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The Celle Seminars – Page 43

(A.14): I have my problems with Pulsatilla.
(G.V.): Many people do. You are not alone.
(A.14): When I think of Pulsatilla, I think of a warm-hearted woman, a woman who is guided by her heart. But she said repeatedly that she has rationally controlled her life.
(G.V.): Is this your first time at one of my seminars?
(A.14): Yes.
(G.V.): Then you are justified in asking this question. I was one of the first homeopaths to take someone with a known personal-ity and assign him to a remedy. For example, Mussolini was very dictatorial, flamboyant, and liked women, and therefore was most likely Lycopodium. Or take an example of Sulphur. Abra-ham Lincoln, former president of the United States, was lean, philosophical and stoop-shouldered. After a time, I realized that I was giving students the wrong impression of the remedies. In my passion to describe, I’d created pictures that were so strongly associated with the particular remedy that students found it difficult to deviate from these standard images. That was my problem in the beginning when I read Kent, who was primarily my teacher. I read about Pulsatilla – mild, warm-hearted – and I became fixated on this image of Pulsatilla. However, in actual-ity this is not so. We have a Pulsatilla who is a peasant, a farmer. Also seen a female biologist who worked for a government agency.The biologist, because of her position, had to deal on an exclusively rational level. Nevertheless, both of these women were Pulsatilla. I have often mentioned the case of a woman who had a high government position. This woman was like a man. She did not laugh, she just ordered people around. When she came to me, I saw her underlying softness and immediately I recognized that the remedy was Pulsatilla. The best homeo-paths in her country never thought of Pulsatilla. When told of my choice of remedies, these homeopaths were stunned: “You, Pulsatilla?” They said. “Forget it, you are too manly!” I told her that the decision to take this remedy rested upon her alone. This was a woman with a severe liver problem; her whole body was