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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 3

To nutrition and detoxification was added recognition of a third basic bodily need exercise. Throughout evolution, until the last century or so, exercise has been a fundamental aspect of daily existence. In the last few years there has been a virtual explosion of interest in exercise, not only as a therapy, but also as a form of self-discovery and sheer enjoyment. Nutrition, and exercise are fine for maintaining health once achieved, but what of those in need of therapy?
A variety of techniques were either rediscovered or popularised: acupuncture, polarity massage, Lomi massage, reflexology, various movement and postural techniques, chiropractic, osteop- athy and others. With the availability of all of these techniques, people with chronic diseases gradually came to believe that the body’s own natural healing processes could be nurtured unob- structed and rebalanced with definite benefit – and without the toxicity of drugs, radiation, or surgery.
Unfortunately, the initially high expectations held by chronic disease sufferers were frustrated in the end. Although the new techniques provided some degree of comfort, cure seemed to be no closer than with traditional medicine. To maintain benefit, the patient must continue with frequent treatments, often with diminishing or transient results. The new approaches were still merely techniques, without fundamental insights into the origins of chronic diseases and without solid principles on which to base the therapy.
It is in this context that large numbers of people have turned to the highly sophisticated science of homeopathy. In my experi- ence of forty years of practice, it is perhaps the most effective natural therapeutic system against acute and chronic illness ex- isting today. At last, the epitome of holistic medicine has been reached, and actual cure has become a reality rather than mere- ly a dream.