Cuprum patients lack the ability to compromise, the flexibility and ambiguity of mind that is sometimes needed in life’s complexity. They are too cramped to be able to stretch a point; they need to find out what they are missing intellectually, they want to examine everything thoroughly, and thus they become very serious.
This serious disposition is something pathological, because it comes from an inability to let go, from a cramping of the mind; this is the impression that you will get in talking to a constitutional Cuprum patient. And you will also see that there is something very serious and severe going on behind and beneath the symptoms, a very profound and severe process of disease that is not easily cured.
Suppression
A second key-note for Cuprum is suppression. Suppression of skin eruptions, i.e. receding from the skin or ‘striking inward’, is a very frequent cause of a Cuprum state. If epileptic fits, convulsions or cramps come on after suppression of an exanthema, Cuprum will often be the remedy. Zincum has the same cause, but Zinc. will rather develop twitching, tremor, and general restlessness.
Suppression of discharges and evacuations may also lead to a spasmodic state to which Cuprum is suited; e.g. when the menses are missing or ceasing, or when diarrhoea or leucorrhoea stops. Kent says: ‘Discharges that have been in existence quite a long time. The individual has become debilitated and worn out with excitement, but this discharge barely kept him alive. He has gradually grown weaker but he has kept about because he had a discharge. It has furnished him a safety-valve. If stopped sud- denly convulsions will come on’.
The same process may occur on the emotional level. Certain feelings are suppressed because ‘one is not allowed’to feel