to pain, even when the pain is not very severe; the slightest pain can cause fainting. Their sensitivity can precipitate a floating anxiety and insecurity with a desire to cling to someone for strength.
These patients fly to pieces if they experience stress. For example, consider a Hepar woman whose husband is unable to provide ad- equately for the home. She becomes very fretful. She cannot sleep. She is constantly anxious over every little thing. When you take her case, however, it is difficult to find the remedy because she talks so rapidly and excitedly. She gives a hundred tiny symptoms, but no clear picture. She pleads constantly for help. Her suffering is so great, you must help me! I am in so much pain; I cannot tolerate it any longer. You try to discover modalities and characteristic symptoms, but all she does is complain and plead. Finally, what is most striking is that there is such great suffering over relatively minor causes. It is then that your mind should think of Hepar.
The abusiveness, especially verbal abusiveness, described earlier is more characteristic of Hepar. One may encounter, however, a more submissive type of Hepar patient; for instance, a woman who sub- mits to total domination by her husband. She is incapable of resist- ing her husband s intimidation, incapable of retaliation. It is in such settings that you will see the development of glandular swellings, sinusitis, all manner of suppurations and skin eruptions. Because she is forced to control her verbal expressiveness, her body is like crying, with suppurations, with tears in the form of carbuncles and boils.
Another consequence of controlling anger in Hepar is the develop- ment of impulses to kill. A woman may have a strong desire to kill her child (like Sepia or Nux vomica or Thea), especially whenever she holds a sharp knife. I have never seen a patient actually carry out such an impulse, but the urge, nevertheless, can be quite strong. It is quite possible, though, that a small child might actually stab some- one while in such a state.
Nux vomica can be compared to Hepar. Both can be very irrita-