difference from the cramps in the extremities or abdomen described above.
An extreme form of tic pathology is Tourette’s syndrome, which is very difficult to cure. This syndrome is often coupled with a need to speak out ‘bad’ words, taboo swear words. Cuprum is one of the first remedies to be thought of in Tourette’s syndrome.
But of course, grimaces do not necessarily assume such an extreme form in Cuprum. The remedy may have real cramps and tics, but sometimes there is ‘only’ a great tension in the muscles. This tension may also affect the speech; stammering, stuttering, and other spasmodic disturbances of articulation and flow of speech.
‘Short Circuit’ Spasms
That a stimulus ‘passes through’ directly from the mental or emotional level to the physical level is a characteristic feature of Cuprum; and this is regularly manifested physically as some kind of spasm. For instance, an idea suddenly comes to the mind of the Cuprum patient, out of the blue and with tremendous force, and it creates a spasm in the body.
Usually these thoughts will have something to do with self- reproach, or self-criticism, such as: ‘O dear, I saw so-and-so yesterday and forgot to greet him’, or: ‘O God, what I did there was totally wrong’, or something similar. And this disagreeable thought, this feeling of guilt cannot be processed by the intellect; the mind is as if paralysed. Rather, the guilty feeling ‘strikes right through’ to the nervous system, to the physical body, and a spasm occurs. The feeling does not seem to stay in the mind, but is immediately transmitted to the nerves, creating a spasm: a jerk, a grimace, or a convulsion.