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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 118

patients may become quite agitated or perturbed when they hear a ribald or risque joke. They cannot tolerate anything which excites their already intense inner emotional state.
The Aethusa patient seems to be too serious. He will give you the impression of one who seriously meditates all the time. This strong meditative inclination is depicted in the linea nasalis which are deep and well-marked, giving the impression of an older age and a kind of wisdom. The Aethusa face is an old wise face with deep furrows.
A good homeopath should take all such observations into consideration because they will sometimes help him make a “unique” prescription. Once I had under my care an Indian philosopher who had been around the world to see the best homeopaths of the time. According to his own estimation, nobody was ever able to help him substantially. I was a young homeopath when he invited me to treat him. He was taking a lot of allopathic medicine at the time. He told me his medical history, and I could not make head nor tail of it. However, I noticed that his face resembled the description of Aethusa; then I looked carefully at the tip of his nose, and I there saw an eruption that was similar to the typical nasal eruption of the remedy. Consequently I was able to correctly begin the case and successfully treat his chronic bronchitis, as well as a host of other quite bothersome symptomatology.
Aethusa benumbs the mind and makes it feel empty and incapable of perceiving, retaining and processing information. Schoolboys or students cannot concentrate their mind on their work. It seems to them that is an utter impossibility to prepare for an examination because they are unable to read anything; unable to think or to fix their attention. Their head is confused and sometimes they feel a kind of stupefaction as if a barrier were erected between their organs of sense and the external objects. This state arises especially after having become overtaxed from mental exertion. I used to almost always give Picric acid to such cases until I witnessed the results Aethusa could achieve. The effort these people make while being so intellectually compromised leaves them looking extremely tired and exhausted. Aethusa children may resemble Calcarea phosphorica as both remedies can present headaches coupled with inability to focus the mind and learn.
The mind of Aethusa becomes weak and seems to have abandoned all efforts to operate effectively in much the same way that the emotions and sexual desire have been relinquished with no considerable resistance. The idea is that with relatively little provocation the organism