Page 7 - Autumn 13
P. 7
Remedy at the end of life
Edward de Beukelaer, UK
She is an old border terrier. She is blind and deaf but still has a good appetite and drinks more or less normally. For the last months she spent most of her time circling around the table in the kitchen or anywhere else she is. She even does it in her cage; turns around and around. It stops as soon as she knows, where her owner is. She will follow her owner without problems, does not walk into the sides of the door and only occasionally misses a step. Once outside for a toilet trip with her owner she is fine, as long as she knows, where her owner is. She has no bal-
ance problems, there is no nystagmus and her reflexes are fine. In the house she is only fine, when she sleeps or when she is with her owner. She is relaxed in the owner’s arms.
The owner cannot decide to have her put to sleep, because when she eats or she is with her or she sleeps, she is still fine.
I see her circling in the practice: she is slightly anxious and she turns to the left. Apparently she always turns in a left circle.
Magnetis polis arcticus 30C twice per day for 3 days makes her much less anxious. She still circles at times but not, when she is in her cage and she is not as anxious anymore. She
will now also settle, when one of the other fam- ily members is there.
She has a few more months of quality time, until she has an epileptic fit and the owner finally decides to put her to sleep.
M-art is the North Pole: for patients, who lose their direction, not knowing where to go. They want to be sure, where they are going (where life takes them). The difference to South Pole is that the North Pole remedy is more social ori- ented. The South Pole patients are more insular (on the South Pole only penguins live, on the North Pole there are a number of animals).
Note that this dog turned to the left: the direc- tion of the earth rotation at the North Pole.