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help dreams of examinations

Posted: Fri Mar 15, 2002 2:24 am
by Dave Hartley
I'll bet you do ;)

Synthesis 8 Repertory, in RADAR:
Dreams Examinations- aids, lac-h, positr. (all kinda modern rems, huh?)
" " failure: maias-l

also, in Encyclopedia Homopathica:

Sankaran, Soul of Remedies
Calc-brom
"dreams of being attacked; of being late for an examination; of being found
in an embarassing position in public; of being naked."

Homopathic Links, 1999 Autumn
Proving of Betula Alba by Nederlander study group 'Het Gilde'
Prover 2
several dreams, two of which included "examination by primary school
teacher" (even though in the dream, the prover is aware of "being a medial
student.")
Dave Hartley
new: www.localcomputermart.com/dave
Santa Cruz, CA (831)423-4284
mailto:dave@localcomputermart.com
Asheville Computer (N. Carolina) (828)285-0240

Re: help dreams of examinations

Posted: Fri Mar 15, 2002 3:13 am
by Allen Coniglio
Thanks, Dave - Just to be sure, I ran the following - "dreams -
exams/examinations/tests" - a second time and searched all of my repertories
in MacRep Pro and still did not find anything. I had checked for dreams of
failure previously after not finding dreams of exams and came up with:

Mind; DREAMS; failures (SRIII-296) (6) : cann-s., fago., ign., lac-del.,
mosch., op.
Mind; DREAMS; failures; inadequate, feels (1) : lac-del.
Mind; DREAMS; looking for someone and failing to find him (SRIII-319) (3) :
cadm., carc., lac-del.
Mind; DREAMS; looking for someone and failing to find him; children (1) :
lac-del.

I will keep your e-mail and use it when and if I need that rubric. Reference
Works listed the following as dreams of failing, missing or being late for
an exam, futile efforts, etc. - Aur-A., Calc-Sil, Mag-M., Mag-S., Mang Met.,
Naja., Nicc., Plac-S., Sil., Zinc, Zinc-I., Zinc-m., Zinc-N., Zinc-P..
Allen

Re: help dreams of examinations

Posted: Fri Mar 15, 2002 3:24 am
by Dave Hartley
Hi Allen,

I'm seeing an interesting phenomenon here.

Practically every single rubric that you or I listed are quite "new"
remedies.

What are we supposed to make of this? Is social pressure such a new thing ??
Schools & exams have been around quite a while..
Dave Hartley
new: www.localcomputermart.com/dave
Santa Cruz, CA (831)423-4284
mailto:dave@localcomputermart.com
Asheville Computer (N. Carolina) (828)285-0240

Re: help dreams of examinations

Posted: Fri Mar 15, 2002 3:56 am
by Sheila Parks
dear dave and allen and everyone, when i asked a patient recently to sum up
her life in a few words, she said "missing the boat". i went to eh and
typed in missing the boat (i forget which form of the verb i used, but i
think it was missing, maybe misses)and the remedy that came up was vanadium.
for me it was extremely interesting, since the patient has severe liver
problems and vanadium also affected the liver. sheila
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Re: help dreams of examinations

Posted: Fri Mar 15, 2002 5:32 am
by Allen Coniglio
Sheila - Reference Works lists both Cadm-S and Vanadium under "missing the
boat". Searching for the same phrase produces nothing in any of my
repertories.
Allen

Re: help dreams of examinations

Posted: Fri Mar 15, 2002 7:11 am
by Dave Hartley
"missing the boat" .. I get 2 hits: Vanadium & Cad-sulph.

(of course, you could always substitute "desire for light" ;)

Perhaps this is, in part, a good argument for proving new remedies and
re-proving others; to add modern vernacular..

OTOH, it brings up the caveat about knowing your sources, as both of these
remedies are listed with this phrase attached by the same author..

Also points up one of the most valuable things about a huge library of
homeopathic literature slaved to a search engine like RefWorks or
Encyclopedia Homeopathica. (honorable mention to CaraPro, which has quite a
lot less literature available.) Once you learn the use of your program, you
can sieve thru a whole wall of books searching for strange, exceptional,
unusual, & odd symptoms & combinations of symptoms, or the occasional
verbatim key-phrase.

FWIW, although I'm a strong supporter of learning the basics & learning how
to "do it by the book" - I'm wide open for hunch-opathy in my practice.. a
good hunch or a potent keyword uttered by the client can save a whole lot of
repertorizing & re-reporitizing.. if such a fortuitous incident leads to a
rememdy which, when researched carefully in MM is a good fit.

It'd be great if it were always so easy ;)

regards,
Dave Hartley
new: www.localcomputermart.com/dave
Santa Cruz, CA (831)423-4284
mailto:dave@localcomputermart.com
Asheville Computer (N. Carolina) (828)285-0240