| August 2004, a waterfront Greek
tavern on Alonissos; here the idea of Looking Back Moving Forward
(www.lookingbackmovingforward.com)
was born. Nigel Summerley and I were in the aftermath of a few hours
spent in the company of the great George Vithoulkas interviewing
him at his Academy (www.vithoulkas.com).
Chatting through our perceptions of the experience, I became inspired
to return to England and interview as many UK-based great homeopaths
and teachers of homeopathy that I could in a year. Little did I
know in this temporary, sun-induced state of immense enthusiasm
and passion for homeopathy, my life would suddenly move into full
throttle and would stay that way for the next two and a half years!
The result, a book of thirty two interviews with
thirty four of our UK leaders in our field. I would have loved to
have continued on my interviewing journey but the chapters took
a further year to edit and compile and resulted in a tome of five
hundred pages.
Manish Bhatia of Hpathy.com
suggested I share with you, over the coming months, excerpts from
some of the interviews and my thoughts and feelings about having
been part of the process and what I have learned from the experience.
I would also like to invite you to explore and share your thoughts
and feelings having read the excerpts (see the end of this article).
Looking
Back Moving Forward was a huge project to be involved in; I
can hardly believe it is complete. I feel extremely privileged to
have been given an audience with these inspiring souls and equally
fortunate to be able to share their wisdom and stories with so many
homeopaths all around the world. Copies of the book in its first
few months since publication have found their way across the UK
to Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, America, Canada, Belgium,
Holland and Italy – and those are just the ones that I know about.
So to start with, let me introduce you to the interviewees.
In alphabetical order I had the great honour of chatting with:
Subrata Kumar Banerjea * Mike Bridger * Peter Chappell * Kate Chatfield * Sheilah
Creasy * Robert Davidson * Annette Gamblin * Lesley Gregerson
* Linda Gwillim * Barbara Harwood * Brian Kaplan * Ellen Kramer
* Martin Miles * Lionel Milgrom * Misha Norland * Nicky Pool
* Rebecca Preston * Linda Razzell * Ernest Roberts
* Bill Rumble * Gordon Sambidge * Roger Savage * Yubraj
Sharma * Jeremy Sherr * Myriam Shivadikar * Sue Sternberg
* Dion Tabrett * Simon Taffler * Francis Treuherz *
Charles Wansbrough * Anne Waters * Jerome Whitney * Kaaren Whitney
* Carol Wise *
Robert Davidson is extremely well known in the UK. He is responsible
for establishing the first school of homeopathy in London, COH,
in 1978 with the late Martin Miles, he then went on to set up the
three Practical Colleges in London, the Midlands and Iceland. He
is known for being somewhat controversial and prides himself in
being a disruptor. Interviewing him was a three year education
in itself and really got me thinking!
I include three excerpts here. The first is about how Robert
got into homeopathy in the early 70s and illustrates how far we
have moved on as a profession in the last forty years.
ROWENA: I wanted to start with how you got into all this. I know you studied
with Thomas Maughan, but what inspired you to even go to him in
the first place? Tell me your story.
ROBERT:
In 1971 I was
living in a macrobiotic communal house in Ladbroke Grove, London.
I was just sitting there in the lounge reading a paper one Sunday
afternoon. One of the people who had left a few months earlier came
back for a visit. She was talking to someone else about a particular
gentleman and inadvertently I heard the conversation. He was in
his seventies and his wife was pregnant and a few other things like
that. I thought I should talk to him but I had no idea why. So I
phoned him up and said, “I would like to talk to you”. He asked
me, “What about?” I said that I didn’t have a clue and he replied,
“Right then, tomorrow at three in the afternoon.” And that was that.
I had no clue about homeopathy; I didn’t even know anything like
that existed. This was in the early seventies and it actually hardly
existed at all.
ROWENA:
And what were
you doing workwise at that point?
ROBERT:
I was very bored
repairing extremely primitive telephone answering machines.
ROWENA:
And how old were
you?
ROBERT:
In 1971 I was
twenty five. I am only twenty seven now; it is amazing how slowly
it has gone. After a couple of months or so I turned up at his homeopathy
classes and this whole universe opened up. I was this complete nutcase
who wrote down absolutely everything he said. I was watching everyone
else at the table. They knew that they would never forget what he
said and they didn’t write anything. Ha Ha.
aHa
ROWENA:
Oh, I would have
done what you did.
ROBERT:
You can get wrist
muscles the size of an elephant, you know.
ROWENA:
Did you know what
remedy he was? You observed him so much.
ROBERT:
Thomas was undoubtedly
Arsenicum album. He probably started off in his youth as Nux
vomica, and there is a rare constitutional progression
from the Nux vomica who lives life so intensely that they
become different. Most people’s lives are too dull, boring and protected
for them to change constitutions. How long will it take a Calcarea
carbonica to get enough life experience to need to evolve?
So the Nux vomica just goes in there, head down; usually
goes through Ignatia
amara and gets into Arsenicum album in
old age. So many homeopaths actually turn into Arsenicum albums. It is more the nature of the work that they
do. They often get ....
ROWENA:
Obsessive?
ROBERT:
Anally retentive.
Thomas held the homeopathy classes on Saturday evenings. It was
very simple. On the first evening the theory took an hour and a
half, just the once. I liked that. After that we did materia medica before tea, and cases after tea. And that was
it. It was about a three and a half year cycle. We just went through
all the remedies and everything was fleshed out with our own real
cases. And as you went along, you gradually got cases and you just
ended up doing it. It was an evolution.
ROWENA:
How many of you
were there?
ROBERT:
Not that many.
There was a flow through; people would come and go. The classes
were once a fortnight. It totally ruined my social life, but there
was nowhere better to go so it was fine. When he died in 1976 I
naїvely started
teaching his Saturday night classes and at the end of 1977 I got
the idea for the College of Homeopathy (COH), and set that up to start in September 1978.
I had a lot of encouragement like, “Who is going to go? You will
never get people. Oh, that is far too much money, nobody will pay
that.” It was an exciting time, but it was the same thing in 1985
when I started the first full-time course, “Oh, nobody can come
full time; you are charging too much money.” Yes, right. I like
the beginnings of things, when they are usually impossible. When
it gets administrative and ‘corporate’ I am out of there.
ROWENA:
At the time that
you studied was there the classical/practical issue being discussed?
ROBERT:
Oh, no. I started
that one and here is the story behind it. Thomas had a particular
way of practising; he used the totality remedy. However as there was almost always a difference
between the organ and the organism, because of modern drugs, lifestyle,
foods, sugar, alcohol and all the rest of it, often the organs would
be specifically damaged out of proportion to the organism. For instance,
if you prescribe for the organism - the totality - and it starts to repair the totality at a
rate of twenty miles an hour, say, and the organ can only do ten,
then you will either have prolonged aggravations or problems with pain and all sorts of other
stuff. His skill was to be able to help the limited organ do twenty
miles an hour and keep up with the organism. So with his way of
prescribing you didn’t get the aggravations or the prolonged discharges.
It was a very high level of skill and I don’t know anybody who has
replicated that yet. And, naїvely again, that is what we taught at COH from 1978 through to about 1981-82.
It was about 1982 and ‘Greeks bearing gifts’ started to
arrive. When George Vithoulkas first came over what he found, in his own words,
were the best homeopaths that he had so far come across. Then he
decided that, of course, like everybody else except him, we were
doing it the wrong way. By that time, the interpretation of what
George Vithoulkas was saying was about essence; that there was the central core, this absolute
essence. Find that; prescribe the ‘right remedy’ and everything cascades better. This is not
actually true in these benighted times, except in rare circumstances.
In this second excerpt
Robert talks about methodologies:
ROBERT:
So, one of the
reasons I got Robin Murphy over from the USA was because what we needed
to introduce were methodologies. The concept didn’t exist before
then.
ROWENA:
What was it like
then if there weren’t methodologies?
ROBERT:
It was just ‘what
we did’. A lot of people still practise that way, saying there are
no methodologies, there is just homeopathy. Which is true, as homeopathy
is similarity. But homeopathy isn’t what you do; homeopathy
is the reason you do it.
ROWENA:
Okay, explain
that a little bit to me.
ROBERT:
Well, homeopathy
is the reason you prescribe. It is not what you prescribe and it
is not how you do it. Homeopathy is a principle. A principle is
a vague idea, a kind of overarching vague idea. Anything specific
in it is an individual’s interpretation of principle, which can
only be judged by effectiveness in the world. (Read that one again..!)
So the purpose of creating methodologies and distinct ways of doing
things is that you create a set of rules within its own patient
specific universe. Like Eizayaga’s layers methodology, which has rules that are completely the opposite
of Kent’s? The methodologies contradict, but only if you
use them to treat the same patient. That is one of the reasons I
think there should be no philosophy in homeopathy; I am with Samuel on that.
ROWENA:
He said that too?
ROBERT:
Yes. He said ‘have
no theories’. Of course he then went on and had a theory but, hey,
he’s human too, maybe. Essentially homeopathy is a technology; it
is an application of principle. The philosophy is not philosophy
at all; it is actually just rule systems. And the rule systems apply
individually within each distinct method. So the methods are defined
by the rules you use, and what you need to do is retain integrity
in your method and not jump from one method to another to another.
That is why we ended up eventually creating distinct methodologies
- aetiologies, Kentian, physical generals, layers and sequentials. Each methodology has its own rules and expectations.
Each, if you like, has its own philosophy. What you do is individualise
the methodology to the patient. That is the bit most homeopaths
are missing. Almost no-one, worldwide, is teaching how to find the
most appropriate method for each individual patient.
Survival (and health) is the ability to adapt to changes.
Extinction and disease are the inability to adapt to changes. The
righteous have no capacity to change. If homeopathy doesn’t get
that it has to be methodologically adaptable to the individual then
it becomes extinct. It dies because its practitioners have never
given up the allopathy in their soul.
Classical homeopathy is much closer to allopathy than it is to anything else. They don’t individualise
a patient; they just look for the symptoms which support the classical methodology. They don’t even look and see if a patient is
weak, strong, damaged or poisoned. It is like the person comes in
and you do your thing with them. And your thing is to find the symptoms
appropriate to finding a ‘classical’ remedy and the theory being that the ‘right’ remedy
will then fix everything. This is pure fantasy ninety five percent
of the time.
As I said, homeopathy is a technology; it is not a science.
It will probably be another couple of centuries before we have anything
close to a science that explains it. Somebody fell over it, picked
it up and wondered what the hell this is and found it worked. It
is a bit like somebody from medieval times stumbling over an electric
torch; you pick it up; accidentally push the button and wow. Okay,
it works but how does it work. Duh? It is a bit like Shakespeare watching television and wondering how the little
people got in the box. The intervening evolutions and their changed
perceptions aren’t there. The glorious and amazing homeopathy simply
becomes more sophisticated, over time, in what it does.
The uniqueness of homeopathy is that nothing ever developed
becomes redundant. It never goes out of date. The monumental significance
of this escapes most people. It is the one observation that makes
science look like the kiddies playing in the puddles. With homeopathy
you don’t have to change fundamentals and you never have to throw
away anything developed from experience. I can take a materia medica published in 1830, put it on my desk and use
it. What has changed? Nothing. Homeopathy doesn’t change because
it is based on what is real. All the rest of it, science and all
the other illusions of our time are based on what is not real. If
science was true it would not be changing all time. It would be
refining and exploring what is true, not scrabbling around looking
for this week’s truths and hoping to get next year’s grants out
of them.
And finally, Robert’s
thoughts on the future of our profession:
ROWENA:
What do you think
will happen to homeopathy in this country? Do you find it worrying?
ROBERT:
No, I find it
cyclical.
ROWENA:
So do you think
it will go dormant again?
ROBERT:
It will go minimal,
for sure. The same people that corruptly produced the EU (hence
UK) legislation to wipe out all the supplements and vitamins; the same money will essentially try to wipe
out everything else. It depends on how far homeopathy abandons common
law. It should never do that; it should have embraced and rejoiced
in common law because that is where the freedom lies. In my opinion,
it is organising itself out of its own freedom to exist. But then
again if you look around the planet, who isn’t? That seems to be
the tone of the century - people giving up their freedom voluntarily.
Selling the freedom of the individual for the rights of a slave
is not ‘Fairtrade’.
The elimination of anything that might obstruct the truly
obscene profits of ‘Big Pharma’ will be eliminated and the level of sickness
will be controlled downwards, to ensure sickness, so that everyone
has to take drugs with no other choices available. By the way that
is a ‘done deal’. It is already set up and must be implemented by
all countries signed up to the World Trade Organisation. What they
are planning is so evil, so totally evil and unthinkable for most
folks that it will be riveted into place before anyone notices,
as it has always been done when totalitarian control of populations
occurs.
A lot of what Robert
said in his interview I managed to follow but there got to a point
where really I just couldn’t get my ‘classical’ head around it and
I told him so. He looked at me with his piercing blue eyes and said,
‘how arrogant are you that you think you have to and can get your
head around everything.” His intention was not to knock my confidence,
and he didn’t. His comment was quite empowering and how right he
was!
I wrote in the preface of my book that my wish
is for discussions to arise from the conversations in Looking Back
Moving Forward and for us all to pull together as a profession to
secure a continued and expanding future for homeopathy; a wish that
I am sure we all share. To facilitate this I have established a
blog on the book’s website (www.lookingbackmovingforward.com/blog). Please participate
in the discussions and instigate some of your own. We are such a
wonderful community doing good work all around the globe. Let’s
share our ideas and experiences and move forward through this current
wave of negativity and scepticism.
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