| I am going to tell you about a case I treated but
I will mainly focus on the process I went through while the case
progressed. Early in my practice I started a support group for local
healers and met a young lady whose mother was terminally ill with
nephrotic syndrome. I offered to help because I intuited during
a group meditation that her mother wasn’t quite ready to leave
this world. That intuition served me well, because even though she’d
been given 8 months to live, under constant weekly/fortnightly homeopathic
care, she managed to live another 2 ½ years. During that
time she set her personal and religious affairs in order, made her
peace with her maker and died when she was ready.
When I first took Alice’s case in May 2003, I was a bit dismayed
at how ill she actually was, how swollen her legs were and that
she was in a lot of pain. I asked her how she was feeling and she
replied: “I’m tired, my mind is willing but my body
isn’t up for it.” Her legs were like tree trunks, stiff
and full of fluid and she was finding it hard to walk.
She’d seen a kidney specialist in January, who said her condition
was ‘caused’ by Glomerulonephritis (Brights Disease)
and she’d been subjected to ECG’s & X rays and was
told she’d lost 50% of her kidney function and was ‘losing
protein’. She’d been prescribed diuretic tablets which
had reduced her weight from 12 ¼ stone to 10 ¼ but
she’d had an allergic reaction to them and had come out in
a rash ‘like stinging nettles’, which made her itch
and scratch so much she couldn’t sleep.
Two of her son’s are GP’s (she has 5 children) and
‘because of them’ she agreed to a kidney biopsy. At
the last minute however, she decided against it and the consultant
‘blew his top. He was in panic mode’ and made her sign
a disclaimer, and that was that. She was ‘finished with the
hospital’.
She then went to see an herbalist, changed her diet to fruit ,
vegetables, soups , beans, chicken and cottage cheese. Ten days
ago her weight had crept up to 11 stone and she was itching and
scratching.
Her symptoms had started in the previous October when she started
to have ‘frothy urine’ and ‘swollen feet’.
She had been very tired but ‘very busy in the allotment’,
and had been commuting on the train from the West Country to Aberdeen
to tend to her aging parents. Before both her parents died, she
had nursed her Dad, travelling every 2 weeks to see him and ‘got
no sleep’ and then contracted shingles after he died. I said
I’d do my best to reduce the oedema as that was causing the
most distress. She loved vinegar and dancing so I prescribed Sepia
30c and said I’d see her again in a month.
I then went off to read up as much as I could about her condition.
Having never treated anyone so ill before I consulted a homeopath
who was also trained in medicine and was advised that Solidago was
a good remedy to try. I also decided to use the MYMOP forms so we
could objectively see if she improved.
We got on very well. Alice was a Catholic convert and my mother
is the same, so we had a common-ground to work on. It was obvious
to me that the aggressive and unfeeling treatment she’d had
at the local hospital was significant and the fact that I was prepared
to listen to her and how she felt about everything helped pave the
way for her to trust me.
The Solidago made no obvious difference in her symptoms and the
only remedy that came up the most in articles and repertorization
was Apis.
I gave the first dose of Apis 30c on 25th June. I visited regularly
and carried on with the Apis, and the main things she reported at
these visits were:
she was reasonable,
huge amount of wee,
fine,
weight now down to 10 stone 3 lbs.
On the 20th October 2003 after an undercurrent prescription of
Nat Mur 200c that hadn’t done much, I decided to go back to
the Apis 30c and said I’d be back the next day. Then a very
strange thing happened. Alice said that during the night her throat
started to feel funny and at 4am she woke up. Her nose on the left
side was ‘pouring’ like ‘water flooding’.
She woke again at 5am ‘nose pouring’. She weighed herself
and she was 10 stone 2lbs. This carried on until my next visit and
she felt she had’ got the flu’ with her nose ‘pouring’,
‘sneezing’ and ‘coughing’. As her kidneys
weren’t working very well, I viewed this as the only way the
extra water in her body (oedema) could be ejected.
By the 4th Nov 2003 her weight was down to less than 10 stone and
she was ‘weeing like a horse’. Over the next few months
she reported feeling ‘fine’. She got a few colds here
or there and had a Lycopodium prescription and Sepia but we seemed
to return to Apis as being the most capable of keeping her condition
stable.
Most of 2004 was routine and I listened as she spoke about making
a pilgrimage to Ireland, settling an emotional upset with her brother,
thoughts about her mother and her deepest truest feelings. She also
went to Paris with her son and had a visit to the seaside. I became
a sort of confidant and we built-up quite a rapport.
This middle part of her treatment was more of me observing her
moods and helping her process how she felt about herself and her
family. She even helped me with a proving as her condition had improved
enough for her to get out and about.
I asked a more experienced Homeopath to help with the case and
we came to a good constitutional. Eventually all her children left
home and when her youngest went to University, things seemed to
change. In October 2005 she developed breathing problems and this
was when I felt the case beginning to get out of my depth. I took
the case to supervision again but nothing seemed to prevent the
inevitable and by Christmas Alice couldn’t walk far, her breathing
was really bad and I recommended she visit the local NHS Homeopathic
hospital satellite clinic, a suggestion she never took up.
I asked a colleague for input and we changed the prescription to
Lycopodium but Alice wanted to carry on with Apis as it had worked
so well in the past. What could I do? Say ‘No’.
Just before Christmas 2005 I arranged to see Alice in the New Year.
I needed some time to absorb the huge amount of responsibility that
I seemed to have given myself by taking on this case and wanted
some time away from the fortnightly visits to ‘get myself
together’. I was shocked when her husband rang me on the 18th
Jan 2006 to tell me she had died that morning. Even though we had
been working together for over 70 consultations and I knew her condition
wasn’t easy to treat, I was very sad when Alice died. Her
family kindly invited me to the funeral, which certainly helped
‘closure’.
I don’t think I’d be able to take on another case like
this as I spent an enormous amount of time worrying about my prescriptions
and worrying about how she was doing. As she got more weak a close
friend of hers even emailed me asking what I was doing’ to
help. This caused me an enormous amount of concern as I knew she
was so well liked and I had to take that to my supervisor too.
I had heaps of supervision and came to the conclusion that taking
a case with serious pathology needs more than one person, and as
I’m a lone practitioner, I was glad of the support network
I’ve built-up. I’d learned about every member of Alice’s
family, even met a few of them and I felt, when she died that I’d
lost a member of my own family. Her daughter gave permission for
me to write this piece, which feels like saying goodbye to a gentle,
kindly Aunt.
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Mary English has been in private practice since
2001. Her formal education in homeopathy began in 1996 and in 2001
she received a diploma from the School of Homeopathy in Devon. In
2001 and 2007 she served as trustee for the homeopathic charity,
The Homeopathic Action Trust. Mary has conducted numerous provings,
including Aquae Sulis (Roman Bath Water) and Thunderstorm. Mary
is also a highly intuitive and accomplished astrologer. Visit her
at her website: www.maryenglish.co.uk
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