Post by Admin - Joy Lucas on Aug 14, 2021 9:04:36 GMT
Curious Rubrics - dreams of gardens - Phellandrium aquaticum
This is also called water dropwort and is in the Umbel family so we will find symptoms that can be common to that family of remedies.
Fundamentally it is a tubercular remedy and has a great affinity to the respiratory system - offensive expectoration with the cough being a leading symptom.
The underlying theme of all the umbels is sudden fear, fright which requires immediate amelioration. Thus, they need to escape, will want to run outdoors (always >>> outdoors which is a direct link to being in the garden).
Many tubercular remedies have constriction within as the lungs fill up and close down, so another need to escape, get air (not cold air), or bury themselves in their thoughts to be abstracted.
Specifically the fear is that of misfortune, fear of being attacked, fear of being robbed and these are all sudden and acute feelings that need dealing with.
Even the headaches are crushing and feel as if the brain in being struck.
Likewise they dream of lightning and this sums up the active fear and extreme of the attack mode.
There can be an extreme diversion to the fear in as much it translates into exhilaration instead of dynamic fear. It is as if it is an energy force that will travel until it finds the outlet, just like the lightening.
Accompanying this almost in exact alignment is a constant feeling of internal vibration.
Another fear comes in the form of hydrophobia, easily remembered with the common name of water dropwort.
It is a very tired, exhausted and sleepy remedy when not in the active fearful state - dreams of gardens (where it belongs) would be a soothing condition.
The offensive aspect of this remedy that comes with the cough is common enough in serious respiratory conditions such as bronchitis, emphysema and tuberculosis but in Phellandrium the expectoration smells like bed bugs - apparently somewhere between urine and coriander and the leaves do look a bit like coriander.
This is also called water dropwort and is in the Umbel family so we will find symptoms that can be common to that family of remedies.
Fundamentally it is a tubercular remedy and has a great affinity to the respiratory system - offensive expectoration with the cough being a leading symptom.
The underlying theme of all the umbels is sudden fear, fright which requires immediate amelioration. Thus, they need to escape, will want to run outdoors (always >>> outdoors which is a direct link to being in the garden).
Many tubercular remedies have constriction within as the lungs fill up and close down, so another need to escape, get air (not cold air), or bury themselves in their thoughts to be abstracted.
Specifically the fear is that of misfortune, fear of being attacked, fear of being robbed and these are all sudden and acute feelings that need dealing with.
Even the headaches are crushing and feel as if the brain in being struck.
Likewise they dream of lightning and this sums up the active fear and extreme of the attack mode.
There can be an extreme diversion to the fear in as much it translates into exhilaration instead of dynamic fear. It is as if it is an energy force that will travel until it finds the outlet, just like the lightening.
Accompanying this almost in exact alignment is a constant feeling of internal vibration.
Another fear comes in the form of hydrophobia, easily remembered with the common name of water dropwort.
It is a very tired, exhausted and sleepy remedy when not in the active fearful state - dreams of gardens (where it belongs) would be a soothing condition.
The offensive aspect of this remedy that comes with the cough is common enough in serious respiratory conditions such as bronchitis, emphysema and tuberculosis but in Phellandrium the expectoration smells like bed bugs - apparently somewhere between urine and coriander and the leaves do look a bit like coriander.