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The Celle Seminars_Page 266

George Vithoulkas

(G.V.): When do you dance for yourself, when you feel bad or
good?
(F.P.): When I feel good.
(G.V.): Is dancing a way of expressing yourself?
(F.P.): Yes.
(G.V.): Can you dance with a partner?
(F.P.): It immediately becomes difficult if there are other people
around.
(G.V.): Are you very timid?
(F.P.): Yes, I think so. I can easily become insecure, put off.

ANALYSIS

(A.l): I found the following symptoms to be particularly noticeable: she wanted a little bit of light until she was just about to go to sleep, and then she switched off the light; fear of animals—frogs and so on; her earlier fear of injections, although this is an old fear that she’s overcome in the course of treatment; she feels well only when she dances on her own, when there is nobody watching her; the sea does her good; she feels better when she doesn’t eat a lot. She said that if she ate as much fat as others sometimes do, she’d feel nauseated. She’s ambitious, intelligent, and she matured early—she must have entered school at the age of four or she wouldn’t have been able to complete her matriculation exams at the age of seventeen. She is a bit too shy and she likes harmony. All these symptoms considered together seem to me to point to Carcinosinum. I think the original remedy behind Carcinosinum was Silicea, because she said that she can get whatever she wants through her own willpower alone.
(A.2): I thought of Silicea because she feels cold and has fingernails with cloudy white spots. Silicea is the principal remedy for that last symptom, and it is also a capital remedy for facial acne and for people who are unable to perspire. Beyond all this, the need to protect herself, the fear of being worthless, and her ambitions are also typical of Silicea. Too little self-confidence. She describes throughout her life a very strong will to achieve

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