Down for the Count: An Adult
Ear Infection
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Homeopathy helps heal the skeptic
- by Allan Casey
- (As published in
Homeopathy Today, September/October 2007)
When I first heard about
homeopathy in 1992 I had my doubts. Okay, I was extremely
skeptical. I enjoy scientific and quantitative endeavors; I like
understanding how things work. I didn’t understand how homeopathy worked and
doubted it could work at all—even when told that homeopathy has been around
for 200 years and is used by millions around the world.
- Over the next few years, I watched my
wife, Shirley, and our veterinarians begin to use homeopathy in our
wildlife rehabilitation activities. We had enough experience working with
wildlife by then to know how long it would normally take for wild
creatures to heal. With homeopathic treatment, many animals were healing
faster and with fewer complications than with conventional medicine. This
piqued my interest.
- I even began to
use Arnica montana for occasional bumps and bruises and Hypericum
for those building project accidents when my thumb got in the way of the
hammer. I had to admit, the remedies helped.
- I liked how
homeopathy supports the body’s ability to heal itself. I also liked the
concepts of the minimum dose and finding a single medicine that matches
the patient’s full set of symptoms, instead of using multiple medicines
for different conditions. I appreciated that homeopathy is less invasive
than many conventional medical procedures and that it has no harsh side
effects. The more I studied homeopathy and the research behind it, the
more I began to accept it. Not understanding how homeopathy works became
less of a problem for me once I realized that there are also many unknowns
in conventional medicine.
- Even so, I
still relied heavily on my conventional physician for most of my
healthcare—until the one-two punch of an inner ear infection took my
appreciation of homeopathy (and my willingness to seriously embrace it) to
the next level.
Inner Ear Infection -
Round 1
- One morning in downtown Denver, I was
leaning against the doorway to a colleague’s office discussing some
issues of the day over a cup of coffee. Out of the blue, a wave of
vertigo hit me, then left, and then returned. The intensity of the
vertigo increased over the next five minutes, and I found myself having
difficulty focusing on the conversation. In fact, I was about to fall
over. My immediate task was to try to return to my office—hugging the
wall all the way. Since I had ridden the rapid transit bus to work, I
called Shirley to see if she could pick me up immediately. Luckily, she
was available to make the 45-minute drive from our home in the
mountains.
- Forty minutes
later, I gingerly made my way down in the elevator to meet her. The
vertigo was intensifying, and a splitting headache and fever were
developing. I got out to the street and hung on to a no-parking sign for
dear life. Thankfully, she pulled up right next to me. As she opened the
door, I literally fell into the passenger seat. Reclining the seat
turned out to be a bad idea, as the many turns required to navigate our
way out of the city brought on waves of nausea. With the seat upright
and on a straighter highway, I began to worry about the 3,000-feet
increase in elevation and the winding, up-and-down roads we would
traverse on our way to our house.
- Sure enough,
about three miles from home, we had to stop the car as I leaned out and
lost that morning’s coffee. When we finally got home, I crawled up the
stairs, hugged the toilet a few times, shed the suit, and dove into bed
with a major case of the chills.
- What a relief
to finally be lying still and not moving! Under the covers, I was also
warming up slightly. As long as my eyes were closed, the vertigo seemed
to subside. When I opened my eyes though, the room was constantly
spinning, and at an increasing speed.
- Never having
experienced these symptoms before, I found them unsettling and wanted
professional advice. Rather than drive back to Denver to see my regular
doctor, we made the three-mile trip to the local urgent medical clinic
with me holding a plastic bucket in my lap, just in case.
- A quick
consult with the doctor resulted in a diagnosis of “standard inner ear
viral infection” and an IV plugged into my arm delivering saline
solution. “I’ve already seen six other cases this week,” the doctor
added. “Seems to be going around, especially with those on the early
bus. Since it’s viral, plan on lots of bed rest, and increase your fluid
intake. You’ll be fine in about 10 days.”
- He was right;
after a little over a week of feeling crummy, I was back at work. I also
remember thinking that as much as I supported public transportation,
sitting in a closed bus twice a day, five days a week, where germs are
shared about as freely as friendly conversation is not without cost.
Over the next year, Shirley and I would occasionally
discuss my case of ear infection, wondering how homeopathy would have
addressed the symptoms and outcome.
Inner Ear Infection - Round 2
- I got my chance to find out about 15 months later. I was at home
this time when the initial wave of vertigo hit—an immediate and vivid
replay of the sensations I had felt before. Within five minutes, the
same type of headache and chills were becoming apparent, as well as a
growing sensitivity to light.
- As I sat in the chair with my eyes shut, I
remember thinking, “Wow! This must be what ‘rapid onset’ feels like!” As
the intensity increased, I realized that this was probably the same type
of viral inner ear infection as I had had before. It felt exactly like
the last time. Since I knew the doctors had nothing to suggest but bed
rest and fluids for ten days, I figured, “Let’s give homeopathy a shot.”
- I called out to Shirley who brought paper,
pen, repertory, and materia medica. She asked a bunch of questions,
which I answered with irritable impatience (so she said). She also
checked my temperature and found it was 100 degrees. Repertorization of
my symptoms indicated the following remedy choices:
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- Shirley read aloud the indications for
the homeopathic remedy Belladonna, and it sounded just like what
I was experiencing: sudden and violent onset. It also included symptoms
that I hadn’t mentioned, like my dry mouth and throat and throbbing ear
pain. I put a couple pellets of Belladonna 200c under my tongue.
My fever quickly spiked to 103 degrees and my symptoms were worse—for 10
minutes!
- Then just as
suddenly as they had appeared, all my symptoms were gone! I felt great—and
very relieved! An hour and a half later, we were enjoying dinner out on
our deck and watching the hummingbirds at the feeder. What a relief to
have those debilitating symptoms for less than an hour instead of for ten
days like the last time!
- I haven’t had
any ear-related problems in the decade since, thank goodness!
Moral of the story
- In retrospect, I wish I had tried homeopathy
the first time around. At that point, however, I
was not ready to use it for my own health care, so
I turned to the medical modality with which I had
the most experience, trust, and comfort level. It
was only after observing hundreds of successful
cases in our wildlife rehabilitation activities
and having used Arnica montana on minor
conditions, that I felt confident turning to
homeopathy for myself on something that felt more
serious. It helped, of course, that we had the
necessary knowledge and resources (repertories and
materia medicas) to accurately work up a case,
along with the basic remedies at hand.
- It seems to me that
anyone who has choices in their own medical care
should understand the strengths and limitations of
each modality and develop partnerships with
certified/licensed health care providers skilled
in those modalities. We consider homeopathy to be
an essential part of our health care toolkit. The
larger the toolkit we have available, the more
options we can consider—and that can make a big
difference!
- And a final thought:
it’s always a good idea to keep your immune system
healthy, whether you use mass transit or not!
© 2007 Allan M. Casey III
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About
the Author
Allan Casey is a management
consultant who also serves on the local Parks and Recreation Board of
Directors in Evergreen, Colorado. He and his wife have been conducting
seminars around the US on homeopathy for acute wildlife conditions for
wildlife rehabilitators since 1997. Allan particularly enjoys giving
presentations on homeopathic research and comparing some of the “unknowns”
in homeopathy and conventional medicine. |
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