| The Allopathic Approach: A Trap for Homeopathy
Allopathy always seems to remain content with spending endless
time to coin a “name” or “broad definition”
for any “new” disease, which is usually nothing more
than a sophisticated sounding word, extended by a drag net of common
symptoms. This now should please the patient as he has been identified
as having an accepted disease. There are plenty patients who have
a non-accepted illness. I refer for instance to any illness that
baffles the scientific community: people who are oversensitive to
everything in the environment (now called multiple or universal
reactors but for a long time referred to as imposters) or people
who react adversely to drugs and get blamed for it. Carl Jung laments
that in his day and age, psychiatry, a step child of medicine, was
not interested in what the patient had to say, but rather in how
to arrive at a diagnosis, describe symptoms, and compile statistics.
Jung says that, for his colleagues and looked at from the clinical
point of view, the human personality of the patient, his individuality,
was of no importance. Patients were labeled, rubber-stamped with
a diagnosis, and for the most part, that settled the matter. I recognize
the homeopath in C. Jung when he says,
“I have in the course of the years accustomed myself wholly
to disregard the diagnosing of specific neuroses, and I have sometimes
found myself in a quandary when some word-addict urged me to hand
him a specific diagnosis,” (C. Jung, 1966, p.86).
Has anything changed nowadays?
Carl Jung practiced homeopathy unconsciously when he advocated
“individuality,” a word that is shunned by the allopathic
community.
The second part in which allopathy shines is its diagnostic endeavors,
with which they want to dazzle the public as “the cutting
edge of research.” All hope is on genetic therapy, but 40
years of this has not resulted in one cure of a patient, yet has
lead to multiple deaths of patients. This bring to our memory how
Pasteur killed thousands of innocent people with his vaccination
for rabies till he reduced the dose, something he should have learned
from Hering who in 1840, forty years ahead of Pasteur, already cured
rabies with Lyssin. But none of these dazzling and scientific techniques
has brought to patients the answer of why they have this illness
and most of the time it has not brought forth a therapeutic answer,
at least not one that brings a true cure, being an elimination of
the diseased terrain to avoid recurrence of the disease.
It is important for the homeopath not to fall into the trap of
“this name giving,” and as a result to be impressed
or even deterred in giving assistance to the patient. This is the
main reason why the homeopath should avoid using the allopathic
general disease name, and rather focus on what the patient has to
say as a “concept.” What do I mean by concepts? A concept
(or we might use Jung’s term ‘complex’ -Footnote
1) can be expressed by one or several words, usually considered
the main theme reflecting the often long-term suffering linked to
painful recollections of the patient. Don’t be surprised if
the patient expresses this to you, even on your question, “What
brings you to me (the CC)?” You will be surprised how patients
are very clear in recognizing the crux of their suffering, and will
answer you with, “I have lack of self worth,” or “I
repress my feelings,” or “I have problems being intimate
with people I love,” or even “I have lost all contact
with the real world, I am always looking for refuge in a dream world!”
These are not disease names, but rather expressions of spiritual
or emotional diseases, and homeopaths should welcome these expressions
by far above the diagnostic named diseases, “I have manic
depressive psychosis,” “I have Chronic Fatigue,”
“I have OCD,” “I have a yeast problem,”
and the countless names allopathy has invented or named after their
eminent discoverers of the disease. Now remember the immortal words
of Kent, “The more the symptoms determine the allopathic disease
name, the less important they are for us in finding our simillimum!”
This reference to Aphorism 153 should always be our guide, no matter
what the allopathic disease name is.
Footnote 1: A complex (a feeling-toned) is a picture of
a psychological nature, often of a traumatic or painful nature,
which make up chiefly the contents of the unconscious. They constitute
the personal and private side of psychic life. Therefore it is often
suppressed (the Natrum elements) or repressed (the Magnesium elements).
Whenever someone during the inquiry touches on such a delicate complex
in a patient, he might react with silence, anger, irritability,
crying, hesitation, stuttering…It corresponds to a painful
“Never Well Since” (NWS) in our homeopathic history.
It is a cluster of images and ideas around an emotional center,
which is the core delusion of the patient. Often negative delusions
(i.e. “I am ugly; I am short; I walk on my knees) are high-feeling
toned complexes and even “positive” delusions (positive
temporarily only for the patient, i.e., “I am a prince; I
am a general”) are generated often by a painful NWS.
The above thoughts are applicable for any allopathic diagnosis,
and therefore also for OCD. I once again see a disturbing but familiar
allopathic trend. As much as modern medicine is always touting the
newest discoveries and progress it is making in these “mysterious”
diseases, (ODD, ASHD, ADD, ASD or Autism Spectrum Disorder), the
main concerns and at the same time the main failures remain exactly
the same over the last 100 years. Let’s give a certain psychological
behavior such description that the majority of children can be dragged
in that “name-net” like fish in the vast sea. My main
concern in this case, is that each child, slightly deviating from
the socially accepted norm, will be caught in this net. This society,
like all societies before, has no place for the individual but only
for the masses controlled by some individuals. Anyone not conforming
to the rules set by some people higher up (those that were allowed
or took the power to express their individualism) is labeled a problem
child, an eccentric and a trouble maker.
In defining these illnesses or syndromes like OCD, allopathy puts
as many symptoms in its definition as they possible could have found
in all these children so that “no child is left behind.”
But to allopathy’s despair, they still have to admit that
they have these “exceptional” cases that do not seem
to fit in that large net of symptoms. It is what we would call,
“individuality,” a dreaded word for allopathy since
it hinders them in classifying these unfortunate victims in a vast
group and then to applying the “protocol” to suppress
as many symptoms as possible. As we will see, allopathy is still
struggling with these two concepts and has to admit their failures
(although in a disguised form) about the two things any patient
or parent of patient would like to hear when suffering from OCD:
What are the causes? And, is there an effective therapy?
Causalities of OCD according to Allopathy
Having studied Internal Medicine and Neurology as a specialization,
I have learned that we always consider an array of possible etiologies
when allopathy is confronted with a disease whose causality is unknown.
Be it Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer, spastic dysphonia and
now OCD, allopathy always concludes, “the following elements
may play a role: Genetic, infectious, environmental, ‘stress,’
the ubiquitous virus, and neurotoxicity,” to name the most
common. In OCD, much attention is paid to neurotransmitter abnormalities,
but therapy using serotonin and norepinephrine are so dubious that
behavior therapy is still the most important treatment. And inevitably,
at the end, a list of questions starts with, “Do you have
this symptom and that symptom? Scoring high on the list automatically
approves you to be the carrier of that disease name and inevitably,
Prozac, Zoloft and Paxil will be tried on you.
I found it important to look at what allopathy has done so far
and what symptoms are grouped in OCD. Those symptoms that are used
most commonly to label you with OCD are the least important to find
the simillimum. Homeopaths, be aware because there is no easier
mistake to make than not to follow Aphorism 153 (rare, strange
and peculiar symptoms of the patient and the remedy are the
guide for the simillimum)! But knowing these allopathic symptoms
will actually have one good consequence: it will help us understand
the dominant miasmatic condition, making us understand why these
children were at risk and where the risk is in future parents having
children. This last aspect is all important, yet because of the
minimal impact and application of good homeopathy, very little applied
to the horror of reality. Will it ever happen?
Homeopathy’s View on OCD’s Causality
We should have learned a little more from one of the greatest
thinkers of the previous century, Carl Jung. Neuroses, phobias,
schizophrenia and other related diseases then, were just as frequent
as in our time, but obviously because of lack of suppressive allopathic
medication, more frank and outspoken.
Clinical diagnoses such as OCD are helpful, since they give the
physician and homeopath a certain orientation. They do not, however,
help the patient. The crucial thing is the story. It alone shows
the human background, the human suffering with its triggers and
miasmatic reactions, and only with the knowledge it conveys can
the doctor’s therapy begin. Jung practiced as a homeopath
without knowing it because he devoted much of his attention to what
he called meaningful connections or what we would refer
to as NWS or “Ailments from.” For him the term psychogenesis
meant the following: “The essential cause of a neurosis and
psychosis with its dreams and delusions is of psychic nature. It
may, for instance be a psychic shock, a grueling conflict, a wrong
kind of psychic adaptation, etc.” (C. Jung, Psychogenesis
of Mental Disease, p. 226). Moments when a new psychological
adjustment, a new adaptation is demanded, facilitate the outbreak
of a neurosis. The neurotic is ill because he is unconscious of
his problems. The neurotic is a person who can never have things
in the world as he would like them, and he cannot enjoy the past
either. Delusions and dreams are not what allopathic medicine understands
them to be-- senseless thoughts or irrational happenings, disconnected
and completely devoid of any truth. If this were the case, we would
never use the many pages of delusions and dreams in our repertory
and yet there is not even one chronic case where you could not discover
delusions. Delusions and dreams all contain a germ of meaning,
a kernel of truth! A personality, a constitution, a temperament,
a life history, a pattern of hopes and desires lie behind a delusion.
The fault is ours if we do not understand them.
Look for the Core Delusion
When we read the description of OCD, “recurrent and persistent
thoughts, excessive and obsessional thoughts, and repetitive behavior
such as hand washing, praying, tearing things, tapping with finger
or foot, etc.) it fits perfectly the homeopathic definition of a
delusion or fixed idea as mentioned before. There may be many delusions
present in one patient, but the one that interests us most is the
“core delusion.” How do we define this?
A core delusion is the expression of the dominant, ruling emotion.
It will be the driving force behind the actions, thoughts and plans
of the patient, and will create along the way, secondary
delusions. Therefore all compensations and secondary delusions have
their origin in the core delusion. It is imperative for everyone
(as we all have a core delusion) to execute compensations, which
can be regarded as defense mechanisms to flee from the core delusion
(when it is negative) or to reinforce the positive delusion. The
patient will have to execute much compensation to stay away from
his inevitable fate: he will have to face this core delusion at
some point in his life. The patient’s “good” delusion
obviously is bad for him as it impedes his self-growth. If we don’t
ask enough “Why’s?” to the psychological behavior
of the patient, he will express his compensations far away from
the core delusion and try to coach you in prescribing for the mask
rather than the shadow side, a mask that is formed by all these
compensations. This will lead to the selection of a simile: “The
mask is the simile (compensations), the shadow side is the simillimum
(the core delusion)!” An Ancient Chinese Proverb expresses
the same: “Confucius says to return to the root is to find
the meaning, but to pursue appearance is to miss the source!”
Finding the core delusion, is what we call the “Ah-ah,”
the light bulb that appears: “I see the essence of my patient.”
This core delusion is the center of the disease progression of the
individual. All his mental-emotional, and physical compensations
will be determined and guided by the primary delusion.
One should not despair when not finding the core delusion: as much
as this is a very important piece of information, the homeopath
can still find the remedy, by filling the rest of the pieces. And
it is always advisable
Once we have to make the differential diagnosis between two or three
remedies, to look carefully at their delusions and see which ones
match the patient’s picture more.
OCD’s Forgotten Etiology
It should be clear to the reader, that to find OCD’s causality,
as for most psychosomatic diseases, one should concentrate on the
psychological traumas leading to fixed ideas or delusions of the
patient more than on anything else. First of all, why do homeopaths
give so much importance to delusions? In general, in homeopathic
practice, delusion rubrics are scarcely used and frequently misunderstood.
When homeopaths attempt to find the simillimum, they need to take
into account Aphorism 153 rubrics, “rare, strange, and
peculiar symptoms”, and there is no doubt that delusions
belong in this category. Let’s not forget that there is a
second important requirement for selecting the simillimum: symptoms
must have remained permanent over some time! Since a delusion
is a fixed idea, by definition, nothing can be more permanent. Therefore
a delusion should be considered to be among the most valuable symptoms
for the determination of the simillimum, since it belongs by definition
to the Aphorism 153 rubrics. The delusion, in the homeopathic sense--and
even according to Jung--always contains some grain of truth, but
the individual’s and other people’s quality of life
is affected by the patient’s not being able to let go of this
fixed idea.
Any one of us might have the feeling at some point in our life
that we are all alone in this world and that no one cares about
us (e.g., isolation through betrayal by spouse or best friend, the
loneliness of an immigrant, or that caused by a physical handicap),
but most often this is a fleeting moment: not a delusion
but an illusion. A delusion is an advanced state of an
illusion. In our repertory we often find the same remedies under
both rubrics; it is really a matter of intensity. If, two years
after the fact, a psychological trauma still evokes the sentiment,
“I am all alone in the world,” and if all my actions
and thoughts are ruled by this notion, then it can be defined as
a delusion. Such a fixed idea will dominate the life of the patient:
everything he thinks, does, and plans is fueled by that delusion.
These fixed thoughts, often morbid, overcome the patient and have
powers of their own that are hard to control. One will observe
that most delusions or fixed ideas come from fixed emotions.
Recurrent or long-lasting unresolved emotions are apt to create
a pattern in our brain, a memory that will be triggered by the slightest,
even innocent insinuation. Eventually, we carry over these particular
emotions--anger that flares up easily, involuntary weeping, a sense
of anguish and foreboding, obsessive compulsive behavior, etc.--because
we have become addicted to them and they have become part
of our personality (Thoughts, persistent in the language
of our rubrics)!
This psychological trauma to create amongst other conditions, OCD,
often stems from a very young age on. The “young” age
is never to be underestimated as this can refer to the intra uterine
events: allopathy has still not linked emotions of the pregnant
mother to the unborn fetus, while we see the results of these unfortunate
traumas in many of our young patients. For many diseases, such as
OCD, or even murderous behavior in children, the homeopath can answer
the two most important questions that allopathy always fails to
address: “What is the cause of this behavior?” and “Is
there an effective therapy for my child with such behavior?”
This is equally true for many adults with similar OCD behavior.
What Emotions can Cause OCD?
To say that certain emotions alone would be responsible for the
appearance of OCD, would be naïve from my point. As usual,
“the virus is nothing, the terrain is everything!” The
painful emotions are Jung’s “meaningful associations”
as referred to before. But it is the terrain that will determine
if OCD will appear. The emotion is the match that lights the fire
if there is wood (terrain) available. Any homeopath should know
the theory of miasms (see my book, Hahnemann Revisited)
and therefore recognize that the majority of the OCD symptoms belong
to the sycotic miasm. So if the patient for instance has a dominant
psoric miasmatic state, and the same trigger (emotion) happens to
him, no OCD will appear. The “terrain” or predominant
miasmatic state of the patient is the determining factor. It is
the inherent tendency to respond automatically along certain qualitatively
predetermined, individual, characteristic and fixed response patterns.
Our reactions to certain events are compulsive, not
elective. Each individual reacts according to some innate
predetermined emotional pattern that makes it impossible for him
to respond otherwise.
Having said that, almost any emotion mentioned in our repertory
can be the trigger or match that lights the fire. Of course some
will be present more than others in OCD or “kind of OCD”
patients. I refer here to emotions such as fright, abandonment,
betrayal, domination, cruelty and indignation.
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Dr. Luc de Schepper will give a seminar in Frankfurt/Main,
Germany (Saalbau Bockenheim) on the 7-8th November 2009. For more
details and booking please see the following website: www.dgmh.org
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