| Mati! I want
to thank you for sending me your two-volume book, Beyond the
Veil of Delusions, it has been a real eye-opener. I thought
of doing a standard book review, but then, I never would have read
it--who reads book reviews?
First of all, I
want to say that thanks to your book, I have solved two Staphysagria
cases in men! Yes, men! The value of your book is that you bring
a perspective to remedies that can't be found elsewhere.
In one such case,
I was about to be totally thrown off by his recurring dream that
devils were trying to grab him, he even once saw the dream figure
in a window while walking; I was thinking to myself, "Am I
going to have to give Mancinella for the delusion of being chased
by devils?" And then you straightened me out by asking, "In
the dream, does he fight back, or is he the victim?" And of
course, I had my answer!
MF: Thanks for your kind words, Elaine. Staphysagria has so
many delusions they hardly have a clue as to what is real. Not only
do they have delusions, they also live in their daydreams most of
the time.
The main delusion Staph. has
is that he is "the greatest," like Sulphur, but nobody respects him. You may not see how great
he is at first glance, but he will be very happy to enlighten you
about his "greatness." (They often love talking about
their own "greatness".) In fact, Staph is so great, that
he shouldn't even have to prove it to anyone! We should just bend
down and kiss his feet right now, and get it over with. This is
why Staphysagria is so lazy - he was probably originally some kind
of nobleman who didn't have to do anything. He probably inherited
the position and never had to prove himself to anyone.
But the laziness is also a protection
for his ego. Yes, people can insult him and say he is a good for
nothing bum, but that is not half as bad as what could happen if
he got up to actually DO something, and he screwed it up somehow.
Then you would have actual reason to call him "useless"
and that would hurt his feelings even more. So, he prefers to be
lazy and daydream. Everything is perfect in his dreams, nobody is
criticizing him in his dreams, and the best thing is, he doesn't
have to do anything. (What is the point of doing anything, when
the goal is so hard to achieve? His mother or wife will probably
nag him anyway, so it is better to do nothing, and to just be defensive,
even before an unavoidable argument happens!)
So Staphysagria doesn't have
much perception of objective reality because he much prefers to
live in his own virtual reality. This is also why Staphysagria often
loves smoking pot - it is the escape from a reality that he has
always wanted.
Simply stated, he is too sensitive
to be here. Staphysagria is a plant remedy that is so hyper-sensitive
they always feel like people are trying to criticize them, even
when nobody is. That is also why Staphysagria is pretty much immune
to psychotherapy - they get so defensive that they can't or won't
hear anything that is being said. And, because of this defensiveness,
they always feel like victims.
It is like a visious circle:
They get criticized because they are lazy, and they are lazy because
they feel like nothing they do is ever good enough, so what is the
point? They want respect, but they don't want to do anything to
earn it. They are afraid to be rejected, so showing any kind of
affection is scary for them.
They love credit cards, because
someone as great as them, deserves a lot of nice things, even if
they can't afford to buy them. And this, too, will attract criticism
from his more sensible mate. In other words, he wants grown up privileges,
but at the same time, he refuses to grow up and be responsible.
Therefore, he is always rebelling against his mate's expectations
of him - that he should be more responsible, and that is why he
acts like a rebellious teenager.
So, it isn't just the core delusion that matters. If you
imagine a tomato plant, the core delusion is like the seed. If you
are experienced enough, you may be able to look at the seed and
say "this is a tomato." But if you aren't that experienced,
you may have to see the leaves, the flowers and even tomatoes before
you know for sure.
So, what your book offers is tomatoes!
MF: Exactly! Next there's
the compensation - what he does to make sure this never happens
again. Then we have patterns he gets stuck in on the way, or we
could call them "reactions" to things that happened in
his life. Once we can dig out enough of these little odds and ends,
it starts forming a picture we can recognize.
So, compensations and repeating patterns.
MF: If you compare Staphysagria
and Sulphur, both are lazy, but Sulphur is lazy for a different
reason. Sulphur already knows he's great, regardless of what people
think. Staphysagria's "greatness" is totally dependent
on what people think. Sulphur is lazy because he is more of a philosopher than
a doer, and he doesn't care what anyone thinks. Staphysagria is
lazy because he is afraid of criticism of his work. Sulphur has natural self confidence,
Staphysagria's self confidenc has to come from others (which of
course never happens). So, to say that both are lazy doesn't help
you differentiate between them. It is what lies behind the laziness,
that will give you the clues that you need.
The problem with prescribing on symptoms alone is that the symptom
is simply the end result. You need to dig out the motivation
behind the symptom before you can use it in the repertorization,
and we are also looking for the other symptoms and motivations that
are connected to each other.
The interesting thing isn't the
dream itself, or the scariness of the dream, but what role the person
played. In the dream, he was the victim or about to be victimized...
(Being a victim is Staphysagria's core feeling - Delusion that he
is unfortunate...)
The main thing about Staphysagria
is that he is actually dependent on the people who insult him.
He is dependent on them for praise, recognition and respect, but
attracts insults instead because he isn't willing to do what it
takes to get the praise and respect he wants. So, the lessons he
is here to learn is either, to get over his laziness and start earning
the respect he wants, or to enjoy his laziness and simply be happy
with whatever he has done, regardless of what anyone thinks. (And
if he choses the second option, there is always a possibility that
he could turn into a Sulphur at some point...)
Mati, maybe you can elaborate on where the classical Staphysagria
image of the rape victim or victim of spousal abuse fits into this
picture.
MF: Sure. It is still part of the same picture, just a
more feminine expression of the same issue.
Rape, is an extremely unfortunate
event. The woman, who of course is the victim here, may have felt
very angry about it, but had to suppress her anger for fear of the
consequences. She can't let go of what happened. One of the things
about Staph is that they have a great tendency to obsess about whatever
unfortunate thing happened to them. They go over it in their heads
again and again, like an old record that they play to anyone who
wants to hear it. And this doesn't just go on for a few weeks or
months, it can go on for years! It is almost as if they enjoy being
victimized on some level because they get to talk about it to everyone
they meet in great detail. What happens when you tell people you
are a victim? You get positive, sympathetic attention. If Staphysagria
can't get respect or appreciation, he or she is more than willing
to settle for sympathy.
However, there is a big problem
with being addicted to sympathy; you only get it when there is good
reason for people to feel sorry for you. So you have to keep creating
the reason - in other words, you have to make sure you are always
a victim.
And, how do you become a victim
and stay that way? You start attracting unfortunate events. And...
it is NEVER Staph's fault in any way! The other is to blame, 100
percent, always! And, whenever you come across the word "always"
in a case, that is your clue that you are dealing with core issues!
(In real life, nothing is ever "always so" - things change...)
From my understanding, male
Staphysagrias seem to be more obsessed about wanting respect and
recognition, and female Staphysagriass have more of a tendency to
make themselves victims so that they can get sympathy from everyone
instead. Both have suppressed anger in common, they both feel like
victims, they both tend to obsess about their misfortunes and they
both refuse to take any responsibility for anything in their lives.
Things are always somebody else's fault, without exception.
Thanks for the lesson, Mati, there's much more on Staphysagria in
your book for those who still have questions. This might be a good
time for you to tell us what the basic premise of your book is and
why it's not just another materia medica, a la Margaret Tyler's
Drug Pictures, etc.
MF: I find that normal
materia medicas talk a lot about "what."
What, to me, isn't very intersting.
If my daughter pulls the cat's tail, I don't just want to know what
happened, I want to know why she did it! What happened is simply
a basic fact, but why she did what she did tells me something about
her motivation. Was she teasing the cat, did she try to hurt the
cat, or did she think the tail would become longer if it was pulled?
The only way I can truly understand is to ask why and get her to
explain her thinking at the time. Just looking at the fact, that
she pulled the cat's tail, isn't going to give me any understanding
of the situation.
This is the kind of information I was looking for in my materia
medicas, too, but I couldn't find it in a single book. The materia
medicas were full of simple symptoms without any hints as to what
lies behind the symptoms. Sulphur
is lazy, Nux is irritable, Staphysagria is angry, Pulsatilla is
weepy and Phosphorus has lots of friends, but WHY?
Do we actually know materia medica
"people", as if they were friends, or is our knowledge
simply limited to objective symptoms that can easily be observed
from the outside in a very superficial way?
Since I couldn't find what I was looking for, I decided to do my
own research instead. While studying the mental symptoms, I discovered
that each remedy seems to have a core story or core situation
that profoundly affects the way the person perceives his reality.
The core story is often something
really traumatic that may have happened to somebody a long time
ago. It may have been something that was impossible to let go of
or resolve, and the memory of what happened was stored in their
cellular memory and somehow passed down to their offspring.
Amazing....
MF: After a few generations
of offspring, the new people being born have no memory of what the
original situation was, but because the original situation was unresolved,
it still affects them more deeply than they know. People
act as if the core situation still applies, here and now, and all
their emotions, reactions, coping mechanisms and life patterns also
reflect this.
If this is true Mati, it totally blows psychiatry right out of the
water with its "Everything is caused by bad parenting"
paradigm! What you're saying is, people go around trying to complete
a story about which they know nothing! There's no use "trying
to get to the bottom of it!"
MF: Yes, the original
feelings have now become unexplainable delusions, fears, phobias
and scary dreams, but they still determine what people THINK is
real! This is why, if 3 people tell you about an incident, you end
up with 3 different stories, 3 different perceptions of reality!
To give you an example, lets look at the very common desire for
love from different constitutional points of view: Nat Mur thinks
that she will be loved only if she is perfect, so she always tries
to please by being as perfect as possible. Lycopodium thinks he
will only be loved if he achieves his goals and secures his position
at the top of the ladder.
Arsenicum believes that he will be loved if he can convince you
that he is right.
Pulsatilla believes that she will be loved if she is soft and gentle,
and Phosphorus believes that she will be loved only if she is the
most beautiful.
This example illustrates how
the same desire, the desire for love, can express itself in so many
different ways, simply because each constitutional remedy has its
own perception of what love is and how to get it.
So, back to your question about what makes my book different than
other materia medicas: Beyond the Veil of Delusions was written
in an effort to discover how each constitution actually perceives
reality. I wanted to really understand why they do the things they
do and feel the way they feel. I wanted to bring the remedy pictures
to life in such a way that people can easily recognize who belongs
to which remedy. (This is what Volume 1 is about). In addition,
I was also interested in what happens when two different perceptions
of reality get together in a relationship. What issues or problems
are going to come up, and how predictable are they? To find the
answers to these questions, I interviewed several couples and analyzed
their stories from a homeopathic point of view. (Volume 2) These
books are a cross between homeopathy and psychology. Because they
are based on my understanding of how things work, I don't think
there is anything quite like it out there.
Mati, here's what I think is interesting about your book. Now correct
me if I've missed the point. Your premise is that there's a story
that goes with each remedy. It's based on an unresolved issue in
the distant past. Because the issue wasn't resolved at the time,
it can never be resolved in the present. It has to be relived just
as in the original story, because only by repeating and reliving
does the hope, the chance, of resolution exist!
So, we have a Nat-mur.
person picking unresponsive partners over and over again so that
the rejection issue never ends; Pulsatillas never grow up; Calcareas
know what has to be done but they can't seem to do it for themselves
and on and on, and you're saying it's because: the original story
must not be allowed to change! My favorite example was what you
wrote in, "You Try Living With Arsenicum!" (http://www.hpathy.com/materiamedica/fuller-arsenicum.asp)
The Arsenicum person you wrote about actually ended up threatening
his wife so that she finally had to call the police. Why was that
important? Because in the original story, as you explained it, the
police were called! Once the police were called, the Arsenicum man
was never threatening again; in fact, he seemed to relax.
It's as if we're
all under some post-hypnotic suggestion!
Would you care
to comment on that?
MF: Yes, I think that
it is very similar to a post-hypnotic suggestion. It is as if we
are all operating in some kind of "automatic pilot" mode.
We do things, but don't know why, we feel things, but we don't know
why, we perceive reality in a certain way, but we don't know how
our perception is different from everyone else's perception. All
we know is that clear communication in relationships is often very
difficult. And these are the issues that the book is trying to shed
light into.
Mati, your book's premise, I believe, is
based on the observation that people are playing out a story that
was passed down to them or that started very early in their lives.
The story matches a remedy.
In Vol. 1 of Beyond
The Veil Of Deslusions, you explain what the various remedy
stories are, The Original Story, as you call it. In Vol. 2, you
present real life relationship cases showing how two different remedy
types are usually talking past each other because they're trying,
unknowingly, to live out their stories, as if on auto-pilot, as
you say.
Now, question:
How does this premise change or reconfigure your case-taking from
what it used to be? For example, do you ask, "What role do
you play in your relationships?" Is this the most important
question there is to ask?
MF: Yes, Elaine, that is exactly what I do. At first I simply
ask why they have come to see me, and just let them talk, and while
they are talking, I listen for clues. Are they using words like
always and never? Absolutes often indicate patterns, or experiences
that keep repeating themselves, and any kind of repeating patterns
are usually part of the Original Story that they came in with.
Ah! Very interesting!
MF: As an example, I once had a client who was suffering
from anxiety and heart palpitation. Besides telling me her symptoms,
she also happened to mention that she was having nothing but trouble
finding a place to live. In the last 6 months she had had to move
6 times for various reasons, and she couldn't figure out what that
was all about. All her symptoms pointed in the direction of Calcarea
Carbonica, and her lack of ability to find a suitable home basically
confirmed it. The story about Calcarea Carbonica is that she only
feels safe inside her house. The stress of not having a nice, safe
house created, not only anxiety, but physical symptoms, too, and
she did really well on Calcarea Carb.
As another example, a woman
was suffering from extreme tension in her shoulders, calves and
feet. As she was telling me about her symptoms, she kept referring
to many different healers and doctors who all had different opinions
about what was happening to her. When I asked her about it, she
told me she was seeing a chiropractor 5 days a week, and that she
spent most of her money going to all kinds of healers. I then asked
her if she was concerned about her health, and she said yes and
started telling me how well she takes care of herself: She eats
only organic food, she runs every day, she is super disciplined
and she takes a list of supplements too long to mention. When I
asked what role she plays in her relationships, she told me she
was usually paying for most things, and she felt that her partner
was ungrateful. She also spontaneously mentioned that what she hated
the most about her partner was the fact that he liked to make food
in the kitchen to surprise her. She had a big problem with this
because she didn't know if he had clean hands, so she wouldn't eat
much if he had made the food. I immediately recognized the different
aspects of the Arsenicum story, especially the part about her inability
to trust the food that her partner had prepared (fear, poisoned
being, suspiciousness and desire for everything to be clean) and
she felt much better after being given Arsenicum.
So, first I listen for clues that indicate some kind of story, and
if I can't find any clues, then I always ask about what role they
play in their relationships. This question often makes them go straight
to the core, and sometimes it only takes one or two sentences to
confirm a remedy.
One client told me "My whole life I have been nagged and yelled
at by women!" (Staphysagria). Another client told me that he
always had apocalyptic dreams where he was helping provide easily
made shelters for people and teaching them how to grow their own
food (Causticum). So, the clues can be in their lives, in their
relationships or even in their dreams! If you know all the stories
that go with the remedies, all you have to do is look for clues
that fit one of the stories.
So, the biggest difference in my case taking is that I am no longer
trying to dig up pages and pages of symptoms. I have never found
long lists of symptoms helpful anyway because it is difficult to
tell which ones are the most important. Now, my main focus is to
look for patterns that indicate some kind of story. And, when I
think I have found their "story," I confirm it with physical
and general symptoms. Or, if I can't see the story, I simply repertorize
what I can see, and when it comes to differentiating between 2 or
3 remedies, I look at the core stories of each remedy to see if
one of them fits the story of the client.
This approach has made a big
difference in my ability to pick a matching remedy for someone.
Many remedies have overlapping symptoms, but so far, I haven't found
any remedies with overlapping stories.
The Sankaran "Sensation" method is very popular these
days. How does what you do compare to that?
MF: I think it is just
a matter of preference. I think that the sensation method is very
open to the homeopath's own interpretation, and if the interpretation
isn't accurate, it is easy to miss the remedy. I think it works
for Sankaran, who in my opinion is a bit of a genius when it comes
to understanding homeopathy, but I don't know how many other people
it really, truly works for, since it isn't an easy thing to do.
My method is very simple (I think).
The core story is like a puzzle. First, there is the story itself,
something which happened that was not resolved or understood, and
in addition we also have to consider the person's reaction to what
happened, as well as how he coped or didn't cope. How did he feel
about what happened? Did he compensate in any way?
Take Tuberculosis, for example.
If you found out at 23 that you had TB and only had another 3 years
to live, what would you do? You would be in a hurry for sure. You
would live life to the max, even if it burned you out. You would
travel, you would party, you would have lots of sex, you would have
to squeeze in as much life as you could in the shortest amount of
time because life is short... and, if you happened to have a child
before you died, the child would ("inexplicably") have
the same feelings - life is short, got to live it now, better hurry!
So, it isn't just the core delusion
that matters when taking the case, it is the whole combination of
issues that creates a picture that can be recognized.
Take Natrum and Ignatia for example
- both are known for ending up in bad relationships, and both are
known for grief, but the reasons why they end up in bad relationships
are very different.
Natrum picks people who will
disappoint her because her father disappointed her.
Ignatia, however, lives in her
emotions so much that her judgment can be clouded. She follows her
heart, regardless of the consequences, and sometimes she runs into
bad luck. So, even though the outcome is the same, they are still
coming from different perceptions of reality, and knowing what this
perception is, makes it easier to differentiate between the remedies.
So, when I take someone's case,
I dig, dig and keep digging until until I can see clearly what patterns
and issues are connected, and when I get to the core, everything
about the case starts making sense! Sensations are often part of
this picture, but that is not where my main focus is.
You say, "When I get to the core...."
Easy to say but, how does a person know that they've gotten to the
"core"?
MF: You have gotten to
the core when you find something that everything in the case seems
to spring from or be connected to. Look at Carcinosin - they always
try to save everything and everybody. They believe that they can
only be loved if they save or take care of someone. Their whole
lives start consisting of giving to others, and they always identify
with the underdog. They don't do anything that doesn't have some
of these elements to them. If they get a pet, they will save one
from the pound, or pick one that has been hurt, or that all the
other animals are picking on, and so on. You can see the "red
thread" going through the story.
What is Carcinosin trying to avert by
being a rescuer?
MF: Again, it goes back to the original story. In the
original story, Carcinosin was in some kind of serious life and
death crisis, and she was the only one who could save everyone who
needed saving. So, now, she is attracting disasters and dramatic
situations were she plays the role of the savior. She has even come
to believe that if she saves someone, they'll love her, and that
that is the only way she actually deserves to be loved.
Well, this is interesting, really. What you're saying is that it's
not so much that a person is behaving in a certain way so that he
won't have to face rejection or face one thing and another, but
more that, quite simply, there is an issue--a "story"--an
unfinished episode from the past or even the parent's past--that
gets passed down...someone was in a crisis; so now the child
or grandchild acts like there's a crisis; these things get passed
down just like allergies and other traits get passed down, is that
what you're saying? Which is very interesting in itself.
Mati, let me ask
you. Let's say you've got a Carcinosin child rescuing everybody,
and it turns out the maternal grandparent was the originator of
this state, why does the child have this grandparent's issue and
not some other ancestor's issue? Why not the father's issue? Have
you given any thought to this?
MF: Yes, you understand
what I am saying exactly right. Your question is not easy to answer
because it is quite complicated. What story is triggered when we
come in, has to do with survival issues and the general family situation.
We probably have a lot of stories that we actually COULD act out,
since all our ancestors have stories that are passed down to us
which also need completion. So, which story will be the one we decide
to work on in this lifetime? Let me try to illustrate how it all
works with some examples:
If someone comes into a family
where the father is physically or emotionally unavailable and has
a hard time showing that he cares, which role can he play in someone's
story? He can definitely play a role in a Nat Mur's life so that
she can get an opportunity to complete those issues. Do you remember
how we always attract or draw to us people who can play a part in
our stories? The same applies to when we are born into a family.
If the father can play a "Nat
Mur part" in the baby's life, the baby will have a great opportunity
to complete the Nat Mur issues they are carrying. Or if the father
figure is extremely strict and authoritarian, he can easily play
a part in a Carcinosin's life. In that kind of situation, Carcinosin
will either wipe herself out and completely submit herself to the
authority in charge, or she will become strong and rebellious and
stand up to him.
I came across a very interesting
Antimonium Cruda case that shows very well how this works. This
woman was a very conscious person who could remember way back to
when she was only a tiny baby. Her parents were very poor, and she
once heard them arguing about the baby. The father said "we
can't even afford to feed her!" So the baby stopped eating.
She didn't nurse for 3 days, and then realized that her lack of
feeding was disturbing the mother, so she started eating again.
However, because she had been starving herself for 3 days, her survival
instincts had been awakened, and when she started eating again,
nothing was ever enough. She became overweight as a child, and even
now, as a grown up, there is still a feeling that she can never
get enough and always deserves more (the core feeling of Antimonium
Cruda). So, when looking at what story that actually manifests in
somebody's psyche, it is basically a combination of what potential
stories we come in with, what roles the family members are willing
to play in those stories, and also what story will make it easier
for the baby to survive.
This is getting very ponderous! So, you're saying your mother may
have passed down a Carcinosin story, your father a nat-mur story,
and so on, and the one you adopt depends on your parents and what
role they play in your life; a dictatorial parent might make you
adopt your mother's Carc. story that she had in her lifetime. A
father who's emotionally unavailable may move you toward adopting
a nat-mur picture.
But Mati, an emotionally
distant father would predispose you toward assuming a nat-mur. posture
anyway; you could never prove that it was because it got passed
down like an allergic tendency gets passed down.
Isn't it really
six of one, half a dozen of the other?
You say that the
story you inherit is a function of the kind of parent you have,
and one can just as easily say that the kind of parent you have
is sufficient in and of itself to cause you to act out a story reminiscent
of a remedy. I'm having trouble with the distinction.
MF: What we have to understand here is the issue of pre-disposition.
We already know that people can come in with a pre-disposition for
physical disease, like cancer, TB or diabetes. The pre-disposition
doesn't mean that someone is going to end up with any of these diseases,
it just means that under the right circumstances, under specific
kinds of stress, the body will tend to break down and manifest one
of these diseases because it's like having a weak spot in the organism.
It is the same when it comes to energetic traits. Unfortunately,
we don't understand energy very well because we can't see it, but
that doesn't mean it doesn't exist. We basically come in with just
as many mental/emotional pre-dispositions as we do physical pre-dispositions
because the physical is simply a reflection of our mental/emotional
state. The body, with all it's physical diseases is just a mirror
of a dynamic energetic imbalance on a level that we can't see or
measure with instruments. The homeopathic remedies have the ability
to restore the energetic imbalance, and then the physical healing
follows. So, what we have to realize is that there is no separation
between physical, mental and emotional pre-disposition. They
are all part of the same picture. Once someone comes in with
a pre-disposition for anything, the environment or living situation
will simply tend to bring out whatever is there.
You mentioned how an emotionally unavailable father would tend to
cause a Nat Mur condition in his daughter, but if that was so, the
same thing would also happen if he had two daughters; but
we know that isn't the case! If he's dictatorial, the sister may
well become a rebellious Carcinosin! Therefore, it is not as simple
as it looks. One person can play many different roles in different
people's lives and bring out a different story in each person, depending
on the pre-disposition they came in with. Therefore, the story we
end up playing, is a product of both environmental influence and
inherited pre-disposition. So, basically, if you can accept that
we come in with physical pre-disposition for disease (which is what
the theory of miasms is about), then there has to be mental and
emotional pre-disposition as well, since one can't exist without
the other.
Makes sense....
I wrote these books after becoming aware of these issues, because
to me, this is absolutely fascinating! Nothing much has been written
about this before, and it adds a whole new dimension to homeopathy
as we know it. By using our knowledge of the core stories that go
with each remedy picture, we never have to end up with long shopping
lists of symptoms, wondering which one to look up in our materia
medica. Neither would we have to try to pinpoint a "core delusion,"
which can also be difficult to do. When taking someone's case, what
we need to look for is their core STORY, which is a combination
of all the person's life patterns. These patterns have become what
people call "The Story of My Life," and I found that each
of these stories are represented by one of the remedies. So, once
we get a good understanding of someone's Story, it becomes a lot
easier to pick the right remedy as well.
Mati, just to make sure i understand, the same traits in a father
that make one daughter a Nat-mur., could make her sister a carcinosin
if she inherits a Carcinosin predisposition from someone in her
family.
For example, her
mother is Carcinosin and she inherits her mother's remedy picture.
She has a dictatorial father, so she finds herself rebelling eventhough
her better judgement might be saying, "Go along to get along!"
But she won't be able to do it because she MUST finish the Carcinosin
"story"; she has little control over it! Do I have it
right?
MF: Exactly, you got it!
I hear you have a special book offer for the homeopathy schools?
MF: Yes. I am offering
a free copy of this book to any homeopathy school that is interested
in introducing it to their students.
For homeopathy schools: To request a free copy of Beyond the
Veil of Delusions Volumes 1 & 2, please email me at matifuller@hotmail.com
and make sure you give me the name and address of your homeopathy
school and the name of a contact person to send it too.
For any individual who would like to buy a copy, the books are currently
available from http://www.minimum.com
(in paperback), from http://www.biggervisionbooks.com
(in paperback or download)
and also from most major book stores and online retailers worldwide,
like Amazon, Borders, and Barnes and Noble.
Thank you, Elaine, for doing this write up on Beyond the Veil
of Delusions. I greatly appreciate you taking the time to do
so!
It's the least
I can do considering that I am constantly bothering you! Let me
just say, I read both volumes, and I rarely finish anything! That's
because most authors seem to drone on and on without getting to
the point and I lose interest fast! Your books were very easy to
read and I've already solved three cases just because of them, not
only that but as I was reading along, I found myself saying, "Oh
my God! So-and-so was Arsenicum!" Or, " Oh, good grief!
So-and-so was Nux vomica!" All I can say, Mati, is, hurry and
get started on volumes 3 and 4, and thanks for taking the time to
discuss your book in this conversational format, not to mention
the long tutorial on Staphysagria!
You're more than welcome!
__________________________________________________
Mati H Fuller, DI Hom (pract) does consultations online, http://www.homeopathyonline.biz
Elaine L. Lewis, DHom, CHom takes
online cases. Visit her website: www.hpathy.com/office/ElaineLewis.asp
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