Gossypium herbaceum 3- 655.33.04A 55-year-old woman presents with exhaustion, insomnia, fatigue, and candida. She exhibits a striking combination of liveliness and playfulness, alternating with a hollow, vacant gaze, as though she is in another dimension. This detached demeanor can abruptly shift into active engagement, though her communication lacks strength and clarity, in contrast to her vibrant non-verbal expressions. Her tone of voice reflects this middle ground, often questioning and exploratory. Initially, she makes cheerful contact, which resonates with
Lamiaceae. Still, a sense of distance remains, as if she possesses both a strong interest in presenting herself and a natural reserve in giving of herself. Her narrative is fragmented, starting with the issues most troubling her before addressing her primary complaints. She is a DES daughter, with a sensitive and inflamed vagina, red and extremely painful. Another fragment of her story reveals that her partner left her unexpectedly seven years ago, triggering significant sleep disturbances. Falling asleep is not an issue, but she wakes at 3 or 4 a.m. and spends hours worrying. Exhausted, she forces herself out of bed each morning. Months ago, she had a breakdown, waking with heart palpitations and panic about work. She is a visual artist and has been teaching at a secondary school for eight years, with a longer history in art education. She describes witnessing a fatal traffic accident last year in vivid detail. The year prior, she had experienced herself another accident. For a month following the incident, she couldn’t sleep, even with medication. Sleep issues persisted after that. She had a busy schedule with exhibitions, she worked hard, and teaching exerted significant pressure. Three years ago, she had already suffered a collapse. As she tells her story, she gauges whether admiration and attention are present, becoming more engaged and bright-eyed when they are. At other times, she withdraws, with an empty gaze and deeply set eyes, an automatic response to emotional attention directed at her. She is deeply empathetic and identifies with everyone, operating in a constant mode of wanting to make others happy. She struggles with an overwhelming sense of responsibility, rooted in her upbringing. Her parents experienced numerous miscarriages before and after her birth. During her mother’s pregnancy, she was prescribed DES and forced to stay in bed for months against her will. After high school, the woman spent a year abroad, then attended art school, followed by a year of traveling to seek adventure and inspiration. She has a deep fascination with nature. She has previously suffered from shingles on her right flank.
AnalysisSilver series: Art, expression, sensitivity.
Silver series: Contact, physical attention, the push-pull dynamic of connection and withdrawal, sensitivity to others’ energy, strong non-verbal communication, this are all characteristics of
Malvales and potentially the broader
Malvidae Class in mine experience.
Phase 3: A strong drive to achieve her goals through hard work. She feels insecure, wants to make others happy, struggles to finish tasks, and delays action:
Subphase 3.
Stage 4: make contact and then withdraw, reserve, as ‘in an other dimension’ think at
Cerium, as after glass.
Travel, desire to: Gossypium.
Her deep-set eyes, passionate work ethic, and inclination to teach others reflect previous Gossypium indications. Despite exhaustion, she doesn’t demand attention or support, instead focusing on receiving and understanding attention. Her enthusiasm becomes almost turbulent when discussing her passions.
Prescription:
Gossypium herbaceum MK.
Follow-upAfter two nights of good sleep, she continues to wake up to three times per week, but she now feels calm and falls asleep again. Nights before work no longer trigger panic. A significant change is her newfound ability to speak out when disagreeing with school leadership, no longer feeling the need to conform or endure everything passively. She reports gaining energy and feeling a renewed sense of space around her. Her dreams involve people she misses or hasn’t seen in a long time. She notes that "loss" is a theme in her family but doesn’t elaborate, indicating a reluctance to discuss it further. Physically, she feels very well, with no more vaginal complaints. She reflects on always being caught up in planning, often procrastinating or hesitating before taking action. In the past, she was unaware of her limits and felt "transparent," absorbing the issues and emotions of her students without grounding herself. The exhaustion initially manifested mentally; now, she experiences emotions but no longer feels the need to suppress them. During moments of sadness, she withdraws completely, hiding behind her hands and feeling emotionally absent. Now themes emerge as include her voice and self-expression, speaking out (Malvaceae), traveling and breaking ties (Gossypium), adapting and enduring (
Phase 3), and the tendency to procrastinate and hesitate (Stadium 4).She was healthy and very happy, eight years later she had palpitations after relation problems.