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Lola is a 4 month old foal. She has not really been lucky up till
the day of the consultation and you can tell by looking at her.
Although she has the normal height for her age, she is skinny, has
a poor coat, feels dehydrated, has red marks on her hoofs and walks
with a rather unsteady gait.
At first her mother did not want to know of her young foal. The
owners had to constrain her when Lola wanted a drink of mother’s
milk. After a week, she would tolerate the foal but never showed
any real interest in it. As if that was not enough, she then produced
a poor quality milk which was too thin.
She is not a friendly horse; she has a tendency to chase the other
horses or foals when they come too close.
In such circumstances it is not surprising that health problems
arise. At the age of one month Lola developed a diarrhea that never
really disappeared regardless many attempts for treatment with conventional
techniques. Her stools are still more like cow pads. Her perineal
region is soiled with dried faeces. She runs a temperature but has
a very, very good appetite. She is dull, she never really plays
with the other foals (who ignore her now) and, although she always
stays close to her mother, the other day she followed one of the
other mares out of the field, thinking it was her mother. She never
realised her mistake.
There is also a round lump, the size of a plum, at the base of
the larynx. This could well be a swelling of the thyroid gland.
The strangest observation was the error Lola made in following
one of the other mares.
Mind, Dullness, children
She was eating well, had diarrhea and poor condition.
Stomach, appetite, ravenous, diarrhea during
There was this lump in the throat, this was an unusual concomitant.
I used the rubric:
External throat, Swelling, cervical glands. (It
seemed too restrictive to choose for swollen thyroid gland).
This repertorisation produced the following grid:
| |
calc. |
iod. |
lyc. |
sulph. |
zinc. |
agar. |
bar-c. |
bar-m. |
calc-p. |
carbn-s. |
| 1. |
3 |
2 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
1 |
| 2. |
2 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
| 3. |
2 |
2 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
When I add Mind, ailments, from grief, Iodium does not
appear in the runners up and Zincum receives a 2 degree
qualification.
I choose for Zincum for the lack of ‘expression’
in this foal. There are no signs of fears or any particular social
behaviour. There is nothing. She just eats, stands with her mum
and has diarrhea.
Always remember that it is not always the remedy that has the
most points in a repertorisation that wins. Always check on the
unusual remedy in a repertorisation. In every respect homeopathy
is about what is unusual, unexpected, bizarre or strange.
She receives one 30k dose on the day of the consultation. 14 days
later her coat changes and the diarrhea disappeared. At the end
of the summer she is as well, strong and as happy as all the other
foals. The owner commented how surprised he was that Lola improved
with so little medicine after he had spent all this money on conventional
medicines.
A few comments on the remedy.
When zincum ‘expresses’ itself
it is usually a little over the top (convulsions, jerking, ticks,
delirium, aggressive) otherwise the remedy is associated with (normal)
eruptions or physiological processes that fail to break out (or
are suppressed). The word ‘expression’ is used to illustrate
both physical symptoms as well as behaviour.
Marc Brunson explains: one of the
prime uses of Zinc is in the building industry: zinc is used to
‘cover’ parts of the roof (windows, corners) for protection
against the rain; this is not a very special role and illustrates
somewhat the problem of the zincum patient. Zincum is not ‘allowed’
to express itself in a more gratifying role and often has not a
very good opinion of itself. The metal is also too ‘soft’
to allow it to take a resisting shape; this illustrates the lack
of character.
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