If
your last visit to the vet ended up with your cats climbing
up and hiding at the top of your vet's cup boards, your
vet and her assistants recovering from scratches, bites
and urine sprays and you yourself having a frightful shock,
then it's time to think.
What
you need to accept as a fact of life is that your cat
hates injections and all the poking around with endoscopes
that all good vets sometimes need to do. Homeopathy in
contrast is gentle and painless and works well in a remarkable
number of cases.
You
need to contact a good veterinary homeopath - someone
who has studied the science and art of homeopathy well.
As
you are aware, most of homeopathy is all about handing
out sugar coated pills. Soothing and gentle, it is a remarkable
system of healing. Developed by a German physician Hahnemann
more people than ever before are adopting this beautiful
system of healing - both for themselves and for their
pets.
The
essential principle of homeopathy revolves around the
concept of Similia Similibus Curentur or " Like cures
like ". Dilution of medicines is done in molecular
ranges or ultra molecular ranges.
According
to this system of healing living beings are maintained
by a vital force. Disease happens because of disorderly
functioning of the vital force. All homeopathic drugs
contain the medicines in very minute doses. The degree
to which a medicine is diluted marks the strength or potency
of the medicine.
In 1873, Dr Schuessler, another German physician held
the view that some mineral salts are vital for functional
activity in living beings. He classified them as 12 basic
tissue salts and gave the names: Calcarea Flour, Calcarea
Phos, Calcarea Sulph, Ferrum Phos, Kali Mur, Kali Phos,
Kali Sulph, Magnesia Phos, Natrum Mur, Natrum Phos, Natrum
Sulph and Silicea. Even today you will find such names
used for homeopathic medicines.