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Heidi from Switzerland
great products, good price, efficient service.A sense of fear waving over me: a case of Pearl
The patient is a woman aged 27. She has a new job to
raise £1.5 million for a school building development. She previously taught
drama.
Presenting complaint:
Emotional: Feeling very stressed and sleeping badly.
Physical: Back pain. Spinal scoliosis since childhood; has lived with back pain
all her life.
Cystitis up to age 12; recurring since her early 20’s.
Family history of prostate and ovarian cancer on her mother’s side of the
family.
She had cystitis on holiday in Barbados,
six months ago. It was treated with antibiotics but the cystitis symptoms recurred
several times, with blood in the urine and left-sided lower-back pain. An ultrasound
scan revealed a 1.4cm kidney cyst (doctor said it was unlikely to cause the
pain). She was referred back to the scoliosis clinic.
She appeared stressed, pressured, animated, and talked non-stop with little
prompting about her situation and symptoms.
“Since summer I’ve felt very anxious about work, the house, everything. I’m
prone to mild depression. My sleep has been fractured. I’m worried about
another cystitis attack. I feel very lethargic, low and exhausted; it’s hard to
feel motivated to walk or exercise. I’ve put on weight. I feel like I’m on a
treadmill. I’m very tense all the time; I haven’t once felt relaxed. If I’m not
doing something, I feel guilty. I feel a lot lower down the ladder than I
should be. I pride myself in being a bubbly person – that’s the mask I put on.”
Work: “It’s a very stressful
environment. Some days it’s so hard to get motivated – I can’t see beyond a
bubble of things to do. The support (at work) is good – moral support, as
opposed to professional or practical support. It feels like a lonely job. I
feel like I’m muddling through everything – I’m so tired. Stress spirals in my
head, I’m fumbling through panic. My partner is supportive but he runs his own
business. If I’m really stressed, it’s hard to convey the panic and sheer
terror of failing. I don’t feel I can talk to anyone about it. It’s such a huge
challenge, it drains me. I get overwhelmed very easily; I have a sense of it
being immense and overwhelming.
“I hold on to things emotionally; if someone’s annoyed me it’s hard to let go
of it. It’s draining.
“I was a nervous child. I suffered from panic attacks and was very shy and had
low self-esteem. My self-esteem has recently gone right down.
“I used to have a fear of not being good enough for anyone; now I’ve found
someone who thinks I’m good enough; it was love at first sight. He’s wonderful.
He reminds me of my father; he’s very gentle, caring; we just fit.”
Fears: “My parents dying. My mum
lost her parents when she was young; she didn’t get over her mum’s death – she had
ovarian cancer and died quite rapidly at 62. My mum is 60 this October – I find
that scary.”
Panic attacks: “I got very anxious
after my grandmother died (when she was 6). I got panic attacks. I was so
worried about my mum; I knew everything had changed for her. I knew she was
depressed. I missed my grandmother so much.
“The panic attacks got really bad when I was 9; little things drove me to tears,
like going to school. I felt incapable of controlling it. I’d cry about random
things. It was as if I was going to die, or I’d never see my parents again. I
became very clingy towards my parents. I was painfully shy. Leaving home and
going to university was like climbing Mount Everest
for me.” After university, she taught English in a small town in Japan for 4
years. She lived alone. “It was so frightening. I just had to get through it.
“Now (since her 20’s), I’ve been getting panic attacks again. When I was
watching a film on my own in Japan:
I felt a sweeping sensation of fear that something would happen to me. It’s
been worse in the last year – a sense of fear waving over me. I feel a wave in
my stomach; like going over a bridge too fast.
“I’m the kind of person to shy away from challenge, but if I’m presented with a
challenge, I’ve always done it. Inside I’m feeling “I can’t do it”, but on the
outside I’m saying “I can do it!”
What do you most enjoy?
“Chocolate and sweet things – it’s a comforter. I love being around friends I
find genuine, that are genuinely happy for me and supportive; also my family.
The youth theatre; being around theatrical people (she runs a local youth
theatre project). Going to the cinema; romantic comedy makes me feel happy.
Being in my house; alone time; my kitten; holding hands with my boyfriend. The
prospect of getting married; the thought of having a family.”
Perfect holiday?
“I’d like to take my partner to Japan,
and go to the Pacific Ocean and Australia.
You couldn’t be distracted from anything there – life is so simple. I’d lie on
a beach and do nothing, read, chill on the beach. I like being by the sea; it’s
so relaxing. The sound; its infinity; it goes on forever. If you lived by the
sea you’d have no choice but to have a carefree attitude, and walk along the
beach.”
Physical symptoms?
“I had cystitis from as early as I can remember until I hit puberty; it’s
debilitating; it takes a hit on all aspects of my life.”
Scoliosis was confirmed by her GP when she was 13, she was referred to the
orthopaedic hospital; physiotherapy made no difference to the back pain.
Since her holiday in Barbados,
she has been getting left-sided lumbar pain: a short, sharp pain; < certain
movements, including lifting & bending; > resting left side on a chair;
> painkillers (only uses occasionally). Some nights she is woken by a dull
ache in the left lumbar area.
Frequent tension headaches from the shoulders and neck up. Her right shoulder
feels “as if someone put an arrow in it”; the pain is > massage.
“I’m very uptight and tense – I’m rock solid half the time. I lie in bed and
imagine myself falling into sand to try and relax. I feel like corrugated
cardboard.”
What would you like from homeopathic treatment?
"I'd like to feel myself again; to be more lively and more bubbly vs. lethargic.
"I'd like to come back to me. If one thing goes with me it's my self-esteem - it crumbles.
"I need more focus; to be on a straighter path. I want to take control of me again."
ANALYSIS
Several themes emerge strongly:
1) Cracking, Crumbling, Fractured, Parts, Hard,
Solid, Stress, Pressure
She feels under pressure, like she might crack up. This language sounds
like a mineral – something hard and solid, under a lot of stress and pressure, cracks,
crumbles and fragments into parts. The word ‘stress’ is repeated.
“My sleep has been fractured”, “my self-esteem crumbles”; “parts of me were
cracking under the pressure”; “I’m rock solid half the time.”
2) Attacked, Hit, Hitting
Some animal language: “attacked” and “hit”. Panic attacks. “The cystitis takes a hit on all aspects of my life”; “I’m very
worried about another cystitis attack”; “as if someone put an arrow in it”; “I
feel lower down the ladder than I should be.”
3) In Control vs. Overwhelmed by something Huge
& Immense & Very Frightening
I had the sense of her being small and vulnerable and being overwhelmed by
something much bigger than her coming down on her from above:
“It’s a HUGE challenge – I get overwhelmed very easily; I have the sense of it
being immense and overwhelming”; “I feel I’m muddling through everything ...
I’m fumbling through panic”; “stress spirals in my head ... panic and sheer
terror of failing”; “I feel out of control” “a sweeping sensation of fear”; “a
sense of fear waving over me.”
4) Support
& Isolation
She feels on her own and unsupported: “It feels like a lonely job”; she
lived alone in Japan,
isolated; “my partner is very supportive but he runs his own business”; “I love
being around friends that I find genuine, and that are genuinely happy for me
and supportive.”
5) The Sea
Water and the sea come through strongly: “I like being by the sea." “bubble,
bubbly” “fear waving over me”, “a wave in my stomach.” She feels carefree by
the sea – the opposite of the stressed state she is in at the moment!
Physically she has a problem with recurrent cystitis – a water problem.
6)
Problems at times of transition
Change and transition are difficult times for her: her grandmother’s death;
leaving university; living in a different country/culture; holiday; new job.
7)
Corrugated Cardboard
“I feel like corrugated cardboard.” I’d never heard anyone describe themselves
this way before. The significance is its connection with ‘doctrine of
signatures’.
These themes suggested to
me that the remedy should come from a sea animal that has a hard mineral part
that crumbles under pressure and that perhaps resembles corrugated cardboard.
Prescription: Pearl immersion 1M
I first encountered Pearl at a seminar by Peter
Tumminello in the UK
in 2005. He was launching his book ‘Twelve Jewels’. I was geared up for a day
of gem remedies. I was surprised that a case he presented felt distinctly like
a sea remedy. The remedy was Pearl; this was my
first lesson in the multifaceted sea/animal/mineral/gem
nature of Pearl.
I have since prescribed Pearl
many times. Successful cases have mainly been of sensitive young women (20-40
yrs old) working in a solitary situation (vs. part of a team) and struggling
with issues of anxiety, self-worth, and identity.
Materia Medica
‘Negative’ keywords for Pearl include[1]: Boundaries, lack of;
Centre, loss of; Confusion; Crumbling; Crushed; Darkness; Blackness; Desolate; Drowning;
Erratic; Extremes of emotional reaction; Fear – overwhelming, panic, terror;
Fragmented and disintegrated; Insanity; Insecurity, deep sense of; Irritation;
Isolated and alone; Closed / vs Open, too open; Sense of self, loss of;
Suffocated, closed in, pressed down, trapped; Shut down, killed and ended.
From the proving of Pearl[2]:
“From above me came a dark, black, crushing sensation. I could feel the black,
black, black force moving down onto my head. Its power was overwhelming and I
was overwhelmed by fear. I was being crushed, killed, suffocated, closed in,
trapped, squashed down by a force I could not see or identify.” [2]
Look at a photograph of the
oyster shell to see some resemblance to ‘corrugated cardboard’
Follow-ups
After 1 month: “I feel a lot lighter, brighter and perkier in myself. The
moroseness and depression has been knocked on the head.”
“As busy and stressful as my job is, I’m getting on with it, vs. things getting
on top of me. I seem to be getting on top of things more. I feel more focused.”
“I used to take my partner’s stress on – now I’m not putting up with it.”
“My sleep is a lot more solid” (cf. “fractured”)
“I feel confident and focused within my role. My self-esteem is better.”
“I can articulate things better vs. rambling and babbling.”
“My back is ok. There’s still slight pain, but it doesn’t get me down so much, everything
is so much more positive in my life.”
“I’ve had no more headaches; they were nearly every day before.”
“I’m not as tense; I try and relax. We’ve had a lot more laughs. I feel more
rested.”
“I’m doing a lot more things that I want to do. I feel more myself again – I
feel a lot, lot better.”
After 4 months: “I’ve had a couple
of work panics but they haven’t completely crippled me. I feel I have a more
solid base at work. My successes have solidified my status. I feel more
integrated at work – before I felt very fragmented and that I was ‘standing
alone’.”
“I’ve been more assertive so that I don’t get overloaded.”
She still has back pain. An X-ray showed that her scoliosis has got worse over
the last 10 years. She is due to have an MRI scan. She’s concerned the doctors
may want to do a spinal fusion to straighten her spine.
“I’ve been very perky and positive, (since the remedy) everything takes on a
different meaning. I’ve been fine in myself, happy and content.”
We talked about yoga and Alexander Technique and osteopathy to help with her
scoliosis and back pain.
After 5 months: she was feeling
apprehensive about the MRI scan results:
“I’m in pain; I think “will this pain be forever?” I feel worried and confused;
there’s a possibility of having a spinal fusion – I need to think about the
impact that would have. I don’t know what’s going to happen, I feel like I’m in
limbo.”
Prescription: Pearl immersion 1M
After 7 months: she says her confidence has been good. She seems light,
bubbly, animated.
“I feel a lot more chilled out about my back situation – what will happen will
happen. I’m looking forward to (seeing the orthopaedic consultant) to see what
he has to say. I can look at alternatives; I’ve booked to see an osteopath;
there are ways to cope with it. I’m not too concerned.”
Her back pain has been bad: “The worst it’s ever been – but I’m not worried and
confused – you can’t control what you don’t know.”
The pain is in the lower left-hand lumbar area, a dull continual ache: the
muscles feel very tight; it feels very hard and tender. The pain is < a lot
of walking, < sitting, and > lying. TMJ (jaw pain): “I have a clicky jaw
and grind my teeth at night; I wake with my teeth clenched. It feels very tense
at night.”
Prescription: Berberis vulgaris 30C
After 9 months: she has been feeling
“positive, in-control, at peace, confident”. “Investigating it vs. ‘not wanting
to know about it’ has been more worthwhile than I imagined. It’s answered a lot
of questions; it’s given me a peace; it gives a bit of closure.”
She was told she did not need surgery, which “took a weight off my shoulders.”
She’s got engaged to her partner.
After 12 months (by email): “I feel well and seem to be coping. I’m keeping on top
of things and doing lots more activity outside of work and that makes me feel
great. I’ve taken up running and enrolled on a part-time postgraduate course at
university.”
References:
1)
‘Twelve Jewels’ by Peter Tuminello. [P.296]
2) ‘Twelve Jewels’ [P.294]
Photos:
Oyster shell; cepolina.com
Wikimedia Commons; Oyster pearl; Manfred Heyde
Keywords: overwhelming, fear, waves, panic attack, crumbling, crushed, fragmented, isolated, overloaded, immense, support, self-esteem, beach, sand
Remedies: Pearl immersion
This article was originally published in www.interhomeopathy.org