Comparison Aurum metallicum and Helleboris niger
[Elizabeth Adalian]
Emotional toll taken by the Corona pandemic, including the lack of
autonomy, suicidal ideation and anger.
When lockdown starts to take its toll in the context of the Covid19
pandemic, it is inevitable that a legacy of despair (if not disappointment) may
remain which taps deep
into the psyche. This means that remedy pictures can later emerge which
hitherto have never been experienced in cases which currently present for
treatment. I therefore feel remedies which were ‘proved’ in very different
times need to be re-appraised through this new lens because of the extreme
times we are living through today.
What is becoming increasingly apparent at this time is the growing lack
of autonomy which is starting to take its toll in society at large – Aur-met. especially sensitive to this among other remedies,
as well as Hell. – lesser known in this context.
Both the remedies are easily affected by disappointed love but, of
course, Aur. has more ambition in its picture. Both
remedies can feel suicidal. In the case requiring Hell., after a period of
intense anger, there is a resulting shutting down of the emotions which can
render the sufferer unable to function.
Both remedies are better for occupation, they both suffer isolation, low
self-confidence, absence of enjoyment combined with a feeling of worthlessness
and powerlessness. However, Aur. does not lose energy
in the same way as Hell. or give up the fight encountered within this context.
This is despite the fact that, of the two remedies, it is only Aur. which is in the rubric – ‘resignation’ (and in black
type). I would certainly add Hell. to this rubric – also in high definition. In
Hell., shutting down is the only way of resisting the degree of pressure which
is felt. This results in the blunt and dull insensitivity known in its picture.
An interesting rubric from the Complete Repertory (2) is ‘anger, excited
easily, consolation aggravates, does not want to be disturbed’. Here, one sees
elements of other remedies such as Bry
and Nat-m.
According to Rajan Sankaran,
Boenninghausen includes Hell. in the rubric ‘mind,
trifles; vexed over’ in his repertory.
At times like this global crisis, it is easy to become submerged in the
bigger story as a way of escape from that which is unresolved in the
individual. Examining the triggering emotion -often a familiar one which runs
deep- in this case –anger- brings the focus back to the core issues which need
healing in the individual.
Hell. is an example of a remedy where the fight/fright/freeze response
is played out as a reaction, as described above. Unless addressed at source,
the organism could progress to an early onset of Alzheimer’s disease where the patient
becomes completely locked down to both their internal state, as well as the
external one playing out around them.
Pathological states can be easily hastened in not only their onset, but
also their progression after such a pronounced collective trauma as the global
pandemic which has been wreaked on humanity at this time in our history. I already touched upon the remedy – Hell. –
in my last blog ‘Reconciling the Longer Term Impacts of Social Distancing upon
Young Minds’.
When considering the Doctrine of Signatures, the pattern
of disease development in this remedy would indicate that there is rapid growth
in the beginning with later sudden depletion and decline. The black part of the
plant (summed up in the name) involves the roots alone – this indicates how
embedded the tendency to destructive forces is rooted in the pathogenesis of
this remedy picture.
Vorwort/Suchen Zeichen/Abkürzungen Impressum