Ill humour and moroseness are striking features of the mental picture of Cyclamen. Irritable with a dislike to do anything, the Cyclamen patient cannot make up his mind to undertake even the slightest task, there is even disinclination to speak. They do not want company and will avoid it as much as possible; they will often react aggressively if anyone tries to give them affection or consolation. In addition, there is a great desire for solitude and a tendency to brood. ‘Great inclination to slumber, all fore- noon’. ‘Longer morning sleep’.
There is much sleeplessness and restlessness at night.
‘Sleep very uneasy, interrupted by frightening dreams, never refreshing’. Finally they do fall asleep, but on waking in the morning they are ill-humoured, with a confused and drowsy head; then ill-humoured all day, disinclined to speak, and devoid of sensation.
A peculiar trait is an ecstatic feeling which may be actually felt in the body as a slight quivering in the joints.
Like the emotions, the intellect of Cyclamen persons may also be dull, even stupefied. The memory becomes dull, patients are unable to remember even things that just happened, they grow forgetful and tend to confound words. ‘Dullness of mind, neither inclined nor able to do any work’. There is a ‘sensation of becoming stupid’, the patient feels unable to think or to under- stand. A symptom from the proving that is characteristic of the stupefaction of mind and emotions: Cyclamen cured a case of mental disturbance during menopause, where ‘the mind was so affected as to make the patient indifferent to what transpired around her, and rendered her incompetent to describe her own case’.
These states of dullness and stupefaction often correspond to a physical lassitude and prostration. ‘Relaxation of the