Hi Glenda:
It looks like the abbreviation for the dog rose or wild rose.
Best,
Lisa
Remedy Name
Re: Remedy Name
Rosa canina
Description
- Dog-rose.
- N. O. Rosaceae.
- Tincture of the hairy excrescence of insect origin called Cynosbati.
- Tincture of ripe fruits.
Clinical
- Bladder, affections of.
- Dysuria.
Characteristics
- Hips are used for making the very pleasant Confection of Roses used in general medicine as a basis for pills and electuaries.
- Cynosbati has been used in ancient times as a remedy in urinary difficulties.
- Burnett has confirmed this to some extent.
- A proving made by himself only evoked a somewhat increased flow of urine and a little heat in the urethra.
Rosa canina
(dog rose)
Pharmacy
Ros-ca. Rosa canina. Dog-rose. N. O. Rosacea. Tincture of ripe fruits. Historical dose: Tincture and all potencies.
Herbal
Rose hips are used for making the very pleasant "Confection of Roses" used in general medicine as a basis for pills and electuaries. Rosa canina has been used in ancient times as a remedy in urinary difficulties. Planets: Venus.
Homeopathic
A proving only evoked a somewhat increased flow of urine and a little heat in the urethra. Burnett has confirmed this to some extent.
Clinical
Bladder, disorders. Dysuria.
Sources
Clarke.
Rosa canina
Wild rose
(bach flower remedy)
Pharmacy
Wild Rose. Rosa canina. Sprigs with leaves and flower heads are boiled for half an hour. Subsequently, the water is strained and prepared as medicine.
Historical dose: Take two drops from the stock bottle into a one ounce dropper bottle, (add brandy or alcohol, if this bottle will be used for days or weeks). This is the dosage bottle, take a few drops straight into the mouth or as needed in a little water or juice.
Herbal
The remedy Wild Rose is part of Bach's group of Lack of Interest in Present Circumstances, together with the remedies of Clematis, Honeysuckle, Olive, White Chestnut, Mustard and Chestnut Bud. Planets: Moon.
Homeopathic
Wild Rose treats states of apathy and resignation. Mental/emotional apathy permeates the physical realm as well, leading to lethargy, listlessness, lack of energy and flat affect.
In sickness, when the fighting spirit is gone and recuperation is not proceeding, or even when death is threatened due to resignation, this remedy may assist greatly.
In mental illness, flat affect is a common occurrence and can be helped by this remedy, as in schizophrenic states, developmental disorders, psychosis, schizoid personality disorders.
The personality disorders are less severe states than schizophrenia. The schizoid personality showing more pronounced flat affect. Usually, social contact is reduced in these illnesses, emotional involvement low and assertiveness yielded to passiveness.
Symptoms
Mind
In the Wild Rose state, the mind has resigned to unfavorable conditions. The mind resorts to apathy and resignation. Helplessness and powerlessness are present. Resignation. Anger or frustration. During a sickness, the Wild Rose state is a state of disinterest in fighting for health. One gives up and may lose all incentive for life.
The typical Wild Rose state shows a retreat from involvement in unfavorable circumstances. This withdrawal from reality helps to safeguard emotions. The emotional capacity for joy and liveliness suffers as well. Outwardly, this stifled capacity for joy is visible in a disinterest in amusement and play, in a lack of hopes, wishes and dreams.
In the less complete Wild Rose state, powerlessness is experienced with anger and frustration. The emotions may vacillate between these two extremes. If conditions are insurmountable, however, a Wild Rose has a tendency to become chronically entrenched, such as in terminal illness and disability. The remedy still helps to uplift the mind and emotions.
Sources
Bach.
Rosa canina
This remedy, prepared by boiling the leaves and flowerheads, belongs to the group of NOT SUFFICIENT INTEREST IN PRESENT CIRCUMSTANCES, as do the remedies of Clematis, Honeysuckle, Olive, White Chestnut, Mustard, and Chestnut Bud. Wild Rose describes a state of apathy and resignation when the world holds no incentive or promise. The person in the Wild Rose state simply has given up to expect any positive changes and does not actively fight for release from a burdensome situation. A Wild Rose tendency can root in unfavorable childhood experiences when the child's wishes or needs were not attended to, until resignation set in. In some children, a lifelong negative expectancy and lack of initiative may become entrenched.
Mind/emotions
Lack of inner liberty and joy; lack of spontaneity and exuberance.
Wishes, dreams, and longings are submerged.
Stifled, dormant, subdued vital urges; lack of assertiveness.
Apathy and resignation, lack of interest in surrounding reality.
Monotonous way of talking, flat affect, unimaginative (schizophrenia, schizoid personality disorder, developmental disorders, psychosis).
Stagnant inner potentials and lack of creativity.
Does not expect to be favored by fate, does not rely on divine providence; general negative expectancy.
Does not seek active engagement in stimulation and recreational diversion.
Depressive tendency; emotional deadlock; may come on after grief or disappointed love; cannot release the emotional hurt which then becomes submerged.
May be taciturn, secluded, and not seeking to share personal concerns with others.
The Wild Rose state may follow a period of rebelliousness against one's fate, with subsequent recognition of the futility of the efforts and resignation.
Resignation may serve as self-protection, so as not to touch at old wounds.
The Wild Rose state may not necessarily be apparent in all aspects of life.
Physical
Lack of incentive to live during life-threatening illness.
Lack of interest in healthful routines that are to further recuperation or prevent illness during healthy times.
Lethargy, listlessness, lack of energy and elan, flat affect.
Subdued vitality; vital needs are not recognized; for example, lack of sexual interest.
Declining sexual interest and sexual power after disappointment in love; women may cease menses.
Lack of appetite; emaciation.
Intestinal ulceration from submerging of conflicts and from coping silently.
Breathing disturbances from sunken vitality, from lack of personal empowerment and lack of self-determination; sighing.
Sensorial depression; may feel, hear, see, taste imperfectly (cf. Clematis).
Insensitivity to pain.
Lack of vital heat.
Loss of hair or nails.
Diseases from suppression of symptoms.
(In gemmotherapy, a medicinal approach using young shoots and buds of plants, Rosa canina has been employed in the treatment of headaches and migraines that have shown resistance to standard treatment and tend to show an allergic component; the remedy enhances adrenal cortical stimulation, while also calming the nervous system. In herbal preparation, rose hips make a tart, stimulating tea.)
Suggested use of wild rose in psychosomatic illness
For example:
Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease (3:5a).
Susceptibility to pulmonary tuberculosis (4:3a).
Asthma with inspiratory difficulties - 'singultus' (4:3b).
Skin disease (atopic dermatitis - infantile eczema) (4:4b).
Gastric and duodenal ulcers - dependent patients (6:2a).
Nervous breathing syndrome - 'respiratory corset' (and sleep disturbances therefrom) (7:1).
Irritable colon (7:2b).
Compare
Gorse: Lack of vitality, lack of desire to live during life-threatening illness; no more hopes and joys.
Gentian: Lack of perseverance during endeavors; is not actively seeking all avenues to improve an unfavorable lot; faithlessness.
Clematis: Does not find fulfillment in the present; dreams of a future happiness; sensorial depression.
Honeysuckle: Has given up belief in finding a present or future happiness, reminisces of gone-by past happiness.
Mustard: Lack of joy, lack of incentive; broods in seclusion; depression.
Centaury: Subdued inner potential from serving in wrong situation, often under the influence of domineering person(s).
Star of Bethlehem: Standstill of emotions after shock or trauma.
Elm: Feels unable to overcome obstacles; work appears overwhelming; may resign.
Examples of homeopathic remedies wiht the wild rose dynamic
Phosphoricum acidum: Stagnant emotions, apathy, resignation; effects of grief, shock, or disappointed love; impaired memory (mental debility); subdued despair; listlessness; lack of sexual interest or power; (diabetes; great thirst for refreshing, juicy drinks); what appears to be a depleting and debilitating chronic diarrhea leaves no detrimental marks on overall constitution, "as if body was indifferent"; colitis; skin conditions; hair loss; emaciation.
Helleborus niger: Sensorial depression; cannot see, hear, or taste correctly; thoughtless, apathetic stare; answers slowly; may come on after disappointment in love; involuntary sighing, constricted chest, with anxiety; suppressed menses and lack of sexual interest from disappointed love; ulcerative colitis; loss of hair and nails; may come on after suppression of eczema or after head injury.
Crotalus cascavella: Magnetic stare; indifference; thoughts preoccupy with death; hallucinations; sensorial depression, especially diminished hearing; chest feels as if encased in iron armor; suffocative feeling with dread; colon/rectum irritation.
Opium (Papaver somniferum): No desires or needs; depressive, drowsy stupor; general insensibility of the nervous system; may experience pleasant and also frightful hallucinations; state may come on after fright; stertorous breathing; vomiting and colic; chronic constipation and suppressed menses from fright or trauma; emaciation; chronic fatigue.
Conium maculatum: Apathy, indifference, general lack of interest in the world; may come on from grief or sexual suppression; spasmodic colic; (hardening of glands); lack of natural vital heat.
Natrum phosphoricum: Indifference and apathy in regard to loved ones; lack of incentive and aversion to work; desire to be silent, tranquility; sadness and depression; acidic stomach, gastric ulcer; worse from sugar and fat; lassitude.
Stannum metallicum: Anxious discouragement and general debility; indecisive and subdued; dreads seeing people; great fatigue after conversation, too weak to talk; tendency to tuberculosis; cramp-like colic; emaciation.
Cadmium metallicum: Indifference and disinterest in seeing anyone; internal stagnation, yet irritability; ulcerative colitis; low vital reactions, lassitude, deficient digestion, lack of vital heat.
Ignatia amara: After severe disappointments and grief, this remedy state can develop a Wild Rose tendency; taciturn reaction, the psychological pain is held within (spasms and cramps throughout the organism from the supression of emotions); sighing, singultus (inspiratory difficulties) after grief or after affection has not been returned.
Mezereum (Daphne mezereum): Indifference and apathy; irresolution; hearing loss; anxiety is felt in the stomach region; gastritis, gastric ulcer; infantile eczema (purulent matter exudes from underneath crusts); lack of vital heat, great sensitiveness to cold air.
Plumbum metallicum: Weary and apathetic; discouraged and anguished; silent melancholy; slowness, dullness of senses; nervous depletion after having indulged in wrong habits; symptoms may come on after suppression of skin disease; difficult, anxious, oppressed breathing; sunken abdomen, as if drawn within, with marked despondency and feelings of powerlessness; (diabetes); loss of hair, of eyebrows and beard; retarded or ceased menses; (rectal spasms, retraction of anus); (numbness and paralysis, limbs retract); anemia; emaciation; lack of vitality and stamina.
In minutus@yahoogroups.com, "Lisa Livingston" wrote:
Description
- Dog-rose.
- N. O. Rosaceae.
- Tincture of the hairy excrescence of insect origin called Cynosbati.
- Tincture of ripe fruits.
Clinical
- Bladder, affections of.
- Dysuria.
Characteristics
- Hips are used for making the very pleasant Confection of Roses used in general medicine as a basis for pills and electuaries.
- Cynosbati has been used in ancient times as a remedy in urinary difficulties.
- Burnett has confirmed this to some extent.
- A proving made by himself only evoked a somewhat increased flow of urine and a little heat in the urethra.
Rosa canina
(dog rose)
Pharmacy
Ros-ca. Rosa canina. Dog-rose. N. O. Rosacea. Tincture of ripe fruits. Historical dose: Tincture and all potencies.
Herbal
Rose hips are used for making the very pleasant "Confection of Roses" used in general medicine as a basis for pills and electuaries. Rosa canina has been used in ancient times as a remedy in urinary difficulties. Planets: Venus.
Homeopathic
A proving only evoked a somewhat increased flow of urine and a little heat in the urethra. Burnett has confirmed this to some extent.
Clinical
Bladder, disorders. Dysuria.
Sources
Clarke.
Rosa canina
Wild rose
(bach flower remedy)
Pharmacy
Wild Rose. Rosa canina. Sprigs with leaves and flower heads are boiled for half an hour. Subsequently, the water is strained and prepared as medicine.
Historical dose: Take two drops from the stock bottle into a one ounce dropper bottle, (add brandy or alcohol, if this bottle will be used for days or weeks). This is the dosage bottle, take a few drops straight into the mouth or as needed in a little water or juice.
Herbal
The remedy Wild Rose is part of Bach's group of Lack of Interest in Present Circumstances, together with the remedies of Clematis, Honeysuckle, Olive, White Chestnut, Mustard and Chestnut Bud. Planets: Moon.
Homeopathic
Wild Rose treats states of apathy and resignation. Mental/emotional apathy permeates the physical realm as well, leading to lethargy, listlessness, lack of energy and flat affect.
In sickness, when the fighting spirit is gone and recuperation is not proceeding, or even when death is threatened due to resignation, this remedy may assist greatly.
In mental illness, flat affect is a common occurrence and can be helped by this remedy, as in schizophrenic states, developmental disorders, psychosis, schizoid personality disorders.
The personality disorders are less severe states than schizophrenia. The schizoid personality showing more pronounced flat affect. Usually, social contact is reduced in these illnesses, emotional involvement low and assertiveness yielded to passiveness.
Symptoms
Mind
In the Wild Rose state, the mind has resigned to unfavorable conditions. The mind resorts to apathy and resignation. Helplessness and powerlessness are present. Resignation. Anger or frustration. During a sickness, the Wild Rose state is a state of disinterest in fighting for health. One gives up and may lose all incentive for life.
The typical Wild Rose state shows a retreat from involvement in unfavorable circumstances. This withdrawal from reality helps to safeguard emotions. The emotional capacity for joy and liveliness suffers as well. Outwardly, this stifled capacity for joy is visible in a disinterest in amusement and play, in a lack of hopes, wishes and dreams.
In the less complete Wild Rose state, powerlessness is experienced with anger and frustration. The emotions may vacillate between these two extremes. If conditions are insurmountable, however, a Wild Rose has a tendency to become chronically entrenched, such as in terminal illness and disability. The remedy still helps to uplift the mind and emotions.
Sources
Bach.
Rosa canina
This remedy, prepared by boiling the leaves and flowerheads, belongs to the group of NOT SUFFICIENT INTEREST IN PRESENT CIRCUMSTANCES, as do the remedies of Clematis, Honeysuckle, Olive, White Chestnut, Mustard, and Chestnut Bud. Wild Rose describes a state of apathy and resignation when the world holds no incentive or promise. The person in the Wild Rose state simply has given up to expect any positive changes and does not actively fight for release from a burdensome situation. A Wild Rose tendency can root in unfavorable childhood experiences when the child's wishes or needs were not attended to, until resignation set in. In some children, a lifelong negative expectancy and lack of initiative may become entrenched.
Mind/emotions
Lack of inner liberty and joy; lack of spontaneity and exuberance.
Wishes, dreams, and longings are submerged.
Stifled, dormant, subdued vital urges; lack of assertiveness.
Apathy and resignation, lack of interest in surrounding reality.
Monotonous way of talking, flat affect, unimaginative (schizophrenia, schizoid personality disorder, developmental disorders, psychosis).
Stagnant inner potentials and lack of creativity.
Does not expect to be favored by fate, does not rely on divine providence; general negative expectancy.
Does not seek active engagement in stimulation and recreational diversion.
Depressive tendency; emotional deadlock; may come on after grief or disappointed love; cannot release the emotional hurt which then becomes submerged.
May be taciturn, secluded, and not seeking to share personal concerns with others.
The Wild Rose state may follow a period of rebelliousness against one's fate, with subsequent recognition of the futility of the efforts and resignation.
Resignation may serve as self-protection, so as not to touch at old wounds.
The Wild Rose state may not necessarily be apparent in all aspects of life.
Physical
Lack of incentive to live during life-threatening illness.
Lack of interest in healthful routines that are to further recuperation or prevent illness during healthy times.
Lethargy, listlessness, lack of energy and elan, flat affect.
Subdued vitality; vital needs are not recognized; for example, lack of sexual interest.
Declining sexual interest and sexual power after disappointment in love; women may cease menses.
Lack of appetite; emaciation.
Intestinal ulceration from submerging of conflicts and from coping silently.
Breathing disturbances from sunken vitality, from lack of personal empowerment and lack of self-determination; sighing.
Sensorial depression; may feel, hear, see, taste imperfectly (cf. Clematis).
Insensitivity to pain.
Lack of vital heat.
Loss of hair or nails.
Diseases from suppression of symptoms.
(In gemmotherapy, a medicinal approach using young shoots and buds of plants, Rosa canina has been employed in the treatment of headaches and migraines that have shown resistance to standard treatment and tend to show an allergic component; the remedy enhances adrenal cortical stimulation, while also calming the nervous system. In herbal preparation, rose hips make a tart, stimulating tea.)
Suggested use of wild rose in psychosomatic illness
For example:
Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease (3:5a).
Susceptibility to pulmonary tuberculosis (4:3a).
Asthma with inspiratory difficulties - 'singultus' (4:3b).
Skin disease (atopic dermatitis - infantile eczema) (4:4b).
Gastric and duodenal ulcers - dependent patients (6:2a).
Nervous breathing syndrome - 'respiratory corset' (and sleep disturbances therefrom) (7:1).
Irritable colon (7:2b).
Compare
Gorse: Lack of vitality, lack of desire to live during life-threatening illness; no more hopes and joys.
Gentian: Lack of perseverance during endeavors; is not actively seeking all avenues to improve an unfavorable lot; faithlessness.
Clematis: Does not find fulfillment in the present; dreams of a future happiness; sensorial depression.
Honeysuckle: Has given up belief in finding a present or future happiness, reminisces of gone-by past happiness.
Mustard: Lack of joy, lack of incentive; broods in seclusion; depression.
Centaury: Subdued inner potential from serving in wrong situation, often under the influence of domineering person(s).
Star of Bethlehem: Standstill of emotions after shock or trauma.
Elm: Feels unable to overcome obstacles; work appears overwhelming; may resign.
Examples of homeopathic remedies wiht the wild rose dynamic
Phosphoricum acidum: Stagnant emotions, apathy, resignation; effects of grief, shock, or disappointed love; impaired memory (mental debility); subdued despair; listlessness; lack of sexual interest or power; (diabetes; great thirst for refreshing, juicy drinks); what appears to be a depleting and debilitating chronic diarrhea leaves no detrimental marks on overall constitution, "as if body was indifferent"; colitis; skin conditions; hair loss; emaciation.
Helleborus niger: Sensorial depression; cannot see, hear, or taste correctly; thoughtless, apathetic stare; answers slowly; may come on after disappointment in love; involuntary sighing, constricted chest, with anxiety; suppressed menses and lack of sexual interest from disappointed love; ulcerative colitis; loss of hair and nails; may come on after suppression of eczema or after head injury.
Crotalus cascavella: Magnetic stare; indifference; thoughts preoccupy with death; hallucinations; sensorial depression, especially diminished hearing; chest feels as if encased in iron armor; suffocative feeling with dread; colon/rectum irritation.
Opium (Papaver somniferum): No desires or needs; depressive, drowsy stupor; general insensibility of the nervous system; may experience pleasant and also frightful hallucinations; state may come on after fright; stertorous breathing; vomiting and colic; chronic constipation and suppressed menses from fright or trauma; emaciation; chronic fatigue.
Conium maculatum: Apathy, indifference, general lack of interest in the world; may come on from grief or sexual suppression; spasmodic colic; (hardening of glands); lack of natural vital heat.
Natrum phosphoricum: Indifference and apathy in regard to loved ones; lack of incentive and aversion to work; desire to be silent, tranquility; sadness and depression; acidic stomach, gastric ulcer; worse from sugar and fat; lassitude.
Stannum metallicum: Anxious discouragement and general debility; indecisive and subdued; dreads seeing people; great fatigue after conversation, too weak to talk; tendency to tuberculosis; cramp-like colic; emaciation.
Cadmium metallicum: Indifference and disinterest in seeing anyone; internal stagnation, yet irritability; ulcerative colitis; low vital reactions, lassitude, deficient digestion, lack of vital heat.
Ignatia amara: After severe disappointments and grief, this remedy state can develop a Wild Rose tendency; taciturn reaction, the psychological pain is held within (spasms and cramps throughout the organism from the supression of emotions); sighing, singultus (inspiratory difficulties) after grief or after affection has not been returned.
Mezereum (Daphne mezereum): Indifference and apathy; irresolution; hearing loss; anxiety is felt in the stomach region; gastritis, gastric ulcer; infantile eczema (purulent matter exudes from underneath crusts); lack of vital heat, great sensitiveness to cold air.
Plumbum metallicum: Weary and apathetic; discouraged and anguished; silent melancholy; slowness, dullness of senses; nervous depletion after having indulged in wrong habits; symptoms may come on after suppression of skin disease; difficult, anxious, oppressed breathing; sunken abdomen, as if drawn within, with marked despondency and feelings of powerlessness; (diabetes); loss of hair, of eyebrows and beard; retarded or ceased menses; (rectal spasms, retraction of anus); (numbness and paralysis, limbs retract); anemia; emaciation; lack of vitality and stamina.
In minutus@yahoogroups.com, "Lisa Livingston" wrote:
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Re: Remedy Name
Thanks Lisa
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Re: Remedy Name
Thank you - is this in a MM, if so which one? Just curious it is not
in ReferenceWorks if it is a homeopathic proven remedy.
Cheers
Glenda
in ReferenceWorks if it is a homeopathic proven remedy.
Cheers
Glenda
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