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How does homeopathy
differ from conventional medicine?
How does the concept of homeopathy differ from that of conventional
medicine? Very simply, homeopathy attempts to stimulate the body to
recover itself. Let's look at an example: the common cough. First, we
must accept that all symptoms, no matter how uncomfortable they are,
represent the body's attempt to restore itself to health. Instead of
looking upon the symptoms as something wrong which must be set right, we
see them as signs of the way the body is attempting to help itself.
Instead of trying to stop the cough with suppressants, as conventional
medicine does, a homeopath will give a remedy that will cause a cough in
a healthy person, and thus stimulate the ill body to restore itself.
Second, we must look at the totality of the symptoms presented. We each
experience a cough in our unique way.
Yet conventional medicine acts as if all coughs were alike. It therefore
offers a series of suppressive drugs something to suppress the cough,
something to dry the mucus, something to lower the histamine level,
something to ease falling asleep. Homeopathy, on the other hand, looks
for the one substance that will cause similar symptoms in a healthy
person. The person with a cough characterized by being worse when
breathing cold air, and sounding like a deep bark, will need a quite
different remedy than the person whose cough is loose in the morning,
dry in the evening, and better when sitting up in bed. We characterize
both as "coughs" but they are different illnesses in the individuals,
and therefore require different homeopathic treatment.
In conventional medical thought, health is seen simply as the absence of
disease. You assume that you are healthy if there is nothing wrong with
you. To a person versed in homeopathy, health is much more than that. A
healthy person is a person who is free on all levels: physical,
emotional, and mental. Obviously, a person with a broken leg is not
free, on the physical level, to move around. But on a more subtle level,
a person who cannot eat certain foods or is allergic to certain
materials is also experiencing a lack of freedom. It is a good emotional
release to cry at a "tear jerker" movie, but someone who continues to
cry for several weeks afterwards is experiencing a lack of freedom on
the emotional level. Likewise, a person who cannot absorb what he has
read or cannot remember day to day appointments is experiencing a
restriction on the mental level.
The homeopath recognizes such limitations and attempts, through the use
of the properly selected remedies, to restore the person to health and
freedom. An important basic difference exists between conventional
medical therapy and homeopathy. In conventional therapy, the aim often
is to control the illness through regular use of medical substances,
even if the medication is nothing more than vitamins. If the medication
is withdrawn, however, the person returns to illness. There has been no
cure. A person who takes a pill for high blood pressure every day is not
undergoing a cure but is only controlling the symptoms. Homeopathy's aim
is the cure: "The complete restoration of perfect health," as Dr. Samuel
Hahneman said. |