her to stay in bed because this is a precarious situation. Unless you force your patient, in cases like this and under homeopathic treatment, to stay in bed and recuperate you are going to have relapses that are not going to be manageable: if she goes out and gets a cold, immediately she will revert back to pneumonia. Once this has happened, Pulsatilla will no longer be able to manage her pneumonia because her illness will have progressed to another remedy, one which you will not recognize.
The difficulty with homeopathic remedies is that the patient feels much better relatively soon so they feel that they can go out. This is not good in such serious cases. Don’t let your patients go outside, no matter how well they may feel. The physical organism must have time to recuperate or it will suffer a relapse. Consider how long it must have taken before this disease reached its present stage, twenty-thirty days, they will need as much rest. Take for example a case of infectious mononucleosis: you may give a remedy and the next day the patient says that their energy is back and everything is fine. Make them stay in bed anyway. Pneumonia: stay in bed. Hepatitis: stay in bed. I advise this because I myself have not stayed in bed; so I know first-hand the consequences of not giving the organism enough time to recuperate thoroughly. The sort of relapse that threatens in difficult cases of this kind is especially hard to handle: the organism goes into a state in which you can very easily miss the remedy because it’s too deep and too confused. Keep this in mind with homeopathy, otherwise you will be disappointed. This woman will have to receive antibiotics if she goes back into a pneumonia state because Pulsatilla will no longer be able to help her.
VIDEO
(Therapist): …she now feels stronger, but it’s still day-by-day. Oh, and the fever: each day it has held down another degree; right now it is staying under 100, yesterday it was staying under 101, and you remember it was like 102,103 before.