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The Celle Seminars_Page 423

Celle Seminar I, Case 16: Rheumatoid Arthritis

We must be careful not to put a remedy into a box because, as I have said before specifically about Phosphorus and also in general during this seminar, we may see a side of the remedy that we didn’t expect. For example, with Phosphorus, we might see it as very closed, very hypersensitive towards the influence of others, so much so that it becomes completely closed and almost goes into a state of insanity. These are completely cutoff individuals, living in a terrible state of internal pain. Any sort of contact is difficult for these patients because they feel as though they are thoroughly unprotected, like an animal without skin.
I was also lead astray by these ideas, that’s why we have to leave room for other things and inquire all the time. I don’t remember now at what point this all came up. There was, however, one point when I asked her directly whether or not she had a specific symptom—as though I wanted her to have that symptom—while I was thinking of another remedy. Let me make this strategy clearer. Let’s say I’m considering Phosphorus, and so I ask a question like, »You are thirstless, isn’t that so?« You see, what I’m trying to do is confirm the remedy by checking through the symptoms that would invalidate the remedy I have in my mind. This type of investigation demands that you try not to confirm your suspicion, rather that you go against your intuition and see how this tallies up with the information she gives you. I noticed this first when I began teaching doctors. There was one older doctor who was not able to perceive all the information present in a case, but he did know five things, which he uniformly applied to every patient. He tried to fit everybody into one of these five remedies by carrying out an investigation in such a way that it would support the remedy he had in mind: »You are Arsenicum, you are thirsty! And you are sipping water like that!« While visiting him, he asked me to look at his cases. I saw his method of investigation, and I thought to myself, »Oh God! What shall I say now?« I tried to explain to him that maybe he was a little bit too forceful. But later I found out that the real source of his problem was his limited knowledge of only a few remedies. His lack of knowledge caused him to squeeze his cases

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