ANTHRACINUM
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
Anthracinum is indicated in patients who suffer chronically from carbuncles, boils, hydradenitis, and tumors which tend to have a malignant appearance, a reddish-black color, and cause a burning sensation and extreme pain. In Anthracinum, ulceration takes place easily, with sloughing and excruciating burning pains. Cellular tissues become edematous and indurated. Anthracinum meets septic conditions with enormous swelling, intolerable burning pains, and with dark-red discoloration of the inflamed part. Generally in this remedy there is a tendency to easy suppuration and sepsis.
For the most part, the central theme of Anthracinum is concentrated upon the intolerably painful, dark-red or blackish abscesses that resolve slowly and only with difficulty, even after days of discharging.
In its mental-emotional state, Anthracinum produces an analogous picture: we see a person who has a deeply imbedded emotional abscess. This malignant abscess is very difficult to "open." The patient feels that there is no hope of recovery; the "abscess" will not come to the surface and discharge its contents. It is an abscess that has been formed out of a very painful emotional experience.
In its constitutional form, Anthracinum can be compared to Natrum muriaticum. Like Natrum muriaticum, this remedy retains so much deeply hidden grief that one might consider it to be the major remedy for silent suffering, its darkest emotional wound buried deeply within its psyche. It is as though all the emotional and mental suffering of the Anthracinum patient has been enclosed in one big blackish boil.
There are differences between the two remedies though. Unlike Natrum muriaticum, the Anthracinum patient does not seem to realize this suffering; it is as if he (or her) is resigned to it, as if this intolerable suffering is now his natural state of being. He (or she) will never talk to anyone about it. This remedy seems to restrict the individual’s free