Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 123

AGARICUS MUSCARIUS
Amanita muscaria. Agaricus imperialis.
English: Bug agaric
French: Agaric mouchete, Champignon rouge
German: Fliegenschwamm, Fliegenpilz Italian: Amanita
Russian: Moucho-more
N.O. Fungi; Class I. Thallogens Vegetable family [Jussieu]: Cryptogamia
Preparation:Agaricus is collected in the hottest months and hung up by a string in the air to dry; some dry of themselves on the ground and are said to be far more narcotic than those artificially preserved. To render it proper for homeopathic usage, the stalk and the cap are cleaned, and after the epidermis is removed, it is cut into small pieces, on which an equal quantity of alcohol is poured. From the tincture thus prepared the alcoholic attenuations are produced
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
Agaricus is a remedy which is needed more often in our times than in the past since its psychological picture corresponds closely to many of the contemporary anxiety states encountered with increasing frequency today
The psychological pathology of Agaricus typically manifests in dependent, weak-willed individuals. These persons have from an early age established a pattern of seeking the guidance and domination of a stronger person. This desired dependence originates from an inability or a refusal to act with initiative or to accept responsibility. It is as if there is a paresis of the will and of the power to think; these patients cannot summon enough will power to confront life situations. Instead they will attempt, by lavishing great love and devotion upon their mentor or protector, to seduce this stronger person into making and accepting responsibility for the difficult decisions in their lives. A man, for instance, may depend upon and obey with almost complete fealty his mother and, later in life, his girlfriend or wife. He is a weak willed individual who asks everybody for advice: “what shall I do?”