• Pain on the heels, or burning sore pain in the heels, felt in the bone; especially on sitting and standing; or pain where the bones are directly covered by the skin (tibiae, clavicles, etc.). This is the only pain that is not ameliorated by walking.
In almost all cases the pain is ameliorated as long as the patient moves about and is aggravated when sitting or standing, or even lying.
The Mental Picture
When they are affected mentally, Cyclamen patients seek solitude, because they not only have depression but also a feeling as if they have done something wrong, and want to be alone and to cry. Weeping actually makes them feel better. They are full of guilt and they have delusions of being persecuted. They have a strong aversion to consolation, like Pulsatilla, but they avoid the open air, not only because it causes easy chills, but of a psychological aversion.
An important feature of Cyclamen is an excessive anxiety of conscience, with strong feelings of guilt. These feelings are often at the root of the depression. Hahnemann says in his Materia Medica Pura: ‘Internal grief and anxiety of conscience, as though he had not done his duty or as though he had committed a crime’. A kind of claustrophobia develops, where any room seems too narrow, but they lack the initiative to leave this
‘narrow’ place and go out.
Sadness and tearful moods are much worse when menstruation is suppressed or ceases; as soon as the bleeding returns, the patient feels better. The melancholy can be connected with great and inexplicable fear and apprehension; as fear of death or an anxiety as though a great misfortune were impending, or else tremendous fear of being deserted or persecuted.