical values are [in ng per g fresh weight]: heart 0.0338; lung 0.72-1.6; brain
grey matter 0.024; brain white matter 0.04; cerebrospinal fluid 0.0062; white
blood 0.055; blood serum 0.08. Normal hair values range from 0.036 to 0.15
mcg per g. Cancer patients were found to have elevated hair gold levels of 1.5
mcg per g. Pregnancy apparently increases gold in blood with levels of 13 ng per
ml compared to 3.4 ng per ml in non-pregnant women. When gold is given by
injection, most of it appears in the urine but some is excreted in the faeces."5
In small doses, the Salts of Gold promote appetite and digestion, stimulate the
cerebral functions, and produce a marked mental exhilaration, a sense of well-
being. Continued, they induce aphrodisiac effects in both sexes, and in women
an increase of the menstrual discharge. Full doses cause nausea and vomiting,
glandular irritation, salivation without loosened teeth or sore gums, increased
urine, sweats, and fever [the auric fever]; nutrition is impaired, and rapid waste
set up. Toxic doses produce effects similar to those from Corrosive Sublimate,
violent gastro-enteritis, mental disturbance, convulsions, priapism, trembling,
paralysis."6
stomatitis,
albuminuria
with
or
without
nephrotic
syndrome,
GOLD STANDARD Gold has always been considered one of the spoils of war
or plunder, and much of the precious metals in existence during early time
passed from one conqueror to another. "The gold standard was first put into
operation in Great Britain in 1821. Prior to this time silver had been the principal
world monetary metal; gold had long been used intermittently for coinage in one
or another country, but never as the single reference metal, or standard, to which
all other forms of money were coordinated or adjusted. For the next 50 years a
bimetallic regime of gold and silver was used outside Great Britain, but in the
1870s a monometallic gold standard was adopted by Germany, France, and the
United States, with many other countries following suit. This shift occurred
because recent gold discoveries in western North America had made gold more
plentiful. ... The reign of the full gold standard was short, lasting only from the
1870s to the outbreak of World War I. That war saw recourse to inconvertible
paper money or to restrictions on gold export in nearly every country. By 1928,
however, the gold standard had been virtually re-established, although, because
of the relative scarcity of gold, most nations adopted a gold-exchange standard,
in which they supplemented their central-bank gold reserves with currencies
[U.S. dollars and British pounds] that were convertible into gold at a stable rate
of exchange. The gold-exchange standard collapsed again during the Great
Depression of the 1930s, however, and by 1937 not a single country remained on
the full gold standard. ... From 1971 the international monetary system is based
on the dollar and other paper currencies. Gold's official role in world exchange
was at an end."7
COLOURS Gold is full of colours. Yellow in its metallic state, gold turns into a
deep violet or purple powder when prepared by volatilization or precipitation
methods.
Colloidal gold in a dilution of 1 to 100 million still makes water visibly purple.
Red stained glass in cathedral windows owes its colour to the addition of a trace
of gold when the glass was poured. Gold nuggets of the size of a match head can
be beaten into a transparent bluish- green leaf of 50 square metres.
TALES The legendary Phrygian king Midas was the first who fell victim to the
lure of gold. Midas requested of the gods that everything he touched might be
turned to gold.
The wish was fulfilled, but when his food also became gold the moment he
touched it, he realized what a terrible gift he had asked for. Horrified by the
prospect of death and starvation, he prayed to the gods to take their favour back.
He was then ordered to bathe in the river Pactolus, where pure water washed
away the awful gift. Ever since the river rolled over golden sands. Though
credited with the Golden Touch, king Midas was inept to pass judgement. He
was appointed to judge a musical contest between Apollo, the god of music and
poetry, and the satyr Pan. His judgement in favour of Pan enraged Apollo to the
extent that he gave the king a pair of donkey's ears. Midas succumbed to the
attractions of sensual pleasure [the sound of Pan's pipes] rather than seeking the
harmony of the spirit and the empire of the soul [Apollo's music of the temple of
Delphi]. The
donkey is linked with gold and with music. Or, as the saying goes, 'There is no
earthly gate, but an ass laden with gold can enter.' Ass-ears were once a sign of
divine power, as is shown in the cult of Set, the ass-headed Egyptian deity who
was the ruler of the pantheon. The brothers Grimm relate in The Donkey the
story of a King and a Queen who were rich and had everything they wanted, but
no children. The Queen lamented over this day and night, so that God at last
granted her wish. A child was born, but it was a little donkey instead of a human
child. Growing bigger, the donkey took especial pleasure in music and
developed into a skilled lute-player. Although distressed by his donkey's form,
he insisted on his nobleness and behaved in accordance with it. He married the
beautiful daughter of an old King and threw off his ass's skin during the wedding
night, revealing himself as a handsome royal youth. He lived happily ever after
the lost vessel of spiritual renewal and fulfilment. Carl Jung referred to gold as
the symbolic end product of inner alchemical transformation. Passage through
the chakras is a process of increasing refinement, which unites light and shadow,
male and female, spirit and matter, all in the crucible of the body and psyche.
The pot of gold is indeed the elusive philosopher's stone which lures us into the
heroic journey of transformation."11
•• [2] Molin - self-experimentation; 4th dil., beginning with 1-drop doses and
duplicating daily [1, 2, 4, 8, 16, etc.] until positive effects were obtained; then
allowing these to subside, and proceeding in like manner again and again. Molin
summarizes the effects on himself of metallic gold as follows: "Desire for
solitude; restlessness; loss of memory; religious exaltation; ennui; causeless
grief, and frequent weeping; impatience and anger; disgust for life and tendency
to suicide. Sleeplessness or continual sleepiness; nocturnal agitation; unpleasant
and fatiguing dreams."12
foliatum, 1x trit., dry on the tongue,' repeated dose on days 4 and 8 of proving.
[1] Hurlbut, Minerals and Man. [2] Pelikan, The Secrets of Metals. [3]
Encyclopaedia Britannica. [4] Pelikan, ibid. [5] Mervyn, Vitamins and Minerals.
[6] Potter, A Compend of Materia Medica. [7] Encyclopaedia Britannica. [8]
Husain, The Goddess. [9] Chevalier and Gheerbrant, Dictionary of Symbols.
[10] Cirlot, A Dictionary of Symbols. [11]
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: Emotions [depressing; disordered affections]. Mental exertion. Cold.
Night
Better: Cool, open air. Cold bathing. Becoming warm. Walking. Warmth [during
pains].
Rest.
Main symptoms
SUICIDAL DISPOSITION.
• "Melancholy; he imagines he is not fitted for the world, he therefore longs for
death, of which he thinks with the most intense delight." [Hahnemann]
SUICIDAL from PAINS [out of despair] - throwing himself from a height, from
a window.
• "Excessively disposed to take offence; even the least thing seeming offensive
to him, affecting him deeply and caused resentment."
• "Peevish and irascible; the least contradiction excites him to the greatest
anger."
[Hahnemann]
c In a study of cardiac catheterization, it was found "that those with the most
blockage of their coronary arteries were the people who showed the most
potential for hostility and also kept their anger in. People whose hostility was
easily and frequently aroused, but who then withheld expression of anger or
irritation against others, even when such expression would be appropriate or
deserved, were the most likely to have advanced coronary artery disease. ...
Hostility tears the social fabric; a move towards isolation of the person so
thinking. Excessive self-involvement may underlie hostility. If a person is very
self-involved and thinks of himself or herself as better than others in many ways,
this person is vulnerable to anyone who confronts such claims or who looks
better than he. To the self-involved, many events are the cause for a threat: the
success of a friend, the turn of the stock market, the prospects for one's company,
the insurance crisis, the pension crisis, the art crisis, the crisis crisis. ... Self-
involved individuals had the strongest emotional and physical reactions to
challenge, they expressed anger more intensely, and had much higher blood
pressure, again at levels that would qualify for hypertension." In a study of "self-
involvement in 156 male patients who were hospitalized to undergo a coronary
angiogram ... the more self-involved patients were more likely to have had a
heart attack and were also more depressed and anxious. ... So the social view
highlights two reactions that can damage the heart: separating oneself from
others by acting in a hostile way or by becoming self-centred."1
• "He is driven to constant activity, and is sorry for his inaction, although he
cannot do anything." [Hahnemann]
• "In a study of 229 men from three countries [Finland, Sweden, and the United
States]
who had recently survived a myocardial infarction, it was found that common
background factors included heavy work responsibility, time urgency coupled
with hostility when slowed by others, and dissatisfaction with the achievement
of life goals."2
• "Some years ago a gentleman came to me in deep distress. Said he, 'My brain is
softening; I am losing my mind, going crazy, becoming hopelessly imbecile, or
something of that sort, I hardly know what.' He was the picture of despair; and I
really thought from his appearance that something serious was the matter. 'I
never thought a man could be so utterly desolate and melancholy,' he continued,
'I feel like putting an end to the whole business by jumping into the river, or
blowing out my brains, that is, if I have any left.' And then my visitor went on to
tell me in still stronger language how imbecile he seemed to have become.
Everything irritated him; he seemed to have as little control over himself as a
child. Ambition and energy were utterly gone, trifling annoyances affected him
even to tears. Memory was impaired, and he was unfitted for business. A little
inquiry brought out the fact that he was suffering from secondary symptoms of
syphilis, for which he had repaired to a popular health resort, and was even now
taking medicine which his physician there had described. He feared that the
disease had not been eradicated, and fancied that it had attacked the throat and
bones of the nose, as he had a terribly offensive watery discharge from nostrils
and posterior nares, and gnawing pains in bridge of nose, all of which he said
came on during the preceding three weeks. I asked to see the medicine he was
taking. He pulled out a box of pills, and remarked upon their expensive
character, a chief ingredient being gold. I examined one, and with the naked eye
small particles of shining gold-leaf could be readily seen. A crude trituration of
Aurum metallicum had been made up into pill form, and the patient had already
taken about two dozen of them in the course of three weeks. ... He was directed
to stop the pills; and in a fortnight the whole train of distressing symptoms,
melancholy, terrible forebodings, thoughts of suicide, headache, catarrh, nervous
prostration, loss of appetite, etc., had disappeared." [Morse, cited in Hughes]
FORSAKEN FEELING.
• "He believes that he has lost the love of others, and this mortifies him even to
tears."
[Hahnemann]
• "They eventually feel as if they have completely failed in life, that they are
taking others into believing they are capable, worthwhile individuals. They feel
that they do not deserve their status, wealth and responsibilities. They begin to
feel that they have no right to live, and that they are literally incapable of
maintaining their occupations or relationships. They put the blame for
everything on themselves." [Vithoulkas]
c "If individuals are ambitious, competitive, or time urgent for purely selfish
reasons, they may be at greater risk than if they are ambitious or competitive to
serve others or higher ideals. ... The latter are those who are interested in
maintaining a stable connection with the larger 'organism' of humanity as a
whole. This perspective would also explain why those people who can look
outward at others, at a pet, at a plant, or at acts of selflessness, as in the study of
the immune system changes of people looking at Mother Theresa, might be
responding to a deeper need within our brains than we and they know about. If
the cardiovascular system is a mirror of the mind, people who are excessively
self-centred are doing themselves harm. The 'me decade' of the 1970s may have
backfired. Self-centred, hostile people set themselves apart from the world rather
than seeing themselves as a part of it. They are cut off from the normal give-and-
take of social intercourse, and the result may well break their hearts."3
[Bailey]
Compare: "The Apollo archetype favours thinking over feeling, distance over
closeness, objective assessment over subjective intuition. ... He knows where he
wants to go, what he wants to accomplish, that he wants to win. He is not a
dreamer. His targets are realistic ones that will require effort. They are usually
goals that are visible to others.
... Apollo qualities favour achieving recognition. ... It is not unusual for an
Apollo boy to be a winner, and be used to receiving love and approval for what
he does. ... When the Apollo man gets as far as he [and the archetype] can take
him, and it is not what he aimed at, work no longer serves as the source of
gratification it always was before, and instead becomes a problem. When the
Apollo man gets above his level of competence, and is no longer the bright star,
trouble occurs. He is unprepared to fail or falter. He has put his energy into his
work, sacrificed development of other interests, and has expected his family to
also defer their needs to his career. There may be no ready-made alternatives for
him to fall back on to give him meaning. ... The woman in his life may decide
that theirs is a brother-sister relationship and may reject him as a lover, either
directly or by becoming attracted to someone else. They look up and value
relationships with older men in authority, and often have mentors who help
advance their careers. ... The Apollo man prefers to withdraw and think
abstractly about ideas, and about the form of things from a distance, rather than
concern himself with the realm of feeling, which is least innately present and
most in need of developing. Innate characteristics and culture, as well as his
family of origin, shape his personality. The intellectual and unemotional Apollo
man lives in a patriarchal culture that doesn't expect men to be nurturing,
disapproves of men expressing vulnerable feelings, encouraging competition,
and rewards acquiring power.
... When he follows his heart, the Apollo man becomes human; he knows he is
fallible and vulnerable, but can step beyond the boundaries of his 'known'
[rational] world. He can take risks. He gives up the emotional distance that both
protected him and kept him isolated."4
G Heaviness.
SURGING of blood to the head with clearly visible carotids and temporal
arteries; flushes easily.
In this respect Aurum is, in general, more suitable for the larger arteries and
those of the upper part of the body while Plumbum involves the arterioles
especially of the kidneys
Esp. called for when want of children results in depression of spirits. [Allen]
G < NIGHT.
> EVENING.
• "This symptom has been observed many times since Hahnemann; among
others it occasioned the unbelieving student Hering to take gold trituration. A
few days later he was compelled to avoid the room because he had a frightfully
swollen red nose."7
[1] Ornstein and Sobel, The Healing Brain. [2] Coleman, Abnormal Psychology
and Modern Life. [3] Ornstein and Sobel, ibid. [4] Bolen, Gods In Everyman. [5]
Gutman, BHJ 1962, Vol. 51. [6-7] Leeser, Textbook of Hom. MM, Inorganic
Medicinal Substances.
Rubrics
Mind
Anger at absent persons while thinking of them [2]; sudden anger alternating
with
cheerfulness [2]. Anxiety > eating [1], from pressure on chest [1], about
salvation [3].
Colours, desire for red [1]. Contemptuous of self [2]. Desire to lie down in
darkness and not be talked to [1]. Delusions, has lost affection of friends [2], his
friends have lost all confidence in him [1], everything will fail [2], he grew
larger and longer [1], whole body is hollow [1], he has neglected his duty and
deserves reproach [2/1], he is unfit for the world [2]. Dictatorial [1]. Egotism [1].
Hurry in movements, cannot do things fast enough
[1], in occupation, desire to do several things at once [1]. Loquacity at night [2],
asks one question after another [1]. Sadness alternating with physical energy [2],
< white colours
Head
Congestion during anxiety [1]. Pulsating when bending head backward [1].
Eye
Discolouration, redness of lids before menses [1/1]. Eye symptoms > moonlight
[2/1].
Vision
Colours before the eyes, blue [2]; yellow crescent-shaped bodies floating
obliquely upward [2/1]. Dim, > looking steadily [2]. Physical exertion > vision
[2]. Hemiopia, horizontal [2], lower half lost [2], upper half lost [3], vertical [1].
Objects seem small [2].
Nose
Smell acute, everything smells too strong [1/1]. Sneezing in sunshine [1].
Teeth
Throat
Bladder
Female
Heat vagina during menses [1/1]. Sexual desire increased, rousing her at night
[1; Med.].
Chest
Anxiety in region of heart > moving about [2]. Sensation as if heart were loose
[1].
Crushing pain behind sternum on ascending [3]. Palpitation when lying on back
[1].
Swelling of axillary glands before menses [1]. Sensation as if heart were turning
around
[1].
Limbs
Sensation as if bandaged, knees [3], while sitting [1], while walking [2].
Involuntary motion when thinking of movements [1/1].
Sleep
Heat
Generals
Food
Desire: [2]: Alcohol; bread; coffee; delicacies; indigestible things; milk; rich
food. [1]: Bread, dry; cold drinks; meat; spicy; stimulants.
Bambusa arundinacea
Bamb-a.
[Hal Borland]
Signs
N.O. Graminae.
species of grasses in 657 genera. Grasses generally have long narrow parallel-
veined leaves, a round hollow stem, and inconspicuous flowers in a terminal
panicle, spike, or raceme. Grasses are the dominant vegetation in savannahs,
prairies, and steppes.
Economically they are the most important family of plants as they contain all the
cereals, which are man's staple diet. They are also widely planted for pasture and
fodder.
Because of the light conditions they only have branches on the upper portions. A
single bamboo plant can give rise to a stand - even a forest - of plants
constituting a single, physically connected entity. The stems in a grove are all
connected by a network of rhizomes, and the grove acts more like a single plant
than many separate ones. A healthy, uncontained grove may double its root area
every year. The rhizomes of non-invasive,
'clumping' bamboos, on the other hand, grow only several inches a year.
Clumping bamboos are commonly tropical or subtropical. They usually have
many branches at each node with one or two prominent. Native to tropical and
subtropical to mild temperate regions, bamboos have their heaviest concentration
and largest number of species in East and Southeast Asia.
HABITAT Bamboos need full sun to partial shade. They like lots of water, but
not wet feet; hence they prefer fast-draining soils.
bamboo species - all around the world at the same time! - can be catastrophic,
disrupting ecologies with bird and rodent population explosions.
cm thick, the shoot, when it pushes through the soil, is also 30 cm thick. These
shoots develop underground in autumn and emerge in spring."2 Just like wheat
germ and nuts, the growing shoots of bamboo are high in protein, whereas the
adult cells are rich in sugars and minerals. The growth of the shoots is so
vigorous at its early stage that it may produce a distinct noise when piercing its
way through the culm-covering sheet. The ancient Chinese used the incredibly
fast growth of the culm for the punishment of criminals. Tied to the culm, the
victim's body was pulled apart by the unstoppable 'lifting-power' of the bamboo.
The mechanism for the timing of flowering and dying is a phenomenon not yet
understood."3
USES "Bamboos are used for a great variety of purposes, esp. in East and
Southeast Asia. The seeds are eaten as grain, and the cooked young shoots of
some bamboos are eaten as vegetables, esp. in Chinese cuisines. The raw leaves
are a useful fodder for livestock. The pulped fibres of several bamboo species,
esp. Dendrocalamus strictus and Bambusa arundinacea, are used to make fine-
quality paper. The jointed stems of bamboo have perhaps the most numerous
uses; the largest stems supply planks for houses and rafts, while both large and
small stems are lashed together to form the scaffoldings used on building-
construction sites. The stems are also split up to make buckets and pipes or are
used to make furniture, walking sticks, fishing poles, garden stakes, and other
utensils. Some species of bamboo are used as ornamentals in landscape gardens.
The fine-grained silica produced in the joints of bamboo stems has been used as
a medicine in the Orient for centuries under the name tabasheer."4 Tabasheer, or
bamboo sugar, is a product of Melocanna baccifera, Muli Bamboo. It is
extremely rich in silica [up to 99%], and contains, in addition, traces of iron,
calcium, and aluminium. Muli Bamboo has edible shoots and fruits the size and
shape of pears; the fruits are eaten by people and domestic and wild animals.
NAME The name Bambusa is the latinized version of the Malayan vernacular
name. The specific name arundinacea derives from the Latin arundo, a reed, in
allusion to its reed-
like appearance.
SILICON The grass family in general, and Rice, Corn and Bamboo in particular,
is remarkably rich in silicon dioxide. Silicon may comprise 1 to 2 per cent of the
dry matter of grasses, yet experiments have generally failed to demonstrate that
silicon is essential for most other plants. It seems to be particularly beneficial to
grasses, where it accumulates in the cell walls, esp. of epidermal cells, and
possibly plays a role in fending off fungal infections or preventing lodging [the
condition in which stems are bent over by heavy winds or rain]. 5
POLLINOSIS Exposure to plants of the grass family can result in irritant and
allergic contact dermatitis, contact urticaria, hay fever, and hay asthma. Millets,
rice and bamboo have spicules which can produce urticarial papules in workers
handling crops or litter straw. The wind-blown pollen of a number of species
may be responsible for pollinosis
The effect was better than that of the hypoglycaemic agent tolbutamide. 6
It is warp and woof of a carefully interwoven nature. For the ancient Chinese for
whom Tao, Buddha and Confucius formed the boundaries of actuality, a
measured, meaningful life was defined and created by the relationship with
bamboo. The Chinese said, believed and knew that it began with bamboo and
ended with bamboo. The study of anything meaningful in life began with
familiarity and ended with mastery. ... The fury of atomic energy unleashed at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki only set the bamboo back a little. It was among the first
of plants to reappear. ... In North America, back when the people that were here
were the only people here, great expanses of bamboo spread across the south
eastern regions, becoming the famous 'Breaks' of many legends passed down
through Seminole, Cherokee and myriad other names which the people called
themselves before those others came from across the seas and cut down the
Breaks."7
Severing the umbilical cord of a newborn baby with a bamboo knife is thought
to bring luck for the rest of one's life. For some [Chinese] Masters, the rustle of
bamboos was the signal of enlightenment. Painting bamboo was a spiritual
exercise rather than mere art.
"Bamboo was used to drive off evil influences, less from any symbolic cause
than from the fact that the wood goes off with a sharp crack when placed on the
fire. The bamboo clump, the classic barrier, was often depicted as 'the jungle of
sinners' through which the tiger, symbol of the spiritual force of Buddhism,
alone can thread is way. ... The Bamum and Bamileke have a chip of bamboo
which they call a guis [laugh] which is their symbol of happiness, the unadorned
happiness of life free from illness and care."8 'Bamboo mentality' reflects a
mentality, highly appreciated in Japan, in which one gives in but ultimately
emerges from all troubles unbroken. As a variant of the iron curtain, the
Pharmacol. 1990, 21 [5]. [7] Milo G. Clark, How to be with Bamboo; American
Bamboo Society. [8] Schuster, Bamboo: Homoeopathic proving of Bambusa
arundinacea.
Affinity
Spine; CERVICAL REGION. Female organs. Nose. * Right side. Left side.
Modalities
Worse: COLD; draft of air. After parturition. Menses [before; at beginning of;
during].
Main symptoms
• "It was noticeable that al the people who required bamboo as a remedy
constantly supported themselves somewhere with their bodies, for instance
resting their head on their hands, arms on the table, the back firmly against the
back of the chair."1
Ailments caused by a combination of stress at work, emotional stress, loss of
[financial or other] support or help, move to a new place due to divorce or
career.
• "At present 'everything gets on her nerves', she is irritable and 'stressed';
sometimes 'she would gladly abandon her child' [laughs inappropriately]. But
she was irritable during pregnancy, too. The young woman feels 'the whole
situation is too demanding for her.'
The child cries too much. She thinks a lot about all sorts of things ['worries about
everything']. The burden is too much for her."3
Desire to be free to do one's own things; to go back to the time before having
children and all the work involved in having a family.
G COLDNESS <.
G Perspiration.
Thirst at night.
G Wave-like sensation.
• Wave-like earache.
• Waves of nausea.
Throat as if swollen.
G Increased discharges.
P Nose.
• "With almost clinical certainty, Bamboo relieves a stiff neck even in 6c and12c
potencies. It should be tried for acute disk problems." [Schuster]
Rubrics
Mind
[1], everything will fail [1], has ruined his health [1], left and right side are not
the same
[1/1], of skin being very thin [1/1], everything is wrong [1]. Despair, everything
is controlled by destiny [1/1]; wants support [1/1]. Aversion to being disturbed
[1]. Fear of brain tumour [1], in a crowd [1], of her condition being observed [1],
lest he should say something wrong [1], of losing self-control [1]. Forsaken
feeling at night, with weeping
[1]. Feeling of helplessness [2]. Impatience with children [1]. Irritability toward
children
[1], before menses [1], from reproaches [1], when spoken to [1]. Laughing;
never laughs
[1]; tendency to silly laughter [1]. Cannot bear to be looked at [1]. Pities herself
from pain [1]. Sensitive to noise of birds [1/1]. Slowness in morning on waking
[1]. Fritters away his time [1]; time passes too quickly [1]. Weeping from
exhaustion [1], during pains [1]. Yielding disposition [1].
Vertigo
As if stepping into a hole [1/1]. Objects seem to move [1]. As if floor is moving
in waves
[1/1]; waves of dizziness from left to right [1/1], from heels to occiput [1/1].
Head
Pain, compelling to close eyes [1], > cold applications [1], with diarrhoea [1],
with pain in cervical region [1], > rubbing [1].
Vision
Nose
Obstruction, wakes him at night [1], blowing nose doesn't > [1], during headache
[1], while lying on abdomen [1/1], sitting > [1/1]. Sneezing in cold air [1], when
walking in open air [1].
Face
Stomach
Heartburn after excitement [1/1], thinking of sweets < [1/1]. Nausea from odours
[1]; in waves [1/1]. Thirst for large quantities [1].
Urine
Odour like spoiled eggs [1]. Profuse, increased, with thirstlessness [1].
Female
Menses, in gushes [1]; profuse, daytime [1], profuse, at night [1]. Sexual desire
increased
[1], in morning in bed [1], from touch [1]; violent, driving her to masturbation
[1].
Chest
Back
Pain, > external heat [3]; cervical region, < motion of head [1]; lumbar region, at
night in bed [1], at night when lying on left side [1], < lying on back [1], before
menses [1], at beginning of menses [1]; coccyx, after a fall [2]. Stiffness in
morning on waking [1], when cold [1], > motion [1], like a stick [1]; cervical
region, from cold [1], during headache [1], before and during menses [1], from
change of weather [1], from stormy, wet weather [1].
Limbs
Awkwardness, hands, drops things [1], lower limbs, knocks against things [1].
Sensation of heat in feet, but cold to the touch [1].
Sleep
Dreams
Amorous, with orgasm [1/1]. Body parts falling out [1]. Children; child is lost in
crowd
[1/1], is neglecting her child [1/1]. Giants [1]. Journey to China [1/1]. Money
[1]. Huge monuments [1/1]. Murder [1]. Robbers [1]. Things are bigger and
overpowering [1/1].
Wedding has to be repeated since only one half of the body has been married
[1/1].
Perspiration
After excitement [1]. Odour, like fresh coffee [1/1], sweetish [1]. Profuse, at
beginning of menses [1], during menses < [1].
Food
Aversion: [1]: Beer; cigarette smoke; coffee; fat; hot food; meat; mushrooms.
Desire: [1]: Alcohol; cake; cheese; chocolate; coffee; cold water; fruit juice;
quark; refreshing; salt; sour; spicy; sweets; tobacco; wine.
Worse: [1]: Alcohol [= heartburn]; beer [= heartburn, stomach pain]; cold drinks
[=
heartburn, flatulence].
Baryta carbonica
Bar-c.
[Mark Twain]
Signs
CLASSIFICATION Barium, from Gr. barys, heavy, was distinguished from lime
by the Swedish chemist Karl Scheele in 1774. Lavoisier included "baryte or
barote" in 1789 in his list of "simple substances" as "Terre pesante" [heavy
earth]. The English scientist Sir Humphrey Davy first isolated the element in
1808. It is found only in combination with other elements, mainly with sulphate
[barite] and carbonate [witherite]. It belongs to group 2 [formerly group IIA] of
the periodic table, called the alkaline earth group, and resembles calcium
chemically. It is a soft metal with a silvery white lustre [like lead]
when pure. Because it very easily oxidizes [turning black or greyish] it should be
kept under petroleum or other oxygen-free liquids to exclude air. Water or
alcohol decomposes barium. Barium minerals are dense, but barium itself is
comparatively light.
USES Alloys of barium with aluminium [or magnesium] are used as getters in
electron tubes [e.g. in television sets, computer monitors, X-ray tubes], where
they perfect the vacuum by combining with the last traces of various gases, and
thus prolong the life of the device. The screen of audio-visual equipment
[television, computer, etc.] contains 4
to 10% barium carbonate to absorb roentgen rays arising in the electron tube. To
achieve the same effect in colour televisions and colour [computer] monitors, the
barium is combined with the even more active strontium. Barium protects by
immobilizing and shielding. An alloy of barium with nickel is used in spark
plugs and engine rod bearings.
ENVIRONMENT Barium gets into the air during the mining, refining and
production of barium compounds, and from the burning of coal and oil. Barium
compounds that dissolve easily are found in lakes, rivers, and streams. Fish and
aquatic organisms accumulate barium. Most soils contain low levels of barium.
Barium entering the body through the lungs seems to enter the bloodstream very
easily, while it doesn't seem to enter the bloodstream as well from the stomach or
intestines.
PHYSIOLOGY Seaweed, fish, and Brazil nuts contain the highest amounts of
barium in foodstuff. Barium performs no known essential function in man, yet
the average individual contains 22 mg of the mineral, most of which is in the
bones. "In heart disease there is a decrease in barium levels in blood and serum
with an increase in the injured heart muscle. Other disorders that decrease blood
barium levels are duodenal ulcer, chronic cholecystitis, cancer of the liver and
liver cirrhosis. Barium is poorly absorbed
from conventional diets and little is retained in the body. A study of English diets
found a daily intake between 400 and 900 mcg per day; in the USA intakes are
similar at 750 mcg per day. Various other studies put the mean intake in general
at 510 mcg per day. Barium levels in foodstuffs are associated usually with those
of calcium and strontium.
Vegetables and fruit can provide between 3 and 80 mcg per g dry weight but the
richest sources by far are nuts. Brazil nuts contain between 700 and 3200 mcg
per g but this was not accompanied by unusual levels of strontium."5
The latter always forms twins. Witherite effervesces in dilute HCl solutions. It
also fluoresces light blue under both long and short-wave UV light and is
phosphorescent under short-wave UV light. Notable occurrences include Cave-
in-rock, Rosiclare, Illinois, USA; Alston Moor, Cumberland and Durham,
England; Thunder Bay area, Ontario, Canada, and Germany. 6 It is used in
casehardening steel and in refining sugar.
EXPERIMENTS "In the early part of the last century a series of very interesting
experiments designed to demonstrate the effects produced upon a sensitive
subject by the touch of precious stones and minerals, were made in the case of
the 'Seeress of Prevorst', Frederike Hauffe [b. 1801], a woman believed to
possess remarkable clairvoyant powers.
When pieces of granite, porphyry, or flint were placed in her hand, she was not
affected in any way. The finest qualities of fluorspar, on the other hand, had a
marked action, relaxing the muscles, causing diarrhoea, and producing a sour
taste in the mouth; occasionally a somnambulistic state was induced. This latter
condition was also produced by Iceland spar and by the sapphire. While the
substances so far noted depressed the vital energy, sulphate of barium stimulated
the muscles, produced an agreeable warmth of the body, and made the subject
feel as though she could fly through the air. If the application of this material
was long continued, the pleasurable sensation found expression in laughter. In
the case of witherite, a carbonate of barium, this effect was produced to an even
greater degree, for if water in which this mineral had been dipped were
swallowed, spasms of laughter resulted."7
GEMSTONE Barium minerals of gemstone quality are extremely rare. The only
one known is benitoite. Benitoite - barium titanium silicate - was discovered at
the beginning of the 20th century at San Benito, California. It has a unique
crystal structure, unlike any other known mineral. It is called "stone of heaven"
because of its sapphire blue colour. It is employed as a flirtation stone and as a
stone to increase love between women.
[1] Merckx Index. [2] Stedman's Medical Dictionary. [3] Christison, A Treatise
on Poisons. [4] Leeser, Textbook of Hom. MM, Inorganic Medicinal Substances.
[5]
Mervyn, Vitamins and Minerals. [6] Amethyst Galleries, Inc. [website] [7]
Kunz, The Curious Lore of Precious Stones.
Affinity
Lungs.
Modalities
on [painful part; left side]. Odours. After meals. Cold washing. Warm food. Sun
Comparisons
c CALCAREA CARBONICA
c SILICEA
"Silica individuals exhibit a corporeal and emotional fragility that is not seen in
Baryta carb. Baryta carb. people tend to form dependent relationships, while Sil.
individuals often find themselves in the role of the caretaker. Sil. individuals
may not express themselves openly and can appear timid in a group situation,
but on the inside they know exactly how they feel. Baryta carb. people are truly
confused about their own feelings and rarely form fully realized opinions."2
c PULSATILLA
"Pulsatilla people can be flexible, spontaneous, and lively. They can be charming
and emotionally expressive. Baryta people, on the other hand, have not
developed agility in social settings. They can appear stiff and uncomfortable and
are greatly stifled by their fear of people, men, and crowds. Pulsatilla people can
act childlike in a delightful and engaging way; Baryta people more closely
resemble a child who is a painfully shy and awkward wallflower."3
c BUFO
<. - Black spots before the eyes. - Exertion of vision <. - Epistaxis from blowing
nose. -
* Beryllium and Radium are excluded because both are [chemically] atypical for
group 2. Beryllium is closer related to Aluminium than to the alkaline-earth
metals; Radium should be considered in connection with other radioactive
elements such as Uranium and Plutonium.
Main symptoms
c Old people - often resulting from CVA - lose their memory, start to act
thoughtlessly and foolishly.
Simple-mindedness.
• "She suspected, that when walking in the street, men found fault with her, and
judged her amiss, which made her anxious, so that she dared not look up, she
looked at nobody, and perspired all over." [Hahnemann]
M Feeling of security in the house.
[Older Bar-c. children always take their mother or someone else they trust with
them.
HOMESICKNESS.
• "During the day she determines to attend to some particular matter; but
scarcely has the time come, when she is sorry for it, and she knows not for
irresolution what to do or to leave undone."
• "In Baryta people the problem seems to lie in learning their jobs and taking on
responsibility and becoming useful. At this point they somehow seem blocked
and feel a tremendous sense of incapacity, a feeling of being handicapped, as if
he is unable to stand on his own feet [delusion legs are cut off]. It seems as if
there is a tremendous need to become much older than they are, to take up
responsibility in life very early. In a failed state they become imbecile, irresolute,
totally dependent, and childish. One can see the bashfulness of Baryta with its
infantile dependence; naivety; much anxiety, esp. brought on by loss of someone
who was supporting him. This is the failed side of the Baryta person. Most
Baryta I see, however, present quite the opposite picture. These are people who
take on responsibilities in life quite early and fulfil them, who support others in a
big way. They are conscientious and anxious for others [rubric: anxiety about
domestic affairs]. They are homemakers and develop signs of premature senility
- hypertension, early baldness. The responsibility along with their conscientious
nature can remind one of Aurum, which lies in the same period as Barium."
[Sankaran]
M Fearful.
• "Apart from shyness and fear of ridicule, other childish fears are commonly
seen, including fear of ghosts [in adults], fear of travelling far from home, and
fear of loud noises." [Bailey]
M Mental retardation after acute illnesses, like measles, typhoid, mumps, scarlet
fever, etc.
• "With the enlarged abdominal glands is linked the fact that the child stands
badly, there is often marked lordosis and a very prominent abdomen. With the
abdominal condition is the symptom that the Bar-c. child is usually worse after
eating - more inattentive, more irritable, more touchy, and very often more tired
after eating." [Borland]
• "A short walk fatigues him very much; he is obliged to sleep soon afterwards."
[Hahnemann]
But also: • "Walking in the open air is difficult for him; but the farther he walks
the easier it becomes." [Hahnemann]
This is connected with the "trembling through the whole body, in morning on
rising."
[Hahnemann]
Constantly weak and weary, wishes to lean on something, to sit or lie down and
still feels weak and weary.
G Aversion to fruit.
G Disturbed sleep.
Awakens at night with heat and bruised sensation in the soles of the feet, >
rising.
G Many symptoms arise when sitting, are better when standing, and disappear
on motion.
P Chronic enlarged tonsils with frequent inflammation [from the least cold] and
tendency to suppuration, together with swollen maxillary glands which get
inflamed easily.
Feeling of plug in throat. Can only swallow fluids. Empty swallowing <.
Rubrics
Mind
[1]. Aversion to amusement [2]. Antagonism with herself [1]. Anxiety evening in
bed, must uncover [2], while lying on left side [2]. Awkward from bashfulness
[2].
Carefulness [2]. Childish behaviour [3]. Delusions, body looks ugly [1], that she
is critized [2], being laughed at and mocked at [2], is going to be robbed [1],
body is smaller
[2], he cannot succeed, he does everything wrong [2], being watched [2]. Fear of
men [2], from noise at night [1], of people, in children [3], of railroad travel [3],
of strangers [2].
Desire to hide, child thinks all visitors laugh at it and hides behind furniture
[2/1].
Irresolution in acts [3], in projects [3], about trifles [3]. Aversion to laughing [1].
Loquacity during menses [2], during pregnancy [2/1]. Neglecting everything [1].
Desire to nibble [1; Mag-m.; Nat-c.]. Indisposition to play, in children [2].
Sensitive to noise, male voices [1]. Spoiled children [1]. Time passes too slowly
[1].
Vertigo
At night in bed [1]. From sneezing [1]. When walking along a narrow path [1/1],
when walking over a narrow bridge [1; Ferr.; Sulph.].
Head
Coldness, begins in head [2]. Pain, pressing, vertex, while standing in sun [2/1].
Shaking sensation while sneezing [1/1], on stamping [1/1].
Vision
Ear
Noises, > while lying [2], on sneezing [1], while walking fast [1/1].
Hearing
Acute, for male voices [1; Nit-ac.]. Impaired, and hypertrophy of tonsils [1].
Face
Pain, before menses [1], during menses [1], when thinking about it [1].
Throat
Stomach
Abdomen
Bladder
Chest
Palpitation > eructations [1; Carb-v.], sudden [2], from thinking of it [2].
Limbs
Sleep
Perspiration
Generals
Part of body becoming cold < [2]. Sensation of heat on waking [3]. Numbness of
part lain on [2].
Food
Worse: [3]: Alcohol. [2] Bread; hot drinks; warm food.[1]: Cold food; milk.
Belladonna
Bell.
The world is all the richer for having the devil in it, so long as we keep our foot
upon his neck.
[William James]
Signs
N.O. Solanaceae.
genera of herbs, shrubs and, occasionally, trees. Although occurring around the
world
[except in the arctic areas], the principle centre of the Nightshade family lies in
Andean South America. The plants in this family commonly produce poisonous
alkaloids. Due to high contents of tropane alkaloids, genera such as Atropa,
Datura, Hyoscyamus, Duboisia, Brugmansia, and Mandragora, have narcotic and
hallucinogenic properties.
LIGHT and HEAT Atropa plants grown in sunny and dry seasons yield the
highest percentage of alkaloids. Research has demonstrated that alkaloid
accumulation in Atropa plants growing in shade decreases six- to eightfold!
Studies of the effect of light on Atropa plants by a comparison of latitudes
differing in light conditions, for example, shows that the plant has an alkaloid
content of 1.3 per cent in the Crimean Peninsula and 0.4 to 0.6 per cent in
Leningrad. That warm weather favours the formation of alkaloids in Atropa, and
in Solanaceae in general, is also noticeable in the relationship between
temperature and alkaloid synthesis during germination. The higher the
temperature, the higher the alkaloid content in the plant. 3
NAME The plant in Chaucer's days was known as Dwale, which is derived from
the Scandinavian dvala, meaning doze or trance. Another possibility is that the
root of the word comes from the French word deuil, bereavement or grief,
referring to the plant's fatal properties. The Deadly Nightshade derives its Latin
generic name from Atropos, 'the inevitable', one of the Fates in Greek mythology
who cut the thread of life. Its specific name belladonna, 'beautiful lady', alludes
to mediaeval Italian ladies who dropped Atropa sap into their eyes to produce a
glassy stare and dilated pupils, which was believed to enhance their beauty. The
family name is possibly derived from L solanum, a solace. The origin of the
common name nightshade is not certain. The word may come from the Old
English word nihtscada - niht, night, and scada, shade - but more likely refers to
Nah-Skado, alluding to the Celto-Teutonic goddess Skadi, the 'destroyer', 'Queen
of the Shades' or 'Mother Death', active in the darkness of the night [nah]. A
variation of her
name, Skuld, was given to the third of the three Norns - the Scandinavian variant
of the Greek Fates - who cut the thread of life. She became the patroness of
witches, whose activities came to be called 'skulduggery' by the Christians. Her
name still subsists in words as schuld [Dutch and German] and skuld [Swedish],
meaning guilt, blame, debt.
There is no escape from Atropos or Skuld, just like there is no getting away from
the severe effects of the Deadly Nightshade. Atropos used the berries of the plant
to fulfil her duties. Or, as an old text put it: "Whoever receives this plant into his
body must die; the whole pharmacopoeia cannot help him."
USES "The use of belladonna can be traced back as far as written records go. In
ancient Mesopotamia the Sumerians reportedly used it in the treatment of a
number of illnesses thought to be caused by demons. Belladonna, along with
related plants such as henbane and mandrake, is mentioned in R. Campbell
Thompson's Assyrian Herbal as having many medicinal properties. It was used
to treat asthma, chronic coughing and spasms of the bladder. Although there are
sporadic reports of belladonna being used elsewhere in Asia and in North Africa
[e.g. as a sedative in traditional Nepalese medicine and as an aphrodisiac in
contemporary Morocco], it was in Europe that the plant became important in
magic and medicine. Belladonna juice is said to be one of the psychoactive
additives to the wine drunk at the Bacchanalian orgies. Its intoxicating powers
were seemingly a factor in inducing a state of frenzy in which the maenads
[priestesses of Bacchus] tore apart animals, men and children. ... The berries
may, perhaps, have contributed to the legendary battle frenzy of the Norse
warriors or berserkers. ... Belladonna had a number of uses in the folk life of
Europeans. In Eastern Europe its root was used in love magic.
When it was removed from the ground, offerings to the spirit of the plant would
be made.
Elsewhere the root was used as an amulet [as was the root of its cousin the
mandrake] for bringing good fortune in gaming and affairs of the heart. Central
European hunters would eat several of its berries to increase their alertness on
long hunting trips. ... Despite its considerable role in medicine, belladonna still
retains an aura reeking of murder, baneful sorcery, frenzied imagination and
dangerous but enchanting female sexuality."4
40/min] [6], shock [5]. Aconitum napellus [4]: tachyarrhythmia [2], AV-block
II/III [2].
Aesculus hippocastanum [3]: allergy [3], anaphylactic shock [2]. Hyoscyamus
niger [3]: anticholinergic syndrome [3]. Ricinus communis [3]: diarrhoea [3],
toxic megacolon [1].
Oenanthe crocata [2]: convulsions [1], lethal coma [1]. Taxus baccata [2]:
tachyarrhythmia [1], fatal asystole [1]. Further single cases of severe poisonings
were observed
with
Arum
maculatum,
Asarum
LEGENDS "According to old legends, the plant belongs to the devil who goes
about trimming and tending it in his leisure, and can only be diverted from its
care on one night in the year, that is on Walpurgis, when he is preparing for the
witches' sabbath. The apples of Sodom are held to be related to this plant, and
the name Belladonna is said to record an old superstition that at certain times it
takes the form of an enchantress of exceeding loveliness, whom it is dangerous
to look upon. ... Another derivation is founded on the old tradition that the
priests used to drink an infusion before they worshipped and invoked the aid of
Bellona, the Goddess of War."7
WITCHES The hallucinogenic Nightshade species from the Old World are
called the hexing herbs because they were used in the ointments or flying
potions of witches. Flying potions contained many substances, but typically
Atropa belladonna, Datura stramonium, Hyoscyamus niger, and Mandragora
officinarum. The plants were mixed with fat -
allegedly the fat of a dead child - to make an ointment, which was applied to
various parts of the body, in particular the genital region and the anus. Because
the genitals and anus have a rich supply of blood vessels, the hallucinogenic
compounds were readily absorbed, inducing a deep, dream-filled sleep with
dreams and visions of flying, dancing, and having sexual orgies with the devil.
Recent scientific experiments have confirmed that hallucinogenic tropanes do
indeed produce these types of dreams as well as dreams involving lycanthropy,
the transformation of humans into wolves or other predatory animals. 9
•• [3] Most of the symptoms come from 'old-school authorities' and concern
intoxications.
[1] Pfeiffer, Weeds and What They Tell. [2] Grieve, A Modern Herbal. [3]
Craker and Simon, Herbs, Spices, and Medicinal Plants. [4] Rudgley, The
Encyclopaedia of Psychoactive Substances. [5] Jaspersen-Schib et al., Serious
plant poisonings in Switzerland 1966-1994; Schweiz Med. Wochenschrift 1996,
126 [25]. [6] Potter, A Compend of Materia Medica. [7] Rudgley, ibid. [8]
Lewin, Phantastica. [9] Richardson, Flowering Plants: Magic in Bloom. [10]
Winslow, cited in Cooke, The Seven Sisters of Sleep.
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: Heat; of sun; when heated. Afternoon [3 p.m.]. DRAFTS: on head; hair
cut.
Hanging down. Company. Cold wind. Uncovering the head. Summer. Lying on
painful side. Looking at bright shining objects. After midnight. Bending head
forward, stooping.
Better: Light covering. Bending backward. Rest in bed. Dark room. Standing or
sitting erect. Warm room.
Main symptoms
M IMPRESSIONABILITY.
Who are lively and entertaining when well, but violent and delirious when sick.
• "In health: Highly intel igent, good, gentle, affectionate, docile, timid, but:
desire for independence until almost unapproachable. When ill: Insufferable,
irritable, rude, not amenable to discipline, accusing, complaining, wild yelling."1
• "Great irritability and acuteness of the senses; everything tastes and smells
stronger; the sense of touch, the sight, and the hearing are more acute, and the
humour is more mobile and the thought more active." [Hahnemann]
• "The sanguine temperament, the bold, daring, vigorous, will readily respond to
Bell."
[Wells]
• "The slight delirium that followed the action of the narcotic was of a strange
yet not unpleasant kind. I wished to be in constant motion, and it certainly
afforded me an infinite degree of satisfaction to be able to walk up and down.
The intellectual operations at times were very vivid. Thoughts came and went,
and ludicrous and fantastic spectacles were always uppermost in my mind. I was
conscious that my language and gesticulations were extravagant, yet I had
neither power nor will to do otherwise than I did; and notwithstanding my bodily
malaise, my mind was in a state of delightful exhilaration."
[Hughes]
• "The Bel adonna type looks usual y vigorous, but has a lymphatic hue like his
chronic counterpart Calcarea, and on a soil enriched with it the plant grows best.
He has a fine complexion, a delicate skin, easily flushed by the blood running to
the head, producing a
somewhat ruddy appearance. The expression is very lively, the eyes snap and
move quickly and are often of a brilliant darkness. The movements are quick and
decided, the gestures vivacious. Belladonna is very pleasant, gay, laughing,
talkative when well and has an abundance of ideas which come and go so
quickly that he cannot follow with the language, making the speech rapid and
hasty. The memory is very much alive. The sensitivity is very great; he is very
temperamental and loses easily his control. As a personality in the state of health
he is a typical Hypo-maniac. All this reaches an abnormal stage in disease. The
face becomes very red, the eyes suffused, brilliant, even protruding, the arteries
of the neck pulsate, the pupils are wide and dilate. Mirth turns into senseless fits
of laughter, the fluent language into garrulity, singing into shouting, the
friendliness into rage and fury with attempts to bite those around, to spit at them,
to tear everything to pieces." [Gutman]
The rubric "delusion persons are animals" mentions three remedies: Bell., Hyos.,
Stram.; the delusion could very well be the reading of one's own feelings into a
particular situation.
'believe he was changed into a Bird or Beast.' He might 'believe himself turned
into a Goose, and would eat Grass, and beat the Ground with his Teeth, like a
Goose: now and then sing, and endeavour to clap his wings.' Animal
transformation is a primary aspect of the hallucinogenic experience, whether it is
a shaman in the Amazon turning into a jaguar, or a Western subject in a
psychological experiment."3
M Insects.
• One grain and a half of what I believe to be a very good extract of Belladonna
was taken ongoing to bed [11 p.m.]. At about 4 a.m. I woke in a state of slight
but decided delirium. My judgement, I think, was sound, when I chose to exert
it, but nothing could rid my eyes of a legion of most disgusting spectra. I am not
very partial to any part of the insect creation, but cockroaches are my special
horror, and spectral cockroaches were swarming all over the room. Every object
in the room, both real and spectral, had a
double, or, at least, a dim outline, owing to the extreme dilatation of the pupils.
My hands also shook a little. This state lasted for about two hours, and then
passed off, leaving me nothing to complain of but a dry sort of feeling in the
throat." [Hughes]
M Metaphysics.
• "One typical Belladonna trait which straddles the worlds of the sane and insane
is an interest in metaphysics. I have seen this in every one of my Belladonna
patients. In both sane and insane patients it appears as an obsession with matters
spiritual and psychic. All of my Belladonna patients have professed to have
psychic abilities, and this has been accompanied in each case by an obsession
with understanding non-physical realms of reality. ... Belladonna individuals
often sense that they have power of a magical or psychic kind even when they
have not direct evidence of it." [Bailey]
M Ailments from excitement, fright and fear, grief, disappointed love, anger and
fright.
G Complaints go down from the head, i.e. after chilling or wetting the head
[haircut].
G Clutching sensations.
Hering mentions 28 symptoms for the right side, and 15 for the left side. This,
perhaps, caused Kent to include Belladonna as an exclusively right-sided remedy
in his Repertory.
persons. The side on which symptoms occurred was exactly recorded, resulting
in the following outline: symptoms of nervous system - right side [395], left side
[381]; eyes -
right [40], left [37]; ears - right [34], left [46]; nose, throat - right [15], left [16];
chest, lungs - right [27], left [23]; abdomen - right [23], left [21]; genitals,
urinary organs - right
[16], left [7]; upper limbs - right [70], left [65]; lower limbs - right [70], left
[103]. Only when it came to the head there was a distinct prevalence of right-
sided symptoms: right
> Lying in dark room [with head high], pressure, bandaging, cold applications.
[1] Berndt, The drug picture of Stramonium, BHJ, April 1964. [2] Zaren, HL
3/93. [3]
Devereux, The Long Trip. [4] Donner, Über eine Nachprüfung von Belladonna,
Allg.
Rubrics
Mind
Biting those around him [1]. Desire to climb [1]. Credulous [2]. Wild dancing
[2].
Desires death during intervals of rage [1/1]. Delirium, talks about dogs [1], >
eating [1], before menses [1], rocking to and fro [1], > after sleep [1]. Delusions,
with activity [2], sees black animals on walls and furniture [1], of bats [1/1], sees
black objects and people
[2], sees birds [1], of butterflies [1], he will taken by the devil [1], divided or cut
in two parts [1], eyes are enlarged [1], house is on fire [1], as if he must fly [1],
sees giants [1], sees shining insects [1/1], is a magician [1/1], talking with dead
people [1], talking with spirits [1], he is transparent [1], of travelling [2], of
wolves [1]. Destructiveness from suppressed emotions [1]. Fear alternating with
mania [2]; jumps out of bed from fear [3]; jumps up on being touched [1].
Insanity, dancing and stripping himself [2/1]. Desire to kill during drunkenness
[1]. Loquacity alternating with taciturnity [1]. Mental symptoms from moonlight
[1]. Rage, doesn't know his relatives [2; Stram.*], with spitting [1], with staring
[1/1], renewed by touch [2]. Striking, himself in face [1/1]. Talking about battles
Vertigo
Head
Pain, from acids [1], > coffee [1*], on descending [3], > during menses [1]; in
forehead >
Eye
Vision
Colours before the eyes, blue when reading [1/1]; objects seem dark [1]; letters
seem golden [1/1]; all the colours of rainbow [2]; white clouds wandering from
left to right
[1/1]; yellow border around all objects [1/1]; red things look yellow [1/1].
Objects appear crooked [2]. Dim, in bright light [1], > coffee [1*], > darkness
[1*], > twilight [1*].
Sparks on motion of lids [1/1].
Nose
Face
Discolouration, red on stooping [2]. Heat and red face during palpitation [1].
Throat
Stomach
Appetite wanting from smoking [1/1]. Sensation of a burning ball [2/1]. Nausea
>
passing flatus [1/1]. Pain from pressure on spine [2]. Stomach seems to be
turning on motion [1/1].
Rectum
Urine
Female
Pain, bearing down in uterus when sitting bent [2/1], > sitting erect [2/1], >
standing
Back
Sleep
Dreams
Danger of fire [1]. Being pursued by giants [1/1]. Visionary, frightful [1/1].
Generals
Food
Aversion: [2]: Coffee; drinks; fruit; sour; warm food; water. [1]: Alcohol; beer;
broth; cold water; eggs; fats and rich food; food, cooked; food, smell of; liquids;
meat; milk; milk, smell of; soup; sweets; vegetables.
Desire: [3]: Lemonade; lemons. [2]: Beer; cold drinks; snuff. [1]: Bread; bread
and butter; champagne; coffee; indigestible things; liquid food; sour; tobacco;
warm drinks.
Worse: [3]: Sausages, spoiled. [2]: Alcohol; cold drinks; hot food; sour; vinegar;
warm food. [1]: Apples; beer; butter; brandy; coffee; farinaceous; fat; liquor;
meat; oysters; pork; salt; shellfish; sugar; sweets; wine.
Better: [2]: Cold food; lemonade. [1]: Coffee [> headache, vision]; cider; hot
food; lemons; sweets; wine.
Bellis perennis
Bell-p.
Signs
FEATURES The outer flowers [white] are the ray florets or rays; the inner ones
[yellow]
the disk florets. It flowers from the earliest days of spring till late in the autumn;
it may even blossom under a thin layer of snow. It prefers nutritious, calcareous
soils, with sufficient moisture during the winter and spring. It grows slowly, but
will, in due time, cover large areas. In meadows and lawns it is very persistent
and sometimes considered
NAME Bellis derives from L. bellus, pretty; perennis means perennial, living
more than two years. Its common name is a contraction of 'Day's eye', because it
closes its pinky lashes and goes to sleep when the sun sets, but in the morning
expands its petals to the light. Another version is that bellis comes from L.
bellum, war, because it grew in fields of battle and is useful in curing wounds. Its
Dutch name, madeliefje, probably comes from 'made, maagd' [virgin, maiden]
and 'lief' [sweet, pretty], referring to the virgin Mary and representing her
innocence and purity. In Nordic countries the plant was dedicated to the love and
fertility goddess Freya. Her alternate name, Frigg, became a colloquialism for
sexual intercourse as well as masturbation. In some Germanic countries it is still
believed that Freya's sacred day, Friday, is the luckiest day for weddings. The
Friday was thought to favour fertility.
'Light of love wenches' are warned by it 'not to trust every fair promise that such
amorous bachelors make them.' Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet gives the
queen a daisy to signify, 'that her light and fickle love ought not to expect
constancy in her husband.' It is said that whoever picks the first daisy of the
season, will be possessed of a spirit of coquetry beyond any control.
FOLKLORE Fresh as a daisy, bright and vigorous, finds its opposite in pushing
up the daisies, dead and buried, or in someone on his way there while drinking
himself under the daisies. Also: you must put your foot on the first daisy you see
in spring unless you want daisies to grow on your grave or that of someone dear
to you before the year is out.
According to an old Celtic legend, the spirits of children who died at birth
scattered new and lovely flowers on earth to cheer their sorrowing parents. "The
cheerful little daisy is a symbol of innocence, because of its association with
children, and of survival. Daisies adapt to almost any landscape and soil type,
and will survive being trodden underfoot and all the indignities of the hoe and
the lawnmower."1
LOVE DIVINATION The daisy was often used in love divination. "In Wales the
daisy is generally selected by the doubting maiden who is wishful to test the
fidelity of her lover. Gathering a daisy, she commences plucking the petals off,
saying with each one,
'Does he love me? - much - a little - devotedly - not at all', and the last petal
decides the question." On Empire Day - 24 May - daisy chains were worn and
daisies were picked from the lawns. "Gather daisies. The daisy is a symbol of
our greatness. The golden centre was us - Great Britain; the petals were the
colonies, absolutely inseparable and dependent on us."2
SOCIAL ORDER The daisy has also been used to express criticism of the social
structure of Great Britain: "'They are nice flowers', he said, her emotional tones
putting a constraint on him. 'You know that a daisy is a company of florets, a
concourse, become individual. Don't the botanists put it highest in the line of
development? I believe they
do.' 'The compositae, yes, I think so', said Ursula ... 'Explain it so, then', he said.
'The daisy is a perfect little democracy, so it's the highest of flowers, hence its
charm.' 'No', she cried, 'no - never. It isn't democratic.' 'No', he admitted. 'It's the
golden mob of the proletariat surrounded by a showy white fence of the idle
rich.' 'How hateful - your hateful social orders!' she cried. 'Quite! It's a daisy -
we'll leave it alone.'3
MEDICINE In early British medicine, doctors used the daisy to tell whether a
patient would live or die. "Take the flower of the daisy and pound it well with
wine, giving it to the patient to drink; if he vomits it he will die of the disease, if
not he will live and this has been proven."4 The daisy has a long history of
medicinal use. In his Herball [1597], Gerard states that "daisies do mitigate all
kinde of paines, but especially in the joints, and gout, if they be stamped with
new butter unsalted, and applied upon the pained place."
Various local names refer to its reputation in healing broken bones: Bonewort
["it helps bones to knyt agayne", says William Turner], Beinwell and
Knochenheil [German folk names, meaning 'bone healer'], Consaude [old French
name, derived from L. consolida, to unite]. Other medicinal applications include
its internal use for coughs and catarrh, and externally for ruptures, varicose
veins, minor wounds, and sore eyes. The first three daisies that one ate in spring
were said to prevent one from having toothache, fever or eye complaints for the
rest of the year! Its use in the treatment of apoplexy led to its name Herba
Paralysios. Due to its alleged abortifacient properties, Bellis perennis was in
17th century Germany banned as an herb and attempts were made to destroy all
species.
Recent research has shown that triterpenoid glycosides obtained from Bellis
perennis inhibit the growth of human-pathogenic yeasts [Candida and
Cryptococcus species]. 5
LIGHT "The crimson petal tips contain anthocyanin which is able to convert
light rays into heat rays. When the daisy is closed these central tips are
concentrated and form a dome over the central disc, thereby concentrating the
sun's rays directly and producing heat. When the sun is high the petals open,
since the heat concentration is no longer necessary."6
•• [1] Compton Burnett - 1 prover, 1880; method: 1-3 times daily 10-15 drops of
tincture for 24 days.
•• [3] Mezger and Haehl - 21 provers, 1937; method: daily doses of tincture, 2x,
or 6x, for periods ranging from 6 to 10 weeks.
[1] McIntyre, Flower Power. [2] Vickery, Oxford Dictionary of Plant-Lore. [3]
D.H.
Affinity
Blood vessels; capillaries. Nerves. Spleen. Female organs. Joints. * Left side.
Modalities
Worse: INJURY. Sprains. TOUCH. Cold baths or drinks. Wet. Becoming chilled
when hot. Warm bed.
Main symptoms
M Detached and disconnected whilst feeling alert, vital, at peace or all right.
• "In my experience of this trauma was an out of body withdrawn state which felt
al right though disconnected. This is one of the mind symptoms which emerged
most strongly in this proving; the feeling of being all right with a lack of real
connection. ...
These two states of Bellis perennis may be paralleled to the way the daisy
responds to light. In sunlight the flower heads open and bask in the sunshine
whilst in darkness the flower is closed. These are the two states of Bellis
perennis, one is feeling open and expansive, vital and at peace with the world
combined with the alternative feeling of being depressed, exhausted and
disconnected often simultaneously present. ... The central mental theme of this
proving has been the state of detachment and disconnection with a contradictory
simultaneous feeling of being at peace, all right, calmness or tranquillity.
This seems to reflect an out of body state. The provers would report they were
all right and peaceful and calm yet actually what had been happening or being
experienced was far from this ideal state. It was a state that was difficult for both
provers and supervisors to grasp exactly what was happening and it was
sometimes a subtle state that the prover was unaware of. On the one hand the
feeling of being all right combined with cerebral stasis which resulted in the
person being disinclined to talk or go to work. On further questioning it seemed
that difficulties in relationships and life's ups and downs were just passing them
by or going over their heads. In this sense it was a state of positive indifference
[though positive only to the prover and not those around] and a state in which
the person felt more objective and less caught up in emotional reactions with the
resulting effect of being better able to function without this. However to the
provers'
families and loved ones the state of indifference led to extreme marital strain.
The polarity of this was also expressed in the sphere of family and close friends,
in the need to contact the family, feeling the marriage was over, the relationship
not working, and dreams of reconciliation. There was a lack of awareness by the
prover of their own indifference since they felt just fine, in fact more tranquil
and at peace with themselves than usual."1
Compton Burnett's prover - a male adult in sound health - compares the effects
of Bellis with those of alcohol. He suffers from all sorts of physical complaints,
e.g. his splenic region is 'tight as a drum', but his spirits remain continually good.
• "Brain getting muddled, in excel ent spirits, but is repeatedly told that he is
under the influence of 'something stronger than tea.' ... In letter written to Dr.
Burnett he described
his mind as getting confused, his memory weak, thoughts jumbled, talk
incoherent; and states that the splenic region has become large, the false ribs as it
were forced out, with stitches there. ... Is laughed at for asking one question ever
so often. ... He described himself while under influence of Bellis as 'happy as a
king, feeling he was doing strange things, but could not help it; friends with
everybody." [Hughes]
c Clinical experience of Karl-Josef Müller with Bellis perennis confirms the idea
of friendliness. Bellis wants to appear nice, smile, and make a nice thing of
every problem.
G INJURIES / VULNERARY.
But the sprains of Bellis are bruised and both the soft and ligamentous tissues are
involved. Bellis achieves results when the sprain comes from a heavy impact.
Rhus-t. is indicated in simple sprains. ... I never overlook Bellis in fractures
which are near joints; such injuries nearly always result from falls. Once more,
Bellis is nearly a specific for falls on the coccyx. Have we not all heard a patient
say that they have never felt well since a certain fall years before? I believe that
many of the 'cures' of crooked, painful spines reported by the Osteopaths might
be checkmated by a dose or two of Bellis."3
c Railway spine.
• "Another indication for Bellis is: neuralgia after running out into the cold when
overheated, and after effects of cold or iced drinks when heated. Labourers or
gardeners, drinking large draughts of cold cider or cold water, while perspiring
profusely, may develop dyspepsia or rheumatism. Have you noticed how often
you see old men hobbling along county lanes? They have been stooping over
garden beds or in the fields, hoeing and weeding, sowing and planting, all
through their lives. As a result of their labours, the prolonged bruising of their
muscles, overuse of their spinal muscles, along with imbibing cold drinks when
hot, they are bent almost double. Give Bellis perennis in the early stages to these
gardeners and farm labourers, and you would save many a poor old chap from
such crippling rheumatism and stiffness of back, spondylitis, slipped disc and the
rest."4
c Fall on coccyx.
• "I made a slight proving of Bel is perennis. I had seven persons take Bel is
perennis 30. I obtained symptoms from one prover only unless a state of well-
being in the other six could be called a symptom. This one prover after sleeping
very well would awake at 3
a.m. and not be able to go asleep again. There was marked desire for company
and unusual energy of feeling. There was loquacity and cheerfulness, abdominal
and rectal flatus. There was lameness of the knees for six days and then it passed
off."5
• "When given at night Bel is is apt to cause the patient to wake up very early in
the morning, hence I order it by preference to be taken not too late in the day. I
have often cured with it the symptom, 'Wakes up too early in the morning and
cannot get off again', and here the higher dilutions act much more decidedly and
lastingly."6
This symptom also occurs, in one prover, in the proving by Deacon and Ribot-
Smith.
• "I was extremely restless during the night, esp. after 3 a.m. I woke up
repeatedly and had lots to drink. ... Looking back, I see that for several nights I
have woken about 3 a.m.
• "Rheumatic pains al over the body, < morning, > motion. Soreness in the
muscles."
[Hinsdale]
P Dysmenorrhoea.
P SKIN.
Itching on the back and along the flexor surfaces of the thighs.
< Heat [bed; bath]; > cold.
• "In two weeks after leaving it off, for the first time in my life I had a large boil
on the back of my neck [r. side]. ... Three days after this boil got well another
made its appearance, but yielded speedily. ... As at no other time in my life have
I suffered from boils, I am inclined to think that these were due to the use of the
daisy." [Hughes]
c Compton Burnett's prover reported that "several pimples are coming out on
face and neck, which is unprecedented with him."
• "I have myself twice made short provings of Bel is, but have lost my notes. It
acted
laxatively with me, and produced many little boils with mattery heads."
[Hughes]
Whereas Mezger states that many skin symptoms were recorded, ranging from
erythema to weeping eczema and, even, boils, the translators turn this into: "The
changes demonstrated all phases of erythema, ... and weeping eczema leading to
boils." One of the provers experiences arrhythmia with a feeling of weakness
about the heart. This irregularity of the heart disappears entirely during a walk.
In the translation the
"In two other provers there occurred palpitation of the heart and pain in the
heart, respectively." "Marked feeling of hunger, so that one even has to eat at
night", in the translation becomes: "Insatiable hunger, so that one must eat again
immediately."
[1] Deacon and Ribot-Smith, Bellis perennis: A Proving. [2] Jansen, When
feelings are neglected by those responsible; HL 1/99. [3] Krichbaum, Bellis
perennis; Intern. Hahn.
Mind
Cheerful when it thunders and lightens [1]. Confusion regarding other people's
identity
[1D]; mistakes strangers for familiar people [1D]. Delusion of being friendless
[1]; of hearing noises, of telephone ringing [1D]. Detached, distant from partner
without being
Desire to go home and see the family [1D]. Loquacity [1]. Sadness, aversion to
company, desire for solitude [1D], with heaviness of body [1D], with weeping
[1D]. Taciturn, indisposed to talk [1D].
Vertigo
During painful menses [1H], > lying down [1H], < rising [1H]. From motion
[1D]. With nausea [1D]. On seeing an expanse of white floor [1D].
Head
Eye
Desire to close eyes, with heaviness of lids [1D]. Pain, aching and burning, <
moving the head [1D].
Vision
Hearing
Feeling of coldness of nose [1D]. Coryza with acrid, excoriating discharge [2M],
watery
[2M]. Obstruction, wakes him at night [1]. Sneezing [1D]; sensation as if going
to sneeze
[1D].
Face
Eruptions, acne, with irregular menses [1]. Sensation of swelling of lips [1D].
Mouth
Teeth
Stomach
Appetite increased at night [1M]. Fulness and pressure in epigastrium after fat
pastry
[1M]. Pain, > bending double [1M], > eating [1M], while lying [1], > pressure
[1M].
Abdomen
Stool
Female
[1], copious < exertion [1], scanty with acne on face [1]. Pain, uterus, extending
down anterior surface of thighs [1M]; bearing down, and backache in lumbar
region [1H]; uterus, as if squeezed [1H].
Chest
Back
Limbs
Heat in legs and desire to put legs out of bed [1D]. Pain, rheumatic, < beginning
motion
[1M], > continued motion [1M], > rubbing [1M]; in right shoulder [deltoid
muscle], awakening him at night [1M], > rubbing and movement [1M].
Weakness after gout [1/1].
Sleep
Position, sleeps on abdomen [2]. Sleepiness during the day with extreme
tiredness [1D].
Waking at 3 a.m. , unable to sleep again [2], at 3 a.m. from thirst [1D].
Dreams
Danger [2D]. Hoses, pipes, tubes [symbols of the umbilical cord] [1D]. Difficult
journeys [2D].
Skin
Eruptions, boils slow to form and slow to heal [1D]. Itching > cold [1H], < heat
[1H].
Food
Worse: [1]: Apples [= vomiting]; cold food or drinks when overheated; fat pastry
[=
Berberis vulgaris
Berb.
[Abraham Cowley]
Signs
FEATURES Mostly shrubs with long-shoot leaves and short-shoot leaves, the
tissues of Berberidaceae commonly are coloured yellow with berberine. They
are commonly heterophyllous [having different kinds of foliage leaves]. The
long-shoot leaves are often spiny. In Berberis spines replace them. The spines
are sometimes divided into several
parts. They are not prickles like those of the rose, for they are regularly arranged
over the stem, and will not break off by a slight pressure sideways; nor spines
like those of the hawthorn [Crataegus], for in the hawthorn the spines originate
in the bosom of the leaves, but in the barberry the leaves originate in the bosom
of the spines. These parts are a curious state of the leaf. They are the first kind of
leaf that the barberry produces when it shoots forth from the bud; but
immediately after, or perhaps at the same moment with, their production, other
perfectly formed leaves break out from their axils, and thus at nearly the same
instant, the branches are covered with spines for their defense, and with leaves
for their adornment. Having both male and female reproductive parts in the same
flower [hermaphrodite], Berberidaceae are adapted to pollination by insects.
Although the hermaphrodite arrangement lends itself to self pollination, this
family has developed an intricately specialized pollination mechanism in which
the stamens spring violently upwards when their irritable bases are touched, thus
showering pollen all over the intruders.
NAME It derives its name from berberys, the Arabic name for the fruit.
Etymologically, the common name barberry is not connected with berry. It is
adopted from the Arabian barbaris, from Barbary, the country of the Berbers, in
North Africa. In Italy the plant bears the name of Holy Thorn, because it is
thought to have formed part of the crown of thorns made for our Saviour. The
French name, Epine vinette, means 'acid thorn'. In both Jewish and Christian
traditions, thorns conjure empty uncultivated soil; hence it was denoted as 'a land
of thorns and thistles'. Since thorns stood for unploughed virgin soil, the crown
of thorns symbolized a woman's virginity as it did the virginity of the soil.
A decoction of the bark or berries has been found useful as a wash in aphthous
sore mouth and in chromic ophthalmia.
USES One to two meters in height, Berberis vulgaris provides wood - very hard
but fine grained, therefore suitable for such objects as toothpicks, mosaic pieces
and turnery -, dyestuff [for wool, cotton, flax, and leather] and edible berries.
Once cultivated for their supposedly antiseptic properties, the rather acid fruits
were made into jellies and preserves. The leaves were also eaten in a sour sauce.
The shrub is distributed throughout Europe, Turkey, the eastern United States,
and naturalized in the British Isles.
EFFECTS An infusion of the root promotes the secretion of bile and is thus
beneficial in liver disorders. It also helps to dilate blood vessels and so can help
to lower blood pressure. The bark of the root has a laxative effect.
BERBERINE "Perhaps the most celebrated of berberine's effects has been its
antibiotic activity. Berberine exhibits a broad spectrum of antibiotic activity.
Berberine has shown antibiotic activity against bacteria, protozoa, and fungi,
including Staphylococcus species,
Streptomyces
species,
Chlamydia
species,
Corynebacterium
diphtheria,
Escherichia
coli,
Salmonella
typhi,
Vibrio
cholerae,
Diplococcus
pneumoniae,
Pseudomonas
species,
Shigella
dysenteriae,
Entamoeba
histolytica,
Trichomonas
lamblia, Leishmania donovani, and Candida albicans. Its action against some of
these pathogens is actually stronger than that of antibiotics commonly used in
the treatment of diseases these pathogens cause. ... Berberine has also shown to
increase the blood supply to the spleen. The combined effect of improving blood
supply to the spleen and increasing macrophage activity translates into improved
filtration of the blood and is consistent with the historical use of berberine-
containing plants as 'blood purifiers'. ...
FOLKLORE Barberry is the birthday flower for 10 April, and signifies ill
temper and sourness. Astrologically it is assigned to Mars.
•• [3] König and Santos - 14 persons [10 females, 4 males], 1993; double-blind,
placebo-controlled, daily doses of 30c - to be stopped when reaction occurred
and to be resumed when reaction ceased; observation period of 6-8 weeks, with
special attention to dreams.
Affinity
Urinary and digestive tract [KIDNEYS; liver; bladder; ureters]. Lumbar region
[hips].
Modalities
Worse: Motion [jarring; stepping hard; rising from sitting]. Fatigue. Urinating.
Comparisons
c LYCOPODIUM
The tendency of the pains going from right to left, observed in Bayr's proving,
plus the affinity for gastrointestinal tract, liver, kidneys, and lumbar region,
make Lycopodium obviously one of the first remedies to compare with Berberis.
"An occasional dose of Lycopodium helped the action of Berberis", Clarke
observed. Both remedies have many symptoms in common; among them some
peculiar ones: Confusion of mind on waking.
Irritability on waking. Heat of head after eating. Bubbling noises in ears. Nasal
catarrh extending to frontal sinuses. Eructations alternating with yawning.
Bubbling sensation in inguinal region. Bubbling sensation in renal region.
Dryness of vagina after menses. In
M Thinking difficult.
M Taciturn.
• "In the twilight some children and dogs appeared twice as large as natural."
[Allen]
• "Before fal ing asleep, saw faces with distorted mouths; also had the feeling
that the bedroom was much bigger."*
During daytime, the same prover didn't recognize several friends, believing them
to be strangers.
M Hidden wounds.
• "The thorns of the barberry plant were considered to be the thorns that Jesus
wore on his head. To me this is symbolic of situations where Berberis is needed,
where there are hidden wounds we are unwilling to look at. ... We all contain
separate personalities within us. But in the case where there has been severe
physical or sexual abuse [as there is in all multiple personality disorder patients]
the split becomes too great and normal conscious activities can coalesce under
the direction of unconscious aspects of the subpersonalities. Case Number 1 led
me to examine the cases where I had prescribed Berberis, particularly in cases of
chronic vaginitis and urinary tract infections. As I discovered that many of these
cases had histories of sexual abuse, I came to the conclusion that these physical
symptoms may be acting as a defense mechanism for the emotional wounds of
the patient. The essence of the wound in Berberis is a secret that remains hidden
to the patients. The medicine is sycotic, combining the elements of urogenital
inflammation, suppression of emotions, and secretiveness. It lies somewhere
between the symptomatologies of Thuja and Staphisagria. While in Staphisagria
the anger lies close to the surface, in Berberis the origins are often no longer
accessible to the conscious mind. They lie quiescent, coalesced in a conflict that
creates fatigue, withdrawal, and psychosomatic expressions of pain. The pain
itself is not clear. It wanders, radiating in different directions from the kidneys,
liver, joints, and sexual organs. ... Interestingly, Dr. Margery Blackie mentions it
as being useful in
c The apparent element of the way of the Cross can be taken one step further.
The pains of Berberis in the metacarpal and metatarsal bones are as if there were
a nail thrust into them.
M Mother - woman.
• "Berberis fits women who are in conflict between being mother and woman. To
be a woman and at the same time a sexual being seems incompatible. A mother
who lives her sexuality is dirty? In this situation being a woman must be denied.
Perhaps as a compensation the social position is rated extremely high. ... Which
patients could benefit of Berberis? We think of women who feel not being
desired by their partners during or after a pregnancy. Or, women who do not feel
sensually or sexually after a pregnancy or since becoming mother. It might well
be that a Berberis patient complains of being disregarded or feeling neglected as
a woman and sexual being. Even sexual abuse must be considered. It seems
worthwhile to investigate the Berberis theme in the case of patient with myoma,
patients [male and female?] with recurrent infections of the bladder, tendency to
stones, sciatica, lumbago, chronic skin eruptions [acne, psoriasis]. ... We propose
to enter Berberis in the repertory - in the form of preliminary rubrics until
clinical verification - as follows: Ailments from sexual abuse; Delusion she or
her mother has been abused; Delusion of being vulnerable as a woman; Disgust
of being a woman; Delusion mother is a whore; Ambition, social position.
Associated feelings include disgust, depreciation, estrangement, humiliation."2
• "Symptoms are apt to alternate rapidly, e.g. a thirsty feverish condition can
change quickly into a thirstless prostration, a voracious appetite can suddenly
give way to complete anorexia, acute polyuria can alternate with oliguria."
[Gibson]
G Great chilliness.
Chill as if in bones.
G Thirst.
• "Increased thirst with dry mouth, esp. in the afternoon, in several persons."
[Allen]
• "Four provers had increased thirst; two of them wanted cold drinks."*
G Sleep unrefreshing.
• "In the morning when waking he often doesn't feel refreshed, but weary in
body and mind." [Allen]
Light sleep.
• "At night a condition between sleeping and waking; in which she is tormented
with a system of education, which at times assumes the form of a tree, at another
some other wonderful form; she tries in vain to get rid of the image, arouses
from slumber and opens the eyes and becomes very fretful about it." [Allen]
Difficult waking.
• "Difficult waking in the morning, when she cannot rightly recollect, cannot
collect her thoughts, and must exert all her power to get awake." [Allen]
• "He wakes frequently and very easily about 2 to 4 o'clock, cannot sleep again
in spite
of the fact that he is still very tired, or he falls asleep again, but also wakes
again; with tension in the head, rush of blood to it and excitement." [Allen]
G Sexuality.
c Four of Bayr's provers noticed an increased sexual desire. In one female prover
there was an aversion to sex.
G NUMBNESS externally.
• "A feeling in the eyes as if there were two drops of cold water between the
margins of the lids, or between the lids and the eyeballs."
• "A feeling as if cold drops of rain spattered in the face on going from the house
into the open air."
• "Sensation as if cold drops of rain fell on back of hand when she went from
house into open air."
• "A sensation as if cold water were spattered on the skin at a smal spot below
the left calf." [Allen]
• "Inner side of the upper lip shows a bluish grey discolouration, together with
bluish or red spots in the corners of the mouth." [Charette]
[This occurred five times during Bayr's proving. Pain in throat, 2 provers; pain in
nipples before menses, first in right nipple, then in left, 1 prover; lumbar
backache, 1 prover; pain in knees, 1 prover]
P Lumbago with PAIN EXTENDING DOWN LEGS and red sediment in urine.
Rising from a seat almost impossible, has to support back with hands.
* Bayr, Eine Prüfung von Berberis vulgaris D3 und D30; Allgemeine Hom.
Zeitung, 1983 Heft 5.
[1] Lange, Two cases of sexual abuse - one with multiple personalities; IFH
1992. [2]
Santos and König, Dream Proving of Berberis, HL 2/94. [3] Kishore, A side-
light on Berberis vulgaris; Zeitschrift für Klassische Homöopathie, 1985 Heft 5.
Rubrics
Mind
Excitement on waking at night [1]. Hurry while eating [1]. Irritability before
menses [1], during menses [1], after menses [1].
Vertigo
Head
Enlarged sensation [2], during vertigo [1B]. Pain, from exertion of body [1], at
beginning of menses [1], < motion of arms [1], sudden [1], wandering [1].
Sensation of a skullcap
[2].
Eye
Vision
Colours, objects seem dark [1]. Objects seem large [1], in twilight [2/1].
Nose
Face
Mouth
Saliva like cotton [2], soapy [1], viscid > eating [1/1]. Taste, burnt, in morning
[1/1], sour after drinking [1].
Throat
Pain, in afternoon, 3 p.m. [1B], > drinking [1B], on speaking [1]. Scratching
sensation >
drinking [1B].
Stomach
Nausea alternating with hunger [1], > eating [1B], from exertion of vision [1K],
>
Abdomen
Rectum
Bladder
Pain during urinating, after a few drops pass [1]. Frequent urging < slightest
motion [1].
Kidneys
Pain, at beginning of menses [2], during menses [1], < motion [1], < pressure
[1], radiating [2], > standing [1/1]. Feeling of weariness in renal region [1].
Urethra
Pain, burning after coition [1], during ejaculation [2], > urination [1].
Male
Female
Coition, aversion after menses [1], enjoyment absent [2], painful [2]. Dryness
vagina [2], after menses [1]. Insensibility of vagina during coition [2]. Itching >
lying [1/1], < sitting
Chest
Pain in nipples before menses [1B], first in right nipple, then in left [1B].
Back
Eruptions, boils in groups [1/1]. Numbness cervical region [1], sacrum [1],
coccyx [1].
Limbs
Cramps in sole of foot on hanging foot down [1/1]. Discolouration, upper limbs,
marbled spots [1/1], back of hands, petechiae [1/1]. Numbness upper limbs when
hanging down
[1/1].
Sleep
Perspiration
Food
Borax veneta
Borx.
[Einstein]
Signs
Extensive borax deposits are found in California [Death Valley], Turkey, Tibet,
and the Andes Mountains.
[anhydrous]. The anhydrous form, also called fused sodium borate or borax
glass, consists of glass-like plates. It becomes opaque on exposure to air. The
pentahydrate is used in very large quantities in the manufacture of insulation
fiberglass and sodium perborate bleach. Dissolves many metallic oxides when
fused with them.
USES Borax has many uses: soldering metals; manufacture of glazes and
enamels; tanning; in cleaning compounds; artificially ageing wood; as
preservative, either alone or with other antiseptics against wood fungus;
fireproofing fabrics and wood; curing and preserving skins; in cockroach
control. 1 The glass-industry is by far the largest market for borates [salts of
boric acid], followed by the industries of detergents and of pesticides
orthoboric acid in volcanic spring waters and as borates in borax, tincal, rasorite
and colemanite.
OPTICS In the boron mineral ulexite, nature provides its own version of fibre
optics: closely packed fibrous crystals. If polished flat on both sides
perpendicular to the fibres, ulexite will show an unusual optical phenomenon by
transmitting images from one side of the specimen to the other; ulexite, resting
on a newspaper will have the writing appear to be on top of the specimen
without any distortion of the lettering. The newspaper can be read upon the
surface of the ulexite! The manmade version - bundles of extremely thin flexible
glass fibres - is used in optical instruments to transmit maximum light by total
internal reflection, giving images of maximum clarity, and designed, because of
their flexibility, for seeing into otherwise inaccessible places.
evaporation must occur for precipitation of the borates, such basin deposits
usually occur in desert regions. The second geologic setting for borate minerals
is a metamorphic carbonate-rich environment, where they are formed as a result
of alteration of the surrounding rocks by heat and pressure. Some compounds
were produced by the reaction of boron-bearing vapour derived from hot
intruding granites during metamorphism; others are the recrystallization products
of evaporite borates. Numerous borosilicates [e.g.
GROWTH Boron is required for the growth of vascular plants and embryonic
development in fish. Deficiency signs were first discovered in plants, showing it
to be an essential element for plants as early as 1910. Boron is immobile in
plants; hence deficiency symptoms show up first in younger tissues. The
symptoms resemble calcium deficiency: leaves turn yellow and curl upward; tips
of leaves fail to expand. Too much boron results in the same effects; excess of
boron as well as lack of boron interferes with calcium intake of plants. Boron-
deficient plant tissues are brittle or fragile, while plants grown on high boron
levels may have unusually flexible or resilient tissues. In addition, boron is
poorly absorbed from soils with low potassium content, e.g. saline soils.
mcg per g ash and from 0.5 to 190 mcg per g dry enamel respectively. Blood
plasma
boron is high at birth but decreases rapidly within 5 days of birth. After ingestion
of boron, the greatest increases occur in spleen, kidney and brain although
thyroid levels remain at the same high figures as before."3 The total body burden
is 20 mg boron.
FOOD The best natural sources are legumes, fruits and vegetables. Highly
fertilized crops provide much less quantities of boron. Foods of animal origin are
a poor source of boron. Legumes are particularly rich in boron. Of the
vegetables, cabbage, asparagus, celery, lettuce, broccoli, cauliflower, and beet
are richest in boron. Fruits with a high content of boron include plum, quince,
strawberry, peach, apple, fig, tomato, pear, sour cherry, red currant, and apricot.
Boron appears to be important for plant nutrient content.
[neutron capture] causes the B-10 nucleus to split, releasing an alpha particle and
a lithium nucleus. These products of the boron neutron capture reaction are very
damaging to cells but have a combined path length in tissue of approximately 14
micrometers, or roughly the diameter of one or two cells. These charged
particles release sufficient energy locally to kill any tumour cells containing high
concentrations of boron without appreciably harming normal cells that contain
low concentrations of boron [selective cell surgery by radiation targeting]. The
selective delivery of radiation dose to the tumour during BNCT is due primarily
to the biodistribution of the boron compound, not to the incident beams of
neutrons. This provides a potential advantage of BNCT over other forms of
radiation therapy. High tumour/normal tissue boron concentration ratios have
been demonstrated in experimental animal tumours and in surgical samples from
glioblastoma patients. If individual tumour cells or small clusters of tumour cells
infiltrating the normal brain, preferentially accumulate the boron delivery agent
to the same degree as has been shown for surgical tumour samples, they will
receive significantly higher dose than the immediately adjacent normal brain.
The concept of BNCT is not new. Patients with malignant gliomas were
irradiated with thermalized reactor neutrons for BNCT at Brookhaven National
Laboratory [BNL] [1951-1961] and, starting later [1959-1961], at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology [MIT]. The disappointing results of these
trials were attributed to two primary factors: 1) inadequate tumour-specificity of
the boron compounds employed, and 2) insufficient penetration of thermal
neutrons. Efforts to deliver therapeutic neutron fluences to deep tumours resulted
in excessive damage to the skin. The high boron concentrations in blood and
brain tissue during irradiation damaged the blood vessels in normal brain. Since
the 1950s, there has been considerable improvement in boron compounds and
neutron beams. More is known now about the radiation biology of BNCT, which
has re-emerged as a potentially useful method for preferential irradiation of
tumours. Clinical trials have been initiated at BNL
and MIT, with an improved boron compound and higher energy [more deeply
penetrating] neutrons."4
mg/kg, while it has a concentration of 4.6 mg/l in ocean water. Israel has a soil
comparatively rich in boron and also one of the lowest osteoporosis rates.
Conversely, Jamaica's soil is extremely poor in boron and its population includes
more people than average who suffer from osteoporosis. "Epidemiological
studies indicate a relationship between boron intake in the diet and the
prevalence of arthritis in various populations.
Where boron intake is lowest, there is a high incidence of arthritis [50-70 per
cent in Mauritius and Jamaica]. Where the diet provides more available boron
[0.5-1.5 ppm] the incidence of arthritis is 20 per cent [UK, USA, South Africa,
Australia, New Zealand].
Daily intakes of more than 1.5 ppm in boron give rise to the lowest incidence of
arthritis
[Israel and limited areas in other countries]. Trials indicate that human beings
and animals respond well to supplements of 6-9 mg boron daily, and in a few
weeks reduction of symptoms in 80-90 per cent of cases has been claimed. This
therapeutic dose of 6-9
[1] Merckx Index. [2] Encyclopaedia Britannica. [3] Mervyn, Vitamins and
Minerals. [4]
Brookhaven National Laboratory Medical Research Center. [5] Mervyn, ibid. [6]
Affinity
Modalities
Main symptoms
• Borax patients are highly excitable individuals with a great intensity of both
their emotions and thoughts. Their thoughts and feelings can be so confused that
they cannot be separated one from the other. They are people who do not
understand what it is to be cool and phlegmatic. There is a resemblance to
Phosphorus in the vulnerability to external impressions and stimulus. However,
Borax patients are not as receptive and sympathetic as Phosphorus." [Vithoulkas]
• "Very timid, in driving down a mountain; quite at variance with his customary
bearing; he felt as if it would take his breath away [the first 5 weeks]."
[Hahnemann]
• "The child is timid while being dandled; when it is rocked up and down in the
arms it makes a very frightened face during the downward motion [the first 3
weeks]."
[Hahnemann]
• "A new understanding of Borax that can be suggested is that they feel that they
don't have ground under their feet and that is why they are afraid of going down.
Ground means something solid, basic, routine, structured. That is when their
pathology starts, at the age when we are supposed to build our ground, our basic
identity. The process of separation from our guide goes wrong. That is why the
Borax child clings to his mother; he doesn't have his own identity and is afraid to
let go."2
Dislikes strangers.
• "Before the stool, which ensued easily in the afternoon, he was peevish, cross,
lazy, discontented; after it cheerful, contented with himself and with the world,
and looking brightly into the future." [Hahnemann]
G Infants with pale face refuse to eat or have little appetite and little gain in
weight; after birth-trauma.
• "After eating stewed apples with mutton, fulness of the stomach, with
peevishness and ill humour, and fulness in the head, as if the blood were
violently pressing in."
• "After eating pears, esp. in the morning or forenoon, pressure in the scrobiculus
cordis, with discomfort." [Hahnemann]
G > Seashore.
P Aphthous stomatitis: white patches with red areola [prevents child from
nursing].
Hot mouth; hot urine making the child cry when urinating.
Sore mouth from plate of teeth; < after eating salty or sour food.
Rubrics
Mind
Fruitlessly busy [1]. Clinging, child awakens terrified, knows no one, clings to
those near
[3]. Cursing about trifles [1*]. Delusion he is possessed by a devil [1]. Dulness >
walking in open air [1]. Fear of contagious disease [1]; from sudden noise [2]; of
thunderstorm
[2]. Idiocy with shrill shrieking [2]. Mistakes in space and time [1]. Changeable
mood, >
epistaxis [1/1]. Thoughts sexual [1*]. Fritters away his time [1].
Vertigo
Head
Sensation of current of air or wind, above the eyes [1/1]. Hair sticks together at
ends
[2/1].
Eye
Sensation as if he could not move his eyes, during fulness in head and pressure
about eyes [1/1*].
Vision
Nose
Obstruction, alternating sides [1], with lachrymation [1/1].
Teeth
Stomach
Nausea from thought of food [1], from mental exertion [2], while talking [1].
Pain, after fruit [1].
Abdomen
Bladder
Sudden urging to urinate during menses [1]. Frequent urination at night, seldom
during the day [2.].
Urine
Female
Itching of vagina during pregnancy [1]. Menses, in morning [2], only at night
[1], copious and of short duration [1], during lactation [1].
Chest
Pain, > lying on back [1], > pressure [2], when sneezing [2], while talking [3], >
walking slowly [1], when yawning [2]. Sensation as if the heart were on the right
side [2/1], and was being squeezed off [1].
Limbs
Chilblains > open air [1/1]. Sensation of cobweb on hands [1/1]. Coldness and
blueness of hands alternating with heat of hands [1*]. Eruptions, eczema of
fingers with loss of nails [1/1]. Trembling of hands from mental exertion [1/1].
Sleep
Perspiration
Food
Desire: [2]: Sour. [1]: Brandy; cold drinks; milk, milk in the morning.
Worse: [2]: Fruit; sour; pears; wine. [1]: Apples; chocolate drinks; cold drinks;
hot food; mutton.
Bovista lycoperdon
Bov.
[Margot Asquith]
It has always been desirable to tell the truth, but seldom if ever necessary.
[Arthur J. Balfour]
Signs
CONFUSION Confusion of mind and head was one of the symptoms arising
from the proving of Bovista. The confusion appears to have affected the
nomenclature, too, since Bovista is found under numerous names in
homoeopathic literature: Calvatia gigantea, Langermannia gigantea, Lycoperdon
giganteum, Bovista gigantea, Globaria bovista, Lycoperdon bovista, Lycoperdon
globosum, Bovista nigrescens. In his Companion to the British and American
Homoeopathic Pharmacopoeias, Ashwell describes the mushroom as follows:
"Stemless; a regular globe, with only two coats; smooth, soft and yellowish-
white when young, becoming yellow, and then brown; filled with a white
cottony substance, which becomes brown, and contains when ripe, an immense
quantity of extremely fine brown-black spores. Habitat, on dry meadows and
downs in most parts of Europe."
HABITAT The Giant Puffball is among the most prolific of living organisms. An
average-sized specimen may contain 7 trillion spores. Instead of splitting open at
the top,
Calvatias crack up into flat scales which eventually flake off. Though often not
larger than a moderately sized turnip, the Giant Puffball may reach a size of 90
cm or more in diameter. It is usually found solitary, scattered, or in groups or
large circles in fields, pastures, cemeteries, on exposed hillsides, along roads,
and in drainage ditches. "Because of its preference for open hillsides, it can often
be spotted from the road. Large specimens, in fact, have been mistaken by
passers-by for herds of grazing sheep!
[Mushroom hunters, on the other hand, are more likely to mistake grazing sheep
for giant puffballs.] Dried specimens found under houses have been mistaken for
bleached skulls, while a sinister-looking individual found in England during the
war was labelled 'Hitler's Secret Weapon' and used for propaganda purposes at
an exhibition to raise war funds!"3
NAME The puffball derives its name from the 'puff' or clouds of spore dust that
emerges when a mature specimen is touched by a gust of wind, or poked,
squeezed, or kicked by man or animal. The Blackfoot Indians of North America
called puffballs 'fallen stars' or
'dusty stars'. The name Calvatia derives either from L. calvus, bald, or from L.
calvaria, the roof of the skull, both in allusion to its smooth and globular shape.
Puffballs have scatological associations. Lycoperdon means 'wolf's fart' in Latin,
which is in keeping with common names as 'pixie-puff' and 'puckfist', denoting
an imp's silent fart. To the Basque people the puffball is the 'ass's fart'. Among
the Maori of New Zealand puffballs are known as 'faeces of ghosts or stars'.
Using the puffball for obstetrical purposes, the Dakota Indians called it 'baby's
navel'.
USES Dried Giant Puffballs have been used as sponges, toys, dyes, and tinder.
"In divers parts of England where people dwell farre from neighbours, they carry
them kindled with fire, which lastest long: whereupon they were called
Lucernarum Fungi. The dust or powder hereof is very dangerous for the eyes, for
it hath been often seen, that divers have been pore-blinde ever after, when some
small quantities thereof hath been blowne into their eyes. The country people do
use to kill or smother Bees with these Puffe-balls, being set on fire, for the which
purpose it fitly serveth."4 The belief that the spores were harmful to the eyes
lead to the English name 'blind man's ball'. The spores, however, are more likely
to cause a persistent pneumonitis called lycoperdonosis.
EFFECTS Young puffballs are used as food in nearly all European countries as
well as in North America. They can be sliced and fried like pancakes, or dropped
as cubes in soups, or eaten raw in salads. They may have laxative effects. "But it
is only in the immature condition, whilst the interior remains fleshy and
perfectly white, that they are edible, and on no account should any puffball be
cooked after the flesh has commenced discolouration, as poisonous properties
are apt to be developed when old, even before decomposition sets in, so that it is
essential they should be eaten only before the development of the spores."5 It
seems unlikely that puffballs commencing to become yellow will be appetizing,
since the spore mass emits an odour like old urine when ripening.
CANCER "Of all the biological activities lying untapped within the fleshy
macrofungi, the possible role of mushrooms in treating patients with cancer has
created the most excitement. The antineoplastic properties of fungi were initially
reported in the 1950s when the giant puffball, Calvatia gigantea, was shown to
contain a compound - labelled calvacin - that was thought to be active against
tumours. This report followed earlier work with other mushrooms and was
published during the period when many products were being screened for
antimicrobial activities. Because various forms of cancer are common, many
folklore remedies have been developed to treat them. It was from old stories
about the use of mushrooms for this purpose that the idea to test the puffball first
originated."6
HEAVY METALS "Many species of the higher fungi - from a large number of
different genera, including many of the best-known edible varieties - have been
shown to concentrate or accumulate trace elements, including some of the toxic
metals. ... Many different trace elements have been detected in mushrooms,
although concentrations depended on where the specimens were collected. It is
clear that many of the fungi have the ability to preferentially accumulate and
concentrate certain elements in their fruiting bodies, even when the soil contains
only trace elements. The reasons for the ability of mushrooms to concentrate
these minerals are entirely unknown. Mushrooms may play the role of 'sink',
removing many of these elements from the environment and reducing their
availability to the plant community. Cultivated mushrooms also concentrate
heavy metals, which have been found in the oyster mushroom and others. This
finding is important because many of the commercial mushrooms are cultivated
on waste material, which could potentially be contaminated with heavy metals.
Mercury and cadmium are the elements most often encountered in appreciable
levels in species of Agaricus. They are not limited to this genus, however. Nor
are these elements the only ones accumulated by mushrooms. Vanadium,
selenium, arsenic, lead, manganese, bromine, nickel, silver, and gold have been
detected. Lead is one of the elements not specifically concentrated by
mushrooms. For this reason, it is only a problem in areas of high environmental
contamination, for example, around lead smelters [and their downwind
extension] and along busy roadways. Measuring of the concentration of mercury
[mg/kg of dried
VANITY Curtis Gates Lloyd [1859-1926], one of the leading experts in the
identification of puffballs, objected strongly to the practice of adding the name
of the discoverer of a fungus after its Latin name. As part of his satirical attack
on this
•• [2] Petroz - method: 'symptoms observed from inhaling the fumes of the
burning fungus' and 'symptoms observed by a young woman from olfaction of
the tincture.'
[1-3] Arora, Mushrooms Demystified. []4 Gerard, The Herbal. [5] Grieve, A
Modern Herbal. [6-7] Benjamin, Mushrooms: Poisons and Panaceas. [8] Hudler,
Magical Mushrooms, Mischievous Moulds.
Affinity
Worse: Menses. Full moon. Getting warm. Early morning. On waking. Cold
food. Hot weather. Coffee. Wine.
Comparisons
Main symptoms
M Unreserved conversation.
• "Very open-hearted; she spoke of her own failings, contrary to her custom."
[Allen]
This proving symptom is included in the repertories [mind section] as Tells the
plain truth. Addition to the rubric Revealing secrets may be considered.
• "To tel the truth is obviously such a rare feature that only four remedies are
given under this heading in the SR. When I met a lady with heavy fibroid
bleedings for the first time, she told me everything about her sexual relationships
and her attitude of changing partners. It was no problem for her to talk about
these very personal matters. As if it was something everybody should know
about. There was no proudness, nor timidity, no 'I-do-not-know-if-I-should-tell-
it'. It was as it was and it was told as it was. She says what she thinks - the truth.
Not in an offending way as perhaps in Hyoscyamus or Tarentula. It differs also
from the 'truth' we find in Veratrum album. In Veratrum it is the truth about
the whole world, what all the deep secrets of mankind really hide. This is totally
different from Bovista, which just means the truth about oneself. It is just open-
heartedness regarding very personal matters. These are spontaneous, lively,
quick acting, active people."1
M Alternating moods.
Crying # laughing.
Lively when in company; sad, depressed, and not interested in anything, when
alone.
Despair # hope.
• "At one time life seemed very exciting to him, at another very hateful." [Allen]
c Compare: Great changes of colour in face, which is at one time red, at another
pale.
M Mistakes in space.
• "She feared that a person sitting near her would stick the scissors into her eyes,
although she sat two steps away and was cutting paper; all her visual perceptions
were distorted; it seemed as if the scissors were close before her eyes."
M Confusion.
• Unquenchable thirst, in one who had previously never needed to drink [after 3
hours]."
[Hughes]
G Feeling of distension.
• "Swel ing of cervical glands; pain in upper front teeth, which are tender on
touch and on chewing, somewhat on upper lip beginning to swell; this it
continues to do till it hangs over lower one, and is in line with nose; after
swelling of lip has subsided a little left cheek began to swell; all swollen parts
are tender to touch [14th day]." [Hughes]
G Tough, stringy and tenacious discharges from nose and all mucous
membranes. [Kali-bi.]
G Haemorrhagic tendency.
Menses only or chiefly at night, or most profusely in morning, and scanty during
the day and night.
P Eyes.
< At night.
Mössinger considers this symptom specific for Bovista in chronic gastritis, esp.
if accompanied by an objective coldness of the skin over the stomach region. 3
P Intolerable itching at tip of coccyx; must scratch until raw and sore.
Red scabby eruption on thighs and bends of knees, appearing with hot weather
and with full moon.
Rubrics
Mind
Anxiety during headache [1]. Chaotic [2]. Cheerful in company [1/1]. Confusion
> after breakfast [1], after coition [1], knows not where he is at night [1], while
standing [1], when stooping [1]. Delusions, a heavy black cloud enveloped her
[1*]; objects are turned upside down [1*]. Discontented after eating [1]. Fear of
pins [pointed things] [1].
Vertigo
After coition [1]. Before menses [1]; during menses [1]. From wine [1].
Head
Vision
Nose
Face
Mouth
Stomach
Appetite, constant [1], ravenous soon after eating [1], wanting in morning [1].
Sensation of icy coldness, during pain [2], with objective coldness of skin over
gastric region
Urine
Female
Menses, copious in morning [2], copious < exertion [2], scanty during daytime
[2].
Chest
Back
Limbs
Sleep
Sleeplessness after coition [1], from coldness [1], from itching [2].
Dreams
Of being in a cellar and that the walls were falling in [1/1], that she was obliged
to remain and could not get out [1/1]. Danger of drowning [1]. Of snakes biting
[1; Cench.; Irid.]. Of having a bleeding wound [1/1*].
Perspiration
Odour of urine [1]. On single parts, front of body [2].
Skin
Eruptions, urticaria at night [2], after bathing [1], with diarrhoea [1], after
excitement
[1], during menses [1], from warmth and exercise [2]. Indented easily from
pressure [3; Ars.; Verat.].
Food
Desire: [2]: Cold drinks. [1]: Alcohol; bread; bread, only; brandy; milk; wine.
Bromium
Brom.
If the world, in the near future, administers to its diplomats, to its highest
officials, to its legislators, to its people the proper endocrines, especially anterior
pituitary, and inhibit the adrenal cortex a little bit, there may be no more wars.
Signs
Bromine.
[cabbage], and Allium cepa [onion]. Sea animals contain bromine in their
tissues.
Gasteropod molluscs of the genus Murex, or rather the purple dye they contain
[used by the Romans for the robes of dignitaries], are particularly rich in it.
support growth of some algae and in chicks it can partially replace chloride.
Bromine at trace mineral levels can cause a small significant growth response in
chicks and mice fed excessive iodine to produce growth retardation. However,
diets deficient in bromine did not cause any reduction of growth in animals and
adding bromine later to such diets did not give rise to increased growth rates.
Low blood serum concentrations of bromide in patients receiving haemodialysis
have been reported and these levels have been associated with insomnia in these
patients. In a double blind trial on haemodialysis patients, quality of sleep
improved markedly in those given bromide but not in those receiving chloride.
All animal tissues contain between 50 and 100 times more bromine than iodine
except in the thyroid where the reverse is true. The bromine levels of soft tissues
are affected by illness: e.g. they are elevated in heart disease induced by damage
or by uraemia."2
minutes after an average dose of one of the bromides is taken, the patient
complains of dull headache, he feels tired and weak, and does not care to exert
himself, either mentally or physically. When he moves about, the movements are
slow and languid. He perceives objects about him, though not as clearly as usual,
but he manifests no interest in them. He speaks slowly and hesitatingly, in a
monotonous tone of voice. He does not express his thoughts clearly; these are
slow and confused, and his reasoning and memory are poor.
Very often the patient becomes drowsy. The pulse is somewhat slower and
weaker, and the breathing is somewhat slower. If the patient is nervous and
excitable, he becomes calm and quiet. If he has tremors or convulsions, these are
lessened or prevented from recurring. ... The bromides lessen the activity of the
spinal cord. The reflex action of the body is therefore lessened. The patient does
not then respond readily to external stimuli applied to the skin or mucous
membranes. For example, when the conjunctiva of the eye
is touched, winking results very slowly. When the pharynx is touched, vomiting
is not produced so easily. The bromides also lessen the sexual reflexes. 4
Stupid, dull expression on the face. [6] Depressed spirits, even melancholia. [7]
The eyes look heavy and dull. [8] The patient manifests no interest in his
surroundings. [9] Slow, uncertain gait. [10] Slow, stammering speech, often
words are forgotten and mispronounced. [11] Very poor memory, even recent
events are forgotten. [12] Slow pulse. [13] Lessened reflexes [touching the
conjunctiva of the eye does not cause winking, etc.]."5
EXPERIMENTS "That the depression of the brain centres is not the sole phase
of bromide action is perhaps most clearly shown by the self-investigation of
Schabelitz using sodium bromide in large doses. The trial continued over a two-
month period. Very soon, after five grams, appeared an irritable frame of mind, a
type of intoxication, with some confusion and uncertain gait. With continuous
introduction of bromine great desire for undertaking work and a cheerful frame
of mind alternating with lassitude and ill-humour. On the seventh day of taking
bromides the variation in disposition ceased and an euphoric frame of mind
remained. To inattentiveness and forgetfulness there were added joking, the urge
to speak, pugnacity, unrestrained and non-critical attitude, a submanic state with
many light and colour manifestations, auditory delusions, disturbances of speech
and language, cramp from writing, disturbance of convergence, ear noises,
disturbances of equilibrium, mislaying of objects, inattention to clothing.
Recollections from youth are very animated, while recent impressions are
unrecalled. 'As epileptics tend to do, I could not simply name a picture but had to
form a judgement about it. The disposition was rosy, I made the most beautiful
plans for the future and was irritated if anyone contradicted me.' On the
twentieth day of bromides there appeared a striking motor unrest. With the
cessation of bromides and the addition of salt the disposition changed like a
flash. Two days after the discontinuance of the bromides, there suddenly
appeared marked delusions in the sense of reality on the basis of a marked
feeling of inferiority.""6
BLOOD LEVEL The bromine content of the blood is essentially higher than the
iodine content. It is thought that the bromine content of the blood has
significance in the human organism for psychic functions. In manic-depressive
disorder the bromine blood level lies 40-60% under the normal, although only in
the endogenous and not in the reactive forms.
The bromine blood level is also much lower during the menopause and in many
patients with schizophrenia. Supported by a good deal of indirect evidence, the
theory has been proposed that schizophrenia is associated with the
neurotransmitter dopamine. "The best evidence comes from pharmacological
observations in man and experimental animals.
8 During sleep the bromine level of the hypophysis drops significantly, while
that of the cerebellum markedly rises. Subnormal secretion of the hypophysis
[pituitary gland]
HYPOPHYSIS "According to Gray, the anterior lobe [of the hypophysis] 'is
developed from the ectoderm of the buccal cavity, and resembles to a
considerable extent, in microscopic structure, the thyroid body.' ... Among the
blessings bestowed by a healthy pituitary are good blood pressure, healthy sex
tone, initiative, zest for study, work, sustained interest in occupation, and
endurance of youth. ... The pituitary, which has been called the gland of
persistent effort, was apparently known to the initiated priests of antiquity, who
associated it with the feminine aspect in symbolism. It stood as the yoni in its
relationship to the pineal gland, which was the primitive phallus. ... The pituitary
body is the 'barometer' of the whole ductless gland chain, the first to reveal
disorder in the endocrine system. In the Egyptian Mysteries, the pituitary body
was the initiator, for it
'raised the candidate' - the pineal gland. In certain East Indian metaphysical
systems the pituitary body is called manas-antaskarana, 'the bridge of mind.'
When stimulated by the disciplines of occult philosophy, the pituitary body
begins to glow with a faint roseate hue. ... At last tingeing the form of the gland
itself with a golden red light, it gently coaxes the pineal gland into animation."9
Prolactin itself is not used clinically; in the context of prolactin physiology, the
main clinical need is to decrease its secretion, and the agent used for this purpose
is bromocriptine."10 Unwanted reactions to bromocriptine include nausea and
vomiting, dizziness, constipation, and postural hypotension. Another side-effect,
but perhaps not unwanted, is increased receptiveness for sexual stimulation and,
reportedly, better controlled and more powerful orgasms. The latter may be
accompanied by a histamine reaction which is more clearly felt, in the form of a
stuffed nose. The drug produces these effects by lowering prolactin levels,
which, when high, are associated with a decreased sex drive. Interestingly, the
repertory lists Brom. under Female genitalia, Coition, enjoyment absent, as well
as under Orgasm, delayed, and Orgasm, wanting. Under Male genitalia, Brom. is
mentioned for Ejaculation too quick. [See Secale.]
•• [2] Hering - experiments on himself, his wife, and others [Husemann and
Lippe], c.
1844; method: vapour, 1st dil., 3rd dil., 5th dil., and 6th dil., manner not stated.
[1] CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. [2] Mervyn, Vitamins and
Minerals. [3]
Julien, A Primer of Drug Action. [4-5] Blumgarten, Materia Medica for Nurses.
[6]
Leeser, Textbook of Hom. MM; Inorganic Medicinal Substances. [7] Rang et al,
Pharmacology. [8] Leeser, ibid. [9] Hall, Man, the Grand Symbol of the
Mysteries. [10]
Affinity
Modalities
Better: Nosebleed [> vertigo, head, chest]. Seashore. Violent motion. Riding on
horseback.
Main symptoms
• "In the evening when alone it seems as though he was obliged to look about
him, and would somewhere see an apparition." [Allen]
M Changeable.
• "At times there is cheerfulness with a desire for mental activity, or the subject
is depressed, fatigued and unable to tackle a job. The general weakness induces a
state of indifference, sadness, boredom and lack of any interest in household
affairs." [Gibson]
• "Fear when alone at home in the evening, stays up until his parents come back,
even if it's until 5 o'clock in the morning. Holds his feet on the chair because he
has the idea something under the chair might grasp him. During these evenings
he watches horror-movies which frighten him intensely, but he is obsessed by
them and cannot stop watching them. He needs the sensation of it. Sometimes he
has the feeling that someone is behind him and is tapping him on the shoulder.
Fear of the unknown, i.e. 'the absolute nothing, the black hole'. He fears losing
loved ones. When this occurs in his life, he becomes depressive: sits still alone
upstairs for days, without eating and drinking, inconsolable, staring. When he
recovers from this after some days, he relapses from hearing a sentimental song.
At other times he has intense remorse and guilt feelings about having wounded
the feelings of others. When be becomes angry and his first warning is
neglected, he becomes violent and strikes the other."1
G Blondes with light blue eyes, fair fine hair, red cheeks and pink delicate skin;
young persons.
[Gibson]
G Weak and easily OVERHEATED, then sweaty and sensitive to drafts. Summer
colds.
• "The reactions to heat and cold are curious. Icy cold limbs are present with a
hot head.
If chilled when overheated, the least draught seems to 'freeze him to the bone'.
At the same time any overheating, esp. indoors, induces great discomfort."
[Gibson]
• "Vertigo as soon as he steps the foot over water; the foot is drawn involuntarily
in the direction of the stream." [In a strong young man who was not otherwise
nervous.] [Allen]
P Gastric ulcer.
• "The type of case in which you get indications for Brom. is that where you
have suspicious ulceration in the stomach. You usually get a history of pain
coming on immediately after food, and very often of definite coffee-ground
vomit. As a rule, these gastric pains are worse during the latter part of the day,
and worse at night. There are various gastric, or appetite, symptoms which are
helpful in the selection of Brom. for these patients. For instance, they often have
an acute desire for acids, and yet they have a very marked aggravation of their
pain, or discomfort, from taking acid foods; and the taking of acids will not
infrequently produce a sudden violent diarrhoea, or an acute gastric irritation
which sets up a very irritating cough. ... Another point that sometimes helps you
to your Bromium diagnosis is that these patients have an undue susceptibility to
tobacco. They often say that smoking will produce gastric pain almost
immediately; even sitting in a room where people are smoking is often enough to
upset them. ... They also get a marked aggravation from hot foods or hot drinks.
These increase their discomfort or pain, make them feel sick, and may actually
make them vomit; and yet they have a strong dislike for cold things. Bromium
patients get a sensation of hunger - an empty feeling in their stomachs - which is
relieved by taking food, although their actual pain is aggravated. So you very
often get an apparent contradiction."2
[1] Jansen, Two Bromium Cases, HL 3/94. [2] Borland, Digestive Drugs;
Homoeopathy, May 1961.
Rubrics
Mind
Desires activity [2]. Desire to be carried in croup [1], fast [1]. Confusion at night
when waking from a dream, > putting feet on cold floor [1/1*]. Delusions, as if
all kinds of things jumped up on the ground before her [1]. Fear of dark [1], of
ghosts [1]. Hysteria from suppression of sexual excitement [1]. Somnambulism
[1*]. Thoughtless staring [1].
Vertigo
During menses [1]. From smoking [1]. In sunlight and heat [1].
Head
Heaviness > darkness [1/1]; in forehead and occiput from heat of sun [2/1], >
when in shade [1/1*]. Pain, pressing in forehead in a small spot above the eyes,
alternating sides
[1/1*]. Must keep the forehead wrinkled [1/1*], from heaviness or pain in
forehead [1/1].
Eye
Vision
Lost, vanishing of sight when sitting and reading in the evening, as if a wind
before the eyes took away the power of sight [1/1*].
Ear
Noises, during headache [1*].
Nose
Throat
Choking and lachrymation [1/1*]. Pain, on bending forwards [1], when touched
[1], when turning the head [1].
Stomach
Appetite wanting during menses [1]. Nausea after palpitation [1]. Pain > coffee
[1], >
Abdomen
Rectum
Diarrhoea after acids [2], > coffee [1], > eating [2], after oysters [2], < smoking
[1].
Male
Female
Coition, enjoyment absent [2]. Insensibility of vagina during coition [1]. Swollen
ovaries before menses [1/1].
Larynx
Voice, hoarseness < dust [1/1], from being overheated [2], painful [2].
Respiration
Difficult before menses [1], during palpitation [1], > walking rapidly [1*; Sep.],
with yawning [1/1*].
Chest
Constriction, > epistaxis [1*]. Pain, < bending forward [1], < turning thorax
[1*]; pectoral muscles, right side, < lifting anything with right hand [1*]; heart,
extending to axilla [1].
Limbs
Sleep
Dreams
Ascending []1. Climbing [1]. Coffins [1]. Physical exertion [1]. Journeys [1].
Food
Worse: [2]: Milk; oysters. [1]: Acids; chocolate; cold food; onions; smoking [=
severe pinching pains in abdomen]; warm food.
Bryonia alba
Bry.
[Calvin Coolidge]
Signs
sap in their stems and other tissues. The family is poorly represented in
Australasia and all temperate regions. Most members of the family do not
tolerate frost or cold soil. Due to their great sensitiveness to temperatures near
freezing, their geographic distribution and area of cultivation is limited. The
family includes such economically important food plants as pumpkin, cucumber,
gherkin, watermelon, muskmelon, summer squash, winter squash, chayote,
gourd, courgette, and cassabanana. The fruit in most species is a fleshy, many-
seeded berry with a tough rind, often attaining considerable size. The fruits of
some wild species are important sources of food and water in the desert areas of
southern Africa.
one season quickly covering entire areas of hedges and undershrubs with their
rough stems and leaves and even climbing to a height of several feet above them.
The fleshy roots yield a milky juice when cut. The name Bryonia comes from
Gr. bryo, to sprout, in allusion to the fast annual growth from the tuber.
Because both resemble a human figure, the roots of Bryonia have been offered in
Britain by frauds as mandrake, Mandragora officinalis, which was thought to
have magical powers. Apart from the colour of the berries, Bryonia alba differs
from Bryonia dioica in being monoecious. The word monoecious derives from
Gr. monos, one, and oecos, house, and refers to plants having male and female
flowers on the same individual, or, so to speak, in one home. Although present
on the same plant, the male and female reproductive organs are separated in
different floral structures. This reduces the chances of self-fertilization and
establishes the need for insect pollination. However, it decreases also the genetic
variability in the population and enables isolated individuals to reproduce.
Consequently, change [variability] is less vital for the monoecious Bryonia alba
than for Bryonia dioica, which, as its specific name explains, has female and
male sex organs separated on different individuals. Moreover, monoecious plants
have a higher seed-setting efficiency than dioecious ones. In a family typically
consisting of dioecious plants, monoecism is the exception and hence to be
considered a peculiar of Bryonia alba.
EFFECTS When applied to the skin, the fresh Bryonia plant produces vesication
and pustular eruption. It has been applied externally as a rubefacient for myalgia.
Many species of the gourd family have been reported to produce mild to severe
skin irritation following contact with their milky sap. The fruits of other species,
e.g. Citrullus colocynthis and Ecballium elaterium, have drastic purgative
properties that have been utilized medicinally. "The fresh root of bryonia is
extremely irritating, occasioning blisters when bruised and kept in contact with
the skin, and causing serious gastrointestinal inflammation when taken
internally. A profuse and uncontrollable diarrhoea, vomiting, vertigo, reduction
of temperature, dilatation of the pupils, cold perspiration, extremely small pulse,
colic, collapse, and death have resulted from its use.
Its influence on the nervous system is marked. A similar result follows the
administration of large doses of the dried root. An infusion of galls is said to
antidote it. This root appears to have been well known to the ancients, and was
used in various maladies. It has likewise been employed in more recent times in
convulsions due to the presence of worms in the intestines, as a cathartic in
dropsy, and in cases of chronic inflammations, attended with glandular
enlargements, or serous effusions."2
has its parallel in the low nutritional value of the gourd family. In Bryonia, the
fleshy fruit is reduced to a medium-sized berry. "Although their different
varieties, pumpkins
for example, are emblems of stupidity to Western eyes, some African initiates
eat their seeds as symbols of intelligence. It is however true that the gourd
remains after its seeds have been removed. ... Gourds grow in the isles of the
Immortals, but they also help in the journey there, and to Heaven as well."3 In
Jonah 4: 6-7, the gourd expresses apparently contradictory decisions of God.
"And the Lord God prepared a gourd, and made it to come up over Jonah, that it
might be a shadow over his head, to deliver him from his grief. So Jonah was
exceeding glad of the gourd. But God prepared a worm when the morning rose
the next day, and it smote the gourd that it withered." If God's reactions cannot
be foreseen, nothing can be foreseen, making mankind suffer from this insecurity
and this lack of logic, "or rather from a logic of which it cannot decipher the
secrets. The sudden growth and death of the gourd are symbols of this. Human
logic cannot grasp the incoherence of things and the absurdity of events; but they
are amenable to a different logic. What happened to the gourd suggests to
mankind that it should not trust to its dialectic alone, since there is another
superior to it."4
PARALLELS "The most eye-catching qualities of this family are the gigantic,
watery swellings, the creeping-crawling-support seeking properties and their
need for a warm surrounding. Where in the human body do we find an
equivalent of these qualities?
The part of the human body in which the liquids are pre-eminent, in which water
and nutrients are assimilated, is the metres-long intestine which twists its way to
its destination. [To make the picture complete, support is given by the abdominal
muscles.]
The better known remedies of this family have the bulk of their symptoms in the
abdominal area. The few symptoms we have of the lesser known remedies all
relate to the abdomen."5
•• [2] Austrian proving - 19 provers [17 males, 2 females], 1844 [in this proving
also results with Bryonia dioica are included!]; method: increasing doses of
tincture of the root; increasing doses of 1x dil.; also with 'the dilutions beginning
with the 8x and descending to the 1x.'
•• [3] Mezger and Pirtkien - 47 provers, 1957-58; method: 1x, 3x, 4x, or 6x,
three times daily 5 drops during first week, three times daily 10 drops during
second week, and three times daily 15 drops during third [and last] week.
[1] Heywood, Flowering Plants of the World. [2] King's American Dispensatory.
[3-4]
Affinity
Modalities
Ascending. Morning. During sleep. Closing eyes. COLD [becoming; cold dry
weather].
Main symptoms
M People firmly rooted in the material world, objective and business-like, not
much by emotions, sentimental feelings or imaginative power, but nonetheless
with a strong desire for security and support, which they try to find in money and
property. When lacking this sure ground, they become irritable, anxious and sad.
• "The typical Bryonia personality is not the artist or scientist or philosopher, the
explorer of beauty or the unknown, who disregards the material basis of his
existence to reach out into lofty heights. It is the businessman, the insurance
man, the stockbroker, the man without much imagination but with much
calculation; a dry fellow, sober, reliable, methodical, tenacious, weighing his
steps, concerned in everything he does with safety, stability, security. Lacking a
safe basis for his economic existence he becomes irritable, angry, anxious,
depressed, always on the lookout for something which promises a hold to
provide stability and security. ...Worried about his security, he holds on to his
back, he holds on to his belly, he holds on to his pocket-book."1
• "Rich and competent though he is, he fears poverty, he may be slow on the
uptake but how persistent; he can follow through with large projects, his
obstinacy is an aid, his choleric disposition an added strength. The Bryonia types
are not negative; they are a bursting people which their pains symbolise. They
are better under pressure, in mind as in body. They are a mighty folk and can
produce real end results in the world."2
• "His depression started after he stopped working. He cannot accept the fact that
he is unable to work anymore. His work was his hobby and now he feels he is a
misfit. 'I sit behind the window, and other people see me walking around and I
have less income than them.' Regarding his income he says he had always tried
to improve his turnover. He had changed his job several times in order to make
more money."3
M FEAR OF POVERTY.
• "Dreams al night very vividly of anxious and careful attention to his business."
their families, for instance, but then they wonder who will take care of them in
case of financial disaster. They feel unsupported and insecure." [Vithoulkas]
M < Thunderstorm.
• "A thunderstorm represents the idea of an increased tension, to the point that all
the stored up energy is discharged. Both Colocynthis and Bryonia fear
thunderstorms, and it is interesting that this symptom is also present in the
Cucurbita melo case."4
G WARM-BLOODED.
General < warmth, summer; > cool open air, cold drinks.
Digestive troubles from beans, peas, cabbage, bread, flatulent food, fruit.
< Fruit. [cold fruit; melons; pears; stewed fruit; strawberries]
G < MOTION.
• "'Aggravation by motion' has long been a phrase applied to Bryonia cases, and
so we find in these cases a lethargy induced more by a desire to remain quiet
than one of dulness, as is noticeable when Belladonna is required. The patient is
languid, torpid, tired, and has little inclination to go about. A general deficiency
of nervous balance is observable, and every effort tends to induce perspiration.
With this may or may not be associated the Bryonia headache, pain from the
frontal region to the occipital base; thinking is an effort, and the patient is
irritable if disturbed."5
G > PERSPIRATION.
[dry, parched, cracked lips; stool hard, large and dry as if burnt; sensation of
stone in stomach]
[1] Gutman, Bryonia alba; BHJ April 1961. [2] Wright Hubbard, The Intellectual
Remedies; Homoeopathy, May 1968.
[3] Verkerk, Redundant; What is my future? HL 5/99. [4] Van der Zee, Themes
of the Cucurbitaceae; HL 5/99.
Rubrics
Mind
Ailments from hurry [2]; from violence [2]. Anxiety, compelled to do something
[2/1]; driving from place to place [1]; about money matters [2]; from thinking
about it [1].
Desire for change [2]. Confusion > eructations [1], when lying [1], > yawning
[1/1].
Delusions of being away from home and having to get there [3]; that she cannot
accomplish her work [1]. Desires more than she needs [1]. Dulness when spoken
to [1].
Fear of starving [2]. Irritability, wishes to be alone [1]. Loquacity about business
[2].
Vertigo
Head
Pain, morning on waking, on first opening eyes [2], increasing gradually [1],
motion of eyelids [2], before thunderstorms [1]. Swollen feeling, occiput [1].
Eye
Vision
Nose
Face
Chewing motion of jaw during sleep [1]. Twitching around mouth [1].
Throat
Dryness, speaking very difficult [1]. Food is felt through oesophagus until it
enters the stomach [1]. Pain, on turning the head [1].
Stomach
Appetite ravenous after nausea [1/1]. Fulness after sweets [1*]. Heartburn after
sweets
[1*], after wine [1]. Nausea after beer [1], after coffee [1], > drinking [3].
Vomiting of food, not of drinks [2].
Rectum
Constipation, unable to pass stool in presence of nurse [1], at seaside [1], from
sedentary habits [2]. Diarrhoea from draft of air [1], > all symptoms [1], after
cabbage [1], after chagrin [1], after stewed fruit [1], after ice cream [1], > lying
on back [2], after sauerkraut
[2], while at seaside [1], in spring [2]. Urging on tightening clothing [1/1].
Female
Cough
Limbs
Pain > perspiration [2], rheumatic, during first days of warm weather [1/1].
Sleep
Dreams
Skin
Food
Aversion: [2]: Coffee; fats and rich food; food; meat; milk. [1]: Beer; cabbage;
cold water; eggs, hard boiled; smoking; tobacco; warm drinks; water.
Desire: [3]: Cold drinks; warm drinks. [2]: Beer; coffee; meat; milk, warm;
oysters; pungent; sour; strange things; sweets; sweets and sour; wine. [1]:
Alcohol; brandy; cabbage; cold food; indigestible things; liquid food; milk;
soup.
Worse: [3]: Beans and peas; bread; cabbage; flatulent food; fried food; fruit;
sauerkraut.
[2]: Beer; cakes, hot; cheese, old; cold drinks, in hot weather; cold food;
farinaceous; hot food; lettuce; milk; milk, hot; pancakes; potatoes; rice; rich
food; sausages, spoiled; turnips; vegetables; vegetables, green; wine; [1]: Bread,
black; buttermilk; chicken; chicken salads; chocolate; coffee; fat; frozen food;
heavy food; oil; oysters; raw food; rye bread; salads; smoking [= excessive
salivation]; sweets [= fulness stomach and heartburn*]; water.
Better: [3]: Cold drinks. [2]: Warm drinks. [1]: Cold food; hot food; vinegar;
wine.
Bufo rana
Bufo
[Shakespeare]
Signs
[from L. salire, to leap] or Anura [from Gr. an, without, and oura, tail].
Amphibians [from Gr. amphi, on both sides or double, and bios, life] lead a
double life, dividing their life between land and water. Anatomically they come
midway between fishes and reptiles.
Toads, frogs, salamanders, newts, and caecillians form a class of animals that
have skin poison glands and mucous glands. The skin has no feathers, scales, or
hair. Most amphibians start their life as aquatic larvae, and in subsequent stages
metamorphose into their final adult stage. Anurans are highly specialized for a
hopping method of locomotion. Most species can walk slowly, rather like newts,
but they rely on hopping /
jumping for fast movements. This is facilitated by the lightness of the whole
body skeleton as a result of the reduction and loss of bones during the evolution
of amphibians.
NAME "Bufo is a buffoon. The word buffoon is derived from buffare, to puff,
and in 1658 Edward Topsel, referring to the toad, stated that the Latins called it
Bufo '... because it swelleth when it is angry'. In medieval courts the buffoon or
jester, by his licensed mockery of the king and nobles, acted as a mirror so that,
by objectivation of any tendency in them towards being pompous or 'puffed up',
the great were enabled to keep their sense of proportion and a decent humility."1
TOADS AND FROGS There are some 3400 known species of toads and frogs.
Although there is no scientific distinction between toads and frogs, frogs are
typically smooth-skinned, have long hind limbs for leaping, and live in water,
where toads have warty, drier skin, with shorter hind limbs for hopping, and live
on land. Toads and frogs inhabit a wide variety of habitats, ranging from arid
desert regions to mountainous regions to tropical rainforests to swamps. Toads
and frogs have at most nine vertebrae in front of the sacrum, and the three or
four posterior to the sacrum are fused into a rod called the urostyle. In contrast
with salamanders and caecillians, toads and frogs are tailless in the adult stage.
The lack of a tail, reduction in vertebrae, and elongation of propulsive segments
of the body [utilized in jumping], are several of the features that set toads and
frogs apart from other major vertebrate groups. In addition, toads and frogs have
a distinctive life phase known as the tadpole, and a unique mechanism of tongue
projection. 2 Toads are famed for their longevity and may live forty years or
more.
thousands of toads and frogs become active in attracting mates by calling; often
many males call in chorus, usually near a pond, where the eggs can be laid and
fertilized. Egg masses are laid in long chains or in large clumps. Parental care
varies from little care in species laying many smaller eggs to remaining with the
eggs until they develop in species laying a few larger eggs. 4 Mating occurs by a
process known as amplexus [from L.
amplexus, embrace or encircling], in which the male clasps the female until she
deposits her eggs. There is no courtship; the first male that meets a female
mounts, without any ado, on her back and clasps her firmly round her neck.
Once coupled with a female, a male toad will not relax his hold however badly
he is treated or attacked by superfluous males. Even when severely injured, as by
pecks from crows, males will continue in their quest to breed. It frequently
happens that several males cling to one female. The female will suffocate under
such a multiple embrace and clusters of toads are often found
Toads have full colour vision, and females are often pink-tinged at this time.
Perhaps this is why it attached itself to my finger; whatever the reason, I could
not shake it off. I eventually tried to prize it off by lifting its hind legs. It
deposited a clouded liquid and slipped off."5
In the male toad the mature functional sexual gland is preceded by a non-
functional gland which assumes female form, and thus every male toad begins as
a female, changing its sex when the masculine factors have overcome the
feminine. The rudimentary gland known as Bidders Organ degenerates and
atrophies as the true gland evolves but it never disappears completely. It is a
minute non-functional ovary, the development of which is inhibited by the
testicles. If a young male toad is castrated, Bidders Organ begins to develop and
within a year or so he will be capable of evacuating the large, ripe, fertilizable
eggs which will have filled the ovaries. Through the coupling of feminized
males with normal male toads, offspring have been obtained which are literally
the children of two fathers, for the spawning toad is still a male as far as its
chromosomes are concerned. In the female toad the rudimentary sexual gland
assumes the same sex as the mature gland and Bidders Organ appears to be more
atrophied than in the male. If a young female is sterilized she may eventually
ovulate from Bidders Organ instead of from her natural ovaries."6
per cent -, while others shoot venom from the parotid and other glands on the
back.
TONGUE The tongue is an organ which was first developed by the amphibians;
no fish have such a structure. It is attached to the front of the mouth. Using an
extendible tongue that shoots out, toads capture flying insects in the blink of an
eye. Toads can move their tongue faster than they could ever move themselves.
HEARING Frogs and toads have developed eardrums. These detect sound
vibrations in the air very efficiently. "While exploiting this ability to hear, the
anurans developed a voice. Frogs and toads are most impressive singers. The
lungs which blow air through
their vocal chords are still simple and relatively feeble, but many frogs amplify
the sound of their voices with huge swelling throats or resonating sacs bulging
from the corners of the jaws. An assemblage of frogs, calling in a tropical
swamp, can create such a noise that a human voice has to shout to make itself
heard. The variety of sound produced by different species is enormous and
amazing to anyone who has only heard frogs of the temperate regions. There are
groans, metallic clicks, mewing and wails, belches and whinnies."7
SKIN "The skin plays an important part in the life of anurans. It is an auxiliary
respiratory organ and experiments have shown that respiration through the lungs
alone is not sufficient to support their life on land for long, while during periods
spent under water or buried in mud, their breathing is carried on entirely through
the skin. They do not drink through the mouth but through the integument and,
although Bufo stands desiccation better than Rana, it absorbs water almost as
readily, for both carry a reserve supply of liquid which they will eject if roughly
handled. So long as the skin is moist, blood vessels in the dermis can extract
oxygen from the air, but if the skin dries it becomes impervious to air and they
soon suffocate."9
HOME If displaced, toads are capable of finding their way back over
surprisingly large distances. Many toad species take their daily rest at the same
spot and will return there if they are removed over a distance of [maximally]
1500 metres. They have a strong homing instinct, and a well-developed sense of
orientation. In any given area, the number of toads is related to the moisture of
the territory. As all amphibians, toads need to keep
moist, and the less threatening their home base, the more tolerant they are of
invaders.
The instinct of self-preservation deserts them in the mating season, when they
travel continuously day and night, surmounting obstacles, ignoring waters and
ponds closer at hand, to reach the particular pond where they year after year
return to.
Because the date when the structures were built was generally known, it became
accepted that toads could miraculously live holed up for thirty years or more. ...
The most likely explanation is that they entered the wall as toadlets, while still
small enough to squeeze through a crack to the cavity inside. The chamber
would provide shelter and high humidity and, because insects were attracted by
the same conditions, the toad would have a ready supply of food."11
DISTRIBUTION The genus Bufo is the largest and most distributed genus and
comprises some 200 species worldwide. Bufo americanus [Cane Toad or Giant
Toad] is considered a pest species in its introduced range of Australia and the
Pacific and Caribbean Islands. It is able to outcompete native species and also
causes predator declines, since these predators have no natural immunity to the
bufotoxin it secretes.
"Cane Toads were first released in the cane fields of Far North Queensland in
1935. It was hoped that the toads would control Grey-back and Frenchi beetles,
the larvae of which stunt cane growth. The introduction of the toads, however,
had little or no effect on the cane beetles and since that time, the toads have
spread south and west to areas where cane has never been grown." [The beetles
of Australia were able to survive being eaten and would burrow out of the toad's
stomach!] "The Cane Toad, which is also known as the Giant American or
Marine Toad, is native to Central and South America. It has one of the widest
ranges of any living toad and has also been introduced into the Caribbean
Islands, southern United States and several Pacific Islands. The toad is extremely
toxic to other animals. It is not uncommon for family pets to die after they have
ingested toad venom. In the wild, toads compete for food, shelter and breeding
sites with native animals. Scientific evidence suggests that the toad is a nuisance
to man and an ecological threat to the environment. The Cane Toad's success can
be attributed to it being a supreme opportunist. Cane Toads do not require
specialised diets or conditions to start breeding. Added to their tolerance of a
wide range of environments, it is no surprise that they have spread so far and
wide."12
BUFO BUFO Bufo bufo is the common European toad. It is a plump animal
measuring from 6 cm in males to 9 cm in females, but may reach a size of 13 cm
in warm regions.
Its broad, neckless body has a humped back and a swollen belly. Not jumping or
hopping much, it walks rather clumsily, dragging its body along the ground. And
yet it may walk great distances and shows great tenacity and perseverance in
overcoming obstacles. Bufo bufo is widespread throughout Europe and is even
found near the northern polar circle.
VENOM Toad venom, secreted from the parotoid glands [located behind the
eyes], is a milky fluid that dries quickly, forming hard brittle scales which are
yellow in colour.
Brought in contact with water, these dry scales swell into a gelatinous mass. If
much water is added an opalescent neutral foamy emulsion is obtained, having a
nauseating bitter taste and a pungent odour. When a steel knife is brought in
contact with the secretion it immediately will be covered with a bluish green
discolouration.
BUFOTOXINS Toad venom does not protect the toad from all predators; most
snakes and birds are insensitive to it. Traditional Chinese medicine includes
compounds from toad species, in particular Ch'an Su, made of dried and
powdered toad skins. These are used for local inflammations, for dropsy, and to
arrest bleedings. Toad venom is largely comprised of cardioactive substances.
Bufotoxins can lead to profuse salivation, twitching, vomiting, shallow breathing
and paralysis if the toad is bitten, ingested, or when in contact with mucous
membranes. The toxin may cause temporary paralysis and even death in small
mammals and predators. Bufotenine is the most potent bufotoxin.
has also been reported. Bufo alvarius has been called "The Toad of Light", and
its venom is a sacrament of the "Church of the Toad of Light". The venom
contains considerable amounts of 5-hydroxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine. This
compound is chemically similar to DMT [dimethyltryptamine], which naturally
occurs in plants with hallucinogenic properties and which was popular among
the drug connoisseurs of the 60's as
The Amahuaca of Peru are reported to use frog or toad poison by applying it into
self-inflicted skin burns. This causes a state of trance in which the hunters
believe themselves to be in contact with the spirits of animals and the forest.
Gradually I begin to realise that this human accordion is me. With each gasp I
am sending out a life's worth of weariness and pain. After what I am told is five
minutes I am able to open my eyes and speak again ... then I lean over and cry
my guts out into the dust
... although my faculties gradually return over the course of the evening, my
powers of cynicism do not."14 A similar effect of 'mental anaesthesia' is brought
about by Haitian sorcerers who use toads in the making of zombi drugs.
Adrian Morgan, the author of Toads and Toadstools, confesses having been an
"amphibian abuser". After pulverising and drying a mixture of venom glands and
skin of two toads, he took some of it as a snuff. The effects included anaesthesia
of the nose and teeth, profuse sweating, and mild psychoactivity in the form of
'trails' following in the wake of moving objects and increased intensity of the
perception of colour. There were definite stimulant effects, both mental and
physical, lasting for about an hour and followed by a deep but short sleep. "The
experience was not pleasant, and because it was hard to stay upright or walk, I
spent most of the second experiment seated. The first two entries in my notes
had jagged and crude handwriting, resembling the scrawling of a child and
contained irrational spelling errors. The following day my nose was still affected
by a mild burning sensation. The effects are felt at their height for a very short
period, an hour at most, and are only slightly psychedelic. The production of
thick saliva concurs with symptoms of psilocybin and LSD, as do 'trails'
produced by moving objects and the richness of perceived colours. ... The
venom's greatest influence is as a stimulant, creating an increased overactivity of
the mind and a feeling of agitation and strain. This may be caused by the
bufotoxins or bufogenines, or by adrenaline or noradrenaline, which are also
present in the skin secretions, or combinations of the above. The stimulant
sensation is soon followed by exhaustion and sleep."15
The experiments were conducted in Ohio State Penitentiary upon four inmates.
"The first subject was given 1 mg of the compound over a period of three
minutes, and the second received 2 mg. Both experienced sensations of tingling
and tightness. The second developed a flushed face, and his eyes oscillated from
side to side for a full seven minutes. The third man received 4 mg and had
similar symptoms, as well as a numbness
of the entire body and 'a pleasant martini feeling - my body is taking charge of
my mind.'
His pupils were dilated and he claimed to be seeing scarlet and orange spots
moving around. His face did not return to a normal hue for a full fifteen minutes.
The fourth subject received 8 mg. As the last of the bufotenine entered the vein,
he said: 'I see white straight lines with a black background. I can't trace a pattern.
Now there are red, green, and yellow dots, very bright, like they were made out
of fluorescent cloth, moving like blood cells through capillaries, weaving in and
out of the white lines.' These visual symptoms could be registered with eyes
opened or closed. His face was sweating and a deep purple. The hallucinatory
images abated after two minutes, along with the eye oscillations and pupil
dilation. After his experience, he claimed, 'Even at the height of this, my mind
felt better and more pleasant than usual.' One hour and a half after his initial
dose, the second subject was given a further measure of 16 mg. Immediately he
felt a burning in his mouth, and his entire body tingled. In the last moments of
his injection he felt that his chest was being crushed, and he threw up. He could
see red spots in front of his eyes and red-purple blobs on the floor, which seemed
closer to him than usual.
After two minutes the hallucinations were gone, and he saw everything tinged
yellow. He could not perform simple mental tasks and felt strange for twenty-
five minutes, with crowded thoughts and a feeling of tenseness. 'I am here and
not here.' Forty minutes from the start of the process, he claimed to be feeling
better, but in need of walking it off, like a hangover. An hour from
commencement, his face had returned to its normal colour.
None of the men were seen to have significant changes in blood pulse or
pressure."16
disturbances
[ventricular
fibrillation;
palpitation;
vasoconstriction;
increased blood
Contrary to popular belief, toads do not cause warts. A toad sitting in a dog's
water dish for some time may leave enough toxins to make the pet ill. The
toxicity varies considerably by the toad species and its geographic location. The
death rate for untreated animals exposed to Bufo marinus is nearly 100% in
Florida, is low in Texas, and only about 5% in Hawaii.
FOLK MEDICINE 'Folk' uses include expectorant, diuretic, and as remedy for
toothaches, sinusitis, and bleeding of the gums.
SYMBOLISM As a symbol the toad represents the inverse and infernal aspect of
the frog-symbol. Toads were supposed to create darkness by intercepting
starlight and swallowing it. Their unblinking stare was the sign of their
insensitivity or indifference to light. In Europe the toad has been surrounded by
superstition. As a companion of witches it was associated with death, darkness
and demons. It was said to be one of the shapes assumed by a demon when he
sat upon a witch's left shoulder. Witches took infinite care of their toads,
baptizing them, dressing them in black velvet, and making them dance after
putting little bells on their paws. The belief that the toad like the snake had a
jewel in its forehead - referred to as toadstone, craupadina, bufonis lapis, borax
or batrachites -
was widespread in medieval Europe. The stone would bring happiness, and
would change colour when its wearer had been poisoned. It had to be snatched
away from the toad otherwise it would reabsorb it itself. It was also thought that
the toad would only void the stone if it became irritated. Therefore one had to
strike it. Since an irritated toad will excrete its venom, the magical toadstone and
the [psychoactive] venom might have been one and the same. Of similar purport
was the belief that gnomes, delving precious metals during the night, turn into
toads during daytime because they can't stand sunlight.
Striking a toad would have been unacceptable for the Vietnamese, because toads
were highly respected by them as rainbringers and anyone striking a toad would
be struck by Heaven's lightning. The Chinese regarded the toad as the Moon-
goddess. She was the wife of the Good Archer Yi and stole from him the draught
of immortality which had been given to him by the Queen Mother of the West.
She fled with the draught until she reached the Moon, where she was changed
into a toad. Thus for the Chinese the toad was a yin and humid symbol, a
rainbringer and therefore associated with luck and riches. As appearing and
disappearing it is both lunar and a symbol of resurrection. Symbolizing rain and
fertility it may have the status of a culture hero in Mexico and in certain parts of
Africa. For the alchemists, the toad depicted the dark but fertile side of nature.
Or as Avicenna put it: "Join the toad of the earth to the flying eagle and you will
see in our art the Magisterium." In Grimm's fairy tale The Frog-King the cold
and dark aspects of human nature, i.e. impersonal sexual instincts, have to be
elevated, esp. morally. The frog tells the King's daughter how to accomplish this:
"Lift me up beside you." It also symbolizes the development from a state of
child-like self-will into womanhood.
SEXUALITY Ancient traditions associated the frog / toad with Hecate, the
Greek version of the Egyptian midwife-goddess Heket or Hekat. Her totem was
the frog / toad, symbol of the foetus. [The male of a European toad species,
named midwife toad, gives great care to the eggs. With the strings of eggs
twined around its hind legs, it hobbles about with them for 3 to 7 weeks until
they hatch.] The three-legged toad living in the moon, portraying the three lunar
phases, as the Chinese believed, finds its analogue in the trinitarian Lunar deity
Hecate. In ancient art often represented with three faces or three bodies, Hecate
came to combine the attributes of Selene [the Moon in heaven], Artemis
[the Huntress on earth] and Persephone [the Destroyer in the underworld] and to
be identified with them. Four thousand years later Hekat became the Christians'
queen of witches, with the frog / toad still as her main companion. Hecate of the
Mediterranean area was sometimes called Baubo, which means 'toad'. In another
version, Baubo and her husband Dysaules welcome Demeter in their house
during her long hunt for her lost daughter Persephone. Baubo cheers Demeter's
distraught spirits with lewd jokes and by
pulling up her skirts and exposing herself. Many European country people still
believe that the toad is an omen of pregnancy. The frog test is a pregnancy test in
which the woman's urine is injected into the dorsal lymph sac of the platanna
frog. The test is positive if spermatozoa are present in the frog's urine within
three hours.
and as "actual lies". On the other hand, Hering declared that "many of Houat's
symptoms have been verified." Arguing in favour of Houat, Berridge even
cherished a hope that Hughes would make "the amende honorable to the memory
of our departed colleague."
"Surely it was somewhat rash thus to bring against Dr. Houat a charge, not
simply of incompetence, but of fraud, unless this charge can be supported by
proofs, which as yet Dr. Hughes has failed to produce; for should these 'actual
lies' be demonstrated to be
'actual facts', and valuable ones, too, Dr. Hughes will have to eat his own words -
not a very appetizing diet." To underline his point, Berridge cites a Dr.
McClatchey who wrote that "within a circuit of five miles from our editorial
sanctum we could gather such a cloud of witnesses to the truth of very many of
the Bufo symptoms [of Houat] as would astonish all skeptics."22
[1] Dale-Green, A Study in the Symbolism of the Common Toad; BHJ, Jan.
1960. [2-4]
Cannatella, Ford and Bockstanz, Salientia; website. [5] Morgan, Toads and
Toadstools.
[6] Dale-Green, ibid. [7] Attenborough, Life on Earth. [8-10] Dale-Green, ibid.
[11]
Spoerke, Toad Toxins; The Vaults of Erowid [website]. [18] cited in Ott,
Pharmacotheon.
Affinity
Mind; nerves; brain. Heart [blood; circulation]. Kidneys. Sexual organs. Ovaries.
Skin.
Modalities
Worse: In warm room. Sexual excitement [onanism]. During sleep. Least motion
[lumbago]. Injuries.
Main symptoms
Laughing - crying.
Company - solitude.
M Desires solitude,
"and yet is afraid of being left alone and dying forsaken." [Houat]
M BASIC types, not necessarily retarded, but close; sometimes actually mentally
retarded.
• "He drops the jaw and looks stupid, as if he had forgotten everything." [Kent]
M Music intolerable.
Or:
• "They like music very much. Boericke describes: 'Aversion music', but in al the
cases which had a beautiful reaction to Bufo, I observed that they all liked
music."2
• "He mistakes words; often he half pronounces a word and gets angry when not
understood." [Houat]
M Fury, rage.
Inclination to bite.
G Metamorphosis.
• "He is not likely to live to be old, he is likely to break down at forty. She comes
to her end by cancer of uterus or breast, or by imbecility." [Kent]
• "Adult people who act as they were children. An aspect of child-like simplicity
is present and the mind returns to a state of child-like innocence. ... The mental
state has not developed, the child has not grown into a man or woman in
intellectual attainments or wisdom, and remains as a whimpering, screaming
child. ... The child-like state remains while the body grows." [Kent]
• "According to a Fulani tradition, toad's oil seeps into stone. When the neophyte
asks the mystagogue how to pass from ignorance to knowledge, the latter
replies: 'Change yourself into toad's oil.' That is to say that humans can penetrate
to the depths of a subject
without altering its externals through the subtle fluidity of their spirit."4
Offensive discharges.
• "You would think you had the odour of gangrene or gangrenous erysipelas in
the room from smelling these discharges." [Kent]
G CHILLY.
G PROFUSE PERSPIRATION.
• "Copious sweat, with weakness, and often with morbid hunger." [Houat]
G Great appetite.
• "Violent hunger, even after eating, esp. in the evening." "In the morning after
breakfast, often feels hungry, as if he had eaten nothing." [Houat]
G High sex drive, mostly not leading to sexual relationships, but driving to
MASTURBATION.
• "Desire for solitude in order to practice masturbation. This alone throws a flood
of light upon the nature of the remedy; the lack of government, the lack of
control over the sexual longing, and the low-mindedness whereby he is willing
to abandon himself to the lower things that are in the human race, to perverted
practices and vices." [Kent]
• "The toad's impulse to clasp has been described as 'frenzied ardour', and this
may be recognized as a confusion of the heat of compulsive impulse and the
coldness of indiscrimination. The cold-bloodedness of the toad, with its
externalization of sex, its lack of discernment, and the fact that it neither courts
its mate nor suckles its young, strongly reflects all that in human psychology
appears as lack of feeling, and unrelatedness."6
G Pains BURNING.
G Epileptic CONVULSIONS.
• "The chief laurels of Bufo have been won in the treatment of epilepsy. Bojanus
has cured many cases; and no medicine has served me better in the treatment of
this disease.
Few people who have witnessed a characteristic epileptic seizure can have failed
to notice the curiously toad-like aspect assumed by the subject. The epileptic
seizure and the status epilepticus give the clearest correspondence to the Bufo
range of action." [Clarke]
Lapping motion of tongue; rubbing of nose; feeling of face; mouth wide open.
Unintelligible speech.
Stiffness of arm[s].
Plexus solaris; stomach; uterus; nape of neck [like a shock]; brain [as if numb];
face; abdomen.
Unconsciousness; falling.
Eyes turned upward [to left] or eyes open; biting of tongue; chewing motion of
jaw; redness of face; face bathed in sweat.
Involuntary urination.
Spasmodic laughing.
c Petit mals.
Sometimes he will continue right on doing what he was doing, and nobody will
know of the spell." [Kent]
Throbbing and heat of the face, as from being too near the fire.
P Cardiovascular.
• "Faithful Henry has been so unhappy when his master was changed into a frog,
that he had caused three iron band to be laid round his heart, lest it should burst
with grief and sadness."7
• "The beating of the heart increases the headache and seems to correspond with
it."
[Allen]
• "Violent ebul itions of the blood with a sensation as if the heart were swimming
in blood." [cured case, Boger]
[1] Dale-Green, A Study in the Symbolism of the Common Toad; BHJ, Jan.
1960. [2]
Geukens, Bufo and Epilepsy; HL 3/93. [3] Geukens, notes from seminar in
Switzerland; HL Vol. 2. [4-5] Chevalier and Gheerbrant, Dictionary of Symbols.
[6] Dale-Green, ibid.
[7] Brothers Grimm, The Frog-King, or Iron Henry. [8] Dale-Green, ibid.
Rubrics
Mind
Love for animals [1]. Cursing [1]. Deceitful, sly [1]. Fear of animals [1], of dogs
[1], of infection [1], of mirrors in room [1]. Giggling [1]. Hatred and revengeful
[1]. Irritability in morning on waking [1], when aroused [1], when questioned
[1], when spoken to [1].
Laughing alternating with weeping [1]; causeless [1], childish [1], over serious
matters
[1], silly [1]. Lewdness, lewd talk [1]. Playful [1]. Runs about [1]. Spitting
people in their face [1].
Vertigo
Head
Sensation of a heavy ball, when shaking head [1/1*]. Heat > epistaxis [1]; as if
brain were boiling [1]; as if hot vapour were rising up to top of head [1/1*]. Pain,
> spirituous liquors [1]. Sensation as if head were full of water [1].
Eye
Open, during convulsions [1*]. Pupils dilated before epileptic attack [2]. Staring
during convulsions [1*].
Vision
Nose
Face
Chewing motion of jaw, with convulsions [1/1*]. Skin of face tans quickly
[1/1*].
Teeth
Stomach
Abdomen
Sensation as if cold balls were running all through intestines [1/1*]. Distension,
with emaciation of rest of body [1*].
Urine
Male
Aversion to coition [1]; enjoyment absent [1]. Sexual desire violent [2].
Female
Pain, uterus, when sitting long [2/1]; extending down the thighs [1]. Sexual
desire increased during menses [1]. Tumours, fibroid, uterus [1].
Chest
Sensitive nodules in mammae [2]. Pain, heart, > pressure of hand [1]. Shocks in
cardiac region [2]. Sensation as if heart were swimming in water [2]; swimming
in blood [1/1*].
Limbs
Constriction feet, as if shoes were too tight [1/1*]. Pain, sensation as if a peg
were driven in joints [1/1]. Weakness, tendency to sprain ankle[s] [1*].
Sleep
Dreams
Skin
Eruptions, blue boils [1], large boils [1]; carbuncle [2]; pemphigus [1];
gangrenous and vesicular [2]; yellow vesicles [1]. Sensation as if skin were
hanging loose [1].
Generals
Chorea, cannot walk, must run or jump [1]. Convulsions in nursing children
when mother is angry or frightened [1; Cham.*], from fright of the mother [1].
Emaciation, in spite of good appetite [1*].
Food
Desire: [1]: Alcohol; brandy; delicacies; pastry; rich food; sweets; sweet drinks.
Worse: [1]: Alcohol; cold drinks; milk; pastry.
Cactus grandiflorus
Cact.
When God measures a man, He puts the tape around his heart instead of his
head.
[McKenzie]
Signs
DISTRIBUTION Cacti are mainly New World plants. They are native to
semideserts of the warmer parts of North, Central and South America, and are
doubtfully native or early naturalized in Africa, Madagascar and Sri Lanka. The
genus Opuntia is naturalized in Australia, South Africa, and the Mediterranean.
Several species of Opuntia are found in colder regions, i.e. in Patagonia and
Canada. Various Cereus grow exposed to the icy winds of the Mexican
Cordilleras. The typical habitat of cacti is arid regions with erratic rainfalls and
long drought periods in between.
and resisting the standard herbarium procedure based on dried specimens. Under
pressure from collectors and commercial growers large numbers of 'genera' and
'species' have been created, more nearly equivalent to subgenera and subspecies
or varieties in other plant families. It is here considered to contain 87 genera,
while others recognize over 300. "1
Cacti are easily confused with certain cactiform species in the family
Didiereaceae -
FEATURES "Most cacti have spines, and the spines, branches and flowers arise
from special sunken cushions or areoles which may be regarded as condensed
lateral branches; these are either set singly on tubercles or serially along raised
ribs. Tufts of short barbed hairs [glochids] may also be present in the areoles.
The young green shoots undertake photosynthesis, but with age these become
corky and in the arborescent species develop into a hard, woody, unarmed trunk
as in conventional trees. The vascular system forms a hollow cylindrical
reticulated skeleton and lacks true vessels. The roots are typically superficial and
in the larger species widely spreading and adapted for rapid absorption near the
soil surface. The flowers are solitary and sessile [Pereskia excepted], bisexual
[with rare exceptions] and regular to oblique-limbed. Colour range is from red
and purple through various shades of orange and yellow to white; blue is
lacking."2 Cacti vary considerably in size, ranging from tree Opuntias of 10 m
tall to desert dwarfs such as Lophophora, and epiphytes perched on trees. Most
cacti are succulents and are characterised by swollen stems which harbour water.
The water-filled stems are frequently strengthened by means of tough ridges.
Covered by a thickened epidermis, cacti contain a thick and mucilaginous sap.
The entire structure of cacti is meant to check excessive evaporation, enabling
them to survive in hot and arid places.
ECONOMICAL USES Cacti have few uses, apart from their wide use as garden
and house ornamentals. The fleshy fruits of many are collected locally and eaten
raw or made into jams or syrups. Opuntias [prickly pears or Indian figs] are
grown commercially in Mexico and California for their large juicy fruits.
Opuntias, in particular Opuntia ficus-indica, have become troublesome weeds in
Australia, India, and North and South Africa.
The juice of Opuntias is employed in the manufacture of candles. The large-
flowered epicacti are grown primarily for their flowers. Epicacti are epiphytes,
plants growing on other plants without being parasitic.
does occur, it is quite spectacular. The huge tubular flowers - usually red, and
sometimes white or yellow - also emit a delicious odour. The juicy fruits then
produced are a local treat. In this way, the cactus begins its existence as a
spherical, moist plant and ends it in the same way as a juicy, round fruit. The
plant's enormous vitality is also evident from its ability to multiply from
cuttings. Pieces that have been broken off grow into a full plant again. If they
were not kept in check by 'harmful insects' they would overpower and control
huge areas in the shortest time. They are virtually immune to fire and poison.
The cactus exerts all its energy on the conquering of territory.
NAME The name Selenicereus derives from Gr. selene, the moon, in allusion to
its nocturnal blooming, and L. cereus, waxy or wax taper, referring to the shape
of some of the species of this cactus. The name cactus comes from Gr. kaktos, a
name used by Theophrastus of Eresus [372-285 BC] for a prickly plant of South
Europe - most probably Cynara, cardoon - but now applied as a general name for
any plant of the family Cactaceae.
dependent largely upon the primary effects of the drug upon the heart."4
HALLUCINOGEN The finding that large doses of Selenicereus can cause slight
delirium and hallucinations is in line with the estimation that 10 per cent of the
species of cacti are hallucinogenic. The most well-known hallucinogenic cacti
are Peyote
[Anhalonium] and the San Pedro [Trichocereus pachanoi], both of which contain
mescaline.
days.
Affinity
Modalities
Worse: Lying [on left side; on occiput]. Periodically. Exertion; walking. 10-11
a.m. or 11 p.m. Disappointed love. Sun. Damp. Slight contact. Ascending stairs.
After eating.
Fasting.
Main symptoms
• "Love of solitude, he always avoids those about him who try to comfort him."
• "Sensation in the chest as if some one were pressing and holding it tightly,
under the delusion that this was the case he cried out, 'Leave me alone'."
[Rubini]
M Deliberate - impulsive.
This symptom was recorded by Dr. John H. Fitch, who obviously was a
'cactophile' since he proved 4 species of cactus: Selenicereus, Cereus bonplandii,
Cereus serpentinus, and Opuntia. The disposition to act 'deliberately', observed
on the first day of the proving, seems to have been an attempt to combat
'impulses bordering on the grotesque', a symptom observed on that same first
day.
• "We understand now that this type of person, who can act only according to his
whims, feels suffocated by others and that this feeling found its way into the
subconscious the sensation: 'whole body feels as if caged, each wire being
twisted tighter and tighter'.
Whether this feeling is being felt locally or at all levels, it limits the action of the
person, and he feels that his heart is like an imprisoned bird [sensation in heart
like bird's wings].
c "This is also a good remedy for children who will not venture to do anything as
long as someone is looking at them; they seem incapable of doing anything, but
get up at night and are perfectly able to act as long as they are shielded from the
gaze of others."
[Grandgeorge]
• "The fact that she gave up her work whenever she felt she was being observed
could mean that she wanted to 'create her flower hidden from sight: during the
night'. Sangeeta used to give up her occupation whenever she was being
observed and she only did what she had decided to do. She was not sure of her
action and of her decision."2
In another case - that of a young girl, suffering from a heart abnormality - there
was also a great recovery on Cactus. The remedy was chosen on the same group
of symptoms:
"Does deliberately what she wants to do, otherwise feels like being in a cage;
doubtful of progresses in life and feels life is ephemeral."3
G CONSTRICTION.
[heart, chest, neck, body feels tight, bladder, rectum, vagina, uterus; often
"brought on by slightest contact"].
• Sensation of painful constriction in the lower part of the chest, as if a cord were
tightly tied round the false ribs, with obstruction of the breathing."
movements." [Rubini]
G < 11 P.M.
• "Pain in the uterus and its ligaments, recurring every evening, and increasing
gradual y till 11 p.m. , when it is worst; it then ceases until the following
evening, for many successive days." [Rubini]
P Choking sensation [lump], cannot bear a tight collar around neck [Lach.].
P Angina pectoris.
P Atherosclerosis.
• "If the true meaning of the word tonic is understood as implying 'a medicine
which has the power of acting slowly and by insensible degrees', then Cactus is
pre-eminently a tonic. I wish to make it very clear, indeed, that Cactus is not a
heart 'whip', in the ordinary sense; not a drug to use for a quick, decisive action;
not a power you can summon to do instant work. Cactus must have time to act.
Given time, it does not produce showy effects, but works slowly and smoothly. It
is not often a thoroughbred, quarter-stretch sprinter, but a homely, reliable pack-
mule, in a therapeutic sense. ... There is one condition in which Cactus is king of
all the cardiac remedies, so far as my experience up to present goes, and that is,
where the heart is feeble and the vessels are atheromatous or in a state of
arteriosclerosis. ... If cardiac force be applied to the stiff arteries too rapidly, they
may rupture, with all the dire consequences of haemorrhage - cerebral, most
likely.
Repertory
Mind
Vertigo
Head
Congestion from coffee [2], during menses [1], from mental exertion [3], from
exposure to sun [2]. Pain, comes and goes with the sun [1], > bending head
backward [2], from exertion of body [2], from fasting, if hunger is not appeased
at once [1], from noise, esp.
Eye
Vision
Nose
Throat
Choking, with cardiac pain [2], < clothing [2], compelling swallowing [1].
Swallowing difficult, must drink in order to swallow [2]; impeded, must drink at
every mouthful to wash down the food [2].
Abdomen
Rectum
Weight and feeling as of a plug wedged between pubis and coccyx [2].
Bladder
Female
Constriction of vagina during coition [3/1], on touch [3/1]. Menses daytime only
[1], cease while lying [1]; clotted [1], dark [2], too frequent [2]; only on motion
[1].
Respiration
Difficult, > lying on back [3], > lying on back with shoulders elevated [3/1],
during menses [1], during pain in heart [2], during palpitation [2].
Chest
Mammae sensitive to cold air [1/1]. Pain, > lying on back [2]; in heart > lying on
back
[2], before menses [1], during menses [1], extending to left hand [2]. Palpitation,
when
holding breath [1], during deep inspiration [1], on beginning to move [1/1], >
sitting up
Sleep
Food