weakness in the vessels that >allows for a seapage.
I agree with the above. Recognising the pathology as suggested here will
help to find a remedy with a sphere of action that is appropriate.
What do others think about prescribing a remedy which has symptoms that are
exhibited, but has a sphere of action that does not seem to fit?
Regards
Robyn
bruises/sphere of action
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- Posts: 8848
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Re: bruises/sphere of action
Hi Robyn,
on 9/13/02 5:49 PM, Robyn at folco@tpg.com.au wrote:
From my understanding of what I've heard, this is a major reason why (too
often!) we may have a remedy that *seems* to fit the case "to a T"--the sxs
match so delightfully well -- yet the danged thing doesn't work.
Sometimes what's needed is a deeper understanding of the case, and sometimes
that understanding is something just like what you say here -- it's not only
*external manifestations* that need to match, but (more importantly?)
underlying mechanisms, sphere of action, etc.
To my (argh) endless frustration!

Shannon
on 9/13/02 5:49 PM, Robyn at folco@tpg.com.au wrote:
From my understanding of what I've heard, this is a major reason why (too
often!) we may have a remedy that *seems* to fit the case "to a T"--the sxs
match so delightfully well -- yet the danged thing doesn't work.
Sometimes what's needed is a deeper understanding of the case, and sometimes
that understanding is something just like what you say here -- it's not only
*external manifestations* that need to match, but (more importantly?)
underlying mechanisms, sphere of action, etc.
To my (argh) endless frustration!

Shannon