Ramakrishnan's work
Posted: Mon Jul 22, 2002 1:08 pm
It was written
and
from
remedies as
Ahh, I think this is the key point. Cancer indeed takes an agressive
approach.
We know the immune system has been infiltrated and so we too must
apply the pressure. We have all had cases where the correct remedy had
to
be repeated numberous times before we got a bite (long term chronics).the
His results are
This is my main question about some classical prescribing. No knocks,
just observation.
While it is wonderful to give one remedy and have it clear everything up,
that does not always work.
I am currently on a good remedy, my homeopath is very 'one remedy' and
leave the rest alone., now the
remedy is working, but there are annoying symptoms either the remedy
doesn't cover or my vital force has
been ignoring. I imagine Cancer is that way also, somehow ignored by the
vital force.
I have found fibroids often come into this area also.
You treat, all else improves and those darn fibroids are untouched.
Hahnemann was a clinician, he spoke of the totality of the 'clinical
symptoms' are not the blood test results, etc
part of those clinical symptoms.
In cases Ramakrishnan works on, is he finding several symptom totalities?
The totality of the diseased organ or tissue,
the totality of the patient himself, and the miasmatic totality?
If my remdy is working, but I have an untouched symptom (pick one: sore
knee, uterine fibroid, diarrhea, etc etc)
wouldn't it matter the degree of perceived danger that sx could cause.
Cancer we would abandon the remedy and aim for that, a sore knee we
might do something about if it was causing problems (low dose acute
remedy), fibroid - well that is unseen and not always symptomatic, so do
we in good conscience ignore it? I have done that to be surprised when
the client came back after most of her active day to day symptoms have
improved , to find the fibroid had grown.
but >> I would like to bring to issue some of the more obvious and
controversial
doctrines of
of
Would it be better to assume he prescibes on different totalities in the
same patient?
We all know, no agreement between remedy and patient doesn't work at all.
Sounds like an interesting book and worth having.
It does bring up a lot of questions.
Warmly, Maria
and
from
remedies as
Ahh, I think this is the key point. Cancer indeed takes an agressive
approach.
We know the immune system has been infiltrated and so we too must
apply the pressure. We have all had cases where the correct remedy had
to
be repeated numberous times before we got a bite (long term chronics).the
His results are
This is my main question about some classical prescribing. No knocks,
just observation.
While it is wonderful to give one remedy and have it clear everything up,
that does not always work.
I am currently on a good remedy, my homeopath is very 'one remedy' and
leave the rest alone., now the
remedy is working, but there are annoying symptoms either the remedy
doesn't cover or my vital force has
been ignoring. I imagine Cancer is that way also, somehow ignored by the
vital force.
I have found fibroids often come into this area also.
You treat, all else improves and those darn fibroids are untouched.
Hahnemann was a clinician, he spoke of the totality of the 'clinical
symptoms' are not the blood test results, etc
part of those clinical symptoms.
In cases Ramakrishnan works on, is he finding several symptom totalities?
The totality of the diseased organ or tissue,
the totality of the patient himself, and the miasmatic totality?
If my remdy is working, but I have an untouched symptom (pick one: sore
knee, uterine fibroid, diarrhea, etc etc)
wouldn't it matter the degree of perceived danger that sx could cause.
Cancer we would abandon the remedy and aim for that, a sore knee we
might do something about if it was causing problems (low dose acute
remedy), fibroid - well that is unseen and not always symptomatic, so do
we in good conscience ignore it? I have done that to be surprised when
the client came back after most of her active day to day symptoms have
improved , to find the fibroid had grown.
but >> I would like to bring to issue some of the more obvious and
controversial
doctrines of
of
Would it be better to assume he prescibes on different totalities in the
same patient?
We all know, no agreement between remedy and patient doesn't work at all.
Sounds like an interesting book and worth having.
It does bring up a lot of questions.
Warmly, Maria