| Felicity is a black and white female spayed feral
cat approximately 10 years old. She is rescued by a very kind lady
who runs a privately funded rescue centre in Wales. (http://www.seaviewanimalshelter.1to1.org/
)
The following is a resume of our Email exchanges:
"Felicity is a very mild, gentle natured cat. She is slender
and fine boned. When we found her, she was stuck up a tree with
a crisp bag stuck over her head. Whereas most ferals would go berserk
if you tried to rescue them from that situation, Felicity merely
wet herself. She has never liked being picked up but will happily
be stroked as long as she is on a high surface; if she is low down
she tends to panic and moves away, though not hysterically. Whereas
the other ferals will run away if a stranger comes into the house,
Felicity is happy to stay around as long as they don’t try
to touch her. She is gentle natured with the other animals (dogs
and cats) and never shows any malice even to new cats who move in.
She rarely moves away from the close confines of the house and tends
to spend a lot of time indoors.
Looks-wise
she is very plain but she has an aura about her that makes her very
distinctive. If you imagine a cartoon cat that has been drawn to
look very sexy and feminine, then you have a picture of Felicity.
She spends most of her time sitting, treading and purring, while
delicately, slowly and sexily batting her eyelids. She just OOZES
sex appeal. I have never seen a cat spend so much time treading
and purring.
She has always been slightly snuffly and has had several bouts
of tonsillitis. Her last bout was about two months ago. The last
bout was treated with homoeopathy (local prescription), the previous
ones with antibiotics. The tonsillitis always takes the same form:
she starts off becoming slightly more snuffly and then the glands
in her throat (just under her jaw) start to swell (left one always
swells to twice the size of the right one), she then gets a lot
of phlegm in her throat that she can’t seem to hawk up. She
is better for warmth (warm room but doesn’t hug the fire)
and worse for cold food. She has no thirst when it is at it’s
worst and drinking seems to make her gag. She never seems to have
a runny nose.
She is just starting with another bout. She started to become snuffly
again last night and this morning was off her food. The glands in
her neck are starting to swell.
She has never had any other health problems, has never been vaccinated
and has only had vet treatment for spay and dental.
When ill she alternates between sitting looking depressed and withdrawn
and her normal treading behaviour. The glands feel hard but it is
difficult to know whether she moves away when I touch them because
she is in pain, or just because I am being overly familiar. She
is happy to be stroked along the back and the top of the head but
if you touch anywhere else she gets panicky. She tends to go off
her food (raw) and only wants to eat tinned, even that has to be
soft and mushy; her appetite slowly diminishes until she doesn't
want to eat at all. She also doesn't drink. Sometimes she goes to
the food and then doesn't want it, at other times she shows no interest
in food."
Based on a repertorisation, I prescribed Lachesis which did not
have the required effect.
"The Lachesis has only made Flis more depressed and there
has been no improvement. She is going to food but doesn't want to
eat. The left hand gland is swelling more.
When the problem occurs she seems to have phlegm stuck in her throat
that won't seem to go up or down and she does a lot of hawking.
I can't get to look in her throat as she gets upset and goes slightly
demented if I confine her in anyway; if I try to wrap her in a towel
to do it she goes even more demented. She is happy to be stroked
if she is in control. She sounds nasal but has no discharge; she
sounds as though she is breathing through a blocked nose. From the
amount of swelling on the left hand side, you would anticipate the
gland to be far more swollen than it is."
I make a clumsy prescription of Phosphorus and a few weeks later:
"Felicity is going worse. She has what I can only describe
as suffocating catarrh. She has no nasal discharge of any kind but
she seems to have a lot of catarrh in her throat; when she tries
to clear the catarrh, she struggles to breath and her eyes go wide
with fear. She doesn't seem to be able to hawk the catarrh up. Her
appetite has gone and she is huddled up looking very depressed and
unhappy."
Based on ‘respiration impeded when swallowing’ I presribe
Bromium 12C 3x per day for 3 days:
"I gave her two doses over about a six hour period. She had
no more hawking of flem until the next morning and her appetite
returned. She received another dose the next day as she seemed to
slip back.
This lunchtime when I took the dogs for their walk, Flis started
to follow us down the lane, this is something that she has never,
ever done in all of the years that I have had her. I chased her
back to the house and set off again, but again she started purposefully
following us. Once again I chased and back and made sure that she
didn't get chance to follow and then went on the walk. I came back
from the same direction that I had left and found Flis half way
down the lane, sat in the middle of the lane, staring in our direction.
As soon as I arrived she was happy to come back to the house.
She didn't seem anxious or happy just blank, sort of robot like."
This last comment did not announce anything good, so one month
later after the first dose of Bromium:
"Felicity is really struggling. She is full of mucous and
looks really distressed. She looks particularly distressed when
she tries to clear the mucous from her throat. She has discharged
a little bit of catarrh from her nose that is yellow in colour but
the mucous just seems to be clogging up her insides. Felicity is
now off her food and drinking a lot. She tends to drink small amounts
often."
I gave pulsatilla 9C 3x per day and ordered Lac-humanum 30.
The Pulsatilla did not make much difference but Felicity improved
very quickly after her dose of Lac Humanum.
2 months later.
"Felicity's improvement has ground to a halt: she has had
no recurrence of the tonsillitis though her glands in her neck are
very slightly swollen. Her coat still doesn't look good and a couple
of times a day, she tries to clear phlegm from her throat. She is
eating well and seems content but tends to hang round the water
bowls, though she doesn't necessarily drink when she hangs round
them. I have tried giving her another dose but that hasn't made
any difference.
I think the change is sort of borderline between important difference
and perhaps not."
Felicity is given one dose of Lac Humanum 200.
Six months later
"Felicity is doing really well. All the swelling from her
glands went and hasn't recurred. She still has the odd episode of
clearing catarrh from her throat but this doesn't happen often.
She still sounds slightly nasal but always has, so I don't think
that will go. Behaviour-wise, she is slightly less flighty than
she was but only slightly. I can pick her up much more easily now
and she doesn't shy away so much when I go to stroke her. All in
all very good progress."
Comments:
The way I selected the remedy is, at the least, hazardous but this
system has helped me several times in the past. In cases where nothing
seems to fit and several remedies failed, I have the tendency to
look in very small rubrics of the repertory for ideas. I found Lac-h
mentioned under: External throat, swelling, cervical glands, left.
(This fits my lazy nature: only one remedy!) When I checked in previous
repertorisations, I found out that the same remedy also was mentioned
under: Throat, Tenacious mucous.
Again, with the same article of Tinus Smits in my mind, this seemed
a cat that did not have its place. First she is born out of a ‘crisp
bag’. She is not close to her owners, she does not run away,
she doesn’t run off from strangers, you can stroke her when
she is on a height, she tolerates stroking much less when she is
on the floor. The only way she seems to express herself is through
her oozing sex appeal, but then like a cartoon character. Has this
cat an identity? (Lack of identity is mentioned in Tinus Smits’
article.)
What counts is that the remedy made a huge difference in physical
symptoms and brought some relaxation in this cat’s behaviour
and this for at least six months (equivalent to approximate 2 years
in a person) without the need for repetition of the remedy.
The reasons why I presented these cases are the following:
One could easily think that Lac Humanum should be replaced in cats
with Lac Felinum for the sake of helping a feline patient to find
its identity. Tinus Smits explains in his article how the mother’s
milk is one of the substances that helps a baby in the process of
finding its identity in the outside world. He writes: "The
main focus of this remedy proved to be incarnation in current life.
The process of incarnation that takes place during pregnancy is
surely not complete at birth and the mother’s milk helps the
baby come down gradually."
(It was my feeling that in both these cases the patients were not
really there.)
Logic seems to dictate that for kittens the queen’s milk
should fill this role. These cases indicate that such logic may
not apply.
In general I find that logic does not apply very well to Homeopathy.
Results of provings, results of documented and honestly represented
cases, the importance of ‘as if’ situations/symptoms
and good reviews of remedies are much more useful.
It is also important in homeopathy to be creative and not to stick
to stiff concepts. As long as we use the principle that what is
‘strange, unusual, striking and bizarre’ is the basis
for deciding on the appropriateness of a remedy for the patient,
we have to (can) go outside our comfort zones and look further than
the remedies or their indications we are used to. In the second
case, the presence of one remedy in a very restrictive rubric brought
my attention to the remedy. In hindsight, I can justify the use
of this remedy by pointing out that the owner mentioned several
times in her mails how the left gland was more swollen than the
right. When in consultations or other homeopathic exchanges certain
symptoms are repeated, they may be the indication of the importance
of this symptom and it is always worth looking into this symptom
as a thread to a successful remedy.
Another message I cannot repeat enough is that veterinarians can
only progress if they study what human homeopathy does. In my opinion,
there is no such thing as veterinary homeopathy. There is only homeopathy
and the experience one has to treat one or more species. I am sure
that, without being over confident, our colleagues that deal with
humans can learn a thing or two from our cases as well.
The message that is contained in a homeopathic remedy is universal.
Conclusion.
Instead of talking about veterinary homeopathy, let’s call
it homeopathy for animals.
I will be looking forward to comments from you, the readers of
the E-zine.
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