but just three days later he was feeling better with the follow-up we prescribed. This shows that the remedy was correct and that it had acted. Now, in June, he comes and tells me that in November he had a relapse. First, it struck me as strange, considering how well the remedy had worked before; it is very strange that within five months after a dose of 200 he should have a relapse, and such a clear relapse like the one he described. He then took Kali carbonicum and he felt better. But after three months he again suffered another relapse. This shows that caffeine obviously had an antidotal effect. After having relapsed for the fourth or fifth time, I said he had to stop drinking coffee. If he had denied drink-ing coffee, I wouldn’t have believed him, that’s how sure I was of what had been going on. Nevertheless, it was of the utmost importance that I find out the truth, and that’s why I appealed to him to be honest with me. If coffee was not the antidote, then I would have to search for some other antidotal influence. There are some laws that we cannot get away from because they are simply indisputable. There are various laws in Homeopathy that you can-not ignore. These laws are not always easy to perceive, because often patients have been given so many different remedies that, in the end, you don’t know what is going on! But once you know what you are doing, things fall into place and you can see which laws you must follow. Kali carbonicum is a deep, correct, and constitutional remedy for him; therefore, the effect of the treat-ment has to last at least one year. I could understand if he reported a relapse after a year-and-a-half or two years, because then the remedy might very well have been exhausted. You’ve no doubt heard the expression, “The remedy is exhausted.”
His symptomatology appears more complicated now, so it is difficult to say without a doubt that the remedy is Kali carboni-cum. This sort of a hazy diagnostic picture usually comes about when several different remedies have influenced the original symptomatology. In light of this fact, how should we proceed? Remember, this is a case of chronic bronchitis accompanied by bronchial asthma, therefore smoking, let alone heavy smoking, is