Books

The Celle Seminars_Page 36

George Vithoulkas

not fit in with the rest of the case, or because we do not know whether or not, given the pathology we see here, the remedy we finally choose will be suitable for such a traumatic event.
The second thing we hear is that when she was three years old she felt totally abandoned by her parents. The first traumatic experience is something independent of the person; it was something that just happened mechanically. However, the second traumatic experience can help describe the type of the person she is. Not every child will become so sick when he is abandoned, but she did, and to such an extent that the doctor insisted she be sent back to her parents immediately. The child was seriously ill. The child felt, very acutely, the feeling of having been abandoned. Where would you go in the repertory to find the correct remedy?
(A.4): Forsaken.
(G.V.): Forsaken, feels forsaken. In the repertory, the feeling of abandonment is expressed as forsaken. Do you get the idea? You see, I am trying to understand this person. As a child, she had a great fear of being abandoned, and she is excitable. Can this be an Ignatia case? I see that she perspires in the face. Perhaps you could not see this on the video, but I could see it, and that’s why I asked, »Do you perspire?« By the time I asked if she perspires, I could already see the perspiration on her face. Remember, she took off her jacket. By the time she took off her jacket, she was already perspiring profusely. Why did I ask her about perspiration? Because Ignatia only perspires in the face. I asked, »Do you perspire ?« because first of all, I wanted to see whether she was aware of what was happening to her. She said, »Yes, I perspire a lot.« Where does she perspire? All over her body. In the face? Yes, in the face, but also all over her entire body. This is not a symptom of Ignatia and therefore Ignatia, as a remedy, is not confirmed. Does she have an Ignatia nature? She does not, nor does she have the nature of Natrum muriaticum because she is not a closed person. She has contact with other people. When she talks to me, she laughs and shows emotions— in fact she is quite emotional. Although the patient is an emotio-

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