– Jan Scholten

The most important aluminium compound known in homoeopathy is not pure aluminium, but Alumina or aluminium oxide: Al2 O3.3H2O.

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The name is derived from alumen or alum. It was discovered in 1872 and it is the most common metal and the third most common element on earth (7,5 percent). Aluminium is found in earth and clay.

The metal is very light and is used in aluminium foil and in aircraft. It is often used as a component in steel to bind the oxygen and to make it light in weight. Bearings usually contain magnesium, silicium, cuprum, zincum and zirconium (the latter is particularly used in spacecraft).

Concepts

Stage 3-9 Silicium series

Investigating Exploring Relationships family

Differentiating Comparing Other You

Trying out Love Hate

Hesitating Communication

Changeable Unstable Language Learning

Underestimating presentation

Discouraged Suppressed Play

Unofficial Noncommittal Teenager

Confusion Home Neighbourhood

Group analysis

Confusion in relationships; confusion about roles.

Indecisive about who he is in relation to others.

Confusion about who he is and who the other person is: confusion identity.

Doubt in relationships.

Doubt whether they belong to the family.

Doubt whether they are exercising their own will or that of the group: mis-guided.

Confusion in groups.

Doubt about the relationship they want to have: triangular relationships.

Searching for contact and relationships.

Confusion in relation to others.

Doubt from the other person in relationships.

Picture of Aluminium metallicum

Essence: confusion about who he is and who the other person is.

Confusion within the relationship; confusion about roles

They feel they have managed to find their own place and they deserve to have this place, but there are still several points that aren’t clear to them. They wonder whether they really want this relationship. They also wonder how to proceed. How much of themselves should they give to this relationship? What is left of them since they have given themselves to this relationship?

Confusion about identity within the relationship

They are confused about their own position in relation to the other person. They know they are in a relationship but they don’t know where their own identity and responsibility end and the other persons begins. They ask themselves questions like: Was it really me who did this? or Am I being myself at the moment? This is the well known rubric’Confusion about identity.

Another typical symptom is that they don’t recognise themselves when they look in the mirror. They look at themselves in surprise and think: Is that really me? The confusion about where they end and the other person begins is sometimes so strong that it stops them from taking responsibility for their own actions.

Doubt whether it is their own will or the will of the group Out of a desire to belong to the group they often do whatever the other person wants, thereby ignoring their own wishes. They carry out a task as requested by a family member or a peer group and later on they discover that it was probably not such a good idea.

They feel uncomfortable about it and start to ask themselves whether it was really them who carried out this request: After all it was the group who asked them to do this, so isn’t it the groups responsibility? We find this in the repertory under the rubrics Delusion other speaks, Delusion other hears, Delusion consciousness belongs to another, Delusion head belongs to another and Errors about identity.

It is a very important remedy for people who did wrong during the war, who did things that did not agree with their own morals, but Befehl ist befehl; also for people who spend their life thinking they have committed a crime.

These people might talk about themselves in an impersonal way, as if they are talking about someone else, using the words you or one instead of I.

Doubt about which relationship to choose: triangles.

They doubt whether they have chosen the right partner or the right relationship. They keep on searching to try and find out whether another relationship wouldn’t be more suitable. This creates complicated triangular relationships with all the confusion and doubt that goes with these. Who should they choose? Whose ideas should they follow? Should they listen to their boss or to their colleague? Should they choose for their wife or for their sister. They can never make up their minds, always afraid to make the wrong choice and regret it later.

Doubt from the other person in the relationship

All this wavering and hesitation eventually makes their partner unsure about the whole relationship too. The partner thought that a commitment had been made but now it all looks very unstable and he doesnt know what to think of it anymore.

Doubt whether they belong to the family

A similar doubt may exist with regard to the family. They know they are part of the family but they don’t really feel at ease, as if they can’t really be themselves, as if they have to give part of themselves away for the sake of the whole group.

This theme may emerge within a very strict or religious family, where everybody has to obey the rules. Or we may see it in religious sects where there is a strong regime of discipline and obedience to authority. Nobody can be themselves, they have to do as they are told. A similar situation exists in the army, where they are forced to do things they would never dream of doing themselves.

Expressions

Fears: knives, blood, insanity, own impulses.

Mood: timid, adapting, complaining, moaning, hurried, slow to act and speak, depressed, suicidal.

Delusions: time going too fast, parts of body belong to someone else, being a criminal, insanity, having no friends, ghosts, killing, marriage, mistake about own identity (

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