Books

Classical Homeopathy for Anxiety and Jealousy – page 115

I went there and saw her. I said: “Forget it. It’s not a relapse. She will recover by herself.” And she did recover on her own.

The next day she went back into a kind of relapse twice, but it was not a real relapse. On the third day they called me into my office again. She came and was sitting there, trembling. And the cardiologist, the professor of cardiology, was there and said: “Let’s get the Valium.” (audience laughs) I said: “We don’t have Valium here!” – “Okay, but then somebody has to go and get some Valium.”

I asked her: “Do you want to lie down?” – “Yes, I want to lie down.” I lifted her and I was holding her, and as I was holding her I could see she was dizzy and almost lost her balance.

Gelsemium, Gelsemium!” some others cried. Different ideas were voiced, as always in cases of emergency. I said: “Lay her down there.” In the room where we take the cases we have a kind of medical bed. I said to her friend: “Let her relax there.”

I went back to the class and described the situation to the class. I asked for opinions. “Repeat the remedy!”, “Do this!”, “Do that!”, and so on. The professor of course called: “Valium!” (audience laughs)

I explained: “Now you have to be careful! See how careful homeopaths should be? What is happening with her is not a relapse, it is something else and for other reasons. This is a crisis of hypoglycaemia! First of all, there is no more fear. What we see is the weakness and the vertigo. Most probably this is a case of hypoglycaemia.” The class was sceptical. What I said: sounded more like poetry to them.