Books

The Bern Seminars – Page 75

LIVE
(G.V.): Usually when they give me feedback I know the remedy, but in this case, as you can judge from my voice, I did not know the remedy. I had no idea. I thought that maybe it could be Bryo-nia, but I wasn’t sure at all. What could I ask now? Whatever I might have asked would have been useless. She had to come in so that I could find out what was happening.

VIDEO
(G.V.): You can’t open your eyes?
(F.P.): I have congenital cataract. I also have what I’ve been calling an allergic response to the remedies: this eye, this kind of half-moon shape, has swelled up since taking the remedy, it’s still a bit swollen…
(G.V.): Is it painful or just swollen? Can’t you open your eye at all?(F.P.): No, and normally when there is a lot of glare my eye does not open all the way.
(G.V.): You can’t see out of that eye at all?
(F.P.): No. Well, I have very, very limited vision; so it’s not con-sidered a sighted eye at all; it’s from birth.

LIVE
(G.V.): Who has understood what she is trying to do here?
(A.): She is trying to distract you from pneumonia.
(A): She bends.
(G.V.): No. Your power of observation must be very acute- you must exercise it. The moment she enters you are all ears. This is not a case that I take into my office and ask the patient to take antibiotics, because nothing is working. If I did that everybody would laugh. They’d say: “Homeopathy! Can’t you do anything in this case?” So I have to be correct in my decision, I cannot make a mistake. That’s why all my senses are open and I see a lot of things when she comes in. I want you to learn to do the same thing: take an account of her and understand what is really going on. I will give you a few hints: Is she well dressed? Yes.