Lyssin and etc. Sarcodes and Re-testing Nosodes [Was: Ebola]
Posted: Thu Nov 20, 2014 12:36 pm
Now Lyssin is an example that intrigues me. I think it's valuable to explore the range of usefulness of the nosodes that goes *beyond* any connection with their diseases.
especially because of my daughter's history with it -- she had (and I had) NO prior exposure to *anything* to do with rabies or rabies vaccine, and yet Lyssin was her "miracle remedy."
I learned that Lyssin and Stramonium can run *very* close in their expression. At that time she looked like a slam-dunk Stramonium (fears, night terrors), but Stram had given her no lasting help at all; Lyssin turned the key in an instant. I don't find it in MacRep, but was given a keynote of Lyssin: "Tormented by one upon whom s/he is dependent." But I do see Lyssin (but interestingly, not Stram) in the small rubric "Mind, Delusions, he is tormented: Aq-mar, canth, Chin, lyss, mangi, merc, soph-m, zinc". Also interesting to see Aq-mar there, but not (what I think is very close-running) Nat-m.
I find it often interesting to keep remembering that the useful of the nosodes goes far beyond their direct correspondence with disease, and is yet another illustration of the power of "similar" versus "identicum".
Shannon
especially because of my daughter's history with it -- she had (and I had) NO prior exposure to *anything* to do with rabies or rabies vaccine, and yet Lyssin was her "miracle remedy."
I learned that Lyssin and Stramonium can run *very* close in their expression. At that time she looked like a slam-dunk Stramonium (fears, night terrors), but Stram had given her no lasting help at all; Lyssin turned the key in an instant. I don't find it in MacRep, but was given a keynote of Lyssin: "Tormented by one upon whom s/he is dependent." But I do see Lyssin (but interestingly, not Stram) in the small rubric "Mind, Delusions, he is tormented: Aq-mar, canth, Chin, lyss, mangi, merc, soph-m, zinc". Also interesting to see Aq-mar there, but not (what I think is very close-running) Nat-m.
I find it often interesting to keep remembering that the useful of the nosodes goes far beyond their direct correspondence with disease, and is yet another illustration of the power of "similar" versus "identicum".
Shannon