Teleosis School of Homeopathy provides students with a strong
foundation in classical homeopathy for the first two years — then,
in the Advanced Clinical Program, adds in the best of the new
frontiers in homeopathy. By inviting guest speakers who represent
varied approaches, Teleosis reinforces some of its fundamental
values: the importance of homeopathic community, and respect for
different methods both old and new.
Last
November Jackie Clason presented a day-long seminar on the Lanthanides,
the new series of remedies described by Jan Scholten in his latest
book, The Secret Lanthanides. Lou Klein, one of Jackie’s
main teachers, has further elaborated on the meaning of these
remedies, which belong in the Gold Series of the Periodic Table
after Barium. (They were not discovered until the 1940s, and they
do not usually appear in place in printed versions of the Periodic
Table, since they would make the diagram too wide to fit on a
page. Hence the “hidden” or “secret” aspect of the series, themes
which show up in the remedy portraits themselves.)
The idea for the seminar arose the previous summer when I met
Jackie at her home on the island of Martha’s Vineyard, about two
hours from Boston. (The Vineyard, as it’s fondly known, provides
a quiet seaside retreat, a picturesque panorama of gray weathered
cottages and white-pillared whaling mansions, sailboats and lighthouses,
osprey and gulls, clay cliffs and rocky coasts.) Jackie mentioned
that she was using quite a few Lanthanide remedies in her practice.
“That’s odd,” I thought. The top remedy in my practice,
by far, is Carcinosin. Although I was intrigued by Scholten’s
book and studied it carefully, I had rarely used the remedies
in my practice. Why such a difference in two busy practices less
than 100 miles apart? I raise this question to encourage readers
to reflect on remedies for their own unique demographics — and
to suggest one of many factors why different homeopaths can get
such good results with quite different ways of using homeopathy.
For my practice near Harvard Square, Carcinosin makes
sense. My highly educated and often self-employed clients have
achieved academic and professional success by being self-disciplined,
extremely hardworking perfectionists, demanding the highest standards
of themselves, and reading voraciously from an early age, all
Carcinosin traits. How else would they end up at Harvard?
Martha’s Vineyard, on the other hand, attracts a
different type. Although Jackie says she uses a lot of Carcinosin
in her practice (makes sense too – they are nature lovers and
better by the ocean!), it also makes sense that the Vineyard would
attract the Lanthanides. The metaphor of living on an island reflects
Lanthanide themes:
·
They escape
conventional society . . .
·
to be independent
and autonomous,
·
to join a community
of free thinkers;
·
the Vineyard
is known for being progressive politically, spiritually,
in environmental concerns.
·
People can hide
from their past …
·
and find ways
to invent themselves on a deeper, more authentic
level, searching for new self-definition
·
Life on the island
is a struggle due to the high cost of living, and
people patch together different creative ways to support themselves
·
They can move
from isolation and self-reflection
. . .
·
to compassion
for humanity (typical themes of the Buddhist spiritual
journey, and Jackie herself is a practicing Buddhist).
·
Independence and self-individuation are other Lanthanide
themes which the Vineyard fosters
·
On the other
hand, if they get stuck in isolation (the
Vineyard can be a lonely isolated place in winter),
·
they can develop
social anxiety and deep depression
. . .
leading to an epidemic of
alcoholism on the island. Jackie offered her own observation that
addictions and especially alcoholism are a recurring theme in
her Lanthanide cases. While this is not part of Jan Scholten’s
or Lou Klein’s teachings on the Lanthanides, Jackie suggested
it may become a Lanthanide theme if others share her clinical
experience, although she noted that so far the Lanthanide remedies
have not had a curative effect for her clients’ addictions in
the way that, say, Amethyst has in a few of her cases.
Jackie’s seminar provided an excellent review with
illustrative cases of the Lanthanide themes from Scholten’s book.
She challenged us to identify not only the Lanthanide but also
the salt for the cases she presented. She said her experience
bore out Scholten’s observation that the Lanthanides work much
better if the correct salt is chosen rather than using the metallicum
(pure) form as he did at first.
A unique aspect of the seminar was the differential
with other families of remedies.
Like the Compositae,
Lanthanides have themes of
·
becoming a self,
building an identity, a personality, so they may be
·
childlike
or feel childish, immature, not yet individuated
·
boundary issues which shows up as problems with vaccinations,
aversion to doctors and to intrusions, and easily feeling offended
Drug remedies have
themes similar to the Lanthanides:
- feelings of being inward,
disconnected or detached.
- and they can have sensations
like electric shocks.
Lanthanides, like the drug
and magnet remedies, have:
- “magnetized”
as a theme; for example, television or Nintendo addiction, very
suggestible to charismatic person or people, strong attraction
to massage, hypnosis, recreational drugs
- the relationships of both
groups have an attraction-repulsion theme.
Jackie is somewhat of an expert on hormone
remedies (such as those made from pituitary, thyroid,
adrenal or other glands, or from ovaries), having done a presentation
on them at a recent NASH conference. Hormone remedies and the
Lanthanide remedies both have:
·
control issues
·
“inward-directed”
·
spirituality
Bird remedies have the highest degree of overlap with Lanthanide
themes, in Jackie’s experience. Both groups have:
·
eyes/observing
·
freedom
·
hiding
·
idealism
Jackie concluded with the observation that when she
finds herself thinking about both bird remedies and hormone remedies
for a case, the client is likely to need a Lanthanide. She summarized
the Lanthanides with the key words self, deep
and hidden. She noted that a Lanthanide person may
move into isolation and self-reflection,
or self-attack on the physical plane in the form of an auto-immune
disease, for which the Lanthanides are becoming noted.
For further information: Jan Scholten’s The Hidden
Lanthanides
To order the remedies: Remedia in Vienna, www.remedia.at.
For those serious about incorporating these remedies into your
practice, we recommend starting with the kit of the 99 Lanthanides
(and their salts) in a 30c potency.
Jackie graduated from Lou Klein’s Master Clinician
Course, Jeremy Sherr’s Dynamis School US Course, and Paul Herscu’s
New England School of Homeopathy. She continues to study with
Lou Klein, Jan Scholten and Rajan Sankaran. She served as Master
Prover for the proving of Carbon Dioxide and presented a seminar
on hormone remedies at the NASH 2003 Annual Conference. In addition
to her practice on Martha’s Vineyard, she does long-distance supervision
and mentoring. www.clasonhomeopathy.com