ble, violent, and abusive. Generally, however, Nux vomica is more self – controlled. Also, Nux vomica patients do not complain so loudly about their sufferings. Sepia can sometimes appear similar to Hepar, especially in the desire to kill her children. However, Sepia is not so nervous. Her mind is more dull. Sepia represents a condition of stalemate – a balancing of opposing forces. Hepar represents an imbalance – a flying off the handle .
Another impulse I have personally seen in Hepar patients is the de- sire to set things on fire.
Finally, as the pathology progresses to a deeper state, depression supervenes. They think about their abusiveness, swearing, and de- structive impulses and they come to view themselves as being full of serious, fundamental weaknesses. This stage is when they begin to have suicidal thoughts. With Hepar, however, such thoughts do not represent a true suicidal wish, as in Aurum, but rather confine them- selves to suicidal ideation, dwelling on the idea of suicide, which is more consistent with Nitric acid. Of course, Hepar patients do not have the anxiety about health nor the fear of death seen in Nitric acid and other remedies.
MENTAL SYMPTOMS
When the disturbance enters the mental plane we will see short at- tacks of thoughtlessness. There are frightening visions, for instance of a dead person in the morning after waking or of a neighbouring house that is burning. There is violent mania followed by motionless sitting in the corner of the room and dementia with complete stupidity, the patient being silent and speechless.
Generals
It affects the nerves making the organism oversensitive to all im- pressions. There s extreme sensitiveness and irritability of the nerves in various parts. Every impression on body and mind excites the nervous system to a sort of internal tremor.