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MIND – MALICIOUS – SAVAGE Remedy: Cuprum metallicum (Cupr.) Meaning of the Rubric 🔹 Malicious • Intentionally harmful • Cruel behavior without sympathy • Desire to hurt, attack, or destroy • No consideration of right or wrong at the moment 🔹 Savage • Wild, brutal, uncontrollable • Animal-like violence • Loss of civilized restraint • Acts by instinct, not reason 🔹 Combined Meaning 👉 A mind state where cruelty is violent, instinctive, and brutal, not planned or clever — pure raw aggression. This is not normal anger. It is primitive, dangerous violence. Mental State of Cuprum metallicum Cuprum represents: • Extreme inner tension • Nervous system under intense pressure • Long suppression → sudden explosive discharge The person: • Holds emotions tightly • Appears controlled or rigid • Then suddenly breaks into savage violence 👉 The malice is not intellectual 👉 It is reflexive and uncontrollable Metaphor 1: A chained wild animal • Calm while chained • Muscles tense • Eyes alert • When chain tightens → violent attack 👉 Cuprum behaves the same way: • Restraint = danger • Opposition = trigger • Release = savagery ⚡ Metaphor 2: Overloaded copper wire • Copper conducts energy • If overloaded → sparks, burns, snaps • Energy discharges violently 👉 Cuprum stores nervous energy 👉 When limit is crossed → violent outburst Example 1: Adult A man: • Quiet, rigid, disciplined • Under stress suddenly attacks people • Bites, hits, screams • Eyes fixed, face congested • After attack → exhausted, weak, calm 👉 This is malicious–savage Cuprum, not planned cruelty. Example 2: Child A child: • Becomes violent when held • Bites, scratches, kicks • Rage precedes convulsions • Cannot tolerate restraint 👉 The savagery is instinctive, like an animal resisting capture. WHY Cuprum Metallicum Has This Rubric This is the most important part 👇 🔬 Pathophysiology (Homeopathic Concept) Cuprum acts strongly on: • Nervous system • Motor nerves • Muscle contraction • Convulsions and spasms Mental state mirrors the physical: • Just as muscles go into spasm • The mind also spasms 👉 Savagery = mental convulsion Psychological Reason • Cuprum patients cannot release emotions gradually • Everything is held in • Release happens all at once • That release is violent, cruel, and savage This is why Cuprum appears in: • Epilepsy • Hysteria • Severe neurosis • Violent insanity MIND – FANATICISM – gives up; never Remedy: Cuprum metallicum (Cupr.) Direct Meaning of the Rubric 🔹 Fanaticism • Blind, extreme, rigid conviction • Unquestioning belief or fixation • No flexibility, no compromise • All-or-nothing attitude 🔹 Gives up; never • Absolute refusal to surrender • Will not abandon belief, task, or struggle • Continues even when exhausted, injured, or defeated • Persistence beyond reason 🔹 Combined Meaning 👉 A rigid, obsessive mental state where the person clings fanatically to an idea or purpose and will never give up, regardless of consequences. This is not healthy perseverance — it is compulsive, driven, and unyielding. Mental Picture of Cuprum metallicum Cuprum’s mind is characterized by: • Extreme inner tension • Rigid control • Iron-like willpower • No gradual release In this rubric: • The mind locks onto one idea • The will becomes unyielding • The person continues past physical and mental limits 👉 Cuprum does not “try and fail” 👉 Cuprum forces and persists until collapse Metaphorical Explanation (Very Important) 🔩 Metaphor 1: A rusted screw tightened too far • It cannot loosen • More force only breaks it • It never releases gently 👉 Cuprum’s mind is like this: • Once fixed, it cannot let go • Giving up is impossible • Breakdown happens before surrender Metaphor 2: A machine without an off switch • Runs nonstop • Ignores warning signals • Stops only when it breaks 👉 Cuprum’s fanaticism is mechanical, compulsive, not emotional. Practical / Clinical Examples 🧑 Example 1: Adult A person: • Fixates on one belief, duty, or idea • Works relentlessly despite illness or exhaustion • Refuses rest, help, or compromise • Becomes irritable or violent if stopped • Collapses suddenly (convulsions, fainting, breakdown) 👉 This is Cuprum fanaticism – never gives up. 👶 Example 2: Child A child: • Repeats one action compulsively • Refuses to stop even when tired • Becomes rigid, angry, or spasmodic if interrupted • May develop cramps or convulsions 👉 Persistence is pathological, not playful. WHY Cuprum metallicum Has This Rubric This is the key reasoning 👇 🔬 Nervous System Basis Cuprum strongly affects: • Motor nerves • Muscular contraction • Spasms and convulsions The mind mirrors the body: • Muscles contract and won’t relax • Mind also contracts and won’t release 👉 “Never gives up” = mental spasm Psychological Explanation • Cuprum cannot discharge tension slowly • Everything is held tightly • Willpower becomes rigid and compulsive • Letting go feels like loss of control or death So: • They persist fanatically • Until collapse forces release .