Books

The Bern Seminars – Page 121

VIDEO
(G.V.): …he doesn’t like it.
(Mother): Today he told me that…
(G.V.): He is very dehydrated, his lips are quite dry. Stick out your tongue, John.

LIVE
(G.V.): His lips show a degree of dehydration, but his tongue does not show the same degree of dehydration. Even though he cannot retain anything, he is still not very dehydrated; that excludes which remedies? Remedies that are thirsty and want to drink a lot because they are easily dehydrated, this is the idea. In an acute state, Phos-phorus will drink a lot because it is very easily dehydrated. So, if this were a case of Phosphorus or Bryonia, his tongue would have to be absolutely dry, especially because he cannot retain fluids. I see that the lips are quite dry but the tongue is not, so this automati-cally helps me exclude some possible remedies.

VIDEO
(G.V.): Does he ask for water?
(Mother): No, most often he refuses it when I put a straw up to his mouth.

LIVE
(G.V.): He refuses water. Is this an aggravation from movement? Why does he sit like that? Doesn’t he want to move? What hap-pens if you sit him up when he starts moving? Could this be Phosphorus – looks so sympathetic and all that – but without needing water, without being so quickly dehydrated? How can this be Bryonia or Phosphorus? It is not a happy state of affairs.

VIDEO
(Mother): Then I tell him he must drink.
(G.V.): But he does not want to drink?
(Mother): Not really.