you might say that this person is closed because they don’t speak very much and keep all the grief to themselves. You may mention points that fit Natrum muriaticum, but I know, from my own experience and knowledge of Natrum muriaticum, that the patient may not really be Natrum muriaticum, despite all the convincing indications. All remedies have anxieties. We could go on indefinitely about all the different types of anxieties. Unless you know the anxiety of Natrum muriaticum you will never be able to perceive it. There is an underlying tremendous anxiety about health, a prominent feeling that they may have a brain stroke or be reduced to invalidity. Natrum muriaticums have a tremendous underlying anxiety that is not expressed. They will not come out directly like other remedies and tell you they are dying, instead they will ask around this fear:
(Patient): “Do you think this can lead to something serious?” (You): “No, I don’t think this can lead to something serious.” But your reassurances do not help, they only push the point further:(Patient): “But my blood pressure is 14.5.”
(You): “You are sixty-five years old, 14.5 is normal.”
(Patient): “Yes, but I always had 12, and now I have 14.5.”
(You): “But now you are sixty. When did you last have your blood pressure checked?”
(Patient): “Twenty years ago.”
(You): “At that time it was normal to have 12, now it is normal to have 14.5.”
(Patient): “Are you sure it is not going to be…?”
The idea here is that they will not voice their anxiety- they are closed, they are afraid of being ridiculed. So they holds it back, and then the anxiety comes out as a hypochondriasis. The whole anxiety of Natrum muriaticum will appear, not as anxiety per se, but as a hypochondriasis. They will visit you again and again, and the theme is always: “Am I going to have a brain stroke? Am I going to contract a severe disease? Am I going to experience something which will endanger my life? Why do I have this? Why do I have that? ” That is a different kind of anxiety alto-