sentimentality and emotionality of the remedy, the aversion to being touched is seen as a function of the psychological state primarily. Antimonium crudum children can reach a point at which even the look of another person becomes as unbearable as being touched physically; therefore, they do not want to be looked at or touched.
Sometimes such a state as that described above will arise for no apparent reason, especially in children. At times, the condition can border on hysteria. One might think that such states belong more to women, but Antimonium crudum is indicated mostly in men.
It is exasperating to witness a previously pleasant boy go into an Antimonium crudum acute state during a fever or a common cold. He is worse than a Chamomilla child, and, of course, much worse than Calcarea phosphorica. The child cries and screams; he is peevish and impossible. The mother will say his behavior is driving her to despair. He does not want to sit or lie down, to play or talk, or anything. The whole day, without pause, the child cries and screams and scolds and strikes out if he is addressed, talked to or touched. He hardly goes to sleep before he is awake, and once again weeping and moaning. Anything that catches his attention does so only for a few seconds, and then this inner state of torment returns, and he resumes crying and shouting. If the child has a high fever, it may evolve into anything, any illness. If you suspect the remedy, you should make a point of asking what the child likes to eat, or, if you are lucky, the mother will give you the information that the child keeps asking for cucumber. This, then, is a case of Antimonium crudum. It matters not whether this initial fever will develop into mumps, scarlatina, chicken pox, pneumonia, or anything else. You need not hesitate. However, if you lack the information about the desire for cucumber, the child will probably be given Chamomilla, Calcarea phosphorica orCiria, etc., but with no effect, of course.
The child is not aggressive; it does not attack others or hit like the Cirta child, or even worse, the Curare child, who has the impulse to hit like Stramonium and Tubercul’mum children.
There are Antimonium crudum children, however, who do not behave so extremely as described above, especially if they are not constitutional patients, but only need this remedy during an acute. In these cases you will not see such a dramatic change in their character, but only withdrawal, a sulkiness or moodiness, and the same underlying
sensitivity, though much reduced and less expressed.