Books

The Celle Seminars_Page 368

George Vithoulkas

inal troubles went away when she was about six months old; she doesn’t have them anymore. She was given Cina because of her granuloma and her behavior. Within two or three days the granuloma was gone, but then she became constipated and had a lot of pain trying to pass stool or just before a bowel movement. This lasted for about a month, and then I consulted another doctor, because the doctor who gave her Cina did not want to treat her anymore. The new doctor gave her Silicea, which produced a bad aggravation but no relief. After three or four weeks of waiting for the Silicea to work I couldn’t bear it anymore, so I gave her Chamomilla. This took away the constipation immediately, but it did not relieve her entire state, which is still the sleeplessness and our really big problem, which I haven’t yet mentioned, the constant vomiting. From the first day of her existence she had either a sensitive stomach or a sensitive diaphragm, because she had severe hiccups on her first or second day. She would get them after eating, because of certain movements, and she would also get them when her feet got cold. Even now she still gets the hiccups four, five times a day. Within the first week, apart from the vomiting, she developed hiccups. (G.V.): Has she had another remedy in the meantime? (Mother): Well, it was probably after the Cina and before the Silicea that she developed the vomiting, and it gradually became worse. Later on, after Silicea, she received Calcarea, and then later on she was given Lycopodium. I think these remedies didn’t do anything, she just gradually grew worse. Normally children start to eat when they are four, five, or six months old, but at first she wasn’t interested. When she finally started putting things in her mouth she would immediately vomit. When she tried to eat she would also vomit up the bottles that she had drank before. That’s why, up until today, she has never eaten anything solid, she only drinks a bottle. I have invented a sort of food for her, a liquid, but it must be very liquid; if it’s too viscous she’ll start vomiting. She is clever: if she puts bread in her mouth now she chews it and then spits it out. If she tries to swallow—not all the time, but 90% of the time—she vomits. There appears to be some sort of

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