sounds. These acoustic hallucinations may be complemented by disturbances of bodily perception. A delusion of falling forward all the time, for instance, is rather characteristic.
The main fear of Elaps is a strong fear of being alone. Of course this is found in many other remedies, too; but when we see the main reason for this fear in Elaps persons, you will understand that it is quite characteristic. The patients have a marked fear of something horrible happening, and this is the cause for their dread of being alone.
The ‘horrible thing’ they are afraid of is usually a feeing of being threatened by other people: others might come too close to them, might violate their private space, even become violent. In Lippe’s proving, it say that there is a dread ‘as though rowdies would break in’. These fears of being threatened by others may be permanently present in the mind of an Elaps patient, also in their daydreams. From Mure we learn that one prover had the following experience: ‘Reveries in daytime, he imagines he is being beaten’.
So the desire for company in Elaps patients is related to a desire for protection against the assaults or encroachments of other people. But even being spoken to may be perceived as an assault by them.
‘Does not want to be spoken to’. In another proving symp- tom, the prover ‘desires to be in a deep cavern where he can see no one’. So we have to add a paradoxical desire for solitude to the fear of being alone. ‘Desire to be alone, takes refuge for days together in a corner of the antechamber’.
It is especially behaviour exhibited by other people which may provoke states of great irritability, disputation and even temper tantrums in Elaps patients. ‘Irritable, quarrelsome mood, with mental agitation’. ‘Inclination to strike and pick a quarrel’. Even: ‘Irresistible desire to scream at the top of her voice’. Elaps people feel very easily disturbed, and then as it were their ‘blood starts to