It is important to perceive the tense and cramped attitude and body posture of the patient. Perhaps a Cuprum patient is able to sit somewhat relaxed for half an hour, but then the feeling of guilt returns, or the idea that he did wrong, and you will see the spasm again.
Outbursts of Emotional Behaviour
Cuprum patients have strong fears, and especially they are afraid of their own emotions. They feel that if they ‘let go’ of their feelings, it will be too much for any other persons to take. And actually it is too much; emotions that have been cramped for so long, suppressed for many years, will indeed have a destructive violence if suddenly let loose in a relationship; and they will go into spasms, even into status epilepticus from such an eruption of feelings. Spasms on the physical level will almost always occur in such situations, as a kind of safety valve for the violence of the suppressed emotion. They cannot express themselves in a normal way, there are only the violent rage and the spasmic attack.
If the emotions really do break through after a long time, this happens with enormous violence. The proving and poisoning reports describe acute outbreaks which give a good idea of the vehemence of Cuprum. Attacks of rage and anger, incoherent talk, even genuine mania with violent, wild and aggressive behav- iour, and vivid delusions. There are reports of biting, striking, and other aggressive actions. In chronic cases, though, there are also emotional outbreaks; fits of anger and rage.
In these temper tantrums, Cuprum people lack all consideration, all diplomacy; they do not care who is present, or what will ensue from their rage. For instance, a Cuprum patient is working in a team in order to prepare an international congress. He is working hard and with discipline, doing what he is assigned to conscientiously. But there is another person in the team who is egotistical and inefficient.