- The argument between the academic and the practical
- Different roads leading to the one place?
- Being ideologically promiscuous
- Homœopathic Facial Analysis (HFA) – strong and
unchanging
- The two modalities that exist in every chronic disease
- The mentals – not the key to unlocking the remedy
- Generals – more discriminating than mentals
- Physical form is unique – the human condition is not
- 90% of valid information is non verbal
- The body is a vault that keeps past memories alive
- Nature has our best interests at heart
- Our facial features have molded into a design most beneficial
for our individual needs
A former patient of mine who has studied homoeopathy for more
than twenty years, described HFA as the most usable system she
has ever known because of its straight forward simplicity.
In any walk of life, professional or technical, there is an
age old argument between those who are practical and those who
are academic, and in homoeopathy it is no different. Accountants
often disagree with economists, while builders shake their heads
as they look at the drawings of the architect. There has always
been a difference between theorists and those at the coalface.
My patient was stating that HFA is coalface homoeopathy. It
is designed for the clinic because it comes from the clinic
and its membership is dominated by working practitioners whose
bottom line is ease and reproducible results.
This does not mean theory is irrelevant, but the argument about
whether it is practical, is too important to be overlooked.
During a discussion I once had with an Osteopath who also studied
homoeopathy, he mentioned how there were so many theories in
homoeopathy by comparison to other modalities. I replied, 'Wouldn't
that be a good thing? After all doesn't this show a thinking
profession?' His reply was 'No, it shows a profession that has
too much time on its hands!'
The problem for him when it came to homoeopathy was not the
system itself, but the multitude of competing theories that
kept emerging in reference to practice. Most disturbing is how
many different theories are adopted by practitioners, as if
they are interchangeable and saying the same thing. Some of
these theories have entirely different opinions on miasms, remedies
and even pathology. Some do not focus on miasms at all while
for others they are the central core. Some have different ways
of prescribing, different modes of delivering the remedy, different
potency scales and different ways of taking a case, yet they
are all being viewed by some practitioners as if they are different
roads leading to the one place.
Many homoeopaths act in a manner that is ideologically promiscuous,
sacrificing quantity for quality in a search to repeat the rush
that comes from being 'amazed'. Promiscuity never delivers the
comfort and depth we instinctively crave. Promiscuity is a short
term fix to an insatiable need for stimulation. But a constant
need for stimulation comes from a lack of sustainable fulfillment.
This is the difference between eating porridge and chocolate.
People don't crave what is nourishing and satisfying because
satisfaction is the opposite of craving. Cravings occur when
satisfaction is momentary but unsustaining, which causes our
desire for more.
Regardless of whether it is food, drugs or knowledge, jumping
from one to another is neither healthy nor productive. It is
not professional development that is in question, but the search
for the thrill that comes from 'insight' which can be addictive
and even dangerous. It is addictive in the way any thrill is
addictive, because it leaves you wanting more. This makes some
research authors feel pressured into churning out 'discoveries'
because of public demand. It also often makes continuous or
annual discoveries look suspicious to other researchers, who
know how much time it takes to research a project thoroughly.
Theories that come out annually will be judged rightly or wrongly
as more concerned with supply and demand, than advancing real
understanding. This is a practical reality of life; supply and
demand drives everything, including homoeopathy, but the problem
as always is that anything mass produced often sacrifices quality
for quantity.
HFA is not a market driven system, because once you know it
– you know it. The system itself has remained virtually
unchanged since its conception, which shows the strength of
its foundation. While the philosophy continues to evolve and
expand, getting progressively deeper yet simpler at the same
time, (see Appearance and Circumstance and Soul & Survival)
the process of applying HFA in the clinic remains fundamentally
strong and unchanging.
When a patient enters my clinic, there is nothing to differentiate
the HFA system from standard classical homoeopathy. In the beginning
the consultation centres around the patient's presenting complaint,
examining the type of pain they experience including times,
aggravations and other factors. Once this has concluded, the
consultation extends into the patient’s life story. Generally
this takes place easily and naturally because it is rare for
any chronic disease not to have two primary modalities. The
first modality is that the patient and their symptoms are worse
when they are tired. The second modality is that the patient
and their symptoms are worse when they are stressed.
While these two modalities seem obvious, the ramifications
that come from understanding why they exist in every case of
chronic disease is so broad they change homoeopathic philosophy
completely, and yet still we ignore them.
Stars exist in the night sky; they are obvious and have always
existed. As a result we don't pay them much attention and treat
their existence with the contempt that comes from familiarity.
Chronic disease with the modalities - worse when tired or stressed,
is in the same position as the stars in the sky. Stars are not
just little lights that twinkle when it gets dark, they are
nuclear powerhouses that drive the material universe, and by
understanding stars we can understand the origins and make-up
of how life began. Accepting “worse when tired or stressed”
without thinking, is the same as seeing the stars but not understanding
their significance. Understanding why every chronic disease
is worse when the patient is tired or stressed has the potential
to reform homoeopathic philosophy and create the next leap forward
- but it is must be properly understood. (See Soul & Survival
for more about personal energy). This is the first big difference
between HFA and contemporary homoeopathy.
Once a patient understands the link between personal energy
levels and disease, it is easy to take them to the next step
and review the impacts life has had by discussing their personal
history. This is the second major difference between HFA and
other contemporary methods. Contemporary homœopathy uses
life stories to find the inner core of the patient. For some
it is an attempt by the practitioner to uncover a subtlety to
distinguish one remedy from another, a necessary process for
those who practice 'personalised drug picture' type prescribing.
In another approach, life stories are used as a way of getting
the patient to delve into their pain until they reach the point
of a primal scream and open themselves up to an epiphany. This
approach is psychoanalysis dressed in a new suit. The process
is not unsound, but psychological medicine was forced to drop
this technique in favour of more practically based methods,
because the process took far too much time and results were
simply not proportional to effort. In HFA however, life stories
are used as a way of ascertaining stress, exhaustion and repeating
circumstances. Biographies sometimes yield good rubrics but
not always, which is why in Homoeopathic Facial Analysis the
mentals are not regarded as the key to unlocking the remedy.
Life themes are repeating patterns and HFA practitioners take
them literally without interpretation. For example, if a patient
came from an alcoholic background and made the decision that
they themselves would never drink because of the damage they
had seen alcohol do, but their partner or child drinks more
than they should, then alcohol becomes a rubric because it is
a repeating life theme. I do not ask how they feel about alcohol
or what physical sensation it causes, I just accept the impact
this substance has made and note it as an influential stress.
Some may find it unusual at this time to go against the tide
of mental’s prescribing. Most current methods attempt
to come up with ways of precision focusing on feelings or beliefs.
HFA is the opposite and this is its third major point of difference.
To describe why the mentals are not as discriminating as generals
is a book in itself, but physical form is unique where as the
human condition is not. The aspirations desires and needs of
most human beings are similar and therefore not distinct, and
certainly not as individual as a physical feature like fingerprints.
The theory has always been that mind and soul forms physical
form but I am not so sure that is true. Other people's attitudes,
attractions, opinions, repulsions, suspicions, friendliness,
openness and sexual desire are driven by how we look, and what
feelings our looks evoke in them. This in turn shapes how we
view the world because of the people and attitudes that have
come our way. A sexually vulnerable looking woman like Marilyn
Monroe will have different experiences and beliefs about human
nature than a woman whose looks are stronger, and as a result
has not shared the experiences caused by having those looks.
Men will act differently around these two women because of the
feelings each create. Not everyone acts in the same way to the
same person because looks interplay with life experience bringing
forth different reactions depending on personal history. In
one man, a woman's vulnerability may bring out a predatory side,
while in another that same vulnerability can make some males
protective or even paternal.
Experts agree that 90% of communication is non-verbal. One
study at UCLA indicated that up to 93% of communication effectiveness
is determined by nonverbal cues. So why are homoeopaths not
using or embracing such vital information, particularly when
clinical effectiveness is totally dependent on gathering the
facts? The reality is that up until now it has been impossible
because we didn't have the right tools, but with Homoeopathic
Facial Analysis there is now an effective way of gaining this
vital information. The reason we need to dig and delve to look
into the labyrinth of the unconscious mind, is because we are
only getting ten percent or less of the information we need,
the rest is hidden in our body. Ninety percent of the facts
are missing because they cannot be verbally acquired, regardless
of intellectual promises to the contrary. Homoeopathic Facial
Analysis solves this problem, because it is the only available
homoeopathic system designed to read facial structure in a clinical
and exclusively homoeopathic way. This is one of the reasons
why its success rates are so high.
The body expresses more than pain. It is a vault that keeps
the memories of the past alive to be used in the present when
necessary. That is the purpose of evolution, to adapt to the
constant stresses of the past so the present has a better chance
of survival. But what homoeopathic system caters to this jewel
of nature apart from Homoeopathic Facial Analysis? – None.
Chronic disease is hardly ever a disease in the infectious sense
of the word. There is no asthma virus or cancer germ because
chronic disease is an outcome. It is a result of all the events
and stresses that have come before it. Chronic disease tells
us the story of the patient, how they have lived and what they
have endured. The body is designed to store memory. How can
new life be created without the physical transference of memory
via genes?
Over time ducks evolved webbed feet because they spent so much
time hunting in the water. As a result benevolent nature decided
that the duck would benefit if its feet were webbed. Because
we know how to read the signs, we can tell that any animal with
webbed feet spends a lot of time in or around water. We don't
have to intellectualise this information because we accept that
physical form in animals remembers, and adapts to consistency
or stress. Why do we think human beings are any different? Why
would nature be less benevolent to us than to a duck?
Have you ever tried to convey an emotion to another person
while keeping a deadpan and unchanging face? Try conveying real
anger without intonation or facial expression. It cannot be
done and do you know why? Because the human face is specifically
designed to be the main conveyor of emotion. Not just the emotions
we feel but also as a medium of communicating what emotions
we need to get from others. Every practitioner knows that certain
patients keep attracting the same type of people and this is
why. Not only do we instinctively and unconsciously through
our face display our emotional needs, we are also unconscious
experts at reading what others through their face are asking
of us. Some who respond will do so with honour but others will
capitalise on this request.
This is the fourth major area of difference between HFA and
more contemporary methods. HFA knows how to read this unspoken
facial language and its practitioners can read what memories
are locked in the patient’s unconscious.
After the patient has finished their story, what we call a
“top to toe” examination is verbally conducted,
asking the patient a totality relating to any pathology or pain
they may experience. This is called a top to toe because we
start with the head and work our way down. Starting with the
head my questions will be
* Do you suffer from headaches or migraines?
* Do you have any skin condition of the scalp?
* Is there any problem with your hair?
When there is an affirmative reply, a check is made to find
any modality that accompanies the symptom. Once all the information
about this symptom is found further areas of the body are checked
– this involves a lot of leading questions
* Do you have any problems with your eyes?
* Are you prone to conjunctivitis or any other repeating infection?
Once this process is complete the physical generals will stand
out. The headache was worse of the right and at night, so too
was the knee pain. The liver pain is a constant problem (<right
side), so too is their difficulty falling asleep (<night).
Each little section does not have to be repertorised because
they are particulars, but the < night and < right side
are valuable physical generals.
Because the body is designed to adapt, being able to read it
is vital. When a body builder trains in a gym their muscles
adapt to the heavy weights, gaining size and mass. If that same
person decided to take up marathon running instead, their body
would become a different shape, shedding fat and bulk in an
effort to make them lighter for long distance running. The same
happens inside the brain. The more we focus our attention on
a subject or skill, the more the neurons in our brain break
past links to create new ones. The key to what happens with
the body and brain is frequency. Nature is a system that ensures
that physical form adapts itself to need. In the past whenever
human beings concentrated on a task, either physical or mental,
it was because that task was important to survival. Nature helps
us with important tasks by allowing our body to readjust and
adapt quickly to any repeated task. This is why practice makes
perfect and why habits and addictions are difficult to break.
The human face is part of nature's adaptable make-up and plays
a vital role in acquiring need. Most of the time we don't need
to be told that our patient is anxious, exhausted or tense,
it shows itself in how they carry themselves but even more,
it is etched on their face. The process of evolution is remarkable
and it shows that nature has our best interests at heart. But
evolution and adaptation are long term processes that rely on
holding the memories of the past. Snow leopards for example,
have changed their coat colour to better suit their surroundings.
In the jungle the yellow and black of a large cat’s coat
is perfect for the sun and shadows. In the snow this jungle
coat would be a hindrance not a help, so nature allows the coat
to change into white so the leopard can now blend with the snow.
However these adaptations are only useful provided the environment
doesn't change. If the snow leopard suddenly moved to the jungle
its coat would be a hazard because it is the wrong reaction
to the environment.
Human beings have these same forces of nature and we also adapt
to our most stressful and dangerous environment. However, before
nature commits to any physical change, the stress or conditions
in the environment must be long-term and stable.
Every one of us has physically adapted and evolved to suit
the changing needs of survival, and the area where this physical
change has been most prevalent is on our face. This is because
our most consistent threat comes from the group we live in.
Human beings are less shaped by weather than other animals although
obviously environment plays a part, especially with blue (syphilitic)
people but that is a much longer story (see Soul & Survival).
While Africans look different to Europeans or Asians we are
anatomically all the same. Weather is less of a physiological
impetus because we can build shelters and fires.
Our peripheral body does not have to continually adjust to
life in the elements because that is not where our greatest
threat to survival comes from. Our body does however have to
adjust and find a survival edge to life in a group. Like all
group animals each human being's greatest threat is the person
next to them, because individuals within groups must always
compete for resources (see Soul & Survival). Evolution is
only successful when it adapts and stores the challenging circumstances
of the past. Evolution is playing the odds with the snow leopard,
betting that the cold and icy conditions of the past will continue
to be the prevalent stress in the present. Human beings have
also faced generations of tribulations and have adapted to the
physical demands of living in groups. Our body language and
facial features have molded and etched themselves into a design
that is most beneficial to our individual needs. Homoeopathic
Facial Analysis not only helps us select a remedy, it helps
the HFA practitioner recognise each person's basic requirements
for survival within a group. Human communities survive by individuals
performing different niches and these traits along with emotional
needs are displayed, as one would expect, to anyone who knows
how to read them. Now let’s return to facial analysis
in the clinic.
After completing the physical examination I then take photos
of my patient (see Homoeopathic Facial Analysis). This is major
difference number five between HFA and contemporary homoeopathy.
After taking my pictures I leave the patient in the waiting
room while I examine their facial features for shape, size and
symmetry (see Homoeopathic Facial Analysis). Each facial feature
is then classified into a designated colour group of yellow,
red or blue, each colour group represents a miasm; yellow is
psora, red is sycosis and blue is syphilis (see Appearance and
Circumstance).
Homoeopathic Facial Analysis determines the dominant miasm
of my patient. While Hahnemann focused on finding the dominant
miasm within remedies, analysing the dominant miasm in people
has not received the same attention. Once my repertorisation
is complete and I know the dominant miasm of my patient, all
that remains is to give the repertorised remedy with the same
dominant miasm to my patient. Normally a repertorisation based
on the generals will leave up to twenty remedy possibilities,
but if I know my patient is syphilitically dominant and Mercury,
Conium and Aurum are in my repertorisation, my choice of remedy
shrinks from twenty possibilities to three. If my patient is
blue (syphilis) then so too must the remedy otherwise we don't
have a perfect similimum - and that is how Homoeopathic Facial
Analysis is done. With the HFA method, practitioners no longer
have to struggle over essence or wait like Kent suggested for
ten years or more, just to become proficient. Many graduates
can achieves results of 80% and upwards after studying Homoeopathic
Facial Analysis for only a year even in the most difficult cases
of chronic disease.
Developing Homœopathic Facial Analysis (HFA) has been
a rewarding journey for both myself, my fellow practitioners
and my students. Clinical success is consistent and the insight
attained through studying the link between behaviour and facial
features has opened my eyes to universal laws and how homœopathy
taps into this phenomena.