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The Celle Seminars_Page 19

Celle Seminar I, Case 1: Epilepsy/Asthma

Case 1: Epilepsy/Asthma

INTERVIEW
(Therapist): I’ll begin with a short biography first: Female pa¬tient, born in 1932. About her parents: Father had asthma, mother had hypertrophy of the thyroid gland; otherwise I sup¬pose they were healthy. Childbirth was difficult and the child was nearly strangulated with the umbilical cord. The children’s dis¬eases she remembers having are: measles, pertussis, and German measles. "When she was nine years old, she began to experience semiconscious states, »Dammerattacken« (»twilight episodes«). This was during the time of World War II, and the semiconscious attacks worsened during air raids. At twelve or thirteen, she suffered her first major epileptic seizure. At fourteen, she began medical therapy; I suppose it was Bromium in allopathic doses. She remembers that she became very sad when the doctor told her that she would not be allowed to marry; this happened when she was twenty-one or twenty-two years old. Menarche was delayed, beginning first when the patient was sixteen years old. Later on, she concentrated on her studies and became a fastidious librarian. In her twenties, she had an extremely painful relationship which lasted ten years. During this time, she again experienced frequent semiconscious states. She said she wanted to bide the disease and that she was very tensed up. At the age of twenty-one, she began to suffer from hay fever. At twenty-nine, she was given Penicillin, obviously for an infection. Afterwards she experienced very strong headaches and meningitis symptoms. Finally, she had to go to the hospital where she was diag-
‘ In every case presented in this book all professional interests and locations of events have been changed in order to protect the patient’s identity.
G.V.=George Vithoulkas, A.=Audience, F.P.=female patient, M.P.=Male patient. All other abbreviations as indicated in text. Numbers following abbreviations refer to order of appearance and not to individual speakers.

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