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The Bern Seminars – Page 97

study the case overnight. (Laughter) You have to go to your rep-ertories, and you have to look at the notes that you took and you have to bring me tomorrow – the remedy- I give you twenty-four hours notice You prescribe your remedy tomorrow morning, and then you’ll see what happened after your remedy.

THE SECOND DAY:

LIVE
(G.V.): Who thinks that they know the remedy? (Counts hands) Fifteen people. Tell me the remedy.
(A1.): Sepia.
(G.V.): Who agrees with Sepia? Nine people. Another prescription? (A2.): Ignatia.
(G.V.): Who agrees with Ignatia? About eight or more people. Okay, another?
(A3.): Phosphoricum acidum.
(A4.): Pulsatilla.
(G.V.): Who agrees with Pulsatilla? Seven people.
You see, the problem is that I present this case and it takes so long to explain. I could have just shown you the case, shown you the follow-up and the remedy; in short, just shown you the effect of a remedy on an acute case, but that is not the idea here. Instead, I would like to try and really communicate to you, as clearly as possible, what I am doing when I take a case and how I come about a remedy. That’s why I take so long. I feel that this is very instructive because then it stays in your mind. I will explain to you my line of thinking in this case.
First of all, I notice the type of person: is she a cold or an affec-tionate person? According to my understanding, this is an affec-tionate person, someone who feels. Although she is reserved, she is not sexually wild. Also, she has some kind of religious, let us say religious, drive, turn of mind.
The first thing she says is that she cannot lie down at all. This is