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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2075

inanity. The patient’s behaviour is no worse than silliness, but if you observe closely and critically, you observe that the behaviour is not normal.
The euphoric state may be accompanied by signs of physical weakness: ‘With great prostration and much dilatation of pupils, much inclination to laugh and joke’. Or: ‘With the signs of an excessive and almost manic joy, pallor, headache, obscuration of vision’.
In general, Crocus patients have an ‘Achilles heel’; they cannot tolerate anyone telling them what to do in an authoritative manner. They hate the person who does this to them. Children react and become hysterical, and shout at people they feel are restricting their free will. They may shout, “I hate you, I despise you. You are bad, you are mean.” In their rage they want to spit, bite, to strike and hurt the people they think are restricting them; such is the Crocus temper.
Crocus can be contradictory: a child may say she will kill people who kill animals, but at the same time she will torture animals herself. They want to be the centre of attention, but at the same time they feel that they are disliked by others. When furious, Crocus patients will talk to themselves if they have nobody else to talk to.
Exaggerated Remorse
During the aggressive state, Crocus patients lose control and can do and say things for which they are extremely sorry later on. At first the patient takes everything in bad part, throws a temper tantrum, but after his rage is spent, immediately afterwards he feels profound remorse if they have hurt someone’s feelings. They can be quite violent in their behaviour, but at the same time they maintain an awareness of the aggression, and after the fit of anger is over they feel that their reaction was too extreme