Welcome on Qjure, on this first blog.In these blogs new information will be discussed, updates of remedies, their place in the
Plant theory, provings and cases with the conclusions that can be drawn from them. It will be many facetted, trying to bring new ideas in an easy to digest manner. All members can send in contributions too: comments, own cases and provings, new ideas and remedies. This website is meant to be an open forum for the homeopathic community.
In this first blog I want to discuss members of the family
Haemodoraceae, the Order
Commelinales. Form old cases the
Stage 8 had become clear from dreams where they had to do impossible task, that never could be ended in time. One patient was dreaming of counting an endless number of things. Another dream was that she had to put something big in a very small box. Typical situations for
Stage 8.
The themes of
Carbon series and
Silicon series were present in relationship and father problems.
The new cases show a confirmation of the themes of
Haemodoraceae with the combination of
Phase 4 and
Subphase 6 in relationships. This indicates that for them it is obvious that one stays together, the
Phase 4 quality. Often their parents had a stable relationship, although sometimes it can be rigid, too fixed. On the other hand there is the feeling that the relationship is not right, that giving and taking is out of balance, as in
Phase 6. They feel that the relationship is on the verge of collapsing. But still they stay together.
Their attitude and action to keep the relationship going on is doing a lot. They work hard to satisfy the other, their spouse. They even do too much, but it it feels as never enough.
The cases also confirm that it is correct to take all the families in the
Commelinales together and treat them as one
Family. From the point of view of the
Plant theory the Order
Commelinales should be downgraded to the level of
Family and the families in the
Commelinales to the level of Subfamilies.
The Families in Connelinales are
Commelinaceae,
Hanguanaceae,
Haemodoraceae,
Philydraceae and
Pontederiaceae.