see non-existing cats and dogs for instance or a woman gets it fixed in her head that a rat or mouse is running across the room.
Such delusions suggest that even when the logical mind is no longer operative, there remains a deep subconscious connection with
animals. In these advanced mental states or deliriums there is no fear of the animals seen in the hallucinations; the subconscious mind merely projects animal images.
One might argue that a love for animals is natural, and, indeed, this is true, but Aethusa’s love is exaggerated. After treatment with Aethusa these animal collectors begin to give away their animals; their degree of attachment returns to a normal level. This change of behavior demonstrates the pathological nature of the attachment to animals. The Aethusa patient may, after treatment, feel as if his departure from his withdrawn state is like emerging from a dream.
There is an alternative path for the release of the emotional energy; the patient may become extremely involved with social work. There is something quite similar here to the tendency to care for animals. Through social work he expresses love, but without the need to directly communicate about his feelings to another individual. The patient may paradoxically state in the interview, “1 have finished with human beings.” However, at another point he may say that he has moments when he “…wants to embrace the whole world.” He is capable of feeling great love. It is exactly this discrepancy that characterizes the Aethusa case.
Now, it easy to imagine that if insufficient outlets are found for this intense emotionality, if the feelings remain withheld, the emotions can overload the subconscious mind. This overloading sets the stage for much of the pathology of Aethusa. As the brimming subconscious mind overflows, we may often see the patient begin to talk to himself. He may not even notice people around him as he voices his thoughts out loud. It is a “pouring out” — symbolically, a verbal equivalent of the vomiting and diarrhea of this remedy. Staphisagria may also talk to himself; he is very emotional and needs emotional communication but when something a little bit aggressive is said to him, he withdraws at once, goes home and talks to his mirror.
Persons with a saturation of the subconscious mind, such as is the case with Aethusa, tend to manifest a host of symptoms at night and especially before falling asleep. The Aethusa person is aggravated by the dark. The darkness seems to permeate his being producing a heavy