primarily important here are the causative factors that are being suppressed: suppression of anger and emotions, suppression of all those things which make a person feel alive inside. She is someone who is sensitive, who is sexually alive. She is neither emotionally dead, nor is she crazy. She is not one of the very strong sexual remedies, although she has to have some sort of sexual outlet.
After this analysis I’m sure that everyone has now found the remedy. What is the remedy? Staphysagria? Pulsatilla? This is acse where you will have to prescribe Staphisagria, ignoring the details of the symptomatology. It is very interesting to see all the symptoms, how strong they are, how Hyocyamus comes up but for her- it is Staphisagria.
All her sympathy, her empathy with the world, may eventually make us think of Causticum. This sympathetic element in her, reflected in Causticum, complements the action of Staphisagria. We have here a sensitivity different from that seen in Ignatia or Natrum muriaticum. She looks for contact whereas Ignatia would have acted altogether different. As Ignatia, she would have been able to stand on her own; she would have withdrawn from the world. The patient would have rejected human contact because experience would have shown her how disappointing such contacts can be. In that case, she would most likely have said to herself, “I don’t want any human contact.” This type of state-ment should make you think of Natrum muriaticum and Ignatia.(A.l): Insanity is not the rubric.
(G.V.): Isn’t insanity the rubric? It’s actually a very big rubric. Over the years I have described the insanity of Staphisagria as I’ve witnessed it in situations almost identical to this one. ‘Insan-ity from anger?’ What is the remedy? You’ll find in the Synthetic Repertory that the remedy is Staphisagria. However, perhaps Staphisagria should be in the general rubric. Staphisagria has acute insanity, but this isn’t really the most pressing problem here. The symptomatology points towards insanity, but it is not real insanity. You see in the course of interviewing the patient