THE EMOTIONAL PICTURE
The emotional symptoms of this remedy appear mostly under the stress of the excessively painful headaches; during such a violent headache the despair is so great that they want to jump out of the window; they become frantic with the pain and attempt to escape, as if they were enclosed, springing out of bed suddenly. ‘Anxiety and inclination to run away.’
The patient wants the room perfectly still. If sitting up in bed, you will often find a Glonoinum patient with both hands pressing upon the head with all the strength available, until the arms are utterly exhausted. He wants the head pressed upon from all sides, wants it bandaged, or a tight cap fitted down upon it. The headache is worse both from bending backward and from stooping forward. There are times when the headache is so severe that lying back upon the pillow cannot be tolerated.
Very commonly the pain begins in the occiput and goes to the forehead, but the whole head is in a state of throbbing. But, we notice more particularly, the ‘aggravation from motion and the least noise’. This patient will sit in perfect quietude and silence for hours. You will be astonished to see how long a Glonoinum patient can sit without moving a muscle, because motion is so painful.
At the other extreme, there is violent mania, shrieking, screaming, striking those around them after convulsions. They fear that soon they are going to die, fear that they have been poisoned; or feelings of impending misfortune, with a sensation as if the chest were ‘screwed together’, and the throat swollen.
They get easily excited, with confused fancies, and then become very animated and talkative with a constant flow of ideas. But when in fever, they become easily delirious and insensible, and speedily comatose. Eventually this excitement ends in a great depression