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The Celle Seminars_Page 288

George Vithoulkas

same, then you would most probably want to give another remedy. In these sorts of cases aggravation occurs very quickly. And because these cases are sensitive to almost all remedies, you may find that remedies which are close to the correct one bring on an incredible aggravation when given; then you despair because the aggravation appears to just go on and on. If the first remedy you give—Tuberculinum—is correct, any further remedy will just bring on unnecessary aggravation. You have to consider these things in dealing with cases like this one here, and you have to be patient.
We have to develop some laws by which to operate when going about finding a cure. We must also understand that it is not always possible to bring about a total cure, because every organism has its limits. I try to recognize these limits in each patient and to push a cure only as far as that individual organism can go. Of course, it is difficult to know when to stop. Often you might think, »Well, I’ve been this successful, why not try to cure all the rest? Why not just one more remedy?« As I said before, certain diseases have limits. For instance, multiple sclerosis has limits; you can bring about an amelioration but no further. If you catch MS in the beginning stages, you may be able to cure it, but only at the very beginning, within the first six months, at the most a year. But if you have a ten-year-old case of multiple sclerosis in which the patient drags his feet and his hands are paralyzed, then you can only improve his condition up to a certain point because the plaques that have formed over the years will have caused degeneration of the nerves. When an illness has reached such an advanced, irreversible stage, there’s nothing you can do, and this is precisely what you must be aware of. You might be able to stop further progression of paralysis, or bring back a bit of movement, but that’s all. If you try to push the organism beyond the limits of its disease, you might wind up speeding things up or reactivating a condition that had been stabilized through your previous prescriptions. Take, for example, a case of rheumatoid arthritis—ten, fifteen, twenty years of rheumatoid arthritis with deformities and pains. You give a remedy and there is an amelio-

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