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The Science of Homeopathy – page 49

 

veloped hair loss. At the age of 22, she fell in love and developed a very healthy emotional relationship in marriage. From the moment she entered this relationship, the hair loss subsided, and the patient felt a great sense of well-being, yet the amount of hair on her head remained much less than normal and did not increase in thickness. In this instance, the same degree of mental suppression produced a similar endocrine imbalance, but the healthy emotional stimulus was able to strengthen her defense mechanism enough to establish a new equi- librium of minor significance in terms of her freedom to live happily and creatively. Thus, although the hair on her head was not normal, the patient was advised that the defense mechanism had established a very acceptable balance which should not be interfered with.

CASE 3: A young man of 19 years developed excessive stiffness in the back of the neck while preparing for entrance to the university. The course of study he had decided upon was very arduous, and he felt great anxiety about his ability to complete the work successfully. As a generalization, it can be said that there are two centers on the physi- cal body which correspond most closely to the emotional and mental levels of the human being – the heart and the brain. In this case, the young man decided mentally upon a course of study about which he felt great uncertainty on the emotional plane. The neck seems to be the main pathway connecting the brain and the heart on the physical level, so the reflected mental/emotional conflict created physical pain in the region of this pathway.

From these and other case examples, we observe that the defense mechanism always attempts to create a wall of defense, which is mani- fest as signs and sympoms at the most peripheral level possible. There are three factors which determine or alter the center of gravity of dis- turbance:

1. The hereditary strength or weakness of the defense mechanism in the first place; this is a major factor which will be discussed at great length in subsequent chapters. If the defense mechanism is weak, the center of gravity of symptoms will tend to affect the deepest mental and emotional levels quite readily; if the defense mechanism is strong, the symptoms will be contained on the least vital physical organs.

2. The intensity of the morbific stimuli, which are received on men- tal, emotional, or physical levels. If the shock to the system is very severe, even the strongest defense mechanism may not be able to main- tain equilibrium at an unimportant level; if the morbific stimulus is weak (say, a cold virus of weak virulence), then even a relatively weak