Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 12 – page 2582

tolerance to suffering or, for that matter, to pressure of any kind. Their entire nervous system is in a fret. They become angry, nasty, abusive. There is discontentment and dissatisfaction. They are very irri- table and even violent when in pain, often making angry and violent gestures. They may be at a loss to explain why they should fly into such angry rages. A woman will say nasty things to her husband over the most trivial matter; she knows the issues are trivial, yet she cannot control herself. A husband will swear at his wife and children, seeming to blame them for his condition. These patients abuse other people because of their own intolerance to pressures, stresses and suffering. They seem to hold other people responsible for their own problems.
These people feel very exposed and unprotected; they have great fear of physical and emotional injury. Great vulnerability and great sensitivity to pain best typifies the Hepar state. They feel that they can be easily hurt, that they are vulnerable to the outside world. In this way they can easily feel attacked or feel that people are in con- test with them, so that they can get into conflict and have a sense of being in competition with others. It is a kind of defense that makes them being very critical to others. A son or a daughter have been offended by one of the parents and after that a conflict develops that can last a whole life. So acute and deep can be the psycologi- cal trauma. They have a fear of being injured, primarily emotion- ally, but also physically. An example of this is fear of injections and insects that can sting such as wasps and bees. I remember a case of grown up man who fainted when he was queuing to get an inoculation. Seeing the others getting the injection and imagining himself getting it, already was enough to make him pass out. Hepar sulphuris patients are very sensitive to the sight or suggestion of violence, even to seeing someone talking badly of another person. Calcarea carbonica persons, when they happen to witness an acci- dent, feel that they cannot stand the sight. They also cannot tolerate hearing an accident described in vivid terms. Hepar individuals do not need to see the accident. They are much more sensitive than Calcareas, being unable to even read a brief account of an accident in the newspaper. Similarly Hepar persons are very sensitive