What's the value of the client's full timeline in homeopathy?!
Something that often catches new clients off-guard is when I start asking them more about their own personal history - emotionally, physically, family lines, traumas, significant life events, illnesses (even as a baby), etc. Sometimes they even say: "well that doesn't have anything to do with my current symptoms" and I think - okay I need to do a better job at explaining the FULL CAPACITY of homeopathic medicine. It's been a great learning experience for me! This week I had an initial consultation with my new personal homeopath (i'm excited to share more about this soon!) But beforehand, I spent time journaling and writing down my full life timeline - the good, the bad the ugly. Because as a homeopath, it's our job in the consultations to essentially map out and get a good idea of the client's timeline. We know that illness and symptoms are a physical manifestation of energetic imbalance in the body. So what can cause energetic imbalances or distortion in the first place?! Literally anything!! It could be a car accident, a vaccine injury, a stressful season of life, a virus or bacterial imbalance, distorted energy passed down through family lines, a physical trauma, emotional trauma - etc. The list is literally infinite. So here's my best example of why the timeline matters so much - Say a client comes to me for mold related illness. It's not my job as a homeopath to get as many mycotoxins out of the body as possible or to put this person on tons of detox protocols. It's my role as a homeopath to figure out why this individual was so sensitive to the mold exposure in the first place! Like why was their body already so easily impressionable by this mold that quite literally covers the earth and doens't impact two people the same way? Then I dig deeper - What emotional factors were at play? How are the relationships in their life? Mold never effects someone when it's convenient - it comes in rapid fire like mental, physical and spiritual warfare at it's worst. So in mold cases, there's hardly ever just one layer we are addressing.