(G.V.): But not preceding these episodes, just a few months before? (M.P.): Yes. After I had the marijuana I wasn’t well: I was very tired and I wanted to sleep. The doctor diagnosed a virus; so, he put me on some antibiotics, which I took.
(G.V.): For how long?
(M.P.): I don’t think I finished the course actually.
(G.V.): How long?
(M.P.): A few days, maybe five days.
(G.V.): Are you a restless person? Are you able to sit still?(M.P.): Well, I can sit still, but inside I am restless on a mental level, I need stimulation on a mental level. I like to be stimulated intellectually, philosophically, that is where my restlessness lies perhaps. I am not a great doer, I don’t rush around doing things.
LIVE
(G.V.): What does he mean by that? He is concerned about philo-sophical matters. He could be Sulphur asking about the meaning of life. We are running parallel to the remedy that he needs, and it doesn’t fit into any category which I could put him in.
(A.): He obviously had troubles finding his way professionally, eventually he became a therapist. He could have become a bio-energetic therapist because of these fears, that is part of his remedy.
(G.V.): Because of his fears, yes. Because of his anxieties and his fears he may have become a bio-energetic therapist, perhaps because it is easier than becoming a homeopath. Bio-energetic therapy is very easy, in a month you can become a bio-energetic therapist, but it takes up to five years to become a homeopath. His wife is a homeopath, that is why she knows the remedy. The remedies he was given were Lycopodium and Cannabis indica. He’s philosophical. You are now approaching the remedy, but you still have to look at what he says from another perspective. The way that a patient will sometimes talk is not always direct, therefore we cannot take at face value whatever a person says, we have to see it in the context of that person. Now, who is that