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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 47

Chapter 9

THE PATIENT’S RESPONSIBILITY

The homeopathic practitioner is faced with a challenging task in choosing precisely the correct remedy at each stage in a patient’s treatment, but the patient as well carries significant responsibili- ties. Homeopathy is a powerful and effective therapy, but it also demands a great deal of the patient. One doesn’t get something for nothing. The patient must learn to observe areas of life which are ordinarily ignored by most people, and this observation must be done objectively and dispassionately.
It is not enough for the patient to merely keep a notebook of eve- ry detail and then leave it to the prescriber to decide which details are significant and which are not. Symptoms are manifestations of the vital force, and as such they are the basis for making a ho- meopathic prescription. The symptoms important to the homeo- path are those which have meaning to the patient, not mere piec- es of data reported out of a compulsion to be ‘complete’. Those observations noted by the patient in the course of daily existence
– those which have some meaning, however small – are the very symptoms which are created by the organism’s vital force, and therefore these are the ones which lead to a prescription.
On the other hand, it is important that the patient does not go too far in the other direction either. Some people are too careful about not misleading the prescriber and so they ignore changes until they are absolutely certain. For example, if a patient of this type notices a definite tendency to chilliness on a particular afternoon, his mind may search for possible explanations – perhaps some- one turned down the heat, or perhaps he drank a little too much iced water at lunch, or perhaps his metabolism is lower than nor- mal because his sleep was restless the night before. If one search- es hard enough, it is possible to ‘explain away’ virtually every- thing. This approach can present a big problem for the homeopath because there will be too few symptoms upon which to prescribe.