recognise the environment, they do not perceive what is going on, unless some considerable time passes and after having moved about quite a lot. They wake up from a dream and are so lost that they do not know whether they are still in the dream or not. They wake up in the middle of the night with a feeling of fear, an indescribable apprehension for no apparent reason. Sleep is an aggravating factor for this lazy vascular system which slows down and stagnates further, and therefore is worse during and after sleep.
This aggravation is observed in acute as well as in chronic conditions. In acute conditions with fever the patient will wake up in a torpor, unable to recognise anyone in the room, with delusions that he is lost, not knowing where he is, and then he may want to escape from the window. The element of disorientation is very strong in Aesculus.
Lying down promotes the venous stasis, the vascular laziness. With Aesculus there is a vicious circle: the more he lies down (something that he desires) the more lazy his body, mind and emotions become. He knows that the best for him is to stimulate his physical body with vigorous exercises and his mind with intense thinking. The more violent the exercise the better he feels. Actually he is at his best when engaged in a vivid conversation in a congenial atmosphere or if stimulated mentally. Then he may find himself having a lot of ideas, his mind becomes lucid and active, he is pleasant with others and feels happy and content. But if the opposite occurs, if he gives in to his “stasis”, to his sluggishness and laziness then his mind becomes more and more dull; he feels stupid, discontent, miserable and cross at the same time. The Aesculus hippo, case is especially cross if he does not agree with something you are doing or something that he does not wants you to do. If he should become cross he can be violent and it will take him a long time to recover.
Eventually he develops a definite aversion to doing any mental or physical work, prefering to remain lazy and inactive, and the more he is in that state the more he sinks into depression. He loses his joy of life and the tranquility which are strong elements within this remedy. Eventually sadness, despondency and depression lead to the confusion of mind which is found in the final state.
Aesculus patients are very difficult people to persuade to do physical excercise, in spite of the fact that they know that if they force themselves to perform such physical excercises they will feel much better in the end. Usually they feel that they cannot be bothered, that it takes too much of