G.V.: In this line we also have Apis. Let’s talk about Apis a little. Apis is a person with emotions who does not pay attention to the environment. What do I mean by that? Apis is awkward, clumsy. We say: “Awkward.” For example, when walking, I stumble like this… (imitates awkwardness in walking)
Like when I want to go over there, and I run into the chair standing in the way. Or if I reach for the bottle over there, I will knock down the other three things on the table on my way … and so on.
One really has to see the clumsiness and awkwardness of Apis to believe it. Regardless of how careful they may try to be, they will knock over something. While walking on a perfectly level street, they will somehow manage to suddenly trip and fall to the ground. If you ask them what happened, why they fell so suddenly and easily, they will not answer, they themselves do not know. They feel awkward, and they are awkward.
They seem to walk in a manner suggesting that they are rushing to get something quickly, without consideration of the surrounding topography. This clumsiness is the exact opposite of the famous ability of the bee to orientate itself and locate objects spatially.
Many Apis patients seem to have lost this faculty, especially when they are in a hurry. They give the impression of being internally busy or preoccupied. It is as if they are absentminded and an awareness of the location of external objects does not register in their minds. Kent goes so far as to say that this disturbance in coordination is the result of a faulty nervous system.
Apis is this type of person. It doesn’t perceive its surroundings correctly.