| When I decided to write this editorial, I started
by asking myself whether I had to address my fellow homeopathic
vets or the homeopathic community as a whole.
To answer this question, I first had to find out whether there
is, or should be, a difference between veterinary and human homeopathy.
It certainly appears that homeopathic organizations show some form
of separation.
Many homeopathy schools are divided into a veterinary and a human
branch. My initial training took place in a purely veterinary environment.
It does seem to make sense to organize things as such: we vets would
not be treating the same diseases as our human homeopathic colleagues.
After my initial training, homeopathy in my hands was rather unsuccessful.
The occasional results I enjoyed were due more to luck than skill.
I nearly gave up homeopathy at that time. It was the enrollment
in a course for both veterinarians and human practitioners
that really started my career as a homeopath.
What was it that helped me becoming a homeopath?
Maybe you noticed the mistake I inserted in the second paragraph.
(I suggest you read the paragraph again before I disclose the error.)
This mistake is a common error that is regularly made against homeopathic
principles. Dr. B’s editorial of the October
issue already touched on this confusion when he treated the
question of the importance of the modern diagnosis.
In the second paragraph I sinned against the following principle:
Homeopathy does not treat diseases but patients.
We need our knowledge and understanding of the diseases of the patients
we treat to detect what is homeopathic in the case but we don’t
treat diseases. We treat individuals who through their symptoms
express their inner derangement.
Animals are a different species from people and have different
diseases, but the same forces of nature as those in people are the
causes of their ill-being. The same goes for the symbolism/information
contained in the remedies. I cannot imagine that remedies carry
a different message depending on the species it is used on. We (humans,
animals and remedies) all belong to the same world order.
Even when the superficial reaction of one species to a remedy can
be different from other species, the soul of the remedy is the same.
The deep responses that remedies will trigger are therefore the
same for all. That is why we can exchange remedy information between
veterinary practice and human practice to help the progress of homeopathy.
That is what I learned differently in the second homeopathy school
I visited. Instead of concentrating on treating animal diseases,
we concentrated on learning remedies and understanding prescription
techniques. The basis for the holistic approach to remedies and
repertorising that I learned in this school has allowed me to become
the homeopath I am today.
Conclusion: there is no real difference between veterinary and
human homeopathy. The same remedy information can be used for all
species as long as the treating homeopath knows what is usual and
unusual in the species concerned to detect what is homeopathic.
The homeopath has to be familiar with the species he is treating
and he/she has to recognize what is important and less important
from a regulation, zoonosis, prognosis and homeopathic point of
view.
This editorial is therefore intended for all. We veterinarians
can learn from our ‘human’ colleagues and they can learn
from us.
Coming to the next point, I would like to start by thanking my
colleague Marc Brunson who runs the school (CLH in Liege-Belgium)
where I started to become a homeopath. As I have already said, the
attendance at the school consists of a mixture of veterinary and
human professionals (25-75%). Indeed, many doctors (from all over
French speaking Europe) come to a school run by a veterinary practitioner.
Moreover, he is asked to address most French speaking homeopathy
meetings. And it is not only Marc Brunson, as many veterinary colleagues
will attend and speak at French speaking conferences organised by
the schools for human homeopathy and participate in the various
study groups that work on the materia medica.
There appears to be much less coming together between vets and
human practitioners in the English speaking community. It is my
feeling that one of the reasons is the difference in approach to
the materia medica between the French speaking community and its
English counterparts. The mainstream French approach to the materia
medica (for non-pluralistic homeopaths) finds its sources in the
work of Pascero and Masi whereas in the rest of the world, classification
or ‘Hahnemanism’ appears to be(come) the norm.
This ‘French’ materia medica approach uses much less
situational factors like life stages, family issues, work issues,
etc., in their studies of the remedies. Miasms find their place
in the approach of the materia medica rather than to determine prescription
sequences. Remedy pictures are often more concept driven. This makes
them more accessible for us veterinarians, and allows veterinary
cases to be used in the implementation of these remedy studies.
Of course there is the language and cultural barrier between the
two worlds. The French community is taking the new developments
of the English world on board, but its own publications are not
available for those who do not have a knowledge of the tongue of
Molière. (If there is an interest, I know that all published
material by the CLH is available for translation into English and
distribution throughout the world by whoever is capable of tackling
this Herculean task.)
This brings me to the most important point I wished to make:
One thing that appears to be a constant in the Journal edited by
the CLH is the veterinary and human contributions in the form of
case write-ups and other articles by a large number of practitioners.
I would like to use this space to call upon all readers to write
up cases and to send them to your preferred journal (which is ‘Homeopathy
4 Everyone’ of course). Good case write-ups are important
for the progress of homeopathy.
Write-ups do not need to be examples of perfect prescriptions as
long as they are true to reality, show a thought process and illustrate
a clear improvement that can be attributed to the homeopathic remedy(s)
used. They are the building stones of what homeopathy will become
tomorrow. If you want to participate in the surge to defend homeopathy,
this could be one of your first (and continuing) actions.
Empty your drawers of successful cases and show the world what
homeopathy can achieve!
Enjoy the issue.
Edward de Beukelaer
-- Editor --
Homeopathy 4 Everyone |