Books

The Bern Seminars – Page 163

(G.V.): Are your feet cold in bed or are they warm?
(M.P.): They are not cold.
(G.V.): Do they get warm easily?
(M.P.): My whole body is actually warm. My wife always says that if she is close to me, she keeps warm.
(G.V.): Do you sometimes have to stick your feet out of the covers?(M.P.): Not really.
(G.V.): Do you have any problems with high places, looking down?(M.P.): Yes.
(G.V.): What do you feel?
(M.P.): If I go up a ladder, I get frozen.
(G.V.): Fear.

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(G.V.): Do you hear that? He says: “If I go up a ladder, I get frozen.” Do you understand that? This is a fear of high places, a vertigo. He has a strong vertigo from high places; look at your books.
(A.): Why do you interpret vertigo out of his statement “I’m fro-zen” when he goes up a ladder? It is a fear, not a vertigo… (G.V.): Yes, it is a fear, I don’t disagree, but which are the remedies that have fear from high places? Besides it is not very clear how much fear is differentiated from “vertigo high places.” What the books means by “vertigo high place” is never found in any remedy because real vertigo means turning around, it is not diz-ziness. What they really have is a mixture of dizziness with fear. What I know about Calcarea carbonica is that, when it goes up a ladder or even a chair, in short, the moment it is off the ground, Calcarea carbonica goes: “Oh my God, this is not steady!” If it goes up a ladder, even three steps higher, it freezes. This is a severe expression of the symptom that you are looking for.
(A.): Argentum nitricum is also afraid of high places.
(G.V.): Absolutely.
(A.): Did you not take it into consideration?
(G.V.): No, I did not consider it because, first, Argentum nitricum is generally not cold or aggravated by cold, instead it is usu-