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THE BERN SEMINAR-PAGE 93

CASE 3

Cerebellitis
What I want to show you now is a case some of you have seen before, but I still think you can learn a few things from it. This is a case of a child that had chicken pox and after chicken pox he developed cerebellitis, an inflammation of the cerebellum which causes ataxia. He could not walk, nor could he eat and retain anything. The child was taken to a hospital, where he was most probably given a simple saline solution. They said they could do nothing about the case, and because this was going on while I was present, the child was brought to me to be treated. The child had been given several remedies before, one of which was Causticum, and then Carbo vegetabilis and China in order to make him retain food; he would vomit immediately upon eating and he was paralyzed. This is a very precarious case because you see the child lying completely exhausted and he cannot retain any kind of food; you have to ask yourself, how long are you going to wait? That is why I asked to see the child after the first prescription, within three days after he received the remedy. Based on my analysis, I said that the first thing that we had to see happening with this child is that he be able to retain food; if we don’t see that then we don’t have the correct remedy. Although the practitioner says, »he was a little better there,« what is really better about his condition when the child is dying? The child had a kind of automatic movement: when he sat up he would start moving automatically, once he laid down he was still again. So that is the situation. I will skip the description, and let you hear the practitioner’s description of the child.
VIDEO
(Therapist): This is George Vithoulkas and this is John. (G.V.): Does he sit quietly like this all the time? (Mother): He has been more animated today. (G.V.): Does he like company, having somebody next to him? (Mother): Yes, although he will pull away.
LIVE
(G.V.): You see why I ask this question? Immediately I see that he is a child who sits quietly; remember how I described Pulsatilla!: sits quietly, immovable, does not talk, doesn’t do anything. This could be a Pulsatilla