Books

The Celle Seminars_Page 348

George Vithoulkas

(F.P.): Christian religion, and it dictates how you must run your life. For example, you can’t just take any job you like. And if you change jobs or want to do something important, you have to ask the priest’s permission first. (G. V.): Is it a priest or a committee?
(F.P.): It’s a committee. There are priests in the congregation and then there are shepherds and apostles, and the main apostle is the leader of the church. They don’t allow you to have a television or go to the movies at all.
(G. V.): Were you very attached to your parents in the beginning? (F.P.): Yes. I am more dependent on them financially than for other things, but I am always interested in how they feel. (G. V.): You don’t want to do or say anything that will hurt them? (F.P.): No, especially in this case.
(G. V.): That’s why you never told them anything about that affair, even when you left the group?
(F.P.): Yes. We talked, but we’re of two different opinions. My parents wanted me to come back, and I told them that I couldn’t because I didn’t want to live like that anymore. We can’t reach an agreement on this issue. (G. V.): Do you work now?
(F.P.): I study and I work. I work at night, eight nights a month, in a nursing home.
(G. V.): Did you or anyone else in your family ever have tuberculosis?
LIVE
(G.V.): By this time I more or less know the remedy. If she were to say that she or her parents had had tuberculosis at sometime, then I would have to reconsider my line of thinking. But I am not really interested in investigating the possibility of tuberculosis in order to confirm Tuberculinum as the remedy. My main objective here is to just try and eliminate possibilities. In the course of the interview, a very clear picture of the remedy begins to come out. She is very typical for her remedy. Let’s go back to the tape:

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