balance and believe that this can be regained through spiritual liberation. Most of the time, these people desperately need homeopathic treatment.
Returning to the pathology of Anhalonium, eventually the patient becomes apathetic. Additionally, there is mental prostration and exhaustion (brain fag). The mind becomes confused; it is difficult for them to arrive at accurate conclusions – dullness and sluggishness; difficulty in thinking and comprehending. There is stupefaction, as if the brain were intoxicated. Often they seem absorbed in their own thoughts.
Mental work is impossible. Thoughts vanish, and they lose their ability to adapt to new circumstances. Monotonous thoughts. Anhalonium displays a lack of initiative, insecurity, irresolution, and indecision. Weakness of memory; does not remember words.
These persons may experience anguish with fear of death. Eventually there is a kind of resignation from life, and a desire for death and suicidal depression can develop.
Sexually, there is either an increase or a diminution in desire. In women we also see lesbianism and nymphomania.
A study of this remedy by the well-known French doctor, G. Broussalian, provides some interesting insights into this remedy. The study is mentioned in the "Dictionary of Homeopathic Materia Medica" by O. A. Julian.
"Marvelous imaginations, exaltation, beatitude; the mind is transported towards the sky to fall suddenly into fright, stupor, shivering and tears. The rational goes side by side with the irrational, or follows one another with vertiginous rapidity. Marvellous theories are worked out; the world is organised and suddenly becomes deformed. Everything seems suddenly aggrandised, the limbs seem enormous, the notion of time disappears then suddenly the person feels completely punctured, the depersonalisation, the degradation appear after the visions.
"Auditive hallucinations of bells, extra-terrrestial musics come to add to the agony, and all these may lead to syncope. Loquacity may alternate with complete mutism, the levitation with paralysis, jokings with weeping….Waking up is painful, the expression loses its mimetics, a kind of catalepsy takes the place of the marvelous. Anesthesia takes the place of hypersensitiveness, the muscular sense is lost, the tremblings, the pain of the limbs make the patient weak…"