Homeopathic Philosophy

Compensation

The news story that broke the other day about the sex and drug scandal involving a prominent Evangelical preacher in Colorado brought back memories of a late night television broadcast my wife and I watched some 20 years ago. We were fresh off the boat, so to speak, having just arrived in the US a week or two earlier. My wife had never set foot in America before and I hadn’t lived here for nearly a decade. So, as a way of (re-) acquainting ourselves with American culture, we were flipping through the channels one night, and came across a broadcast of a preacher histrionically sermonizing about faith, sin, redemption, and salvation. Part mesmerized, part repelled by his prancing and posturing, by the flow of tears and the howling, neither of us really knew what to make of it…

Not long after that, we recognized pictures of this same man, Jimmy Lee Swaggart, splashed across the front pages and nightly news broadcasts. Little did we know that he had been, up until that point, one of the most successful and powerful televangelists in the country. But, he had been caught repeatedly on film in the company of prostitutes. And although Swaggart weepingly confessed his sins and pledged to make things right with God, it was not enough to save his ministry.

The Swaggart episode was engineered by a former minister in his church who himself had been fired for an adulterous escapade and it had come on the heels of an even more lurid sex scandal in which fellow evangelist Jim Bakker was accused of paying hush money to quiet allegations of rape.

So, the news from Colorado got me thinking, “What is it with these guys?” What is it about people so sanctimonious in their pronouncements about the way people should and shouldn’t conduct themselves but who can’t keep to the straight and narrow in their own lives? How could it be that Ted Haggard, the disgraced Colorado preacher could publicly condemn homosexuality and be such an outspoken proponent of a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage, while hiring male prostitutes?

It is tempting to dismiss these wayward ministers as hypocrites, lumping them together with politicians, unscrupulous corporate executives and other favorite targets of popular contempt. But, there is more to this phenomenon than that.

Compensation is a concept that both homeopathy and psychology share. It is a mechanism by which a person conceals or counterbalances an internal state of being by developing a set of behaviors, attitudes and beliefs that apparently are very different. In fact, quite often these are the polar opposite.

It is easy to mistakenly assume that a highly compensated person truly embodies the overtly displayed behaviors or proclaimed beliefs without detecting the inner reality they are meant to conceal. He himself is often equally unaware. Compensation does not come about through conscious decision making, but is instead a subconscious strategy which all of us, to one extent of the other, employ to feel safer and function more smoothly in the world.

I recall a patient who was a strict vegan (a form of vegetarianism were no animal products, even milk or eggs, are eaten) and extremely devoted to animal rights causes. While her devotion to these beliefs was admirable, at the same time she expressed them with a discomforting strident adamancy. In the course of the consultation, the reason for that unyielding dedication was revealed when she described constantly recurring dreams of incredible violence where, for the most part, she was the perpetrator. Clearly, her lifestyle was a compensatory mechanism to keep in check her own brutality.

The study of homeopathic remedies often reveals various states of compensation. For instance, one of our very commonly used medicines is made from the coniferous tree Arbor Vitae, otherwise known as Thuja. The internal state of a person needing Thuja, like other members of the conifer family, is one of great weakness.

More specifically, it is experienced as a sense of hollowness and fragility, a brittleness that can easily fragment and shatter. On a psychological level, the fragmentation manifests as disconnectedness, leading to a feeling of isolation. In addition, one of the characteristics distinguishing Thuja from other conifers is a compulsion to hide their state. They experience their fragility, emptiness and disassociation as an innate, irreparable weakness and survival in the world demands it be covered up lest it be discovered.

A common compensatory strategy of a Thuja thus becomes to hide his fragility by being very rigid in the way he thinks while, a the same time, denying any urges or impulses that might reveal the true inner state. This can develop into a type of fanaticism or monomaniacal obsession. Regardless of the arena in which he is involved, be it religion, politics – or even homeopathy, a deep fear that the slightest deviancy from orthodoxy might fatally expose his own weakness, compels him to be unyieldingly dogmatic.

The Bakkers, Haggards and Swaggerts of the world are not truly hypocrites anymore than the rest of us. For whatever reason, their need for compensatory behavior is unusually strong, but it is doubtful that they made deliberate, conscious choices to hide their real selves through sermonizing and moralizing. The urge to preach, more than likely, was experienced as a compulsion, a ‘calling’ if you will. In their own language, one might say it was a calling from God to fight temptation and sin… And that is a very apt description.

 

Crossing That Great Divide

The other day, I had the opportunity to listen to an interview with Larry Dossey. I’m not sure how his work had escaped my notice all these years, but hearing him speak was certainly an enjoyable and reinforcing experience. Dossey has been an MD for 4 decades, was a battalion surgeon in Vietnam and chief of staff at a hospital in Dallas. He is also the author of a bunch of books and the chief proponent in the American conventional medical world of what he has termed the "nonlocal mind", that is, the concept that our awareness and our mind are not confined to our physical brain and body.

His story is similar to a number of others I have heard: he came across some data that seemed to contradict everything he knew about medicine and physical reality, and instead of dismissing it as flawed or bogus, he went about finding out whether it was valid or not.

The information he first came across was the result of a study conducted by South Korean researchers who created an experiment to determine the validity of the healing power of prayer. In it, a group of Korean women troubled by infertility were matched up with a person unknown to them in Canada. These pairs were divided into two groups, one where the Canadian was instructed to pray for their Korean partner to become pregnant, and the other where the Canadian was instructed to not pray for the partner.

What shocked Dossey, and paved the way for a dramatic shift in his view of medicine (and reality, in general) was the fact that there was a clear statistical difference in the pregnancy rate between the two groups.

Further studies showed that the religious affiliation of the participants – both the ‘prayers’ and the ‘prayees’ – happens to be. Whether Christian, Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, no matter what God or how they pray – all these factors make no difference. What is critical is the performance of some form of ritual that signifies one person’s intent that another be healed.

This often overlooked aspect of healing has been recognized for centuries in other traditions of medicine and is now, thanks to Dossey and other likeminded allopathic medical practitioners, only slowly gaining some recognition in the modern medical world.

This phenomenon brings to mind the science of Radionics, a form of distance healing created and popularized around the turn of the last century. It was the invention of a man named Albert Abrams, who made it into a very successful enterprise, and was further developed by a number of disciples some of whom were later persecuted and jailed because of their activities.

In Radionics, a “signature”, that is, a substance unique to a person, such as a drop of blood or a few strands of hair, is used as a focus to determine the health status of that individual and to heal them. This can be performed no matter where the person may actually physically be at the time.

Both the diagnosis and treatment are conducted by a device, a Radionics machine, onto which the signatures are placed. Curiously, this device is very simple electrical circuit – a circuit that may or not even be functional. It doesn’t use electricity or any other external form of energy (aside from, one might presume that of the practitioner and the subject).

Compared to a healthy person, a sick person will show disturbed or abnormal patterns of energy. These patterns or frequencies are picked up by the Radionics machine, and then categorized into various patterns that define what the problem or illness is.

Having made a diagnosis of sorts, the treatment is carried out by ‘broadcasting’ healing patterns of energy to the patient. This too, is carried out a Radionics device – either the same or a different machine from the one used to make the diagnosis.

One very interesting aspect is the fact that Radionics practitioners often used ‘rates’ to define and cure illness. Anticipating the modern computer age to a certain degree, rates are series of numbers that are used to categorize a disease and to perform the broadcast.

Although I am not involved with nor very studied in Radionics per se, over the years I have been exposed to and used various forms of treatment that rely on similar concepts. And it has become absolutely clear to me that the efficacy of these treatments - and make no mistake about it, sometimes miraculous cures have occurred with them – is dependent on the focus and intent of the practitioner.

These machines are merely conduits for that intent and focus, just as are acupuncture needles and the hands placed on a person during massage, chiropractic, Reiki or any form of bodywork. For that matter, it seems no different than the focus and intent that a physician, nurse or homeopath gives while interacting with a patient.

Sometimes it is useful to codify this into a ritual, a prayer or some other act, that brings us back from the mundane thoughts of daily life, brings our mind into a sharper focus, and distills or intensifies our true intent. For every person, this ritual may differ, but in the end, it boils down to the simple act of caring.

 

For the Birds

Dichotomy, ‘the division or contrast of two opposing things’, seems to be one of the basic phenomena of existence. Black & white, in & out, up & down, left & right, positive & negative, yin & yang, conservative & liberal, capitalist & socialist. The list goes on and on. Even our modern cyber world is built on the contrast of 0’s & 1’s. The ancient Chinese understood dichotomy as the basic operating principle of the world: from the great Unity came the separation into Two, and from the continued force of separation the 10,000 things of the world came into being. A few thousand years later, German philosophers of the 19th century revived the Greek term ‘dialectic’ as a metaphysical term describing the inevitable existence of opposing forces, concepts and actions that creates contradictions as well as the process leading to their resolution. Marx and his communist successors picked up and tweaked this idea a bit with the moniker ‘dialectical materialism’.

In the development of homeopathy over the last two centuries, there have been two great dichotomies, one mostly historical and the other quite contemporary, which have had far reaching effects on its evolution and the way it is practiced. The first was the division between the low potency and high potency prescribers during the mid to late 1800’s.

‘Potency’, in the homeopathic context, is used to describe the extent to which a medicine is diluted. The basic notion being that the more a medicine is diluted during the preparation process, the greater medicinal strength or ‘potent’ it will become. This quite counterintuitive concept was not a hypothetical postulate, but rather was the direct result of experimentation and clinical evidence.

Over a period of some five decades beginning around 1790, Samuel Hahnemann, the founder of homeopathy, investigated into various methods and degrees of dilution for his medicines in order to further enhance their curative powers. Early in his homeopathic career, the medicines were diluted by factors of 1 part in several thousand or millions. Although to most laypersons, this seems extraordinarily dilute, it was in fact, a quite modest beginning. By the latter part of his career, he began to use medicines that were diluted by factors of many billions, trillions and beyond. These were diluted to such an extent that no molecule of the original substance could possibly remain.

Hahnemann himself had the breadth of mind to perceive that the action of the medicine was based on the nature and purity of the energy that was transferred from the substance into the medicinal solution, and not the extent to which the substance itself was present. He understood that in point of fact the dilution process enhanced their medicinal action. But there were those amongst his followers who accepted and used medicines of lower dilutions but balked at the idea of these extreme dilutions, perhaps thinking that the old man had gone off the proverbial deep end.

These were the original ‘low potency prescribers’. A generation later, this dichotomy became even more pronounced when some homeopaths started to make and prescribe much potent medicines that were diluted to degrees that Hahnemann himself never considered. And again, there were those in the homeopathic community who considered this an outrageous corruption and misapplication of the basic principles of homeopathy.

In the United States, this split rendered asunder and weakened the entire profession, and became a key factor in the demise of homeopathy in the early 20th century. Although does still existing today to a certain degree, the difference between the two camps has to a great extent been resolved. This is basically due to the fact that there is a consensus in the profession that remedies of different potencies have different have differing actions. Put another way, the same homeopathic remedy in two different potencies will act differently.

While there are many disparate schools of thought about exactly how that difference is best defined, generally speaking, most would agree that lower potencies, which are relatively speaking closer in form to the substance from which they are derived, tend to act more at the level of the physical tissues. They are used more for ‘organic illnesses’ where there are clear changes in the structure of a particular tissue or organ. An example might be an enlarged thyroid gland or kidney disease where cellular destruction has occurred.

Higher potencies tend to be used for what are called ‘functional illnesses’ where a function or physiological process is disturbed. Complaints with a strong mental or emotional component tend to also fall into this category. A chief complaint of high blood pressure or anxiety would both be examples.

With this perspective, a modern homeopath need not choose between one camp and the other, but can make appropriate potency selections based on the patient and the illness. Thus, the ‘dialectic’ of low and high potency comes to a very satisfactory resolution.

PART II

While the first splintering of the American homeopathic profession chiefly centered on the question of how dilute the medicinal solutions ought to be, that was not the only matter of contention. It also fell along a growing divide between constitutionally oriented homeopaths and those more concerned with pathology.

The former group, who ended up becoming a small minority, strictly upheld the founding doctrine much emphasized by Samuel Hahnemann that the diseases manifested by a patient must be treated by understanding a complex of characteristics related to the physical and mental nature of the person. The latter were more focused on using remedies that had known effects on certain symptoms, tissues or organ systems, but not taking into account the overall state of the person.

As it turns out, the division between these two approaches for the most part fell along the same lines as the split between the ‘high’ and ‘low’ potency homeopaths described earlier. Constitutional homeopaths tended to use the high potencies while the pathologically oriented homeopaths used the lower ones.

As was previously mentioned, this is due to the fact that as homeopathy developed over time, it became clear that both high and low potency remedies were both effective in their own right – but that they acted in different ways, even if they were derived from the same substance. Generally speaking, low potency remedies were more effective when there was a condition where there was significant organic tissue change while the high potencies seemed more effective in cases of functional and mental disease.

Thus, the chasm between the two schools of thought – the constitutional versus pathological, was less one of who was correct, but more one of treatment emphasis. In a case with significant organic tissue changes, a constitutionally oriented homeopath may choose to prescribe low potencies based on the pathology itself. Likewise, a more pathologically oriented homeopath may chose to use higher potencies when dealing with functional or mental problems.

In the last quarter century, there has arisen yet another controversy that has threatened to divide the homeopathic community. As in the questions of potency and the constitutional versus pathological perspective, on one side there is a more traditionalist camp claiming to be more fully aligned with the original doctrines of Hahnemann while on the other are those who believe they have fostered an evolution in the philosophical and therapeutic horizons of homeopathy.

In essence this latter group feel they have maintained the progressive, experimental outlook that so characterized Hahnemann’s career without contradicting the underlying principles of his work. They have introduced a great many new remedies into the homeopathic material medica and prescribed them without necessarily relying on the experimental symptoms elicited during a “proving”.

A proving is basically an experiment during which a single remedy is administered to a group of healthy volunteers, and observers compile the resulting symptoms. The resulting set of symptoms is analyzed and compiled into a drug picture. Classically, it was only based on these proving symptoms and the resulting drug picture that homeopaths can prescribe a remedy to a person matching the drug picture.

But the ‘progressive camp’ (this is my term used as a matter of convenience) to incorporate a great many new remedies into the material medica – some of which were proven, but many of which were not. They also began to understand the action of remedies, whether well proven or not, by analyzing their place in the natural world, grouping them together in families based on scientific classifications such as the periodic table and the taxonomy of living organisms.

Extrapolating from this type of information and by various consultation techniques, it became possible in a great many cases to make a correspondence between the constitutional nature of the patient and the nature of the source material from which the remedy was derived.

To a great extent, what they had done was to incorporate and integrate a post-Freudian perspective on the human psyche, with data accessible via computer analysis and scientific information readily available via the Internet.

While the traditionalists claim these techniques undermine the very foundation of Hahnemanian homeopathy, positive clinical results for patients whose remedies where prescribed in this manner.

PART III

A woman I’ll call Irene came for a consultation about one year ago for unremitting chronic pain she was experiencing throughout her body. Irene was slightly built and when she spoke, her voice sounded hoarse and raspy. A little shy of 60 years old, the pain began about five years earlier. Her condition was originally diagnosed as a collapsed vertebrae in the lower back and although surgery to fuse two of the vertebrae did help somewhat, she found it difficult to stand or move without severe pain.

Later, she was told that she had spinal stenosis (a narrowing of the space in the spine, causing pressure on the nerves) that was responsible for pain and tingling in her arms. But no treatment provided any relief. There were other pains too that were undiagnosed such as the sharp stabbing she felt under her skin – ‘ like broken glass’, as well as double vision and that distorted voice. The cumulative effect was debilitating and, in fact, was now on total disability.

Irene appeared to be of a gentle nature, yet she expressed frustration with her how her condition had been handled. In fact, she dates the dramatic exacerbation of her pain to a diagnostic procedure known as a ‘discogram’ or discography’ done five years before which entails the injection of x-ray dye (x-ray contrast) into the discs of the spine. It was performed by a resident physician who was no very practiced in the technique and kept missing the disc when inserting the needle.

A registered nurse herself, she was familiar with most of the procedures, therapies and medicines, but felt that there was neither a comprehensive understanding of her condition nor any further options available to her. She added, “I’m also sick of being treated as if it is my fault!”

Aside from possible nerve damaged caused by the poor execution of the discogram, the pathology of her condition was not anymore apparent to me than it was to her physicians. But fortunately, my understanding of her case would not be defined by the pathology but by her experience of the pathology.

This is so for nearly every homeopathic diagnosis. The understanding and selection of the medicine derives from how the patient perceives their condition – physically, mentally and emotionally. Ten or a hundred or a thousand people might complain of pain, but all of them relate to it, experience it, in a different manner. And all of them will need a different prescription.

For a homeopath, an unelicited, spontaneous and somewhat incongruous statement is often a gift. It can lead to a generalized, or ‘globalized’ , understanding of the case. That is, while I had no idea whether anyone had ever really blamed Irene for her problem, while we were discussing the pain, without any prompting she spontaneously provided a hint as to how she experienced her condition, and by extension, how she experienced her life: treated as if were her fault. So, I was alert to the possibility that this feeling might be applicable to other aspects of her life

Proceeding with the consultation, I further asked her to tell me what the worst thing about her condition was and how that affected her. The pain fatigued her, she replied, and it made doing anything an effort. Once she was an independent, functional and productive person, but now she was not contributing anything. She was useless, a failure.

“I feel trapped. I need to stay at home, be patient, bide my time. Its like a rat trapped in a labyrinth that can’t find it’s way out… And somehow, I feel this is my fault, that I’ve brought this onto myself. No one else is owning up to anything, so it must be me.”

Again she had come back to the same feeling and this time added another dimension to it: she was trapped and it was her own fault. This was a purely subjective perception of her condition, what some homeopaths might call her ‘delusion’. For homeopaths, this is not a pejorative term because we can recognize these subjective ‘delusions’ are very much part of the human condition and can be seen in all our patients to one degree or another. It is the clear perception of the nature of a particular person that often is the key to unlocking the case and finding a deep acting, curative remedy.

PART IV

From a homeopathic perspective, the delusion is quite useful. Homeopaths are always looking for the ‘strange, rare and peculiar’ – that bit of information that is unusual or just doesn’t make sense. This is because those illogical or contradictory parts of a case are points where the individual vital force makes itself known. One could call that the signature of the vital force.

So, while it would be common for a person who feels cold to want blankets, the person who feels cold yet throws off the covers is experiencing something illogical and relatively unique. That shows a very peculiar signature of the vital force and as such is a valuable to gift to the homeopath searching for a remedy. (Homeopathic Camphor is just such a remedy well know to throwing covers off despite feeling extremely cold.)

So, ‘trapped and my fault’ expressed something significant about Irene’s individual nature on a mental/emotional level and as such seemed a key to opening the case further in order to make an effective prescription. I asked her to explain it a bit further.

Irene described how difficult it was for her to accept the pain at the beginning because she was used to being useful and productive working as a nurse. “I had developed the capacity to put pain out of my mind – a ‘dissociation syndrome’. I’d just make it so the pain wasn’t me. I never was one to spend too much time in my body anyhow.”

It turns out that Irene had a history of pervasive abuse during her childhood at the hands a number of family members and during her first marriage. To survive, she learned how to dissociate from the trauma, becoming a remarkably industrious, functional adult. But that activity too appeared to be another dissociative mechanism because if not busy working, she’d be overcome with a sense of failure and guilt.

Irene had a strong sense of responsibility raising four children on her own after leaving the first marriage and, later taking in a sibling - one of her former abusers - who had become disabled. This was despite her intentions of becoming a travelling nurse once the children were out on their own.

But there was another side to Irene, also: a part of her that yearned to be free of the compulsion to be busy, free of responsibility, and free of guilt. By the manner in which she described her life’s story, it became clear that on a very deep level Irene felt trapped by it all.

To compound that feeling, Irene found herself living in close proximity to a former abuser, thereby denying herself of the opportunity to realize long held plans. It could hardly be a coincidence that it was around this time that her pains began.

The longing to be free was not new for her. Even as a child who felt hopelessly repressed and enslaved, her goal was to gain her independence, to earn money as soon as it was possible and leave home. Unfortunately, she gained her independence from home by way of a marriage that ended up being another form of entrapment.

When I asked Irene what she imagined freedom – freedom from her pains and from her responsibilities - might be like, she described it as a sense of flying upward, being above everything and floating wherever she wished. Falling into a near trance-like state, Irene envisioned passing over mountains and valleys, of the warmth of the sun shining on her as she navigated the air currents.

Even before this point of the consultation, the class of remedy that Irene might need was coming into focus. But the clarity and depth of her trance was a strong confirmation. This altered state is sometimes referred to as ‘going to source’ because the patient actually manifests a state of being reflecting the very substance of his or her own constitutional homeopathic remedy.

This phenomena does not occur during every consultation, but when it does, it is not only a strong indication of the necessary remedy, but also a powerful, somewhat transcendent experience for patient and homeopath alike.

PART V

While in conventional medicine a drug with a 10 year track record might be considered an ‘old timer’, in the homeopathic world, where many of our remedies originated in the early 19th century, a medicine with only a 10 year history would be considered a veritable newcomer. As a matter of fact, there are many homeopaths who resist using newer, non-traditional homeopathic remedies.

The incorporation of these newer remedies, in fact, is a great source of debate amongst two camps of homeopaths in general. Broadly speaking, on one side are the traditionalists who generally wish to prescribe remedies experimentally proven and therapeutically applied over many generations. On the other side are the non-traditionalists who actively seek to broaden the scope of treatment by incorporating newer remedies into the homeopathic pharmacopeia.

In working with Irene, the woman who sought out homeopathic treatment for disabling chronic pain whose case I have detailed in previous columns, it was rather clear to me from our first consultation that the homeopathic remedy she would need did come from a relatively new class of medicines developed over the last decade.

Not only was her chief complaint of chronic muscular-skeletal pain quite typical for these remedies, but also the way she expressed being trapped by her symptoms. Now, while many people might complain of feeling trapped by a disabling or painful illness, in Irene’s case this experience of ‘being trapped’ manifested over and over in her life. It seemed an inescapable pattern for her starting from childhood, continuing through her first marriage, then after divorcing, with her responsibilities of caretaking both her children and afterward a disabled sibling, and finally, with the disease itself.

An effective prescription necessarily needed to address this repeated pattern as well as the opposite – her yearning to be free, to float or fly above her pain and entrapment. This is a perfect description of ‘bird remedies’. That is, these are homeopathic medicines prepared from some tissue, usually either a feather or a drop of blood, of various birds. As research and clinical experience accumulates, there is an ever-increasing variety of this class of medicine made from falcons, eagles, parrots, crows, hummingbirds and a host of other aves.

While as a group all the bird remedies or, more accurately, the people who need bird remedies, experience their lives as conflict between being trapped and the desire for freedom, each particular species expresses this conflict in a somewhat different way. For instance, in the homeopathic proving of Columbus palumba – commonly known as the Wood Pigeon or Ring Dove, there arises a strong sense of being a gentle soul trapped in a harsh world full of violence and pain. The proving of Ara- macao, the Scarlet Macaw, brought up a sense of being trapped between the need to be part of a social unit, the family or society, and the need for self- expression.

In Irene’s case, the overwhelming sense of responsibility identifies the particular species as Buteo Jamaicensis, the Red Tail Hawk. Paraphrasing Dr. Jonathan Shore, who more than anyone has conducted research and written on birds: There is a conflict between freedom and obligation. They cannot live in community and not have a sense of responsibility. They are obliged to care and support. In essence, trapped in responsibility.

Irene’s response to Buteo-jamaicensis was quite immediate. Her pains begin to lessen and her moods improved. Now, nearly a year after beginning treatment, though by no means cured, she feels her pain has diminished by 75% and she is starting to consider re-entering the work force. Interestingly, during a recent follow-up visit, she expressed that her main concern about getting off disability to resume her career was not whether she could physically do it or not, but that she didn’t want to take on the responsibilities that it entailed.

It had become clear, she said, that her illness had been the only way to avoid the overwhelming responsibilities of life. Without knowing much about homeopathy or anything about the remedy she was prescribed, Irene had put her finger on the exact essence of the Red Tail Hawk.

Cases like this are a constant reminder to me how remarkable the homeopathic process truly is. The Vital Force of every individual and every substance constantly expresses itself, but we need to be perceptive and persistent enough to recognize it. But even if we can understand the person’s Vital Force, what if we don’t have the appropriate medicine, the homeopathic ‘similar’ that matches that Vital Force?

Before the bird remedies were available, Irene would probably not have received the same degree of benefit from homeopathic treatment. It is even possible that she may have not received any benefit at all. While extremely respectful of homeopathic tradition and the classical remedies used for many generations, my experience with patients like Irene also makes me appreciative of the need to expand our horizons as well.

 

Homeopathy & Toxicology

Historically, the field of homeopathy has been rife with internal divisions based on philosophical differences that date back to the time it was first disseminated in the medical community of early nineteenth century Europe. While these differences have lead to a plethora of various school of thought and practice, there is one major fault line that divides homeopathic practice and practitioners into two major camps. On the one side is what is generally know as “classical” or “constitutional” homeopathy; on the other is virtually everyone else. What makes a practitioner a classical or constitutional homeopath is the belief that each individual is best served by the administration of a single homeopathic remedy that is carefully chosen to match the nature of that person. To reiterate this with other words, a remedy is selected that “resonates with” the characteristic “vital energy” of that person.

Immunizations - A Matter Of Course Or Choice? Part III & IV

PART III

Last week we talked about possible acute side effects resulting from vaccinations. Let us now turn our attention to the possibility that immunization could lead to more chronic, far-reaching and insidious problems. It must first be pointed out that there is no definitive study nor true understanding of the long range effects of immunization. It is not a simple matter to make such a scientific corelation between an event that occurs early in a child,s life and his/her health over the next four or five decades. And, although immunization programs are carried out on hundreds of millions of people around the world, there has been no apparent effort to explore this question by those medical authorities who have the resources to do so. Still, some independent researchers are making correlations from their own observations. Many health care practitioners have worked with patients who have suffered long term ill-effects of vaccinations. I have personally worked with people who have experienced neurological damage that has lasted for years after immunization. I also remember seeing a young child who was brought to the office of a colleague with a seizure disorder. Ever since vaccinations several years earlier, she experienced a convulsion on the order of every 10 minutes. The seizure consisted of flailing of her limbs and a strange cry similar to the braying of a donkey. In his book DPT: A Shot in the Dark, Harris Coulter has documented the severity of the effects of the pertussis vaccination. In a later book, he suggests that vaccines cause many syndromes of brain injury or neurological damage. He postulates that the rise in the occurence of many problems like allergies, dyslexia, autism and behavior disorders could be the result of the wide spread use of vaccination. Coulter suggests a mechanism whereby the vaccination causes an allergic inflammation in the brain which results in neurological damage. Richard Moskowitz, MD, who has also questioned the use of this procedure, offers a slightly different theory. He believes that the introduction of a vaccine into the body that results in the long term presence of latent viruses within the body will create a confusion in the immune system. A vaccination is a method by which diluted disease agents are introduced into the system by avoiding the natural defense mechanisms of the body. They are, in a sense, parachuted behind enemy lines. Without any means to expel these agents, the viruses are eventually incorporated into the cells of the body. This creates a profound confusion throughout the entire organism as to what is actually the organism ("self"), which is to be protected, and what is foreign ("nonself"), which is to be expelled. At some point, the immune system will begin to attack cells within the body to rid the organism of the foreign substance. This results in chronic auto-immune disease. As an example of such a mechanism, Moskowitz quotes the following case. This "was a five-year-old boy with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, whom I happened to see in August of 1978, while visiting an old friend and teacher, a family physician withover 40 years' experience. Well out of earshot of either the boy or his parents, he told me that the leukemia had first appeared following a DPT vaccination, and that, although he had treated the child successfully with natural remedies on two previous occasions, with shrinking of the liver and spleen to approximately normal size, and dramatic improvement in the blodd picture, full relapse had occurred soon after each successive DPT booster".1 The theory presented by Moskowitz is also echoed in a very similar concept offered by a German physician. He suggests that material from vaccines shots becomes attached to the various molecular compounds in the body, creating new, unknown substances in the body. Dubbed "haptens", they are neither "self" nor "nonself". But they have the effect of stimulating auto-immune disease.2 Dr. Robert Simpson of Rutgers University made the following comments in a 1976 address to the American Cancer Society, "Immunization programs...may be actually seeding humans with RNA to form latent proviruses in cells throughout the body. These latent proviruses could be molecules in search of diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis, MS, systemic lupus erythematosus, Parkinson's disease and perhaps cancer." Taking all this into account, suggestions that the AIDS epidemic is the result of a contaminated vaccine was used in Africa over a decade ago may seem more credible. Although all this may be dismissed as speculation, the fact remains that we really have very little idea what this pervasive medical procedure is doing to the present and future generations of humanity. We are undertaking an enormous gamble with higher stakes than were first realized.

1 - Immunizations: A Dissenting Point of View, Richard Moskowitz, MD. 2- Homotoxicology, Dr. Hans-Heinrich Reckweg.

 

PART IV

Most of what has been presented diverges from the standard views held by most conventional medical practitioners. Yet, I sincerely do not wish for anyone to construe the information presented in these articles as an attempt to dissuade people from vaccinating themselves or their families. It is presented for what it is - information and interpretations of data. It is not orthodox, and therefore will probably incur the wrath of those who are philosophically, emotionally, and/or materially invested in the orthodox view. But it is important information provided us by sincere people who have researched the facts. Just as importantly, it is information that is not distributed at the office of your local family practitioner or pediatrician. The reason why it is not readily available is simply because this point of view is not incorporated into the educational background of orthodox health care providers. Patients sometimes ask me, "Should we immunize our child?", or, "Should I take a flu shot this season?" It is a hard position to be put in because it is such a hard question to answer. All of us wish for a life that is free from disease and suffering. To some extent or other, we all take steps to enhance that possibility. But nothing can be absolutely guaranteed, nothing is absolutely safe. That is the human condition. Vaccinations cannot guarantee anyone freedom from sickness, they offer a choice. On the one hand, a refusal to vaccinate chances contracting a possibily preventable disease. On the other, vaccinating will chance the possibility that there will be either short-term side effects, long-term complications like possible weakening of the body's immune system or other yet unknown problems. The solution? I know what I have chosen for myself and my family. But only you can educate yourself and make an informed choice. There is no absolute black and white on this. Be reasonable and avoid the rigid dogma of either side. You can choose to accept all the immunization procedures, refuse them all, or select the ones that seem most important and/or less likely to cause side-effects. Do not be overwhelmed by the pressure put on you by family, peers or medical and educational institutions. If you do make a decision that does not follow conventional wisdom, be prepared for the possibility that one, some, or all of the above will try to force you to change it. Sounds easy, no? Well, you do have a right to your choice - legally and morally.

Here are some reference sources for information on vaccinations: (1) The Case Against Immunizations by Richard Moskowitz, MD. Short and concise but technical, theoretical information. Write: NCH, 801 North Fairfax Str., Ste 306, Alexandria, VA 22314 Call: (703) 548-7790. (2) Immunizations published by Mothering magazine. A collection of articles with many points of view expressed by professionals and laypeople. Write: Mothering Magazine, POB 8410, Santa Fe, NM 87504 Call: (505) 984-8116 (3) The Immunization Decision : A Guide for Parents by Randall Neustaedter, OMD.North Atlantic Books,1990, Berkeley A fairly concise, user-friendly and reasonable investigation of the facts and non-facts surrounding immunization. Discusses immunizations as a whole or indiviually. (4) DPT: A Shot in the Dark by H. Coulter and B. Fisher. Harcourt Brace, Jovanovich Publishers, Orlando, Florida, 1985 A scholarly documentation of the destructive side-effects and politics related to the pertussis vaccination. (5)The Assault on the American Child: Vaccination, Sociopathy, and Criminality by Harris Coulter. North Atlantic Books, Berkeley, 1990 An investigation into the possible relationship between childhood vaccination and many medical/social problems that plague our society. Fascinating and terrifying. (6) Immunization: The Reality Behind the Myth by Walene James Bergin & Garvey, New York, 1988 A grandmother's personal account of the medical and legal struggles her family faced when confronted with the problem of immunization. Full of facts and anger. (7) How to Raise a Healthy Child...In Spite of Your Doctor by Robert Mendelsohn,MD. Contemporary Books, Chicago, 1984 A commonsense guide for parents on how to avoid the pitfalls of conventional medicine for their children.