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The Science of Homeopathy – page 79

The best way to illustrate this principle is to present a case example which is very common in the practice of any physician. Let us consider a patient who has contracted a staphylococcal infection in the lungs. From the moment of onset of the infection, the vibration rate (the “res- onant frequency”) changes somewhat, and the patient is “immune” to invasion by other similar organisms. The defense mechanism calls into action the normal mechanisms of fever, cough, chills, prostration, etc., and the patient goes to the doctor. Tests are done and reveal an elevated white blood cell count, antibody production against staphylococcus, an abscess on X-ray, and a culture which grows Staphylococcus sensitive to a wide variety of antibiotics. The patient is given one of these anti- biotics, and promptly the fever decreases, the energy begins to return, and the quality of sputum improves.

If this patient’s defense mechanism is strong, it eventually reestab- lishes an equilibrium and corrects the changes in vibration rate caused by the bacteria and the antibiotic. If, on the other hand, the defense mechanism is not quite strong enough, a different course of events oc- curs. The vibration rate does not return to normal and is altered even more deeply by the antibiotic. After a week or so, there occurs a pleu- ral reaction with pain and effusion. The doctors recognize that a “com- plication” has occurred, and draw out of the pleural space some fluid which now reveals a new bacteria, Proteus, which is sensitive to fewer antibiotics than was the Staphylococcus. The reason this occurred is that the new resonant frequency of the patient enabled susceptibility to a new and more serious organism.

A second antibiotic is then given, again altering the vibration rate of the defense mechanism. Gradually the patient feels a little better, the pain subsides somewhat, and it appears that recovery will ensue. Still, however, nothing has been done to appreciably strengthen the defense mechanism. On the contrary, two bacterial infections and two courses of antibiotics have weakened it. Finally, the effusion increases again, and it is found that an even more serious organism, Bacillus pyocy- anaeus, is present and that it is insensitive to all known antibiotics. To the allopathic physician, the only alternative left is surgical drainage and perhaps lobectomy; the case is now considered very serious and likely to die in any event.

Such cases as this are far from rare; every physician has a wealth of experience of cases which progress in exactly this way. When referring such a patient to a specialist, it is commonplace to comment on the pre- dilection of such a patient to develop “complications”; even allopathic physicians talk in terms of systemic weakness in such cases, and by experience they have learned to expect the worst.