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The Celle Seminars_Page 346

George Vithoulkas

(F.P.): Over the last year I’ve gone jogging sometimes and I ride my bike.
(G. V): Do you have any other complaints about your health at the moment?
(F.P.): I had a headache on Sunday. I felt a stinging; I can’t localize it because it goes from my eyes to my head. (G. V.): How do you feel psychologically?
(F.P.): There are some things that depress me a little bit; (cries) for instance, one thing is that my parents belong to a very strong religious group. I also belonged to it because I was born into it. I grew up with this religious socialization so when I say that this religion takes all the joy out of people, I know what I’m talking about. It forbids all kinds of joy, and so I left the church, (cries)

LIVE

(G.V.): When faced with a case of a psychologically fit person, I prescribe according to the physical symptomatology. If I see that there is a problem, I will inquire and then try and find out, more or less, what is going on, especially when I cannot get information from other levels. When you have a severe localized problem like she has, going ahead and pushing the person to give you information on local symptomatology can be misleading. Consider the sort of wishy-washy information she gives about her eye; if you were to base your prescription on this local symptomatology, you might wind up just changing the case without bringing on any real curative effect. I immediately understood that the eye is not going to give me the answer to her illness. The key to what is going on with her is going to have to come from a consideration of her entire organism; only then will you be able to hit upon the remedy that will bring about the most satisfactory, far reaching effects.
Here we see that she begins to cry after I ask her the first personal question. She states her story quite clearly, and then she starts to cry. What is going on? Her parents belong to a very strict religious group, one which, as she says, takes all the joy out

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