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Essence of Materia Medica – page 207

ship between smallpox vaccinations and Thuja is not known.
In every medicine, there is always a sequence of events. Pathol-ogy begins somewhere and ends somewhere. To fully know a remedy, we must know each stage very clearly. The same remedy will act both in the beginning phases and in the end stages. For example, if you have a patient with chronic headaches dating from a smallpox vaccination, Thuja will likely cure them even though they may not fit the typical left-sided frontal headaches of Thuja. For this to happen, the patient must be in a phase not yet elucidated in the provings.
This is why we sometimes must rely heavily on the causative factor in a case. We know that smallpox can cause maningitis, an ailment characterised by the most violent of headaches. Nev-ertheless, it is important to specify that Thuja will bring about cure on such specific causative indications OFTEN—but by no means ALWAYS. One must alwavs take the full case to determine if another remedy covers the case adequately. If not, then one is justified to use Thuja.
Another ROUTINE use of Thuja is in warts which have been sup-pressed. Here it is appropriate to THINK of Thuja. Caution is again in order, however, because I can testify from personal exper-ience to several mistakes made by just such routine use of Thuja.
Thuja is a very deep acting remedy that can produce some amaz-ing surprises. You may come to a point of desperation in a case No progress has been made after several prescriptions. The patient is very closed, proper, and correct—you may even think of Kali carb. but it doesn’t work. Finally, you realise that the patient is not really being straight with you; there is this manipulative deviousness. Once you see this, you give Thuja, and you are likely to see dramatic benefits indeed.