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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2234

starts after cold and wet conditions, may need Dulcamara. Another remedy that they may need is, of course, Calcarea carbonica because both are worse from cold and wet. But if the patient reports that he has been suffering from simultaneous skin eruptions, then with the combination of skin eruptions and paralysis of single parts under such conditions, you should give Dulcamara.
A girl was sent to the Athens homeopathic centre by a hospital in Thessaloniki. She had been an in-patient with Guillen Barre para- lysis, and the only causation that we could find was that she had been exposed to cold and wet near the sea. She lived near the sea and she went out, or was forced to go out, and the next day she came down with Guillen Barre. In this case the remedy was Calcarea carbonica. She became much better, to the amazement of the hospital staff who thought she could only be given cortisone to save her life.
The Mental-Emotional Picture
I have seen many cases of Dulcamara, especially in women, who are very loving individuals, but with a domineering and possessive nature. That means they take care of others, but in a manner which is authoritative and bossy. It is not really dictatorial, because it comes from concern; a mother might say to her son, “You have married the wrong woman, a bad woman, so I have to protect you from this woman. So you must do this, or you must do that”. They try to protect in a possessive way. This attitude comes from the anxiety they feel about those close to them.
It is interesting for the student to note that the Dulcamara woman is a sexually hyperactive woman, with many needs in this respect. This need, that can sometimes reach the dimension of ‘nymphomania’, if suppressed and not satisfied, sublimates as concern and attach- ment to those close to them, especially to a son, who is then