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The Celle Seminars – Page 332

twenty or twenty-two?” He replied, “Twenty-two.” (laughter) Because I was in a hurry I just prescribed the remedy. About four or five years later I met a friend who also knew the General, and I asked about him. My friend said, “He is very well, but he doesn’t want to come back to see you.” “Why?” I asked, and he said, “Because you asked him something as if you already knew the answer!” (laughter) According to the General, that was not proper or scientific. But I suspect that he was just afraid of losing face. The main thing was that his tremendous blockage, which is also typical for these patients, cleared up once he took Medorrhinum.
The story I just told you took place around 1969 or 1970. At that time I was just beginning to realize that the symptoms we see and prescribe on are not always the only possible manifestations of a remedy, that in fact, there may be many opposite poles to a remedy. For example, in some cases where there is a desire for salt, which would make me consider a remedy with a corre-sponding desire, I have found that sometimes a totally opposite pole – an aversion to salt – can also be an aspect of the remedy. This point is well illustrated in Medorrhinum: these patients can be very closed or very open, sometimes both. Take, for instance, a completely closed person, unable to talk because of emotionality: this blockage can become so acute that the patient begins to get a ‘wild feeling’ due to suppressed emotions. If this happens, then Medorrhinum will become very fearful: fear of the dark or fear of ghosts; supernatural phenomena makes them feel uneasy; fear that someone may sneak up behind them while walking in the street at night or while taking a shower. These closed Medorrhinums are people with high cholesterol and high blood pressure.
In summary. Medorrhinum patients are people with a lot of energy and initiative. They are nice people, always seen at social gatherings and often the life of the party – extroverts. But behind all this outgoingness is always some sort of sexual drive. The dif-ference between Medorrhinum and Belladonna is that the latter is