Homeopathy: Restoring health rapidly, gently and
permanently.
One of the questions I am most often asked is “What
can Homeopathy treat?” Happily the answer is anything
and everything! It can even work beautifully in situations
where a formal diagnosis can’t be arrived at.
After an in-depth interview with a client my task is to
find a substance that, if taken, could produce a similar
symptom picture in a healthy human volunteer (a “prover”).
This similarity has to be as close as possible in every
way (physical, emotional and mental).
In fact the word Homeopathy is Greek for “similar
suffering”.
Specialised computer software enables me to search huge
libraries of medicine descriptions (recorded by “provers”)
in just a few seconds, it also helps me narrow down the
choice from over 1500 medicines to exactly the right one.
This is a wonderful era to be a homeopath as modern technology
greatly improves the chances of finding a medicine that
is exactly suited to each individual case and every year
many new medicines are being added both to our pharmacopoeia
and our computer programmes.
Homeopaths get very excited if you have what are known as
“strange, rare and peculiar symptoms”! One or
two unusual details make finding the correct medicine so
much simpler.
Let’s take a look at a few real cases to see how this
works in practice. (I would like to thank my clients who
kindly gave permission to publish case details. Models were
used for the photographs illustrating this article).
Migraine Madness
A boy aged 12 had migraine attacks that often came on after
over-excitement. They were so severe that during them he
was tempted to jump out of the window. For this reason he
always wanted his mother to stay with him. He would bite
both his own hand and his mother’s during the height
of the pain, which was throbbing, left-sided and began over
the eye. He was photophobic during attacks and suffered
stomach cramps with vomiting.
I prescribed Glonoine 30c, which worked beautifully, not
only because it is a classic migraine remedy, but also because
one of the strange symptoms it produced in the “provers”
was the desire to literally jump out of the window.
Side-to-side cysts
A young woman of eighteen had a long, ongoing history of
very painful periods. A few months earlier she had had two
cysts removed from her left ovary. Since then she had had
no energy. Unfortunately, the cystic pain had returned soon
after the op. The strange thing was it alternated between
the left and right hand side (probably depending on which
side was ovulating). She had become increasingly withdrawn
and wouldn’t speak to teachers or students at school.
She was often on the verge of tears. She felt stupid when
she spoke to anyone and scared to say anything. She said
several times that she believed people were laughing at
her and whispering about her. I prescribed a medicine called
Lac can. One of the main symptoms this medicine can produce
in a healthy volunteer is pain which alternate sides. It
also matched her mental state very well.
Her first period after the remedy was more painful, but
her energy had greatly improved and she said she didn’t
‘notice the pain as much’. She didn’t
worry about people laughing or whispering about her anymore
and she was talking to people a bit more. She felt more
confident. After three months her physical symptoms all
resolved and she was also feeling very good mentally and
emotionally.
Coughing by the clock
A boy aged 8 had used inhalers for his asthma since the
age of 6. He had been taking Becotide 50mg (two puffs -
morning and evening) and Ventalin syrup 3 times daily. He
had suffered from occasional accelerated heart rate whilst
on the inhalers and didn’t like taking them. He had
an unproductive cough that came on one hour after going
to bed (at about 9pm). When the cough was very bad he would
vomit and continued to vomit, without any relief, until
he was retching bile. In the past this cough had been treated
with Procaine.
Ipecac is well known as the remedy for incessant vomiting
without relief, vomiting related to coughing and also has
the strange symptom of vomiting one hour after going to
sleep.
© Mary Aspinwall
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by Mary Aspinwall