As all homeopathic practice is of a positive nature,
it does not appeal to every form of mind.
Much depends upon the soil into which its seeds fall and the parable
of the sower finds
another illumination. For this reason it is easy to see why it is
accepted haltingly or even
deserted by professed followers.
Again much of the stress under which it labours must, in common
with the difficulties of the
other sciences, be laid at the door of faulty instruction; a state
from which we are only just
beginning to. emerge. It should be self evident that in proportion
as we cease trying to force
the mind into fixed channels we will develop the inner faculties
of reflective thinking.
While much must necessarily be taken for granted, it is fundamental
that true learning begins
with the laying aside of all bias and preconceived ideas—like
little children. We will find
causes after we have learned to know their effects. The latter have
indeed been with us from
the beginning, but only now and then has a mind been keen enough
to read their language,
only too often to be misunderstood and have its work swallowed up
in the surrounding
gloom. Such was emphatically the medical age in which Hahnemann
appeared, armed with a
message of deep import.
The law which the master expressed is always demonstrable, if
we will for a while lay aside
our blinding prejudices, those last remnants of a darker age when
men revelled in the blood
of their adversaries, all for opinions' sake. If the material advancement
of the race has too
often been written in blood, its agonies have likewise been lulled
into the sleep of death by
lethal drugs. O! shame for such things. This and less refined barbarities
were and are the
practices which Homeopathy strives to reform.
The pen of the founder of Homeopathy was far too vitriolic for
regularity, and it cast him
out; but his disdained law has become the cornerstone of a new house.
What it has done, all
may read; what it shall do, depends upon the faithfulness of its
disciples to truth. The world
is waiting to be shown, to see you demonstrate your case. Are you
able to do it? That's the
question. The demands of college curricula which force the student
into straining every
nerve for the purpose of passing faculty and state examinations
will never do it. Such forcing
methods don't teach, they cram, and their product is but poorly
equipped to meet the
exigencies of daily practice with curative measures.
The struggle between dynamism and materialism will not end in
our day, and the mechanical
mind will always be with us. An appeal based on the finer dynamics
will always be well
beyond the mental grasp of the latter and unless we can hold it
by showing the most
convincing of results it must inevitably drift into forcible methods.
The power of the similimum is a constant source of pleasure to
the careful prescriber.
Almost every day brings something new and he does things that can't
be done in any other
way. A case in point. Sixteen years ago Mr. C. had the arch of his
left foot crushed down.
The surgical treatment which he received did absolutely nothing,
but left him with a constant
dull pain in the injured member which has been absolutely flat ever
since. He is a very well
educated man and scouted the idea of obtaining help from any source
whatever, for which
reason it required a deal of persuasion on the part of a near relative
before he would venture
to even try Homeopathy. After looking the matter over carefully
I came to the conclusion
that Symphytum was the only remedy that offered the least hope of
relief and accordingly
gave him one powder of the sixth centesimal potency. This brought
complete relief for six
weeks, much to the patient's surprise, and gave me his confidence
which was all important in
this case. A repetition of the same potency was now without effect
hence I administered a
single dose of the 1 M, since which time he has remained entirely
free of pain. A case of this
sort is one for serious reflection on the part of doubters. Here
was an irremovable cause, and
yet the indicated remedy stopped the pain which had been of sixteen
years duration. The
patient was too intelligent to allow the use of morphia or any narcotising
drug. Can palliative
medication do as well?
Homeopathy is full of experiences like this, hence it lives nor
will it die, in spite of assaults
from without and misrepresentation from within. State boards, prejudiced
examiners and
lying about it do no harm; but false practice is its greatest enemy.
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