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Pausinystalia johimbe

Kingdom
3Plants
Phylum
6Angiospermae
Class
6Asteranae
Subclass
5Lamiidae
Phase
4Rubiales
Subphase
4Cinchonoideae
Stage
16
Name

Pausinystalia johimbe

Author

Maarten van der Meer

Type

Case

Chapter

3-665.44.16

Book
Family
Pausinystalia johimbe A 56-year-old woman, she often looks worried, is very orderly, and clear. She feels discontented, and emotional sticky, a kind of clinging. The year before, she developed hypertension after her mother was hospitalized. She is the youngest daughter and tries to advise her mother and brothers, which is not appreciated. The pressure was corrected after Zingiber officinalis, and she was also less agitated. The complaints that persisted the following year are stiff joints (fingers, knees, and feet), neck and shoulder pain, sensitive and often bloated intestines, difficulty losing weight, and she often feels rushed. Her upper right jaw often has a nagging pain, radiating to her ear. Her frequent foamy urine is a concern; she has no bladder problems.
Her father was dominant, and her mother had a difficult time due to his behovior at home. She as child went her own way, and her brothers did a lot of the householding. At work, she often gets annoyed with colleagues, which she keeps to herself. A manager controls everything, and she considers him unreliable; she needs freedom. Her upper jaw hurts, especially her mandibular condyle, and a nagging pain behind her ear—"you want to smack it." She develops canker sores on the palate and a fever rash. Her bowels gurgle (mostly on the lower right), and she often has light stools. Her annoyance: people are too self-absorbed. Three years ago, she responded well to Asclepias tuberosa (Series 6 arguments were allergies, Series 5 argument was the different culture she comes from). Lamiidae can still be a leading theme.
AnalysisSeries 6: responsibility, caring for parents, tension, joints, Lanthanides theme in childhood.
Series 5: neck and shoulder pain.
Phase 4: taking responsibility.
Phase 5: father's dominance, tension. Weight.
Cinchonoideae: irritation, keeping annoyance inward. Cephalanthus occidentalis, placed at Stage 8, shows slight improvement for six months. After annoyance at work, she relapses in all pains and irritability, has trouble falling asleep, and has a painful occipital spot. Her blood pressure fluctuates again. She has clashes with her family and feels excluded, she now broke the contact.
Stage 16: bowel, no appreciation.
Prescfiption: Pausinystalia johimbe.
Follow-upAfter two days, the pain and tenderness were gone. Her neck and shoulder quickly became less painful and less stiff. The soles of her feet can be tender at the heel, which lessens with walking. She sleeps well, can exercise a lot, and her blood pressure decreases, occasionally reaching 110. Her urine is sometimes still frothy (symptom of Pausinystalia johimbe). She can now ignore the pressures at work. Her face is softer and fuller, and a wistful expression is often visible in her eyes.
CommentWe see arguments for Phase 5, but it's a matter of interpreting words; The father's dominance can have the burdensome side effect of undervaluation, towards the family, towards her mother, a Stage 16 (or Phase 6) as a burdensome factor, as a sensitivity. Irritation can also be a consequence; the need for freedom is exacerbated by fixation, the Phase 4 theme. She works in a company with a hard-nosed male culture, she has steadfastness as a survival or capacity. The choice of Series 5: the location (here neck-shoulder region) is often an excellent guideline for determining the Series.
  • 0 Kingdoms
  • ›3 Plants
  • ›6 Angiospermae
  • ›6 Asteranae
  • ›5 Lamiidae
  • ›4 Rubiales
  • ›4 Cinchonoideae