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The Celle Seminars_Page 337

Celle Seminar I, Case 12: Muscular Dystrophy

say? Fear of being alone at the night. Open your repertory to fear of being alone at night. We see three remedies, amongst them Causticum in italics and Stramonium, very strong. We’ve already decided on Stramonium, but I believe that Phosphorus and Pulsatilla should be added as well. Phosphorus in the same degree as Causticum, and Pulsatilla in the first degree.
(A.5): What about Medorrhinum}
(G.V.): Medorrhinum may have fear at night.
(A.6): When you combine his getting out of bed at night to go to his parents with his attachment to his friends and teacher, along with the way he sits next to his parents and clings to them, you can also take the symptom clinging from the repertory, which is Stramonium.
(G.V.): As you remember, I immediately inquired concerning Stramonium, because I could see that this very sweet child is like Stramonium. The Stramonium child might not have any of the other fears mentioned here, but they definitely wake up at night from nightmares. It is almost a must that Stramonium be prescribed for these sweet children who display an obvious fear of violence. Fear of violence then appears at night in the form of nightmares; they wake up screaming and are completely terrified. So, in light of the absence of nightmares in this case, we have to choose between Pulsatilla and Causticum, which are the main remedies now after Phosphorus has failed. Another hint: there is one remedy that we do not know well and which even I haven’t mentioned often. This child has some of the Natrum elements; the sensitivities and the fact that he is communicative and nice. However, he is not communicative enough to be a typical Phosphorus. His inhibitions and desire for fried eggs are symptoms that point more towards Natrum than does his sweet nature alone. Look this up in your repertories; you’ll see one remedy has a specific desire for fried eggs: the remedy I’m hinting at is Natrum phosphoricum. Let me tell you a little bit about it. First of all, it has a profound effect on the muscles, especially the tendons, where it promotes contractions. I am not aware that this information can be found in our repertories or materia med-

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