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Homeopathy: The Natural Mind-Body MedicineRooted in natural healing traditions from around the world, and harkening to modern physics, homeopathy stands poised to become the medicine of the twenty-first century. A gentle, deeply-healing system of medicine founded by the visionary genius Samuel Hahnemann in the early 19th century, homeopathy uses healing substances so dilute that they do not cause the side effects of conventional pharmaceuticals. And unlike pharmaceuticals, which suppress symptoms that later recur (often on a deeper level), homeopathy cures from the inside out. It removes the underlying emotional or mental stress of chronic disease first, then moves the illness out of the body. Homeopathy treats the whole person—emotional, mental and spiritual
as well as physical. The well-chosen homeopathic remedy can bring about
a profound sense of well-being before it even begins to cure the symptoms.
And the search for the right remedy for a chronic disease begins with
an inquiry into the emotional or mental trauma that might have triggered
it. Advantages of homeopathy over conventional drugs
How can it work if there's nothing in it? There is "something in it": information! Think of a remedy as a tiny computer chip. You could store a whole book on a computer chip, right? A homeopathic remedy is a way of storing and transmitting information to your body's healing energy (Vital Force). It teaches the Vital Force a better way to deal with something that has made it go out of kilter or off balance. Then the Vital Force can let go of the symptoms it has created to redress the balance – and you feel better, naturally. Think of the homeopath as a piano tuner and the conventional doctor as a carpenter. Most of the time, a piano can be tuned without needing any sawing or hammering. Maybe once in a while the piano has been damaged in such a way that it needs to be repaired by the carpenter before being retuned. In the same way, many health conditions can be addressed with the "retuning" of a homeopathic remedy. Sometimes – like if you've been in a car accident or if you've broken a bone – there's no substitute for surgery (the "carpenter"). For the best explanation of how homeopathy works and the research behind it, please see the article by Dana Ullman, founder of Homeopathic Education Services, which we recommend as the source for books on homeopathy for our students and clients. How can a remedy store information? Snowflakes are all chemically identical: all made out of water, H2O. Yet their patterns are all different. In the same way, the water of different homeopathic remedies is chemically identical, but the pattern of the water molecules is different in a way that stores information. Cutting edge research in physics documents this effect of coherent or structured water. Computers store huge amounts of information with a simple on-off, 1 or 0 effect of each electro-magnetic byte. Remedies are able to store huge amounts of information by changes in the orientation and bonding of simple water molecules. How come I've never heard of homeopathy? Pharmaceutical companies spend hundreds of millions of dollars to promote their drugs: they buy ads on TV, provide incentives for doctors to prescribe their drugs, and hire sales reps to woo physicians (not to mention the lobbyists on Capitol Hill: did you know there are more lobbyists than congresspeople?) Homeopathy is the people's medicine. The remedies are not patentable; they are in the public domain. A tube of a homeopathic remedy that costs $7.95 in a health food store can last you for years. As a result, there are no extra funds generated to publicize homeopathy. Most people find out about it through word of mouth from satisfied users. Why does Wikipedia say it's based on the placebo effect? The editorial board at Wikipedia (which is not as neutral as they would like us to believe) has recently been suppressing attempts by homeopaths to post accurate information about homeopathy's mechanism of action and research as to its effectiveness. Please investigate for yourself, for example at www.homeopathic.com, the website of Dana Ullman, an expert on research on homeopathy. In the experience of Teleosis faculty, students and clients, homeopathy's effectiveness cannot be based on the placebo effect. It works on infants, animals, even on plants. Anyone who has given a remedy to a baby screaming with teething pain, and watched the child stop crying instanteously, knows that it cannot possibly be the placebo effect. Nor can the effect be based on a positive interaction with a professional homeopath, as some claim. No matter how supportive the experience, no matter how much the client enjoys feeling truly heard, the recommended remedy will not work if it is not a good match for the client. The best proof of homeopathy's effectiveness is personal experience. If you have never felt or observed a remedy's healing effect, please try it for yourself (for an acute condition, i.e. one appropriate for over-the-counter treatment). Your local health food store will have books and remedies to help you. If you would like to read more about research on homeopathy, we recommend you start with Dr. Bill Gray's Homeopathy: Science or Myth. For a thorough review of two centuries of research, please see Michael Emmans Dean's The Trials of Homeopathy. For more about the science behind homeopathy's mechanism of action, please see Bellavite and Signorini's The Emerging Science of Homeopathy: Complexity, Biodynamics, and Nanopharmacology. How come my doctor says it's unproven? Chances are your doctor is not familiar with the research on homeopathy, which is not at all her/his fault, since most of the research has been done overseas and is not taught in American medical schools. The research has primarily been done overseas because our homeopathic pharmacies cannot afford to fund research the way American drug companies do. The US government has funded a few studies which have been demonstrated the effectiveness of homeopathy and have published in peer-reviewed journals (for example, on homeopathy for childhood diarrhea and for mild traumatic brain injury). To reassure your doctor, try telling her or him that homeopathy is an accepted part of the national health care system in many countries around the world (including Canada) and that FDA regulations in this country are comparable to those for drugs. In other words, the FDA treats it as a system of medicine, quite different from vitamins and herbs. For more information: see the article by Begabati Lennihan, Director of Teleosis, or listen to an interview with her. Please also see the article on Homeopathic Psychotherapy by Co-Director Loretta Butehorn, Ph.D., DIHom. ResourcesBest Introductory Book on Homeopathy: Other Recommended Reading Internet Resources |
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