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Materia Medica Viva Volume 12 – page 2618

tinguished by its more passive character. In Hyoscyamus the person is not as active, energetic or violent. He is more preoccupied with his internal state, sitting and muttering to himself or talking to absent people or dead persons. This mania is of the type commonly seen in elderly, senile patients. Many of such patients can be seen popu- lating the hallways of nursing homes; oblivious to their surround- ings, they sit alone, mutter nonsensically, pick at their clothes, etc. Of course, when pushed, Hyoscyamus can explode into violence like any of the other remedies, thus explaining the fact that it is listed in bold type in the Repertory in the rubric Violent .
Rather than actually hitting, Hyoscyamus is more likely to experi- ence the unrealized desire to strike. In states of insanity Hyoscy- amus will shout, I’m going to kill you!, but he won’t in actuality. He possesses only the impulse. Stramonium, on the other hand, will not threaten; he just kills. Hyoscyamus is the most mild, least aggres- sive of the schizophrenic remedies. Stramonium, our most violent remedy, will strike in rage, will be the first to attack. Hyoscyamus is more passive and cold, the violence is more subdued and internal. The desire to kill can be extreme in Hyoscyamus and constantly present. They are so overwhelmed by their strong emotions that they feel they can be destructed by them. After a disappointment (or disappointed love) they start shutting them off, their emotions become blocked, immovable and eventually they become detached. That’s when we see the coldness and the inhumanity with which Hyoscyamus can harm other people. This urge to kill can cause one to confuse Hyoscyamus with Mercurius, but Mercurius lacks the sexual twist, which will be described later.
Externally little is seen, though internally he may feel an overwhelm- ing urge to strike someone over and over with a hammer, etc. The desire to strike can be present all the time. If an easy opportunity to commit violence is presented, he may act e.g. pushing someone off of a cliff, for instance, if they happen to be standing too invitingly near the edge. Hyoscyamus lacks an understanding of the poten- tially lethal consequences of his actions. The earlier passionate jealousy tends to compromise his judgement