(A.8): In such a case where the disease is located on the skin, how long would you expect the first aggravation to last? This is a very difficult question to answer. Is it a correct aggravation? Was the remedy given correct, or was it the wrong remedy?
(G.V.): As I’ve said before, you can aggravate without really cur-ing in such cases. I have noticed something very important- if you have made an intelligent prescription based on facts, you will always see, even if your remedy is not right, that if you wait, the organism is forced in the right direction, towards a clearer picture of a more suitable remedy. This is what Hahne-mann meant when he spoke of partial diseases. Hahnemann said that sometimes he could and simultaneously could not see the remedy; but by giving one remedy anyway, a clear picture of the next, more far-reaching remedy could develop. Today we have an increase in the number of such cases, and that’s why we may not see an amelioration after we’ve given a remedy. Even if you feel you’ve accomplished nothing, you still have to try and be patient and wait. If you’ve given an intelligent prescription and you’re able to wait long enough, you’ll eventually see the next remedy. This is my experience. On those occasions when I’ve lost a case it has usually been due to the fact that I was in a hurry to prescribe one remedy after the other. This can happen when you feel yourself under pressure to cure. For example, you hear a symptom, itching in the nose, and you give a remedy specifically for this; but perhaps the problem is not the patient’s nose, perhaps he is really suffering from cancer. If you merely take into consideration itching in the nose and then prescribe Causticum, have you really understood his case, or have you just based everything on the one symptom you could perceive?It’s very interesting that when you push the organsim correctly, then how it develops to a much more clear remedy and if you observe then you see the next remedy. And there you have the effect. Another example- is the case of a woman with metrorhag-gia and severe anemia who had been seen by many doctors at the center, and on whom I’d also consulted. I had given my sugges-