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THE BERN SEMINAR_PAGE 6

ency towards lung infections. All this points to the possibility of an underlying Tuberculinum; so your course of treatment would be to give Calcarea carbonica and then Tuberculinum, and then the patient should do very well. The other case of Calcarea carbonica is not as easy. This patient might have cystitis, for example, and at the same time urinary tract infections. You look at the patient’s history and see that the patient’s father had gonorrhea. Your suspicions about an underlying remedy are confirmed, and you see that underlying the Calcarea carbonica there is the possibility of Medorrhinum. It is a different expression of the same remedy, Calcarea carbonica.
(A.): When do you give Tuberculinum, when you see under Calcarea a bronchitis?
(G.V.): Yes, that is one instance in which you’d give Tuberculinum. However, you have to decide beforehand whether the remedy you have to give first should be Tuberculinum or Calcarea carbonica. I gave you an example of a case in which the first remedy was Calcarea carbonica with an underlying Tuberculinum. The manifestation of the symptomatology in this case is going to be different from the manifestation of the symptomatology in a case of Calcarea carbonica with an underlying Medorrhinum. The underlying remedy can often color the patient’s symptomatology; then we have another type of a case, one involving layers. In cases involving different layers, the first thing we will notice is that the picture of the remedy is not clear. For instance, suppose you perceive the possibility of several different remedies in a case, and you ask yourself: can this be Pulsatilla! Yes, but what about Sulphur’! It has the symptomatology of Sulphur, but it also resembles Calcarea carbonica in this aspect and there is also a possibility of Cuprum, and some Nitricum acidum or Argentum nitricum is there as well! Then we are lost. You might say that the prognosis in such a case is not good, perhaps only so-so at best, because you do not see the results that you saw in the first, more clear-cut case. Having given the remedy and not seeing a significant effect might make you feel discouraged. You might doubt your ability as a homeopath. Why? Because it’s a matter of »similia similibus curentur.« Take the remedy Arnica for example: it works beautifully on bruises, but you might see cases in which you give Arnica for bruises and they do not go away. Of course you can give the patient more Arnica, but it will not speed up the healing process; besides, the bruises will go away by themselves in two months or so anyway! The problem in such a case is that the remedy is not the simile.