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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2137

Generalities
A very significant sign of a Cuprum state is clenching of the thumbs. It often indicates that an epileptic fit will occur, but Cuprum has it at other times as well. This symptom is also present when there is no manifest case of epileptiform convulsions; they may have it all the time. Kent describes it thus: ‘The thumbs are drawn into the palms and then the fingers close down over them with great violence’. This gesture expresses tension, reserve, a closed, cramped mind, in short an inability to show inner feelings.
Another feature that is typical of the Cuprum aspect: a grey, sallow, earthy, or else a brownish complexion with a ‘coppery’ tint. This is not shiny, but dull. A patient with an unhealthy, grey, coppery complexion and a tremendous nervous tension that is shown in his clenching of the thumbs; such a patient should make you think of Cuprum.
Additionally, there may be involuntary grimacing, as in Agaricus, but the tension in a Cuprum patient is much higher than in an Agar. patient. All the muscles are tense, not only in the face. The grimaces are the means whereby the cramped feelings try to emerge. Cuprum patients hide something inside themselves, while they do not themselves know what it is. They try to hide it from everybody, even succeed in hiding it from themselves. To a certain degree, they succeed in hiding it, but they are unable to control their tics. Perhaps they have begun psychotherapy, and have done quite a lot to release the constant pressure from within, but it has not effected a lasting cure.
I have had patients who made the most disturbing grimaces for minutes on end; then they are able to relax for some time, momen- tarily released from their pressure, maybe for an hour, but then the tension comes back. Those tics will occur from the least emotion that is stimulating. The tics are not painful, which makes a big