power to overcome difficulties, to endure, nor to concentrate and so, ultimately, the Calcarea subject feels compelled to give up. He then either withdraws and stays homebound or gives himself over to medical care.
‘Little Ideas’
This trait, the fixation on little ideas, is characteristic of the remedy, but the degree to which it is evident may vary and depends upon the stage of the mental pathology. It is peculiar to see how, under the pathology of Calcarea, a mind that used to be sound and whole, becomes fixated on little things. In its mildest form this keynote may appear as a simple inflexibility of thinking. At a later stage it becomes a striking obstinacy in daily life, and ultimately, a preoccupation with trivial ideas that amounts almost to psychosis.
By the time Calcarea has degraded to a relatively serious condition, the mind loses its perspective and gets obsessed with little ideas. It is not merely that the Calcarea patient pays attention to trivialities and details; these minor concerns prevail and actually dominate his life and mind. This kind of inflexibility of mind, the fixation on minor issues, makes it impossible for him to think about anything else. He does not even seem to realise that his focus is on small, insignificant things, and that he is overlooking the essential.
Kent describes this state graphically: ‘When the Calcarea patient begins to relate to his friends how he feels they all naturally say to him, “Why don’t you put that aside; that doesn’t amount to anything,” but to him it is a big thing, and he cannot put it aside; all these little things combine to convince him that he is going crazy. ’
While in this state, Calcarea patients may talk endlessly about these little things that are of no interest to anyone else. Kent asked some of his Calcarea patients why they behaved this way, and he generally got an answer like: 7 tried a good while to stop it, and when I