duty, of responsibility. They appear to adopt the attitude that everything is here on earth for their own pleasure. They feel that they are more intelligent than others, more sensitive, more capable in their work, and more well-suited to enjoy sex than anybody else. They love to travel in pursuit of sexual encounters. They are happy with themselves, prone to laugh and sing, yet any astute observer can easily perceive the delusional quality of their thinking, as well as the imminent possibilty of eventual madness. In our texts it says: "Great self-esteem; great satisfaction with himself and his labor; internal complacency with smiles. Foolish joy and absurd complacency. Gay humor with disposition to laugh and sing. Cheerful, gay mirthful."
Another syndrome seen in these cases is the inevitable result of such an attitude. These persons, so closely attached to their objects of pleasure, experience tremendous jealousy if others have something that they themselves lack. The texts say, "Ungovernable jealousy; everything causes jealousy." They become attached not so much to a particular partner, but to the idea of pleasure; thus, it is another’s experience of pleasure that becomes a threat and provokes such jealousy.
As a natural consequence of such a lifestyle, of such intense identification with earthly pleasures, once they begin to suffer from some kind of disturbance in their health, they become overwhelmed with a fear of dying. The fear that pleasure may end and be replaced by suffering is unbearable. They become restless with a constant fear of death.
At this stage they may develop a strange fear of water, such that they are unable to swallow water even though thirsty. Even the mention of the word "water" causes a spasm of the throat, a tightness precluding swallowing.
Fear of shining objects is a characteristic of this remedy which can cause it to resemble Stramonium; however the destructive force of Anantherum is much less than that of Stramonium. Anantherum will very much regret any damage which may have resulted from their spells of anger.
This remedy has a great deal of convulsions and spasms, and it should be thought of frequently in epilepsy, particularly when the patient’s morality is rather low and his sexual demands high. Convulsive tics occur.