sort of anxiety from another; still, there are ways of determining a remedy’s corresponding anxiety state
I’d like to begin with the panicattacks of Aconitum, which are very impressive. The chief characteristic of an Aconitum anxiety attack is that the patient thinks that they are dying. In this state the patient does not know what they are really panicking about. All Aconitum cases will revolve more or less around this theme. Now, what makes an Aconitum an Aconitum? Let’s look at the questions you’d have to ask in order to find this out: Therapist: “How frequently do you get these attacks?” Patient: “Not very frequently.”
Therapist: “How strong are they?”
Patient: “Very strong, when it starts I cannot control it at all.” Therapist: “Does it start slowly?”
Patient: “No, it just suddenly overwhelms me.”
What you see here is a sudden overwhelming attack of anxiety, accompanied by panic, palpitations, hot flushes, in an individual who is otherwise quite calm. Suddenly the person feels a storm coming on inside, a storm which overcomes the psyche and produces a state of panic that cannot be controlled at all. The person is forced to lie down because of the palpitations, flushes, and they feel that they are about to die. This idea of death, imminent death, is very strong in Aconitum. You’ll never have a patient come to your office and say: “I am going to die at eleven o’clock!” No Aconitum patients will ever express them-selves that way because, despite their anxiety, these patients will still try and control their fears. So you will see a sort of internal trembling here that is trying to be controlled. Aconitum can reach severe states of agony, especially in the evening,at twilight These sudden attacks are of such intensities that the person feels they are going to die soon and there is no hope of survival. This should give you an idea of Aconitum.
I recall a case in which a doctor came into my office – it was about six-thirty in the afternoon – and showed me a patient who