like Baryta carbonica. In my experience, though, Antimonium crudum is more often indicated for children than adults. When you see an immature child with redness and inflammation of the eyelids, cracks in the corners of the mouth, and a pustular eruption on the cheeks or chin, then you have a case of Antimonium crudum.
The Antimonium crudum sentimentality can be precipitated by other stimuli, particularly fever and the menses. Fever of any type can evoke tremendous sentimentality in children or adults. In women, sentimentality is greatly accentuated before or during the menses. In such cases, their sentiments obfuscate their perception of reality; they easily fall in love and unrealistically fantasize love affairs. Not surprisingly, during this unguarded period of emotionality, these women are hurt very easily, shifting then to the other extreme. They close up and do not want to speak to anybody, not even their closest friends. In this latter state they become easily depressed, ruminating upon the things that have happened to them, unable to get over them. They become peevish, morose, dissatisfied, and irritable, but never aggressive. They are passive people. They want to disappear from the face of the earth; so they withdraw and brood and sulk.
This is the most moody, the most sulky remedy of our materia medica. It is "overtly" sulky, one can say. Their sulkiness shows; they cannot hide it. It is immediately noticeable. When moody, when hurt, everyone around knows they are in a mood. The feeling that others get from them is: "Do not touch me! Do not come near me! I do not want any interference." They do not want any contact. They wear a long face. They want no one to approach them when in such a state, much less touch them. The mere look of another person irritates them. The spouses of Antimonium crudum patients will say that if these patients are hurt, they become moody and sulky and stay like that for days at a time.
When in such a sullen state, the Antimonium crudum individual finds physical or emotional touch painful. He is a miserable, "touchy" person, one who finds it very difficult to live in this "brutal" world, or so he thinks. No doubt those around him will think differently – that they cannot live with him.
Referring to the Repertory, Antimonium crudum is one of the four bold remedies appearing in the rubric "aversion to being touched." Each of these remedies possesses this symptom for different reasons and under different cicumstances. In Antimonium crudum, framed within the