doubted, when they can become really furious, losing control.
In fact it is very difficult for them to control any emotion, whether pleasant or unpleasant. They shout and verbally abuse others; they snap at anyone with the least provocation, they cannot control their impulses; violent, argumentative, obstinate, the least contradiction angers them, they insist that they are right and everybody must listen. They are very domineering; in their anger they may even feel the need to break things before they can calm down.
On the other hand, they take life and their responsibilities seriously, work hard and attend to duty and their obligations in life. It is this ‘workaholic’ type of individual who is vulnerable to anaemic states, losing their blood and becoming weak under the pressures of life. They are determined to the point of being obstinate. Afterwards they may feel remorse, and can cry, or be tearful for no reason.
Once the anaemia is established, they are dissatisfied with them¬selves, they do not like to talk or socialize, and want to remain in solitude. They cannot tolerate noise, visits, or even the society and conversation of their best friends. They become so sensitive that their nervous system cannot tolerate the least noise, even the crackling of paper which makes them furious.
They feel extremely fatigued and they lose any kind of interest; they do not want to do anything. They become so sensitive that even if you look at them may start crying. They can sit in a place and gaze into nothingness without doing anything (compare Pulsatilla). At the same time they feel frustrated, because they were formerly active people and they realize they have lost all their ambition and initiative.
They begin as hard-working people, with pride and self-confidence, but after a certain time they have bad moods, are disinclined to do anything, indifferent even to subjects in which they formerly took