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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2136

Another fear is fear of impending misfortune. From a case of Croserio: ‘Unconquerable sadness has been torturing him for months, and a constant restlessness, as if some misfortune were approaching; cries easily and fears he will lose his reason. On his vertex, seemingly in the brain, a sensation as if some- thing was moving there, like worms’.
It was the last symptom that made Croserio think of the curative remedy, because he found this in the Chronic Diseases: ‘Crawling sensation in vertex’. ‘Crawling, dull sensation in the crown of the head, as from going numb, with a pressing-down sensation and some stupefaction’.
A crawling sensation in the vertex or top of the head should make you think of Cuprum, especially if it occurs in connection with epileptic convulsions, attacks of anxiety or rage. An ‘anxiety that could not be suppressed’ has also been observed in a case of great prostration after mental exertion which was cured by Cuprum.
The wish to be alone is very marked in Cuprum. ‘Melancholy; shuns the sight of people, seeks loneliness and loves it’. Children often would not be touched, shrinking back from every- one who enters the room. ‘Fearful confusion of mind; attempts to escape’.
In this context we can understand another symptom from the Chronic Diseases: ‘A kind of fearfulness; it seems to him as though he must tread lightly, in order to avoid injuring himself or disturbing his companions in the room’. Here we can feel a fear of the suppressed power and energy described above, in other words the fear of the violent outbreak of their own feelings.