Books

Materia Medica Viva – Volume 2 page 403

(Emphasis mine.) Farrington says that "if you persist in your unwelcome attention (looking at the child), it will have a convulsion." When a child reacts so strongly when looked at and is so averse to being touched, it indicates that the nervous system is in a very precarious state. The child feels that it needs protection; this need then accounts for another charcteristic of this remedy; the child, seeking protection from people (even those he knows) around him, clings to his mother. Such behavior immediately brings to mind Baryta carbonica. However this child is much more irritable and peevish than is the Baryta carbonica child; it seems to be very emotionally upset and clings for help out of despair rather than timidity, as is the case with Baryta carbonica. The Baryta child is quiet and placid and usually wants to remain unnoticed, but it never shrieks when looked at. Nonetheless, the two remedies act in a complementary fashion.
Here we must mention an important observation made by Hahnemann: "The child will not allow itself to be touched, without whining and crying, whereby the toes and the fingers are drawn inwards!!" I
stressed the last sentence myself as it reflects the magnitude of the reaction. This observation provides a measure of the effect of this remedy on the nervous system. It shows how the "endmost parts" of the nervous system (the toes and fingers through which, in large part, we are able to stay "in touch" with the outside world) almost convulse to protect the organism from unwanted external contact! From this observation we can understand why this child does not want to be touched.
Antimonium tartaricum children do not want to remain lying down in bed, but instead want to be picked up and carried around in an upright position, especially when suffering from asthma or bronchitis. If they lie down, their breathing becomes quicker, irregular, unequal, and more difficult; they gasp more, cannot expel phlegm, and in general seem to suffer when they lie down. They toss about with great restlessness and throw their arms about constantly. Farrington says, "A nursing infant suddenly lets go of the nipple and cries as if out of breath, and seems better when held upright and carried about…" In general, whether suffering from difficult breathing or colicky pains or toothache, these children want to be carried upright and will feel better in that position.
The Antimonium tartaricum patient is an irritable, quarrelsome, despondent, and nervous individual; one who is usually in a bad humor. Anything disturbs him. He is depressed, melancholic, and he