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THE BERN SEMINAR-PAGE 77

a dry cough that becomes loose in the morning and lasts for the rest of the day as a dry cough without expectoration. Her description of the cough was what brought me to the correct remedy. In the meantime I asked about warm and cold: she is a warm person, she is aggravated by warm. Instinctively she says that what she needs is cold, but perhaps because of her condition she applies hot. Why does she apply hot? Because of the Kali car-bonicum, which chills her down and changes the symptomatology a little bit. That is the problem with this case: it is not clear, it is confused, and therefore the Pulsatilla element does not come through very strongly. What she wants: open windows and also affection. Despite the fact that she says she wants to be by herself, it is still nice, she says, to receive affection from someone. What confirms the diagnosis now? Well, you have for one: on coughing, loss of urine. You’ll see Pulsatilla in capitals as well there. So, if you have two symptoms underlined three times, like »cough, lying on the back,« then you have to see the remedy in capitals; »coughing, loss urine« also has to be in capitals. In both these main symptoms Pulsatilla is capital, therefore the remedy must be Pulsatilla.
Do you see why I took so long in this case, why I thought so much and put things all together? For the simple reason that I have to be correct on the first remedy. I especially do not have the luxury here of being wrong and giving several different remedies until I hit upon the right one, and that’s why I take so long before I reach a decision. Now I can say with a degree of certainty that this is a Pulsatilla case.
If we give Pulsatilla in this case, then we are faced with another question: how will we know that Pulsatilla is really acting? The first thing that we have to see – like with the case of acute anxiety we had to first see that she could swallow and keep down solid things – is that she is able to sleep for at least an hour or so, then we know the remedy is acting. If she takes it at 6:00 p.m., then by 10:00 p.m. the remedy must have put her to sleep for one or two hours. This is the idea we search for with a remedy. And the next day, we have to ask whether the fever is lower and whether she’s slept a bit better. If so, she’ll be more relaxed and will start to recuperate; then we may be able to wait with the antibiotics. That’s one thing that we can expect. In case the remedy does not have this effect, because I feel that there is no other real good possibility, I would say that I was sorry but she should take antibiotics. I do not see another possibility in this case. I have thought, I have written down the case, I’ve analyzed it, I decided that this is the remedy and I do not see another remedy. So if I give it and Pulsatilla