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The Bern Seminars – Page 162

(A.): He’s bored because he realizes that his life is too easy. He asks himself: “What the hell am I doing on earth?”
(G.V.): I don’t agree.
(A.): He is afraid that his wife could leave him because of his former girlfriend.
(A.): Maybe he has a fear of death because he had experienced the situation of being really dead with the marijuana; that kind of philosophical thinking, of what will there be after death.
(G.V.): Yes, yes, correct.
(A.): I had the impression of him as being like a child.
(G.V.): Yes, but he is not Baryta carbonica, although we agree that he is not mature, he is still close to his age. What the last person said is much closer to the point: he has a fear of dying, and he has at the same time philosophical questions about death, about what happens after death. Is there a God? What kind of God? All these issues are what he considers philosophical ques-tions. Which remedy that engages in that kind of questioning? We described the children in this remedy, and we said that these children ask about God and what God is doing, and whether there is a God, and what is the next world, etc. What is the rem-edy? Calcarea carbonica.
Calcarea carbonica is the remedy that asks such philosophical questions. The most philosophical question is the one raised by the fear of death. The child is afraid that he is going to die, per-ceives the idea of death; of what may happen after that; of God and raises many questions. I quickly go to the remedy. I know that there is an anxiety that goes along with Calcarea carbonica. Once he gives me that hint, I ask if he has cold feet, if he feels very cold. This is the next question I ask in trying to confirm Calcarea carbonica. What did he say? Let’s hear:

VIDEO
(G.V.): In bed, do you have to cover yourself very well before you get really warm?
(M.P.): Not particularly.