not with the deliberate intention of calming down, but more like a mental mechanism, an unthinking automatism.
Generalities
This triad of symptoms is most characteristic of Crocus: haemor- rhages of black, stringy blood; a ‘jumping’ sensation within the body as of something alive; and rapid oscillation between opposite mental states. Of course, it is not necessary that all three of these be present simultaneously to be able to prescribe this remedy with confidence. In any presentation in which one of these symp-toms is prominent, we have to think of Crocus.
Crocus patients frequently feel tired and weary. This is true not only in those cases where there is a loss of blood, but also when there is the alternation of moods described above. If the weariness is restricted to the physical level, intellectual stimulation may help remove the feeling of lassitude. For example, in a case in which the patient had ‘Excessive prostration, with weakness and weari- ness’, along with great sleepiness in the evening, after a very simple and moderate meal, ‘literary occupation removed this weakness’.
There is an absent-mindedness and forgetfulness that is similar to petit mal epilepsy. ‘For some moments she suddenly feels as if her thoughts vanished’. ‘Great forgetfulness, she asks a question, but the next moment she has forgotten what she had asked and even that she had asked a question’. ‘On attempting to write down anything, he is unable to do so, on account of loss of recollection’. ‘Indifferent to everything’, as the proving states.
Crocus has two marked general modalities: the first is that most Crocus conditions are ameliorated in the open air, and aggravated in closed rooms; this is not only true for vertigo, nausea and a
‘stupid’ feeling in the head, but also, for instance, in lachrymation.