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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2217

These fears increase as evening draws near, at dusk and darkness. They are aggravated mostly when the patient is alone. What relieves the fear of the alien and the weird is to talk to someone they know. As long as this ‘normal’ form of human society and commu- nication is present, Drosera is able to suppress his fears, they may even seem unreal to him; but as soon as he is left alone again, the paranoia comes back powerfully and seizes him again.
Drosera has a severe anxiety which may be felt in the body as a physical symptom. An uneasy feeling of anxiety, which seems to be seated in the region of liver and spleen, slowly rises towards the head. Sometimes a sudden wave of heat flows over the whole body and especially over the face. This uneasy feeling usually comes from the Drosera patient’s certainty that bad news will come.
Solitary activities, such as reading, aggravate the mental state; the patient becomes more restless by the hour, reads the same sentence over and over again, puts the book away and moves to another task. Only in the presence of a person they know and trust, can their unease and anxiety be reduced for some time.
The Drosera delusions are sometimes coupled with a diffuse feeling of guilt, as though they had done something wrong. Drosera people are usually very obstinate. If they have come to a decision they will work very obstinately in order to execute it, and there is hardly any possibility to make them reconsider.
But sometimes their hidden doubts, about whether what they are doing is right, which they do not admit to their conscious mind, will find an outlet in this fear of bad news, conspiracy and alien powers. A ‘curative action’ of Drosera is described in the Materia Medica Pura as ‘Joyful, good courage; has no fear of bad things because he knows that he has done right’. Untreated Drosera patients are far from this confident state of good conscience.