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The Science of Homeopathy – page 178

many develop a life-long fear or chronic insomnia? It is important to keep in mind the difference between the “exciting cause,” which intel- lectuals tend to focus upon, and susceptibility to that cause.

Highly educated patients create another distortion as well. They have read many theories on diet, vitamins, cleansing regimens, etc., and they have adopted some of these ideas themselves without any consideration for the uniqueness of their own organism. For example, a well-educated professor suffering from hay fever, duodenal ulcer, constipation, and other problems may have become convinced by a nutrition book that salt is bad for the human race. He therefore avoids salt, even though it has been a chronically habitual and craved food in his case. His chemistry may have required a higher amount of salt than that of other people, but for intellectual reasons he has altered that balance in his own body. Not only does this remove from observation a symptom which might be important to the homeopath, but the result- ing chemical imbalance might result in depression, or irritability, or easy fatigue, etc. For this new state, then, the intellectual studies other nutrition books and decides to take megadoses of B-vitamins to cor- rect what he surmises to be a vitamin deficiency. This in turn produces other symptoms, and the process continues.

By the time the intellectual comes to the homeopath, he has used his mind to interfere so profoundly with his organism’s own natural expression that it becomes virtually impossible to discover what the defense mechanism was trying to do in the first place. The intellec- tual, of course, can explain the reason for each and every alteration that has been made, but it is impossible to discern which symptoms resulted from previous alterations and which are true expressions of pathology. In such a situation, the only thing to do is to recommend that the patient discontinue all the vitamins, follow a diet based solely on whatever is craved or desired, and return in several months for the homeopathic interview.

Another very big problem posed by intellectuals is their insistence upon making all the decisions for themselves regarding therapy. They want to know the reason for everything, and they want to participate in every judgment. Of course, patients must have overall responsibility for their health, and they must be bold enough to request basic infor- mation regarding their progress, their prognosis, and the rationale be- hind the therapy being used. But this process should not go so far as to involve the patient in every minute decision for which the homeopath has been trained over many years. At some point, a person must sit back and acknowledge the value of expertise.

This issue becomes most apparent in those intellectual patients