(M.P): Oh yes.
(G.V.): But are you able to show some anger now?
(M.P): I am very unlikely to show anger around people that I don’t know. I am not self-assertive, or mildly self-assertive, but I am not going to be angry with somebody that I don’t know. With my wife or close relatives I can get pretty heated. But I do tend to contain frustration.
(G.V.): Do you have a normal stool every day?
(M.P): Yes. Before I used to get constipated a bit.
(G.V.): But not now?
(M.P): Also since you gave me that remedy.
(G.V.): Is your appetite good?
(M.P.): Yes.
(G.V.): And has your weight now stabilized? (M.P.): Yes, it is 161 pounds.
(G.V.): Are you back to the same weight that you had before you really felt sick?
(M.P): Yes, virtually.
(G.V.): It was 168 pounds, if I remember well.
(M.P): No, I used to be overweight a bit, you know, I used to be about 168 pounds, but I saw a picture of myself and I was a bit too fat.
(G.V.): But now your weight has stabilized?
(M.P): Yes, very much.
(G.V.): Do you eat freely?
(M.P): Yes.
LIVE
(G.V.): Well, what are we going to do? He still has the extrasysto-les. It may take time before he gets away from that without another remedy. Eventually he may need another remedy to get him over it as well. The fact that these extrasystoles, as he says, are triggered by some emotional kind of stress shows that he has kept certain things unresolved inside which he now feels he has to settle out. What do you think these things are that he’s kept bottled up inside?