How and When to Be Your Own Doctor eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 350 pages of information about How and When to Be Your Own Doctor.

How and When to Be Your Own Doctor eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 350 pages of information about How and When to Be Your Own Doctor.

Onion Cases

All too many of my cases are what I privately refer to as onion cases.  By this I mean the opposite of a simple case.  There are multiple complaints.  I call them onion cases because these people get better in layers, like pealing an onion.  As each skin comes off, the next becomes visible.  Sometimes when the patient overcomes an existing complaint, another appears that was not there in the beginning, probably this new one is a complaint that they had at an earlier point in their life, one that had gone away.  Onion cases take a long time to completely heal, sometimes years.  There frequently are psychological aspects to the case that surface with different physical problems.  If I were not an effective psychologist I could not succeed with most of them.  The average medical doctor probably considers onion cases to be hypochondriacs, but they usually are not.

Almost always the first symptoms that demand attention are the most life-threatening, like immune system failures, liver failures, pancreatic failures, nervous system failures and heart failures.  With these eliminated, new complaints appear.  Often these are endocrine system imbalances or weak endocrine glands, anemias, mild heart conditions.  Then it gets down to eye or ear infections, muscular or skeletal weaknesses, mild skin problems, sinusitis, teeth problems; things that aren’t serious but that do degrade the quality of life.  Each one of these layers also carries with it a psychological component; each of these layers can take three to six months to resolve.

I had a pretty good idea from the first visit that Daniel, not yet 30, was going to take some time to get well.  He already had a degenerative condition not usually seen until middle age—­crippling gout and arthritis.  He had badly distorted joints, walked with considerable pain, lacked a full range of movement, had enormous fatigue and consequently, a well-justified depression.  Daniel was about to give up working as no longer possible, but he liked his job.  And he certainly needed it.

Daniel’s analysis showed massive allergies to foods, a systemic yeast and multiple virus infections and multiple organ weaknesses:  a life-threateningly weak immune system, weak pancreas, weak adrenals, weak large intestine.  Because he could hardly accept anything he wasn’t allergic to and because he could not afford to quit working even for a few weeks (though he was about to be forced into complete disability) I put him on a Bieler fast.  This is a monodiet of fairly substantial quantities of either well-cooked green beans or well-cooked zucchini, the choice between these two foods depending on the acid-base balance of the blood. (Henry Bieler, 1965) In Daniel’s case my choice was zucchini, one pint of plain zucchini puree with a little kelp and garlic added (no salt, no butter, no nothing else) every few hours.  I also put him on heavy vitamin support and protomorphogens for his desperate immune system.  While on the Bieler fast he did daily enemas at home.  Had colonics been available to him, Daniel couldn’t have afforded them.

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How and When to Be Your Own Doctor from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.