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The Science of Homeopathy – page 197

tients may come to the office complaining of similar symptoms – say, stiffness of the knees. One patient with this complaint, after having the complete case taken, is found to be relatively unaffected on other levels in the totality. The patient is living a full and creative life, quite unencumbered by any problems except this occasional stiffness of the knees. The past history of the case is negligible, and all the parents lived to old age without difficulties and died quickly without prolonged illness. This person can readily be judged quite healthy, and the ho- meopath may be assured that such a case is likely to proceed smoothly and quickly to a complete recovery.

On the other hand, another patient may present exactly the same complaint, but the interview reveals an entirely different picture. Al- though the patient has learned to live with them, it turns out that there have been many anxieties, low self-esteem, periodic depressions, and a progressive process of introversion spanning a period of twenty years. As the patient talks, it becomes clear that his ability to express his inner emotions is greatly obstructed. He claims that he has enough energy to live his daily life, but further questioning reveals that he purposely limits his activities because of a lack of stamina and a need for an afternoon nap every day. In the past history it becomes clear that the patient was very sensitive as a child and then suffered a variety of severe disappointments. Over the years, everything became stressful: meeting new people, applying for a job, contemplating a move from one apartment to another – all have been felt as major stresses from which the patient requires days for full recovery. The family history reveals a strong history of cancer and diabetes, and a few relatives had been institutionalized for mental disorders. To a homeopath, such a case is very quickly recognized to have a poor prognosis. Even the best laboratory examinations might reveal merely “osteoarthritis.” Yet the homeopath knows that within a matter of years, such a patient is like- ly to develop a serious pathological ailment; even good homeopathic treatment will be fraught with difficulties. In such a case, a partial prescription, or one which is timed incorrectly, may create such havoc that later prescriptions become almost impossible to discern.

The patient looks to the homeopath not only for a prescription, but also for information as to what to expect, whether the condition is cur- able, how long it will take, etc. If expectations are falsely raised so that the patient looks forward to dramatic relief within a few months, later stages of expectable problems experienced on the way toward cure may become profoundly disappointing. In such a circumstance, the patient may become discouraged enough to abandon homeopathy altogether.