Re: PotUS change to negative images of remedies
Posted: Sun Nov 26, 2017 8:46 am
Hi Dr. Roz,
You are doing a very nice version of Dr. Frei's polarity analysis. If a remedy has plenty of clinical cases and a good proving one would hope that we would have both the extremes of the healthy individual and the pathology. Mangialavori and I suppose many others argued that the healthy polarity is not found in provings. The extreme pathologies are also not possible for provings. We can't put prover is in the hospital with remedy symptoms. So we are very dependent on the kind of description that Dale made of the case that she saw. Of course, it has to be a longtime cure, at least a couple of years. It seems to me that this kind of gut feeling is very important although it doesn't belong in our provings.
Kristy L sent me Tyler's description of Platina. In there, she mentioned the injuries of Platina.
"Therefore by Mental Traumatism we would express wounds of mind - heart - soul. The very phraseology we apply to these is borrowed from physical traumatism... "feeling very hurt"... "deeply wounded"... "cut to the heart". And we speak of "lacerated feelings"; of being "broken - hearted", while Shakespeare reminds us how " sharper than a serpent's tooth it is, To have a thankless child ".
In order to suggest remedies to counter such injuries and the damage, acute or chronic, inflicted by them, we must match them with drugs which, in the provers, have produced sensitivity to just such traumatic agents.
A physical wound may be a stab, scratch, tear, an acute abrasion, or chronic damaging pressure which, persisted in, may conduce to even malignant ulceration. Mentally one may experience all these wounds. And here Platinum, Staphisagria, Colocynth, Ignatia, Natrum muriaticum, Phosphoric acid may be found to have been not only causative but curative - according to symptoms."
We all know the narcissistic injuries. But it might be useful to consider the injury remedies that are not Platina. The Asteraceae (Like Arnica montana), have a very macho type of injury reaction. Part of their bravado is to show everyone else that they have a strong physical body. Coffea, Insects, Parasites and many other groups have this kind of bravado. Platina It is definitely more female, perhaps female macho. Not feminine. They want to show off their physical sexuality or their intellectual strength.
Best,
Ellen Madono
You are doing a very nice version of Dr. Frei's polarity analysis. If a remedy has plenty of clinical cases and a good proving one would hope that we would have both the extremes of the healthy individual and the pathology. Mangialavori and I suppose many others argued that the healthy polarity is not found in provings. The extreme pathologies are also not possible for provings. We can't put prover is in the hospital with remedy symptoms. So we are very dependent on the kind of description that Dale made of the case that she saw. Of course, it has to be a longtime cure, at least a couple of years. It seems to me that this kind of gut feeling is very important although it doesn't belong in our provings.
Kristy L sent me Tyler's description of Platina. In there, she mentioned the injuries of Platina.
"Therefore by Mental Traumatism we would express wounds of mind - heart - soul. The very phraseology we apply to these is borrowed from physical traumatism... "feeling very hurt"... "deeply wounded"... "cut to the heart". And we speak of "lacerated feelings"; of being "broken - hearted", while Shakespeare reminds us how " sharper than a serpent's tooth it is, To have a thankless child ".
In order to suggest remedies to counter such injuries and the damage, acute or chronic, inflicted by them, we must match them with drugs which, in the provers, have produced sensitivity to just such traumatic agents.
A physical wound may be a stab, scratch, tear, an acute abrasion, or chronic damaging pressure which, persisted in, may conduce to even malignant ulceration. Mentally one may experience all these wounds. And here Platinum, Staphisagria, Colocynth, Ignatia, Natrum muriaticum, Phosphoric acid may be found to have been not only causative but curative - according to symptoms."
We all know the narcissistic injuries. But it might be useful to consider the injury remedies that are not Platina. The Asteraceae (Like Arnica montana), have a very macho type of injury reaction. Part of their bravado is to show everyone else that they have a strong physical body. Coffea, Insects, Parasites and many other groups have this kind of bravado. Platina It is definitely more female, perhaps female macho. Not feminine. They want to show off their physical sexuality or their intellectual strength.
Best,
Ellen Madono