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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 204

The Alumina tendency for retention is pervasive; both expressiveness and normal eliminative processes seem to be held back. The patient gives the impression of being very closed and self-protective. He seems unwilling or often unable to bring forth his thoughts and emotions. Even in his sexual life the release of orgasm is delayed or completely absent. On the physical plane one sees that normal secretions such as the menses are retained or scanty. Perspiration and other lubricating secretions are also scanty, giving rise to the great dryness of the mucous membranes and the skin which is so characteristic of Alumina. Of course, Alumina is also famous for severe constipation without urging. Thus, one finds the same theme repeated in all the normal outlets of the organism — retention and difficulty in moving forward, even to the point of paralysis. It is as if the entire system were moving in slow motion.
The pathology of this remedy seems to concentrate mostly on the mental and physical levels, with the emotions less affected. On the mental level the Alumina patient almost invariably displays marked dullness and slow comprehension. During the interview the patient gives information very slowly and in vague, hazy terms. Of course, as in all remedies, one finds a spectrum of cases ranging from intellectuals to more unsophisticated, primitive type people. Patients at either extreme will present themselves quite differently. The intellectual will come to the office with carefully prepared notes. He has realized that he has difficulty in retrieving the information he needs from his memory, so he comes with everything written down. He gives this information very slowly, as if being very careful to be exact. However, even as he describes his symptoms he does not seem to be really involved with the interview. He plods along, speaking in a colorless, monotonous voice, giving just minimal answers without elaborating, even to the point of monosyllabic replies. The homeopathic practitioner may well feel like reaching across his desk and shaking this patient just to provoke some kind of interaction. Even if the interviewer “zeroes in” on the patient and exactly describes his condition, the patient may rather blandly respond, “Yes, that’s correct.” He may appear slightly perplexed at the practitioner’s comprehension of him, but he shows none of the excitement or relief normally expressed by a patient who finds that he has been understood so completely.
At the other end of the spectrum, the unsophisticated or primitive type patient demonstrates an even more extreme picture. The effort to describe himself can visibly entail an almost agonizing struggle. He