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Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2473

Roger Morison writes, in connection with a case he was treating:
‘As I thumbed through Kent’s lectures and Vithoulkas’ essences, I realised that I had a textbook case of Graphites sitting in front of me. The mental dullness, blandness, and heaviness that Vithoulkas describes were quite evident in the initial interview. Vithoulkas states that Graphites people have a barrier to external impressions. It is difficult to reach inside the person’s heart; they are not easily aroused; she shows extremely flat affect, answers slowly and unemotionally, and states that before counselling she never paid attention to her feelings. Perhaps this was the reason for her failed relationships; the inability to connect on a deep level with another person.’
THE EMOTIONAL PICTURE
Though Graphites is not by any means an emotional remedy, there are disturbances on the emotional level that are characteristic of the remedy. They can go into depression, which can sometimes be severe, and such a sadness is made worse by music. They listen to the music, they feel that music increases their sadness, yet they cannot stop it, eventually they start weeping from listening to it.
Their sadness can be so strong that they think only of death and salvation; this is the depth of depression they get into. The depression can last all day, until finally they go to bed in the evening and feel better. Sometimes they describe that their sadness comes from a kind of pressure that they feel on the chest.
The depression is preceded by periods of dejection, of gloomy moods, accompanied with great heaviness of the legs. He often feels as if his end is near, or as if the greatest misfortune impended over him. When depressed they like to be alone, every