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The Bern Seminars – Page 102

reduced. All life-threatening symptoms must be reduced, what-ever these may be. If she is perspiring a lot, you would let it go because this does not endanger the person. If she suddenly starts urinating a lot, or having diarrhea, in short, if she experiences a kind of aggravation that is not immediately life-threatening, then you should turn your attention towards these aggravations only once the main symptom has been reduced. Most importantly, you have to see an immediate reduction in the patient’s main symptom.

VIDEO
(Therapist) In the beginning we gave Pulsatilla 200, 1M, 10M, and what happened was that the first night she was able to sleep maybe two hours, which was much more than before, and she felt better the next morning but then quickly relapsed. So the very next day – the symptoms were all the same – we gave Pulsatilla 1M, 10M, 50M, just jumping up in the series of three. And the next night, which was the night before last, she was able to sleep – still has to be propped up -for an hour at a time over a six hour period, and then just up briefly to cough, maybe fifteen-twenty minutes and then back to sleep.

LIVE
(G.V.): So this is the idea: the next day she must sleep a little bit more, and then a little bit more on the third day, the fourth day, and so on, then she will be over her crisis. (Laughter) You might laugh now, but you cannot imagine how I felt at the time. When I have such cases I can’t sleep, I just pace around and around the bed. There was once a case of septicemia which I had treated on the spot with Sulphur CM. After which I got busy with the other patients.. Late that night I was quite distraught. I didn’t know how to contact her, so I couldn’t find out whether everything was all right. She took a remedy, but what if the remedy was wrong? I asked myself, why do I go through this, why didn’t I just tell her to take antibiotics? I can’t save everybody. The next