Remedy code: 3-666.74.09.
A 30-year-old woman, she is short and heavyset, appears friendly but exudes emotional detachment and slight pride. She has mild asthma and hay fever and is unresponsive to medication, which makes her drowsy due to side effects. Blood tests reveal allergies to herbs, grass, trees, and pollen. Her symptoms include shortness of breath, an itching in throat, eyes, nose, and palate, nasal congestion, or a runny nose. Taking a shower helps; symptoms worsen with dust and scents. Shortness of breath, tearing eyes, and intense coughing occur during colds or hay fever episodes and with temperature changes, such as air conditioning, a glass of ice water, or transitioning between warm and cold environments. Her symptoms worsened after her ex cheated on her. Her is born in Africa, never saw her father and came here 20 years ago as refugee. Initially, she didn’t realize the impact of the transition to a completely different climate and culture. Later, she sought help from a psychologist for depression. She often experiences headaches or migraines, severe, mostly on the left side, with heaviness around the eyes, making it hard to see or keep her eyes open.
Light and sound exacerbate the pain, which often begins with stabbing sensations at the occiput, leaving her drowsy. Migraines used to occur every two months but now arise only when she feels unwell. She has always been strict with herself, ignoring hunger, thirst, and pain, and avoiding bathroom breaks at work. She is trained in social work and is skilled at building connections. Her hobbies include sports, spending time with friends, reading, and painting. With stress and sensory overload, she retains water, and swelling, especially in her ankles and abdomen, it starts after sleeping, and then she sweats heavily. Her energy levels are good, but she sleeps lightly and wakes frequently. Her dreams are frightening, revolving around fears such as leaving her homeland, losing everything, and her journey. These dreams often involve farewells or unexpected events beyond her control. In the past, she used cannabis extensively. Without it, she feels more, including pain, sadness, and guilt toward her family, before she was less available to them. She used smoking as a means to withdraw. She quit smoking to get more out of life instead of isolating herself in her work. She had a difficult childhood in foster care, frequently changing homes. She often had headaches and didn’t finish school, spending some time homeless.
AnalysisGold series: hay fever, allergies, control.
Lanthanides,
Series 6: independence, self-reliance, awareness of shadows, unresponsive to pharmacological medication.
Phase 7: loss, farewells, drug escape, homelessness, suicidal tendencies (see follow-up).
Phase 4: more visible so the Subphase, pride and responsibility at work.
Apiales: “unfeeling,” caring for others, protective.
Stage 9: not completing school or studies, stopping just before the finish line (later she shared severe exam anxiety, working hard to prove herself, comparable to "walking on your tip-toes," as known in casuistry of
Europium and
Iridium, both
Stage 9), proving oneself to the world.
Coriander: the theme of "homeland" (L. Klein: ailments from emigrating, nostalgia for the homeland, feeling trapped in another country), the issue of seduction.
Prescription:
Coriandrum sativum MK.
Follow upHer condition improved; within the first week, the attacks were less severe, only sneezing, throat irritation, and mild shortness of breath remained.
Symptoms no longer lasted all day but subsided within 10–15 minutes. On the first day, she noticed an ammonia-like taste and smell during the meal. She is very sensitive to taste and smell. Her skin improved, appearing brighter and less sallow, noticeable even to others during the first week. She occasionally experienced mild headaches after long, busy days, leaving her a bit drowsy. She feels more stable and emotionally better, no longer having suicidal thoughts, which previously occurred a few times a month (lasting days before therapy). These thoughts used to arise after arguments, but now she experiences tension, cries briefly, or takes a walk to calm down. She still dreams frequently, sometimes bordering on nightmares, but they no longer cause fear or prevent her from sleeping. The recurring theme in her life is perseverance. After three months, her symptoms are minimal. She feels better, less tense, sleeps better, and has fewer nightmares and disturbances from noise. Her energy levels are higher. She dreams less often and experiences less fear in dreams she doesn’t remember. Headaches sometimes occur upon waking, and her shoulders remain tense, sometimes radiating to her neck. She has lost weight and now can pay more attention to her diet. The nerve pain in her abdomen occurs occasionally, triggered by stress, on pressure to perform, or being under duress. She experienced abdominal pain during a recent test.