ASARUM EUROPEAUM
Asarum vulgare, Asarum foliis reniformibus subhirsutis
English: Asarabacca, Foie’s Foot, Hazelwort, Wild Nard
French: Asaret, Cabaret d’Europe, Oreille d’homme, Narde sauvage
German: Haselwurz, Haselkraut
Italian: Asaro
Dutch: Mansoor
Swedish: Hasselort
Russian: Wodoler
Natural order: Aristolochiae
Family: Jussieu [vegetable substance] – Gynandria monogynia, L.
Mode of preparation: The whole plant is used; it is gathered during the flowering in April, May and June. The juice of the fresh plant is expressed and mixed with equal parts of alcohol, which yields the mother tincture.
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
Asarum appears to be primarily an hysterical remedy. The state of Asarum arises for varied reasons, the two most common being alcoholism and mental overexertion. There are in Asarum, as in other remedies, different stages of development of pathology – different levels of physical and mental disturbances. One level of disturbance can be quite mild, but the very same remedy can also have a very severe level of disturbance. What follows are descriptions of the different levels of pathology to which Asarum corresponds most frequently.
The main characteristic of Asarum which has to be remembered is oversensitiveness of the entire nervous system, and this hypersensitivity, this overexcitability focuses primarily upon the auditory nerve: Asarum Individuals cannot tolerate any kind of noise.
Asarum, when given early, will prevent the eventual development of those hysterical states that go from one extreme to the other. The one extreme is the extreme sensitivity of the auditory nerve to even the least amount of noise. Hearing a noise causes chills and an unrevealed, internal irritability. Asarum patients feel that their mind will disintegrate from noise; and, interestingly, though definitely sensitive
to loud noises, Asarum is especially sensitive to a specific type of grating