(F.P.): I study and I work. I work at night, eight nights a month, in a nursing home.
(G.V.): Did you or anyone else in your family ever have tuber-culosis?
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(G.V.): By this time I more or less know the remedy. If she were to say that she or her parents had had tuberculosis at sometime, then I would have to reconsider my line of thinking. But I am not really interested in investigating the possibility of tuberculosis in order to confirm Tuberculinum as the remedy. My main objec-tive here is to just try and eliminate possibilities. In the course of the interview, a very clear picture of the remedy begins to come out. She is very typical for her remedy. Let’s go back to the tape:
VIDEO
(G.V.): Are there tuberculosis patients in the nursing home where you work?
(F.P.): No, I don’t think so.
(G.V.): What happened with your boyfriend? Did you continue going out with him?
(F.P.): Yes.
(G.V.): Eight years ago you had a love affair with a boy who you liked very much, and you left the group because of this affair. What happened with this boy? Are you still together?
(F.P.): We’re friends, we meet sometimes and we call each other regularly. We’re still interested in how the other one’s doing. (G.V.): When did you end your love affair?
(F.P.): We stayed together, lived together, for two years.
(G.V.): Four years ago, that means it ended in 1984.
(F.P.): 1983.