Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 252

tongue. If a remedy is to be taken after eating, at least 1 1/2 hours must be allowed to pass in order to minimize the possibility of any strong odor remaining in the mouth. Once a remedy has already been taken, however, the patient may eat within 10 minutes or so.
When frequent repetition is desired, remedies are often given in water. The best procedure is to dissolve a few granules in a glass (made of actual glass, not plastic) of distilled water. The water is stirred until the granules are fully dissolved, and then the entire contents are taken according to the instructions of the prescriber. If another dose is to be taken the next day, the glass is filled with more distilled water, covered tightly, and then shaken very vigorously. It can then be stored until the next day in a place which is not exposed to direct sunlight, excessive heat, excessive cold, or strong odors. The next dose is taken, and the process repeated as many times as needed. This procedure is known in homeopathy as “plussing,” and it is generally used in low potency prescriptions. For example, suppose a patient is given a 12x potency and instructed to take it in its “plussed” form daily for ten days. As a very rough approximation, it can be said that the dose on the second day will be a 13x potency, the third day a 14x, the fourth day 15x; by the tenth day, the patient is taking a 22x potency.
Once the remedy has been successfully administered, our attention turns to the many factors which can antidote its effect after the organ- ism has responded to it. This occurs by interferences with the action of the defense mechanism itself. As a general rule, it can be said that liter- ally anything which has a medicinal effect on a particular individual can antidote a remedy. Anything which produces a hyperactive, ner- vous state, or a chemically induced calmed or sleepy state, can antidote the action of a remedy.
It is important to remember that it is not actually the remedy which is antidoted (although this expression is commonly used for the sake of convenience), but it is the defense mechanism itself which returns to disorder under the stimulation of an allopathic drug, coffee, etc. There- fore, patients have a responsibility to be very strict about the particular substances which are known to disrupt the defense mechanism and cause relapse.
The most important antidote is allopathic drugs. In our world, drugs such as painkillers, antibiotics, tranquilizers, sedatives, etc., are so commonplace that people tend to swallow them without a second thought. Nevertheless, they are artificial substances with powerful ef- fects which can quickly antidote homeopathic remedies. Therefore, al- lopathic drugs should be strictly avoided unless specifically approved by the homeopathic prescriber.