Community News
Homeopathy and Trauma

Trauma is defined as either a physical injury and/or a deeply distressing or disturbing experience. Trauma is dependent on the constitution of the individual, what is deeply traumatic for one may be insignificant to another. Trauma can include physical injuries, emotional shocks and exposure to toxins such as chemicals, vaccines and medications at any point in the individual’s life, including the unborn child during pregnancy.

Physical trauma

I remember getting my fingers caught in a refrigerator door lock as a child. Just thinking about it now still brings back memories of the pain and worse, the shock of feeling my fingers being squished by a cold, metal vice. I screamed bloody murder! Physical trauma always affects the mind as well and injuries can trigger shock and even death. On a couple of other occasion in later years I injured my fingers and actually fainted. I think we can all relate to incidences like this.

Homeopathy has a lot to offer for physical trauma and the shock that goes with it. Hypericum perforatum, knowns as St. John’s Wort, when prepared homeopathically, can be a great remedy for nerve injuries. Crushed fingers, injured tail bones and pain from dental procedures, even years after the original injury can be magically relieved. I’ve cured many cases of chronic pain in the tailbone from falls or childbirth with Hypericum over the years, a most reliable remedy for this kind of mishap.

Arnica montana, a remedy made from a little yellow flower is one of the most popular homeopathic remedies for injuries of all kinds. Most health food stores and pharmacies now carry it. It’s great to have on hand for falls, bruises and even more serious conditions such as heart attacks and comas, although in such cases I do recommend calling a professional.

Emotional trauma

Homeopathy also offers many remedies for emotional trauma. Fright, grief, anger and jealousy can all be traumatic to an individual if the emotions are strong and long-lasting. Suppressed emotions can affect us even more.

I remember a case of a woman who had a very high fever as a child, causing delirium and hallucinations. She ‘saw’ someone attacking her mother in the kitchen with a knife. This created such a shock to her system that she was in counseling for years after and was still affected when I saw her at age 32. A few doses of Belladonna, a remedy made from Deadly Nightshade, used for treating high fevers with delusions, were very helpful to her and would have been to her as a child.

One of my first MS patients who had been suffering for five years and was progressively getting worse was brought into almost instant remission with a remedy called Natrum muriaticum, a homeopathic preparation of table salt. Careful case-taking revealed that she had developed the disease shortly after her brother died very unexpectedly, which was incredibly traumatic for her. She had not been fully able to express this grief and it had somehow settled into her system triggering the MS.

I saw her occasionally for the next 15 years and the MS never came back, amazingly. I had only been in practice for a year and was extremely surprised by this result, having been told that MS was incurable. Natrum mur is one of our big grief remedies in homeopathy.

Infections

Infections can also be traumatic. Some people never feel well after a bad case of Mono of even the flu. A homeopathic preparation of the infection in question may help. Infections can also affect the brain and behavior; for example it is known that some people can develop severe anxiety after strep infections, which can look like post-traumatic stress disorder. The person may suddenly develop intense anxiety, panic attacks and become obsessive compulsive. Antibiotic therapy can be useful as well as diagnostic but may not totally clear the patient. In a case like that it may be helpful to use a homeopathic preparation of strep bacteria to ‘reset’ the system. Constitutional homeopathy would also be indicated.

Medication and chemicals

Exposure to chemicals, including those in pharmaceutical drugs, environmental toxins and pollutants can also be traumatic to the organism due to their toxic effects. Tylenol is well known for its ability to cause liver failure. I have seen several children who developed autism in part due to Tylenol exposure. One child actually ate a bottle of Tylenol at age three and almost died from liver failure, then developed autism afterwards.

Recent research on the effects of Tylenol examined the link between circumcision and autism. Circumcised boys were more likely to develop the condition. The culprit: Tylenol, used to manage the pain of the procedure.

Vaccines

Vaccines can also be traumatic to the developing nervous and immune system in a susceptible individual. Vaccines not only include weakened viruses or bacterial fragments or toxins but also formaldehyde, antibiotics and aluminum salts. Infectious agents alone can trigger auto-immune reactions and aluminum salts used in vaccines have been shown to do the same.

Fortunately there are homeopathic remedies prepared from all of these vaccines and medications to help. I have seen many children with autism, sensory processing disorders, anxiety, sleep-walking and chronic infections recover with these special homeopathic remedies.

One little boy under my care developed eruptions around the injection sites of his 12-month MMR and Varicella (chickenpox) shots within a month of the injection. After another month the eruptions had spread to this whole body and a few weeks later he started to bang his head, lost his speech, developed black diarrhea and only wanted to eat milk and meat. I started treatment with a homeopathic preparation of the chickenpox vaccine and he began to recover within days. Total healing involved clearing many other substances from his body, including other vaccines he had as well as addressing inherited predispositions, but nearly two years later he is a strong, happy and healthy young boy.

If you or a loved one have been traumatized in any form, homeopathy may be able to help you.

Anke Zimmermann, BSc, ND, FCAH

Learn to Let Go of Lather

All those whipped creamy soft foams, shave creams and brand name shampoos we have been using all our lives contain some of the harshest chemicals around; the sodium lauryl sulphates and laureth sulphates and betaines. Bottom line? They are detergents. They aren’t good for us. They strip the natural oil mantle from our hair and skin. They run down our drains and enter streams and rivers, dissolving the protective lipid layer of tiny plants, fish and animal life. They enter our pores and lungs, contributing to toxic overload, neurological malfunction and other nasty things.

Shampoos are a huge problem. The hair industry is based on the routine of stripping the natural oils from the hair shaft and then synthetically putting it back with silicones, acryllics, chemicals and cationic surfactants (carcinogenic, environmentally disastrous substances.)

Before scientists discovered detergents in the 1920’s, people used soap. The first soap was discovered when people poured the ashes from their fire into a stream with animal fats. The two combined to create a slippery bubbly concoction known as soap. Natural soaps made with a high proportion of emollient oils (like castille soap) are gentle cleansers, and biodegradable. The problem is that they can break down and leave scum on clothes, skin and hair. (In the olden days people knew that the acidic water in their rain barrels worked best with soap).

So what is out there for natural personal cleansers besides soap? The plant world offers saponins in plants like Soapwort, Yucca, Quillaria and Soapberries. Shikakai powder (Acacia) from India is a terrific hair cleanser, detangler and conditioner. These plant soaps were originally used as foamers in beer and also in toothpastes; soapy herbs that have been used for centuries to wash clothes and hair. If you have tried them, you’ll find that they are not nearly as luxurious as the fantasy foamers we’ve come to know and love, and a lot messier, but they are healthier and overtime you will see dry over-stripped hair and skin restored.

The chemical industry is responding to the demand for milder, plant-derived surfactants. Even though they are still technically classified as detergent, there are now soapy olive and coconut derivatives with names that include: glucosides, olivates, esters and glutamates. These are milder, plant-derived detergents. Suppliers claim they are biodegradable. They have a nice “soapiness”, but not the rich lather. They don’t strip the skin or the hair and are very gentle and even baby safe. Look for names like poly alkylglucoside, cocoglucoside and decylglucoside. And with the explosion of “green chemistry”, there will be more coming.

Whether you choose to go with good old-fashioned soap, saponin- containing plants, or with the new milder detergents, the conclusion I’ve arrived at is: We have to learn to let go of lather.

Karen Van Dyck, Organic Skin Creamery
www. www.naturesfirstbeautybar.com

Benefits of Exercise 

There aren’t many areas of health advice which would be almost universally endorsed by health practitioners of every stripe – orthodox, progressive, complementary and integrative – but the Benefits of Exercise would certainly be one. There is, however, still controversy about what TYPE of exercise is best, safest and most effective. And of course, people of different ages, fitness levels and health challenges will have different needs. But I would say there are still a few general principles that the vast majority of us can benefit from: Almost everyone in our society sits too much. Walking daily is a great rule of thumb for most people. It really is the single best exercise for most people, and should form the basis of a regular routine for most of us. Recent scientific evidence shows that short duration, high-intensity exercise yields much better results than long workouts.

Howard V. Dieno
www.dieno.ca