Dear friends, today we have with us in our Hot-Seat, the famous ‘facial-analysis’
couple, Grant Bentley and Louise Barton. Grant is the Principal
of the Victorian College of Classical Homeopathy in Melbourne, Australia. Both Grant and his partner Louise have
done intensive research into miasms and their influence on facial
features. This research has been applied clinically since 1999
and is now a recognized diagnostic method to determine a patient’s
miasm.
Dr. Bhatia – So
Grant and Louise, before we start the serious discussion on miasms
and facial analysis, let’s start on a lighter note. Tell us something
more about yourself, how you got interested in homeopathy, and
what the journey has been like?
Grant
In my twenties I started studying
Naturopathy which would be the most common introduction to Homoeopathy
for Australian Homoeopaths. I had already qualified and was practicing
Psychotherapy but felt I needed something more to complete my
practice. My first book was Classical Homoeopathy by
Margery Blackie and I became an instant convert on my first read.
I was fascinated with Homoeopathy and its structure, something
I thought was sadly lacking in Naturopathy and appreciated the
quality of its author. By the time I had finished the book I
knew that’s what I wanted to do and I began studying Homoeopathy
the next year. The journey has been an interesting one. After
graduating and practice I began teaching and soon afterwards was
offered the position of principal at the Victorian College of
Classical Homoeopathy(VCCH), a position I still hold nearly fifteen
years later.
Because
my wife Louise is also in practice and is co-administrator of
the college, Homoeopathy is more than a job, it is a common bond
we both share. The college training I received was grounded and
thorough. The patron of the college was Dr Subrata Banerjea who
helped the original founder Denise Carrington-Smith, formulate
a curriculum grounded in the classics. This stood me well and
gave me the foundation I needed to understand Homoeopathy in a
practical and clinical way. I now look on this training I received
as invaluable and I consider myself fortunate to have had such
teachers. Modern Homoeopathy in the west can be extremely interpretive
and I feel blessed that my training was based on the solid unshakable
platform supplied by Hahnemann, Kent, Allen, Roberts and the teachers I just spoke about.
Louise
I
got started later than Grant. Like many other students in Australia
I had already started working in a different field – personnel
management. After ten years I wanted to expand my horizons –
luckily I came to Homoeopathy straight away and not via any other
modality – I didn’t have any unlearning to do! I had been seeing
a Homoeopath and was impressed with the results and the philosophy
behind it. I read a few Homoeopathic books, left my job and signed
up for training. In the early nineties there wasn’t much choice
in regard to Homoeopathic training in Melbourne
– only naturopathic colleges with Homoeopathy as an elective.
In retrospect I am so glad I chose VCCH as although it was small
it was dedicated to Homoeopathy and quickly I became a passionate
convert. As part of my training I went to India
in 1995 and spent some time studying with Dr Subrata Banerjea
who always made such a point of using miasmatic knowledge in prescribing.
After I graduated in the mid nineties, I set up my own clinic
and later began working at VCCH in an administrative role. Soon
I was helping Grant with his research, running the student clinic
and doing some first year training in Homoeopathy. By the late
nineties we were partners, had a blended family and our own son
was on the way. Somehow we still had time to talk about Homoeopathy
and what became Grant’s major interest – the miasms.
Dr. Bhatia – You both have had very interesting lives and it’s great
to see that your work has only flourished more after the two of
you came together. My wife, Manisha, is also a homeopath and I
don’t have enough words to tell how helpful it becomes at times
to have a life partner who understands your work, passion and
eccentricities! Do you think your work on miasms would have been
any different if the two of you were not partners in work and
life?
Grant
Yes
it would have been vastly different if Louise had not been involved.
When I was developing this system, I thought about it, spoke about
it and wrote about it 24 hours a day. I would even wake up dreaming
questions to ask myself! If I didn’t have anyone to bounce these
ideas off, particularly someone as skilled as Louise there is
no way this system would have developed as quickly and perhaps
it may not have developed at all.
Louise
There is no doubt that this
work is Grant’s work but I feel proud to have been involved and
if I can claim anything it is that I asked challenging questions!
We both belong to opposite miasms and bring different qualities
to the work. Grant is more abstract in his thinking whilst I
am more linear. He thinks and writes about broad concepts while
I streamlined the system. I suggested that each feature should
get one point to help determine dominance and I came up with the
triangle. I like to see things visually and like systems, so
that helped to pull it all together. There is no doubt that the
passion we both have for Homeopathy brought us together and has
fuelled the rapid development of Homeopathic Facial Analysis (HFA).
We are both amazed that it has come to this point and we are happy
that so many practitioners are beginning to use it in their clinics.
Dr. Bhatia – Today you teach about miasms to everyone, but how did
you learn about this very controversial theory of Hahnemann? Who
were your teachers and what was your initial impression about
this theory?
Grant
While Hahnemann’s work on the
miasms was a stroke of genius, it can also be very difficult to
work with. In fact I must confess that I was like a number of
people who during their training found the miasms so complicated
and to some degree so unnecessary, that I contented myself to
drop all thought of them and to concentrate my focus on finding
the simillimum. After all the simillimum represented the underlying
miasm anyway, therefore to focus on one was to focus on the other.
This is not the case but I did not know that then. In the years
following my graduation I had more failures than successes but
enough successes to keep me going. Like many Homoeopaths I adopted
essence prescribing as my principle method of achieving greater
constitutional results. My focus on constitutional prescribing
was necessary because chronic disease did and continues to make
up more than ninety percent of my practice. Unfortunately essence
prescribing is rooted in the belief that extremely subtle differences
between remedies exists. Therefore the focus was entirely on
materia medica and the extraction of how the indignation of Staphysagria
is slightly different than the indignation of Nat Mur, which is
different than the indignation of Calc Carb. Because I’d already
done Psychotherapy I found this area fascinating and seductive.
Later I was to learn that even though it sounds good the results
never reached expectation.
One of the good things about
teaching undergraduates was that I got to reread the Organon every
year. And each time I picked up a little bit more valuable information.
Around 1998 when I was reading the Organon once again, I was struck
by Hahnemann’s conviction regarding the miasms. Of course I had
heard this story a number of times before – I had read it nearly
ten times myself, but for some reason this time I was really taken
by it. His conviction and his willingness to stake his reputation
on the truth of the miasms convinced me that I should not be giving
it the lip service I had been doing in the past. Nobody knows
Homoeopathy like its founder and if Hahnemann says that the miasms
should be central to every chronic disease prescription, then
that’s what should happen. So I guess that’s how it started -
by believing in Hahnemann’s belief yet at the same time acknowledging
that I had no way of applying it.
Dr. Bhatia – Your comment about results never reaching expectations
with the essence theory is interesting. But I will come back to
that later. So Louise, what about your initial experiences with
the theory of miasms?
Louise
As part of our studies we had
to do a lot of research on the miasms and write an essay on the
topic. After reading Chronic Diseases, Allen, Roberts, Ortega,
etc., I remember feeling really confused and decided (like Hering)
that it really didn’t matter which miasm it was as long as the
totality was covered. When Grant mentioned that he really wanted
to understand what Hahnemann meant and reread every book on the
subject I was thinking – oh miasms are boring!
Dr. Bhatia – When and how were you convinced that the theory of miasms
is still relevant but needs more work for clinical application?
Grant
One of the reasons miasms remain
so controversial was because of the way Hahnemann himself explained
them. Obviously he knew what he was talking about, but to take
such a large abstract concept and try and put it into words for
everyone to understand can be an extremely difficult task, and
I’m not sure he did this successfully. My understanding of Hahnemann’s
miasms really didn’t take shape because of Hahnemann but because
of the writings of Allen and Roberts. For example if I read and
try to make sense of psora the way that Hahnemann wrote about
it, I fail to pick up any patterns and put the book down with
the belief that it can cause anything and everything but that’s
not really individualizing. Allen and Roberts on the other hand
are the authors that begin to categorize Hahnemann’s three miasms
into more easily recognizable groups. These authors talk about
the hypo function of psora, the hyper function of sycosis and
the dysfunction and degeneration of syphilis. Now I can see trends
forming and now I can see differences and how each miasm is a
dissimilar disease in its own right.
Louise
Grant has always considered
that everything Hahnemann did had to have some importance. It
was really Grant’s personal mission to try and understand why
Hahnemann spent twelve years on the topic and why mostly since
that time miasms have only been given lip service.
Dr. Bhatia – This
is very strange! Allen and Roberts had access to exactly the same
texts from Hahnemann as we all do. Then how were they able to
give a structure to the theory of miasms while we see a chaos
with 90% of the problems ending up in Psora? Does that mean that
Allen and Roberts have not merely interpreted Hahnemann’s work,
they have given their own version of it? That will make the theory
even more controversial. Do you have any idea on what basis early
homeopaths like Allen and Roberts were able to classify the miasms
in the way in which most of us understand them today?
Grant
No I don’t and I look forward
to the day, where I have a little more time, so I can begin an
historical research to try to find out how Allen developed the
construct he did. So far I have not seen any previous author
that has been the “missing link” between Hahnemann and Allen but
if anyone reading this knows more about this subject and would
like to share it with me, I would eagerly await their reply. I
know that Roberts followed Allen but perhaps we underestimate
the genius of Allen to be able to restructure and interpret Hahnemann
where nobody else could. In my mind Allen is one of Homeopathy’s
most unsung heroes. Most of what we understand about psora, sycosis
and syphilis, even the tubercular miasm comes from Allen. So
he must have been able to see trends and patterns in chronic disease.
Is it controversial? No I don’t believe so. The reason for this
is because historically it has stood the test of time. Many practitioners
have made successful prescriptions based on the foundations that
Roberts and Allen have put into place. Nothing proves truth like
success. Allen’s observations may have begun their life as interpretations,
but their continuing and repeated success raises them above controversy.
Dr. Bhatia – But
don’t you think that the interpretation of later homeopaths varies
from that of Hahnemann? If you read ten different books on miasms,
you will get a difference in either the classification or in interpretation
of ‘what miasms are’ or in symptom classification. How do you
find a common working ground in all that?
Grant
Dr Bhatia that is the best
question I have been asked in years. I make the claim that facial
analysis is based on Hahnemann’s concept of the miasms but in
truth this is only partially accurate. Hahnemann’s concept of
the miasms included psora, sycosis and syphilis and he stated
in the Organon the foundations of natural law that would allow
the joining of miasms to create complex groups. However Hahnemann’s
interpretation of the miasms is for all intents and purposes almost
unusable. Take psora for instance, if 94% (I think that’s what
he claims) of the world’s population is psoric and psora accounts
for the vast majority of chronic disease regardless of form, where
does that leave us? And how do we use it? I think it would be
fair to say that while the foundation of HFA is Hahnemann, it
is Allen and Roberts who create the working model through their
understanding. For example Hahnemann never mentions that psora
is about hypo-function, nor does he say that sycosis is inflammation
and hyper function predominantly. These observations are first
purported by Allen and developed even further by Roberts and it
is this in which HFA is based. Hahnemann made no reference to
facial structure as best I understand it. Allen is the first to
do this. The trouble with Hahnemann’s miasms is that while he
himself understood them in theory, he couldn’t teach that theory
in any meaningful way to other Homeopaths. We know this because
of the lack of miasmatic application that runs through early Homeopathic
history. The only reason miasms are such a hot topic now is because
Allen and Roberts made them clear. If they could take Hahnemann’s
work and see the patterns running through it and successfully
utilize them, then Allen and Roberts should be the base and following
their lead has proved immensely successful for me. Kent
says that miasms are the inherited predisposition towards disease,
at least psora is. Allen makes the further claim that both sycosis
and syphilis are predispositions rather than actual diseases.
The problem for Hahnemann was that he was still seeing it in a
physical sense rather than a vital predisposition. He saw psora
as the consequence of suppressed and mistreated leprosy rather
than an inherited predisposition that we would today call genetics.
Allen and Roberts believe the miasms are genetically linked. Otherwise
they could not talk about miasms, pathology, character and facial
structure as all one and the same thing.
In regard to symptom classification
I have not found pathology to be either credible or reliable indicators
of the underlying miasm. Boenninghausen, Hahnemann’s greatest
supporter, states himself how poor pathology is as a miasmatic
indicator. In developing HFA the focus was always on facial features,
never on pathology. It is true that we have seen certain pathological
trends such as allergies and psora, reproductive problems and
sycosis and bone pain and syphilis, but none of these are exclusive.
What we have found is that the generals laid down by Hahnemann,
Allen and Roberts have been far better indicators than pathology.
For instance the worse at night of syphilis is a better indicator
than pathology itself.
Dr. Bhatia – OK,
let me now ask you the Big question – What is a Miasm? Hahnemann
gave three; J. H. Allen added the fourth one, after which people
have added Cancer, Typhoid, Ringworm, Chickenpox, Malaria and
Leprosy according to their own understanding. Miasms have been
called a predisposition, genetic susceptibility, suppressed and
maltreated infections, a sin, reaction to a situation and what
not! What do YOU understand by the word ‘Miasm’?
Grant
In a way this is the ultimate
question. When Homeopathy first started Hahnemann was trying
to treat acute diseases and fevers, which he did successfully.
When it came to the treatment of chronic disease he was not so
successful. Hence the study into why - which became Chronic Diseases.
Hahnemann believes the miasms to be infectious agents of microbial
origin, leprosy, gonorrhea and syphilis. I understand why he
would believe this. After all Hahnemann must have treated more
than one generation of families over his 88 years. He saw children
of syphilitic parents being born with traits and characteristics
similar to the infected parent. If syphilis as a miasm, that
is a tendency, was passed on to future generations and had a microbial
origin, then the other miasms would also. The fact is that when
we are dealing with chronic disease we are dealing with far more
than infection. Hahnemann’s continuance of the belief that miasms
belong to micro-organisms has not been fruitful in the treatment
of chronic disease, therefore I question its validity. As I said
earlier the easiest thing to prove is the truth because the truth
is what is provable. The fact that miasms are so controversial
and confusing, is because the truth behind the miasms is not as
accurate as it should be. Personally, I have come to believe
that miasms are something totally different to how Hahnemann interpreted
them, and find myself at odds with contemporary theory. In a
nut-shell this is my understanding of the miasms.
The miasm is the way we describe
the workings of the immune system we inherit – essentially there
are three primary ways our immune systems cope with stress and
disease. Firstly it can meet the germ head on, by attempting
to create an impassable barrier forbidding the germ’s entrance
into the body. This is the psoric miasm and when in balance,
it is effective at protecting its host. Out of balance however,
it will begin to reject everything as foreign thereby creating
allergies and reactions so typically seen in psoric patients.
Secondly an immune system can choose to conserve energy by not
meeting force with force but rather encapsulating and imprisoning
any invading microbe, thereby restricting it’s impact and stopping
it from becoming systemic. This is the sycotic miasm and it accounts
for the tumors, cysts, warts and fibroids it characteristically
is known for. Thirdly is the submissive immune system that conserves
energy by monitoring a microbe’s progress through the system,
and allowing it to pass through unimpeded thereby limiting its
impact. If however the microbe or infection gets out of control,
it will draw on its reserves of energy to fight. This is the
syphilitic miasm and accounts for why syphilis traditionally is
the miasm that has pathology more deeply imbedded and central
than the others.
However,
even here we are still talking about infection and response, but
chronic disease extends into the individual and this means that
miasms must also influence the general make-up and character of
the individual. Let me explain what I mean. To me a miasm is
another term for a survival instinct and we apply the same pattern
to microbes as we do to human beings in social circumstances.
Remember as Hahnemann said, the vital force cannot tell the difference
between stresses so all stress is treated as the same stress,
he writes this in the Organon, in reference to disease and drugs
and how the vital force cannot tell the difference. A survival
instinct is how we protect ourselves and what we project on to
the world around us in order to acquire the things we value and
need to keep us safe. If we take psora for example, the psoric
immune system is confrontational and competitive. When we look
at the major psoric remedies such as Sulphur and
Lycopodium, it should come as no surprise to find they have a
dictatorial and dominating nature. This means they survive by
out competing those around them. Have a look at which remedies
are involved in business and power and you will see that most
of them such as Sulphur, Lycopodium, and Bryonia are all traditionally psoric. Sycosis on the
other hand has fixed ideas. Sycosis feels trapped and imprisoned
just like their immune response and this also means that sycotic
people will have a controlling element in their character, because
taking charge of situations is how they become needed. This makes
them protected because others need them around. The need to feel
secure is the outward expression of the internal securing of infection.
Syphilis on the other hand is submissive. Their survival instinct
makes them lenient and yielding by nature and this protects them
because they are so well liked that others are willing to act
in their defense should the situation arise.
I
do not believe in the contemporary model that each miasm is a
step further downward from the one it leaves behind. That is,
that sycosis is worse than psora and syphilis is worse than sycosis.
It is not a downward progression but rather a difference. Life
is built around diversity, the miasms just show that human beings
also have this same diversity.
Much is made of progressing
back up through the miasmatic scale after appropriate homeopathic
remedies have been given, but the truth is that people under stress
always revert back to their weakest point. Stress if it is strong
enough, will throw people back into positions they thought they
left behind years before. I have had patients that will claim
after a break-up of a marriage or a business failure or something
equally as distressing, that they begin to suffer complaints such
as migraines or asthma for the first time in twenty years. Does
this mean they have suddenly acquired the same layer of infection
they had twenty years ago? Of course not. It simply means that
under a certain amount of pressure, migraines or asthma will present
themselves in this person, but they have been absent because the
person has not been under enough pressure to elicit them until
recently. This opens up a whole new paradigm of prescribing.
The base line is that I do not believe even under the best homeopathic
remedy that cure means the eradication of all previous symptoms
forever. Rather, I see cure as a balance between stress and response.
Homeopathic remedies build a buffer zone between how much stress
a person can endure before the same response begins again.
Louise
This makes absolute sense to
me now, that there can only be seven miasms or seven responses.
Using the three basic ways that a person or immune system can
respond, that is outwardly, inwardly or sticking to a fixed position
(psora, syphilis and sycosis), only four other miasms can exist
alongside those primary miasms. When two dissimilar diseases
of equal strength join together – tubercular (psora & syphilis),
syco-psora, syco-syphilis and cancer (psora, sycosis and syphilis
of equal strength) from the three primary responses come a total
of seven. It is just simple math. We have taken pathologies
out of the equation so typhoid, malaria, chickenpox, etc., just
can’t exist as miasms in their own right. They may be illnesses
that occur but they don’t describe a miasm as an independent response
state.
Grant worked backwards to get to this point but when a system
is true it will explain everything; and put simply, our world
is three dimensional, there are three particles (electrons, neutrons
and protons). There are the three forces of outward, fixed and
inward and the three measurements of height, width and depth.
Psora, sycosis and syphilis represent the Homeopathic view of
this natural construct. These same forces shape our facial structure
– they shape every part of who we are, how we see life,
how we respond to stress, how we look, absolutely everything.
Homeopathy is so clever and yet so simple!
Dr. Bhatia – Grant, I can not help asking you this now. In your book
‘Appearance and Circumstances’, there is a small passage,
where you write –
“What is the difference between miasms and
karma? The short answer is, there is no difference at all. Miasmatic
knowledge is nothing more than the age-old laws of karma with
a medicinal application.”
I am unable to relate this with the immune-response approach that
you just mentioned. The Encyclopedia Britannica summarizes the
concept of Karma as –
“In Indian philosophy, the influence of an
individual's past actions on his future lives or reincarnations.
It is based on the conviction that the present life is only one
in a chain of lives. The accumulated moral energy of a person's
life determines his or her character, class status, and disposition
in the next life. The process is automatic, and no interference
by the gods is possible. In the course of a chain of lives, people
can perfect themselves and reach the level of Brahma (God), or
they can degrade themselves to the extent that they return to
life as animals. The concept of karma, basic to Hinduism, was
also incorporated into Buddhism and Jainism.”
How do you explain the passage in your book?
Grant
When
I talk about Karma I am talking about the laws of the non-material
universe. As we know through Homeopathy, the non-material ‘energy’
universe is governed by laws opposite to those that govern our
material one. The infinitesimal dose where less means more as
well as the law of similars are great examples of this. In the
physical world, it is opposites that attract and similars that
repel, look what happens for example when two protons meet, but
in the non-material world it is the opposite that is true. The
more we concentrate on something through thought (energy) the
more it manifests and the more similar energy is attracted toward
it. With Karma we learn by circumstance what energy resides within
us. If negative things keep happening then it is because negativity
is within us, we get what we cause. Constitutionally, karma is
a life theme and life themes are rubrics. As your question states,
karma is a chain of events. If a patient has an abusive upbringing
and then becomes involved with an abusive spouse, spiritually
one would say that abuse is their karma, homeopathically we say
abuse is their constitutional life theme and because it is causing
so much damage and impact – a kind of never been well since effect
– it is what is draining their energy and allowing chronic disease
to develop. Violence is an important rubric in the repertorisation
of this patient. Karma is our make-up and that means it is our
constitution, who we are, what we love and what we hate. These
are all the things Kent stated we need to know if we are
to successfully treat and understand patients with chronic disease.
Karma
means being caught in captivity by negative thoughts and deeds
that secure us to the earth in the endless cycle of birth and
rebirth. After good constitutional treatment, many patients become
stronger in what they need for themselves, they become less angry,
less jealous and less domineering. These are the traits that
keep us earth bound and the traits karma tells us we must overcome.
If we must move away from domination to find our own inner strength,
that is our karma – our life lesson. Domination or abuse will
be drawn toward us not as punishment but as something to overcome
so we become stronger. Using constitutional remedies also achieves
this and the causative circumstances and trends cease. This is
why I say the law of karmic attraction and the law of similars
are the same.
Dr. Bhatia - When and how did the idea of using facial features for
assessment of miasms strike you?
Grant
Allen and Roberts not only
made Hahnemann’s concept of the miasms clearer, these two authors
also mention facial features as indicators to the miasm. It was
these books, Allen’s Chronic Diseases and Roberts
Art and Principles of Cure that got the ball rolling.
I was fascinated by the idea that internal miasms would be represented
by and influence external facial features. Later by reading other
authors such as Donald Foubister and his account of the Carcinosin
appearance, I began to understand that if miasms are inherited
and influence all physical structure which they have to do to
create specific disease processes; they would also influence physical
make-up including facial structure. It is crazy to think that
psora for instance can stamp its own unique mark on pathology
as well as on the mind but not on the appearance. That is contrary
to holism which is the basis of constitutional prescribing. So
I began a private research project in 1999 to see whether I could
extend upon the work of Allen and Roberts to create an observable
diagnostic system by the miasmatic determination of facial features.
Louise
Yes
it was very fortunate that Grant focused on the facial features.
In the early days we just looked at everyone’s faces and tried
to see the link between features and their pathology. We were
stuck in the whole idea of “essence” prescribing and had ideas
that perhaps faces would have “types” too. After a rocky start
we discovered this couldn’t possibly be true. Once we had more
than half the features categorized it became obvious that nearly
every patient had at least one feature from each of the primary
miasms. So they all belonged to the Cancer miasm! Of course
this couldn’t be true so we sat down and thought about this long
and hard and decided to try the idea of dominance. Within weeks
we were convinced that this was the way to go and we haven’t looked
back since. Now as we see the whole picture and how each part
operates we know it couldn’t be any other way but everything is
easier in retrospect.
Dr. Bhatia – Tell us about your findings related to the use of facial
features for identification of miasms in detail.
Grant
At first the project consisted
of information gathering and so findings were limited as all beginnings
are. Information gathering consisted of analyzing the facial features
of successful constitutional cases with remedies well known to
represent a specific miasm. For instance if a patient had a successful
result with Sulphur,
photographs of his face were taken and kept for future reference.
When other successful cases with Sulphur
came through, the clinic photographs of all these patients were
then compared to find the common features relating to all. When
you are dealing with the miasms you are dealing with a genus epidemicus,
so our job is not to find the unique, but it is to find the generic.
After analyzing patients over a five year period a comprehensive
system of determining the dominant miasm in a patient by their
facial features had developed. For the last three years we have
not added anything significant to the model as we believe it to
be complete. There are always going to be small details and fine
tuning that needs to be done on a regular basis, but the model
itself is reliable, sound and effective. What both Louise and
myself have found is how successful Homeopathy can be. What I
mean by this is previously to HFA, I imposed restrictions on how
far a remedy could go. In the past with a condition like epilepsy
or cancer I would have imposed guides on myself that limited what
I believe could be achieved with the Homeopathic remedy. If a
condition was serious I viewed my role as secondary and believed
for many years that while Homeopathy could offer valuable service
it could not necessarily be the primary medicine to complete cure
without any outside adjunct. HFA has shown me that by matching
the remedy to the miasm, that my previous outlook was naïve.
Rather than becoming more “realistic” about the potential of our
remedies, I have learned to open myself to the “unrealistic” because
I have seen that anything is possible. Cancer for instance was
a disease that I thought was difficult to treat constitutionally
because of my previous limited success and therefore treated most
cases by organo-therapy. This is no longer the case; all chronic
disease is constitutional including cancer and should always be
treated in the same manner. The problem was not the system, it
was simply – as it always is – my choice of remedy. We offer
open clinics to both students and practitioners here in Melbourne
to encourage people unfamiliar with HFA to see first hand what
Homeopathy is capable of. For years I practiced in the traditional
sense without HFA and so know the difference between the two when
it comes to results.
Louise
Yes
it was the same for me. Now I couldn’t imagine practicing without
doing a facial analysis every time. It is such an important piece
of information and makes choosing remedies so much easier. Remedies
can look alike – especially when you first start practicing and
the subtle differences aren’t clear. Even now I have come to
realize that although an “essence” picture may be true of some
patients there are other patients who seem quite different but
still need the same remedy. We have gone back to repertorising
every chronic case, using rubrics that represent the generals
like Boenninghausen suggested and being very careful when choosing
mental rubrics and always working out the miasm using facial analysis.
Our current students are really lucky as we decided to only teach
them how to take a case, how to repertorise, how to choose the
miasm and then accept the remedies that were delivered to them
as part of this process. If they have more than one remedy to
choose from then it is back to checking the materia medica for
the final decision. They are doing some very good cases using
this method and are far more advanced in their confidence and
outcomes than we were at the same level.
We
found it quite incredible when patients of the same miasm started
describing life stories of great similarity. We came to see these
stories as “themes” and still can’t get over how the case story
and the face will lock and key.
Grant
also made an amazing link when he started applying the findings
of this model to trends in history and disease. There is a clear
link between epidemics and social history that fits perfectly
into the seven colour miasm model. These same social themes fit
the stories of the patients with corresponding faces. Of course
anyone who has studied metaphysics knows these things but seeing
universal patterns in action is constantly exciting. His current
book explores all of these issues with a particular emphasis on
the dual nature of humans, the role of the miasm, the vital force
and what will probably be controversial – that Homoeopathy can
be completely explained using Newtonian physics rather than Quantum
physics. We have had many discussions with each other and our
students and believe this work will be of great importance to
Homeopathy.
Dr. Bhatia – That’s great! But how do you analyze a face? What are
the features that you focus on and how do you differentiate between
subtle differences in the facial features?
Grant
The
inference of both Allen and Roberts is that miasms influence facial
structure in accordance to their own design. For example, we
know that sycosis is hyper-function which means accumulation.
Excessive inflammation, mucous or fatty tissue, tumors, fibroids
and cysts are all results of the sycotic tendency to accumulation.
If excess occurs internally, and facial features are formed by
the internal miasm, then larger or excessive features also represent
sycosis. This is a conclusion that was formed from successful
cases. I did not set out to prove that excess internally, would
be excess externally, but when I saw it by examining the photographs
of successful sycotic patients, it became obvious that it could
be no other way. It also became obvious with the syphilitic inward
miasm why so many successful syphilitic patients had facial features
such as deep set eyes, dimples and inward pointing teeth. This
is cutting a long story very short but it gives you an idea of
the philosophy of the system. In practice we take the photographs
of every patient after concluding their consultation. These photographs
are then examined and each facial feature is assessed in accordance
to hyper, hypo and inward structure. Each individual facial feature
once assessed is allocated into its miasmatic group. The rest
is based on Hahnemannian theory and simple addition.
Hahnemannian theory is that
two dissimilar diseases cannot live in the same body at the same
time, the stronger will dominate the weaker. If the diseases
are of equal strength they will join to form a complex miasm such
as the tubercular miasm (psora and syphilis). The addition is
simply adding all the facial features influenced by each miasm
in a chart, to determine which is the stronger disease (miasm).
If a person has far more syphilitic features than sycotic or psoric,
then syphilis would be the stronger disease, therefore a syphilitic
medicine must be chosen. Hahnemann stated in Chronic Diseases
that the treatment of chronic disease must consist of the miasm
and the totality not just totality alone. Up until now we have
had no real definitive way of recognizing the stronger internal
miasm. What HFA has provenn is the miasm that is strong enough
to influence the majority of facial features is also the miasm
that is strong enough to dominate the rest of the body, therefore
it is the stronger disease and the one we must treat.
Louise
We
are writing an on-line course with Pioneer University in Dubai to help practitioners to develop
their skills and apply HFA. Some faces are definitely easier
to analyze than others. In the same way as some cases are easier
to analyze than others. However with practice everyone’s results
improve. Our students study it for 18 months and after about
nine months most of them are getting the correct miasm. It is
all about learning to see size and shape and structure. Once
you know what to look for it becomes easier. We recommend studying
at least fifty faces before you will really feel some confidence.
It isn’t that hard to do – your family, friends, movie stars,
people in restaurants – there are faces everywhere. Once you
get started you will be seeing noses and ears and hairlines and
knowing straight away which miasm is dominating that feature.
Then it is just a matter of adding up all the features to see
the totality and where the dominance lies.
Dr. Bhatia – Does
being male or female affects this analysis? The differences in
the male and female skull and facial features are quite easy to
recognize.
Grant
No,
being male or female makes no difference whatsoever. We are only
comparing each facial feature against other features and the overall
size of that person’s face. Women can have inward teeth and
men can have inward teeth (syphilis). Men can have a down-turned
nose (psora) and women can have a down-turned nose. It is not
about overall looks and it is not about beauty. This is about
shape and size, nothing more.
Louise
Everyone is individual regardless of their sex or race. Facial
analysis is about looking at all the parts and adding up the totality
– really the same as case analysis. So while, for example,
sycotic features tend to be seen more in females than males there
is no exclusivity. We see all miasms that include both sexes.
Once you really look at the features you will see this is true.
There are more than seventy different features – this is
why there are nearly six billion different faces (a bit less due
to identical twins of course); but having the three core miasms
and then seeing their impact on the majority of facial features
on each single face allows for a multitude of outcomes –
our individuality. So one psoric person will look quite different
than another and the same is true of each of the miasms. After
a while you start to recognize similar combinations that add up
to the same miasm but even then the variety of placement of features
can allow for a completely different look. Say for example two
people are of the same miasm and they both have similar hairlines,
eyes, foreheads, ears and mouths but one of them has much larger
teeth and a broader smile whilst the other has a broad nose –
all of a sudden they will look quite different. However when each
feature is rated and the totality is decided upon they still come
up the same miasm. Whether or not they need the same remedy depends
on the case – sometimes yes, sometimes no. In the end it
is just a diagnostic tool but a fascinating one that’s for
sure.
Dr. Bhatia – And what about the facial features of various races?
Does that have any effect on the facial analysis?
Grant
Yes certain miasmatic features
do seem to be more dominant amongst some races. However to suggest
that everybody from a particular race will belong to one miasm
is nonsense. In an interview with a Chinese migrant on a Melbourne
radio station, the Chinese man laughed when he said that all us
round eyes look alike! Everyone from a different race becomes
overwhelmed at first by the similarity of a new race. But after
only a few days of being amongst a new culture, variation becomes
obvious. By the end of the week there is as much variation in
the new culture as there is in the old.
Louise
Yes we get many people asking about race. Because Australia
is so multi-cultural we are used to seeing many races although
still predominantly Caucasian. People are so sensitive about
equality that they point out differences even between individuals,
let alone whole groups – however this is what Homeopathy is all
about! So yes racial features are often asked about. No matter
what race the patient, each feature still tells the same story
– if it is distinctive, it will be either psoric, sycotic or syphilitic.
Whilst some races have common features – e.g. the recessed lids
of Asians, the wider nose of Africans, the lower hairline of Arabs,
the down-turned nose of Europeans, the dominance for each patient
within a race can (and does) vary enormously.
Dr. Bhatia - You have said that your results have been significantly
better after you started using facial analysis. Have you ever
quantified the difference in success? What changes have you found
in your clinical practice and the success rate after using facial
analysis?
Grant
I have quantified the success of HFA by checking a one year period
of patients, examining the result of each case and placing them
into a category of unsuccessful, partially successful or successful.
Unsuccessful is self explanatory, partially successful means an
improvement of between 50-80%. Successful means that the main
problem is dramatically alleviated as well as an improvement of
energy and well being with no or few minor ailments remaining.
For example if a patient suffers from depression, insomnia and
panic attacks as well as gastric reflux and has two warts, if
all their complaints are ameliorated to a level of more than 80%
but the two warts remain I would still regard this as a success.
Patients whose symptoms have ameliorated between 50% - 80% are
placed in the partial success group. Patients who have had no
benefit or discontinued treatment within two visits were placed
in the unsuccessful group. Obviously at a personal level I believe
if I had been given more time, this unsuccessful group would have
a much lower percentage. However for the sake of statistics, I
must accept this result. The number of constitutional patients
who achieved a better than 80% success rate on all levels regardless
of the multi-factorial nature of their complaint was 64%. The
number of people who reached a 50 – 80% amelioration of
their complaints, therefore qualifying as a partial success, was
12.5%. 23.5% were rated as unsuccessful. Of partial and successful
cases most were achieved within four visits. This means statistically
that 76.5% of patients will achieve within four visits a 50% or
greater improvement of their health regardless of the nature of
their pathology. This is important as there is no specialization
in the clinic and the chronic diseases treated ranges from suicidal
depression to cancer, to panic attacks, to rheumatoid arthritis.
Chronic conditions also include allergies, asthma and pneumonia.
Louise
I saw Miranda Castro when she came to Australia and recommended
doing a self audit to determine how well you were doing as a practitioner.
It is a daunting task especially with chronic cases. I wasn’t
too happy as the really successful cases were few and far between.
However many of the patients who didn’t get the wonderful
outcome got peripheral improvement for periods of time and so
they kept coming back. It is interesting that most of the long
timers have got extremely good remedies (finally) after applying
HFA – mostly in the last few years. Like Grant, close to
60% get a remedy that really turns them around and partial successes
account for another 15 - 20%. The other 20% leave or I am still
trying. These are the cases where a polychrest just won’t
do and with those patients that persevere we try to get results
with smaller remedies – knowing their miasm through facial
features means we will be able to confirm more remedies once a
positive outcome occurs.
I really like knowing that I am in the ball park with most patients.
The facial features are absolutely essential for gaining this
confidence. If my patient for example is tubercular or dominantly
cancer miasm, in most cases a major polychrest will help them
very quickly. Repertorising is essential (did I mention this?)
and we use much larger rubrics than before knowing that this process
only draws in possibilities – the miasm will determine which
three or four remedies to look at.
I now expect that all aspects of the patient will improve, especially
their energy and well being and of course always the presenting
pathology. So even if they come for one pathology – say
hay-fever and the remedy I chose in the past helped that condition
but then I find they suffer with anxiety attacks too, I won’t
consider the result a success until both conditions are under
control. I no longer look at the patient in a layers model but
as a whole person who expects to get better in a whole way with
single remedy treatment or in some cases a series of remedies,
but always one at a time. Another area in which I fully I fully
expect an outcome is in the amount of time it takes to get a solid
result. Solid improvement should commence within a couple of weeks
to a month – if nothing has happened then I know there is
a better remedy. Obviously the depth and longevity of the pathology
has to be taken into account but using miasmatic remedies means
the simillimum is so close that the healing commences quite quickly.
This came as a surprise to us as we were trained to be patient
and cautious especially with long standing complaints. But when
you regard the action of the remedy as rebalancing the vital force
rather than curing the condition you come to expect that the patient
will quickly see changes. I didn’t practice like this in
the past – there was a lot more waiting and expecting aggravations.
Now when working with the miasm the reaction to the remedy is
often very fast and far more holistic in the outcome. So it becomes
an expectation and I am far happier with the results. Also results
hold well in most cases – it is just far better all round.
And easier. It has been a pleasure to teach the method and see
our students do so well so quickly.
So we really want to see all Homeopaths using HFA – for
obvious reasons. We all want to do the best for ourselves and
our patients as quickly and deeply as possible.
Dr. Bhatia – Many
homeopaths have focused on the concept that the true simillimum
should not just cover the symptoms but also the underlying miasm.
So the concept is not new. But so far, homeopaths have relied
on symptom classification and pathology to identify the underlying
miasm. Have you ever compared the results of miasm identification
through symptoms and through facial analysis? If so, are the results
similar with both approaches?
Grant
I
suppose if I had found the traditional model of miasms, that is
the allocation of pathology into a miasmatic group successful,
then the need to develop another model would not have arisen.
I think one of the reasons there are so many different and often
opposing views of how to apply the miasms, is because the traditional
model fails in its attempt to clarify. There is simply no way
we can say that Hahnemann’s legacy of the miasms and how to apply
them in clinical day to day practice has been successful, and
yet we know at the same time, that Hahnemann was the greatest
medical mind the world has ever seen. So if he stakes his reputation
on stating that the medicine chosen for a patient must be based
on the totality of their symptoms, as well as their miasm, then
we must listen. Miasmatic symptom prescribing yielded no results
above symptom totality alone, at least not for me. In the end
I disregarded miasms altogether as many practitioners do, and
based my prescriptions entirely on presenting symptoms – exactly
what Chronic Disease says NOT to do. In short my answer to your
question is yes, I have tried them both and my conclusion is miasmatic
symptomology does not yield results, and historically this would
also prove to be the case for the profession, however facial analysis
(HFA) has been a rich vein of success.
Dr. Bhatia – You
have said earlier that with essence prescribing ‘results never
reached expectation’ and also ‘Modern homeopathy in the west can
be extremely interpretive’. Can you elaborate on this further?
Do you think that the excessive focus on subjective symptoms and
interpretation of dreams, delusions, and sensations is making
homeopathy less productive? Do you think we should stick to the
age old tried and tested methods of symptom repertorization (no
interpretation) and finding the miasm? What is your opinion on
these modern developments and what is the future of homeopathy
in your opinion?
Grant
In western Homeopathy there
is a strong focus on seeing remedies as distinct and individual
personalities in the same way as we see people. Much of this
has arisen because of the works of Kent and Tyler. Hahnemann
did not view medicines in this same way and one look at Materia
Medica Pura will clarify that he saw medicines as medicines.
In Aphorism 9, Hahnemann states that there is a distinct difference
between the predictable vital force and the more unique and individual
characteristic soul of an individual. The vital force according
to Hahnemann is a program designed for our well being but distinctly
separate from our mind and character. Because Homeopathic remedies
work on our vital force they work on a preordained program not
our personality, or our individuality. If remedies had to be
specific to the most characteristic parts of our personality there
would be no such thing as a polychrest. A polychrest is a drug
of many uses but it can only have many uses because it fits many
types of conditions in many types of people. Most of the contemporary
understanding regarding medicines as unique and distinct personalities
has been attributed to Kent
and yet Kent himself advises against this, and chastised Tyler
for doing so in Drug Pictures. For any who doubt this I would
suggest they read Kent’s
Lesser Writings and look at the cases he presents at the end of
the book. It soon becomes noticeable that while Kent
talks theoretically about individualization and character, his
prescriptions are based on pathology and physical generals. The
idea that Homeopathic remedies touch or alter the immortal soul
is absolutely wrong. Remedies interact with the vital force but
as Hahnemann has pointed out the vital force is NOT the soul.
Therefore remedies do not have to be individualized to suit the
person, but need to be individual enough to suit the way that
person’s vital force is responding to stress.
Let me point this out by example:
a patient attends the clinic with conditions such as arthritis
and irritability and also has a personality that is artistic and
generous. After the successful administration of a remedy, that
person’s arthritis and irritability have gone, but their
artistic talent and generous nature remain. This is because talent
belongs to the soul, while arthritis and irritability belong to
the vital force because they are stress responses. Remedies never
make a happy person less happy or a talented person less talented.
In fact remedies cannot touch this aspect of character at all.
We have all seen this and we have all heard patient’s who
state, after good constitutional treatment, that the way they
feel now is the way they used to feel twenty years ago. This is
a return to an unstressed state; it does not mean they have moved
to a “higher” plane. Therefore in my opinion, to focus
on character and personality is to focus on the soul and that
is not the domain of the remedy. A remedy is for the vital force
- not the soul. Generals and emotions are great indicators of
the vital force. Repertorisation is essential but it cannot be
based on interpretation. Repertorisation is simply a program –
the accuracy of the information that comes out is equal to the
accuracy of the input. So in this case speculative input creates
speculative output. If you merely think your patient is guilt
ridden, but you know that their complaints are both right sided
and worse at night, then only these two generals should go into
the repertorisation.
Too many attempts at personalizing medicines have been done.
Also, the focus on one particular aspect of a remedy at the expense
of more comprehensive symptoms has also taken place. For example,
in the proving of Nat Mur far more provers wept openly and publicly
than those retiring to their rooms to weep privately. And yet
in most materia medicas, at least western ones, a whole personality
profile has been based on the martyrdom of Nat Mur, presented
by their inability to cry in public as the central key. This occurs
even though the majority of provers were otherwise. Personality
profiles are not wrong, they are just very, very limited.
The future of western Homeopathy is precarious. We are in the
unfortunate situation in which we have gone from a position that
rivaled conventional medicine to a current position below chiropractors,
osteopaths, naturopaths and in some countries kinesiologists.
For many western Homeopaths in order to study Homeopathy one must
also study one of the other modalities.
In the recent past, one came to Homeopathy via other modalities,
then focused on homeopathy entirely. Now we seem ill-content with
Homeopathy and feel the need to be both Homeopaths as well as
psychologists or psychotherapists. Because I came from psychotherapy
to Homeopathy, I cannot comprehend why so many Homeopaths want
to be psychotherapists. My only conclusion is that contemporary
western Homeopaths are confusing the parameters between the vital
force and the mind. The remedy influences the vital force, which
is the emotional responses and general reactivity to stress. Character
change seen after a remedy is the patient returning to an unstressed
state. To confuse this as anything deeper is to miss the point
of Homeopathy entirely.
In regards to the future, I believe Homeopaths – at least
western ones, need to decide whether they are going to be psychotherapists
or Homeopaths. At this point, most seem to think that they are
one and the same but I can assure you they are not. Hahnemann
understood that the mind and vital force were separate entities
and contemporary Homeopaths would be advised to do the same.
Where homoeopathy goes from here is dependent on the success
of our achievements. Patients turn to Homeopathy, particularly
in chronic disease, because we offer them hope. Homeopathy can
do what no other western medicine can, therefore we have a niche.
However society at present has an abundance of psychologists,
psychotherapists and counselors and does not need more of the
same even if we offer a pill at the end. While I think the current
trend to be counselors and spiritual advisors as well as Homeopaths
will be unfruitful, if we return to the roots that made us great
in the first place, that is, the re- energizing of the constitution
and the treatment of disease, there is no reason why Homeopathy
should not retake its allotted place as a respected and effective
medical alternative. Like the patient returning to their unstressed
state, the position for Homeopathy to return to already exists.
Louise
We have discussed this for
years and at one point I got pulled into the type of model Grant
is referring to (this was before facial analysis). I didn’t get
good results and found the process difficult for myself and the
patient. I am just so grateful to have been brought back to Homeopathy
the way it was intended to be; my results and confidence in the
clinic reflect this, most particularly because of using facial
analysis. HFA has given me a deeper understanding of what Homeopathy
is and has made me proud to be a Homeopath without feeling the
need to be something else as well.
Dr. Bhatia - All
this is very thought provoking and I hope our readers will understand
the depth of your words and enjoy this fruitful discourse. Gant
and Louise, it has been a wonderful experience to have you among
us in our Hot-Seat. I have enjoyed your answers very much and
I am sure everyone out there is going to find this discussion
interesting. Thank you for your time and patience!
To our
readers – If you wish to know more about Homeopathy
Facial Analysis, you can get hold of a copy of Grant’s
book Appearances and Circumstances and Homeopathy Facial
Analysis and you can also visit their website
- http://www.vcch.org/index.html