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Hi Elaine,
I'm a homeopath in England and was just browsing online when I
came across
Joshua's story. I do most of my work by email and over the phone
these days
and so the amount of information on Joshua's condition was a bit
of a draw
for me. Normally I'd think about what I was given and then have
a chat over
the phone.
Given the early intolerance of milk and the excoriation around
the anus, and then the appearance of cradle cap/eczema, I'd be very
tempted
to consider a bowel nosode. I read (again online) that we Brits
are very
fond of bowel nosodes, so it may be an area that isn't so well documented
in the States.
Morgan Pure has separation anxiety in its symptom picture but without
reading
up I couldn't say whether being slow to speak and having hypotonic
muscles
is also an indication that this is the bowel nosode required. I
would make
a bet that he needs one simply because of the detailed description
of his
digestion in his early years. Morgan gaertner has nail-biting and
also claustrophobia.
I suppose if we were speaking on the phone I'd want to know whether
Joshua
screams when the door is closed on him because he's scared of the
dark, scared
of being alone, or if he feels trapped, and how much of it is now
habit at
getting you to do what you've all become used to. (That's not a
judgement
call, by the way).
I know a lot of people would take this trauma back to pre-birth
but I would
be asking questions around the time when Joshua was 18 months old
because
this was when the separation anxiety worsened. There's a lot of
evidence
to support the view that inefficient bowels (especially leaky guts)
leach
various waste products into the bloodstream and that these do affect
behaviour.
I'm sure you know this so I'm telling you nothing new. And since
dietary
change is common to all growing children it could be that something
that
was changed or introduced at that time exacerbated an existing condition.
I suppose what I'm saying is that since the presenting problem
is a behavioural
one it's tempting for a homeopath to focus on the Mentals. I work
a lot with
digestion and so for me it's the obvious way to go, but I'd be asking
food
and bowel questions.
Do look into the bowel nosodes if you get the time. Morgan, Morgan
Pure and
Morgan Gaertner need some comparative analysis for you to get the
right one.
If bowel function is restored it can turn around a person's mental
and emotional
state.
Another remedy I would look at is Saccharum Officinale which is
all about
fear of abandonment by the mother, especially when breastfeeding
was impossible.
There's quite a succinct explanation of the remedy on this website:-
http://www.tinussmits.nl/
OK, gotta go, I'm supposed to be working.
Good luck with Joshua.
Jane Kibbler
LHom MARH
_______________________________________
Hello !
This case seems to be a case of baryta mur. In my repertory , and
taking into account the symptoms posted, it has a lot of baryta
carb and natrum mur is not far off either. So I would try baryta
mur.
_______________________________________
I have just been to a weekend seminar by Patricia Hatherly, and
would like to suggest the remedies Borax and Lac Maternum. Apparently
they are complementary and both are about being present in your
body. The clinging may relate to Borax. Lac Maternum contains colostrum
and is like Lac Humanum, but is more intense. It has issues around
spaceships and aliens, and also separation issues. She thinks it
is usually a layer remedy, one from which many of us would benefit.
Another remedy worth considering could be Lachesis to help him sleep
- He sleeps into the aggravation of fearing the loss of the mother.
I am watching this work at the moment in a child with a similar
picture to Joshua's (not my prescription, someone else's pick-up
on a case that I missed the centre on).
Gail Allen
________________________________________
Dear Michael,
I was going through Murphy's 3rd ed. of his Repertory today and
came across--Mind: fear, aliens. I thought, Joshua's afraid aliens
are coming for his mother to take her away in a spaceship! There
was only one remedy listed--Mancinella! I've successfully used this
remedy on two clients with fears. I don't expect this to be Joshua's
constitutional remedy, but it may be the fear remedy that keeps
him from falling asleep alone at night.
Elaine Lewis
www.hpathy.com/office/ElaineLewis.asp
________________________________________
Michael,
I'm a patient of a classical homeopath--my first attempt to get
help in this way. After almost three months (I know...not long)I
can empathize with failed remedies.
So I'm not writng to offer homeopathic advice. In your writing
somewhere you were understandably unhappy with a homeopath who neither
prescribed a new remedy nor offered any other support. That emboldened
me to suggest a family dynamic approach that was suggested to us
many years ago and was extraordinarily successful.
Our son was 9 at the time and would not go to sleep upstairs without
his dad or me on that floor with him. That was not as disruptive
as your situation, but it was getting old. Our family therapist
gave us exact instructions: 1) Explain to him we were doing bedtime
differently. We were putting him to bed in his bed, and we were
both going to be downstairs. 2) When he cried and/or got up to argue
his case,we were to firmly and kindly take him back to his bed.
Our therapist explained that to continue in the old way was reinforcing
his fear that the upstairs of our house was a dangerous place. She
knew it would be a challenge, but she stressed the importance of
the change and "firm and kind."
That first night it was about three hours before he fell asleep
from exhaustion, and prior to that he was about as pitiful as you
can imagine ("I cannot live my life through this night").
He did not waken in the night, and he mentioned nothing the next
morning. When he came home from school, he asked me, "Are we
doing bedtime the same way tonight?" I replied, "Yes,
we are."
That night I put him to bed, kissed him, and went downstairs. And
he was asleep within a few minutes--no crying or arguing. It was
never an issue again.
I'm not suggesting it would go that easily for your family, but
maybe it's worth a try. Every time he gets up from his bed when
he should be in it (both before sleep and later in the night), he
is put back to bed with firmness and kind reassurance.
You and I both understand your initial goal with him would be more
modest: get him sleeping alone, without interruption.
Marian
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