Consider the sort of wishy-washy information she gives about her eye; if you were to base your prescription on this local symp-tomatology, you might wind up just changing the case without bringing on any real curative effect. I immediately understood that the eye is not going to give me the answer to her illness. The key to what is going on with her is going to have to come from a consideration of her entire organism; only then will you be able to hit upon the remedy that will bring about the most satisfactory, far reaching effects.
Here we see that she begins to cry after I ask her the first personal question. She states her story quite clearly, and then she starts to cry. What is going on? Her parents belong to a very strict reli-gious group, one which, as she says, takes all the joy out of life. This suggests that she has felt oppressed by her parent’s religious convictions, either sexually or emotionally. As a child she prob-ably wanted to go out with someone, had a crush or something, but her parents were very strict and did not allow it. All the grief she kept inside is now coming out very quickly and easily here, and that’s why you see her cry. Is this aggressive crying or sweet crying? You have to ask yourself this question and then explore which remedies display this type of crying. You would immediately consider remedies that do not cry hysterically. For example, a Nux vomica or a Natrum muriaticum patient would cry in a totally different way. She displays the sort of crying typical of Pulsatilla or Staphisagria. What else impressed you about her?
(A.): Her childish outlook.
(G.V.): Yes, there is a naivety; she is straight forward and naive. You don’t see a sophisticated way of looking at things behind what she says. You wouldn’t suspect her of being capable of say-ing one thing and meaning another; she just isn’t that sly. Instead, I would characterize her as a very direct person. Consider how spontaneously she begins to cry. It’s childish, indicative of a person with a pure heart.