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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 113

AETHUSA
Aethusa cynapium. Fool’s Parsley.
N.O. Umbelliferae.
Tincture of whole flowering plant.
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
Unfortunately, nowhere in our homeopathic literature do we find a clear description of the chronic conditions of the remedy Aethusa. The remedy has been considered mainly for acute conditions. Of course, Kent has beautifully described the acute picture of the remedy: aggressive gastric and intestinal conditions where “The child has the appearance as if it were dying, pale hippocratic face…” However, certain clues, which appear in the Materia Medicas, the Repertory and other sources, when combined with information gleaned from clinical cases, have helped establish a picture of the chronic state of Aethusa.
With regard to the mental-emotional characteristics, we frequently find that the Aethusa individual remains separate from others — a man apart. He is withdrawn, but in a very singular way. Inside he experiences very deep, intense emotions, yet he does not communicate these emotions to other people. He may be moved to tears, but tears do not come. He may feel friendly, but he appears aloof.
It seems that at a certain point in the psychopathological development of the Aethusa individual he has decided to refrain from communicating with other people. The emotional injury or disappointment which provokes this withdrawal may be surprisingly mild. We do not find in Aethusa a prolonged history of many bitter disappointments and griefs which can account for such introversion or withdrawal. Usually there is some past stress which does not seem very significant. The patient may say, “I didn’t grow up in a happy family” or some other such vague statement, but nothing definite seems to have occurred to explain this decided withdrawal. This lack of a definitive and sufficient causation and its strange effect is a peculiarity of this remedy.
In other cases we find instead a slow-growing disillusionment, a sense that no one has fully understood or responded to the patient’s intense emotions. Thus the patient may feel that communicating with other