been recognised because they exhibited all or some of the following symptoms.
During physical pathology we usually observe:
• a general aggravation from cold and wet weather. The patients are chilly, cannot get warm, especially their feet which are cold and at the same time may have a slight clammy sweat. They need to wear socks in bed and cannot go to sleep unless they feel that their feet are warm.
• a tendency to be overweight and obese, and to sluggishness;
• perspiration during sleep, around the neck;
• desire for sweets and soft-boiled eggs;
• vertigo in high places.
During mental pathology we most often see:
• that patients have numerous fears, such as a fear of the dark, of ghosts, of thunderstorm, of high places, of mice, of dogs, of infections, etc.;
• a prevailing fear of insanity;
• a particular fear that others will observe and perceive their mental confusion;
• despair of recovery;
• an overwhelming anxiety about health, especially the fear of cancer.
If the cause for the pathology is exhaustion after physical or mental exertion, then the case is further confirmed.
The practitioner should not get lost in the vast array of symptoms but should look for these main key-notes of the remedy. Of the above ten symptoms, at least four or five should be found in a Calcarea case. The following observation regarding Calcarea is particularly important:
The characteristic constellation of physical symptomatology