| What
is homeopathy?
Homeopathy is a system of medicine that is based on the Law
of Similars. The truth of this law has been verified experimentally
and clinically for the last 200 years.
Let's look at an example: If your child accidentally ingests
certain poisons, you may be advised to administer Syrup of
Ipecac to induce vomiting. Ipecac is derived from the root
of a South American plant called Ipecacuanha. The name, in
the native language, means "the plant by the road which
makes you throw up." Eating the plant causes vomiting.
When a group of healthy volunteers took this substance to
determine the effects of this drug, they found that the drug
induced other symptoms as well. The mouth retained much saliva.
The tongue was very clean. There was a cough so severe that
it led to gagging and vomiting. There was incessant nausea.
While it is expected that vomiting would usually relieve the
nausea, this was not the case.
Such an experiment, using healthy volunteers, is called a
proving, and it is the homeopath's source of information about
the action of a drug.
Of what use could this plant be? If a person were suffering
from a gagging cough after a cold, or a woman were experiencing
morning sickness with incessant nausea that is not relieved
by vomiting, then Ipecacuanha, administered in a minute dose,
especially prepared by a homeopathic pharmacy in accordance
with FDA approved guidelines, can allay the "similar" suffering.
Samuel Hahnemann described this principle by using a Latin
phrase: Similia Similibus Curentur, which translates: "Let
likes cure likes." It is a principle that has been known
for centuries. Hahnemann developed the principle into a system
of medicine called homeopathy, and it has been used successfully
for the last 200 years.
How does homeopathy differ
from conventional medicine?
How does the concept of homeopathy differ from that of conventional
medicine? Very simply, homeopathy attempts to stimulate the
body to recover itself. Let's look at an example: the common
cough.
First, we must accept that all symptoms, no matter how uncomfortable
they are, represent the body's attempt to restore itself to
health. Instead of looking upon the symptoms as something wrong
which must be set right, we see them as signs of the way the
body is attempting to help itself. Instead of trying to stop
the cough with suppressants, as conventional medicine does,
a homeopath will give a remedy that will cause a cough in a
healthy person, and thus stimulate the ill body to restore
itself.
Second, we must look at the totality of the symptoms presented.
We each experience a cough in our unique way. Yet conventional
medicine acts as if all coughs were alike. It therefore offers
a series of suppressive drugs something to suppress the cough,
something to dry the mucus, something to lower the histamine
level, something to ease falling asleep.
Homeopathy, on the other hand, looks for the one substance
that will cause similar symptoms in a healthy person. The person
with a cough characterized by being worse when breathing cold
air, and sounding like a deep bark, will need a quite different
remedy than the person whose cough is loose in the morning,
dry in the evening, and better when sitting up in bed. We characterize
both as "coughs" but they are different illnesses
in the individuals, and therefore require different homeopathic
treatment.
In conventional medical thought, health is seen simply as
the absence of disease. You assume that you are healthy if
there is nothing wrong with you. To a person versed in homeopathy,
health is much more than that. A healthy person is a person
who is free on all levels: physical, emotional, and mental.
Obviously, a person with a broken leg is not free, on the physical
level, to move around. But on a more subtle level, a person
who cannot eat certain foods or is allergic to certain materials
is also experiencing a lack of freedom. It is a good emotional
release to cry at a "tear jerker" movie, but someone
who continues to cry for several weeks afterwards is experiencing
a lack of freedom on the emotional level. Likewise, a person
who cannot absorb what he has read or cannot remember day to
day appointments is experiencing a restriction on the mental
level. The homeopath recognizes such limitations and attempts,
through the use of the properly selected remedies, to restore
the person to health and freedom.
An important basic difference exists between conventional
medical therapy and homeopathy. In conventional therapy, the
aim often is to control the illness through regular use of
medical substances, even if the medication is nothing more
than vitamins. If the medication is withdrawn, however, the
person returns to illness. There has been no cure. A person
who takes a pill for high blood pressure every day is not undergoing
a cure but is only controlling the symptoms. Homeopathy's aim
is the cure: "The complete restoration of perfect health," as
Dr. Samuel Hahneman said.
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