-----Mensagem Original-----
From:
finrod@finrod.co.uk
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2012 7:37 AM
To:
minutus@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [Minutus] Re: Coffee and homeopathy
Ultimately it is practice and experimentation that will give the answer to
this question.
From my point of view certain substances seem to have a marked effect on the
organism.
Even the right similimum starts to act very subtly in the first moments. The
healthy reaction
of the body/mind is also very subtle in the beginning. Maybe coffee and a
few other substances are
able to interfere in this subtle dynamism between action and reaction
disrupting cure.
-geo-
OK - Let us see what might be the safest course.
I have on good authority of colleagues that coffee can anti-dote some
remedies - especially Nat-m!
I have used it myself to stop severe aggravation a patient suffered!
We also have people like my esteemed teacher, Sheilagh Creasy, who does not
object to patients drinking coffee.
We need to give the homeopath the best chance of effecting a cure.
Considering the risk of the first remedy not being the Similimum, if it is
not bang on target, then coffee could affect it and give dis-information to
the homeopath regarding his first choice.
Therefore, my recommendation is that to avoid coffee for the first couple of
months!
Best wishes
Soroush
From:
minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:
minutus@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of
jtik ari
Sent: 31 May 2012 06:12
To:
minutus@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Minutus] Re: Coffee and homeopathy
Coffee can only antidote Nat m if the remedy is taken in material doses ie
under 12c. Two, if Nat m is taken in potencies above 12c then no molecules
are involved, only imprints are involved and then it would really depend on
whether Nat m imprints have a 'lock & key' association with crude coffee
molecules in which case the coffee molecules would bind to the Nat m
imprints and neutralize then.
I don't think that is the case but an Organic chemical biologist would be
able to advise on this.
In the old books most of the remedies that are supposed to be inimical to
each other are not so. Science was not advanced to the molecular level 200
years ago and I can't imagine how the doctors of yore stated that a remedy
was inimical or antidoted another remedy. What means did they have to
determine whether a molecule of one remedy exactly counter matched another
remedy to find a mutual 'lock & key' bind to neutralise each other?
Amazing - and we blindly follow these old baseless pointers.
Jeff
Jeff