Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to main navigation
Please feel free to contact us via our order hotline:
07626 974 9700
(Mon-Fri 8am-8pm, Sat 8am-12pm)

The air is too heavy; a case of xenon.

News

 
 
 
The patient is a young man who had been sent to me by his mother because of his depression - he would probably not have come of his own accord, as he says he regards homeopathy as a 'pseudo‑science'. He is a freelance composer who produces film music. He suffers from androgenetic alopecia, which his father also had, and had already lost his hair by the age of 21; he also suffers from migraine. The migraine manifests as a throbbing pain at the back of the head, without aura. It is as if a weight sits at the back of the head and pulls his head backwards. It is a stabbing pain, as if his skull is not big enough and his brain wants to bulge out.
13_0507_xenon_xenon_autolicht_shutterstock_24059077.jpg
Xenon light
 


Divya Chhabra (DC): What can happen if your skull is not big enough?
Patient (P): It's as if an air pump were attached to my head, inflating my head. It's like a hammer, not like a pimple.
Light bothers me; when I look into the light, it's as if my eyes are pierced by shards of glass. Cold light sources, like tungsten, hurt my eyes, but the blue lights of a BMW do not dazzle me. I have an aversion to mercury‑based light. I am sensitive to colours - I prefer yellow because it is warmer, but my favourite is black. There are so many types of light sources nowadays - we also use different lamps in films. I am also very sensitive to music.

DC: What exactly are you feeling at the moment?

 P: Phone tones, high pitches and red colours worsen my condition; they give me a slight pressure on my chest. I get physical reactions and want to withdraw. It is as if my chest is being drawn into a cavity, but I am not suffocating.

13_0507_xenon_Taucher_pool_shutterstock_4623667.jpg

Air bubbles

DC: (no feeling of suffocation? He denies it ...) Tell me about the choking.

P: It's as if something were tied around my chest, and it gets tighter and tighter, it becomes compressed. Like a clay pot it falls apart. Like a cricket bat - it doesn't break, but it becomes stiff and hard.


DC: Stiff?

P: A strong gravity pulls me down like a fist. (There is no logic here, an important sign.) It pulls everything around it and also attracts the molecules. A wide, dense space, no sky, vacuum. No air molecules. The air feels heavy. (This is illogical - air consists of light!) It is exhausting to draw the air into my lungs.
It is like breathing under water, it pulls me down as if I had weights attached to me. When I am happy, I have a springy step. My body feels light and fast, I shoot off like a rocket into space. It's like when a ship is launched into the air, then it falls down again. (Absurd = important!). Flying fascinates me. When I leave my body, there is weightlessness, like leaving the ground. Yet I land, as if I am being pulled down. It is like an air bubble that I have to pierce to escape. 
Keywords: dragged to the ground by the migraine, by gravity, into depression. The air feels heavy.

P: I love the speed, it's a feeling like an air bubble around me. You have to free yourself from this air bubble by stabbing into it, then it bursts.
DC: What if you cannot free yourself from the air bubble?

P: I become tired if I cannot escape. It is like a large office building where all the lights suddenly go out and nothing happens anymore. It is like the flickering light of an incandescent bulb before it goes out.

Particular aspects of this case are:
- Cold light has effects on the eyes.
- Sensitivity to incandescent bulbs.
- The air is heavy.
- A ship in the air, in flight.

The contrast between heaviness and weightlessness points to the gases; most bulbs today are filled with inert gases. BMW cars have xenon headlights. Xenon gas is used for propulsion. It is five times heavier than air and can be poured downhill. Smelling xenon gas makes the voice heavier, unlike helium, which produces a very high, squeaky Donald Duck‑like voice.

Prescription: Xenon 1M
 
Follow‑up:

Initially he still could not breathe properly. He stayed at home alone and did not go out to meet friends. There was no real change. The remedy was repeated in 10M, and the change was dramatic. He is now a young man who smiles and can concentrate. He can work for hours and breathe much better. He has fewer headaches and has returned to his profession. He feels 96–97% better. The remedy was repeated once weekly at 10M.


__________________________________________________________________________

This case was presented at the Congress for Psychiatry and Homeopathy in Bad Krozingen, Germany, March 2012.

Photos: shutterstock.com

Category: Cases
Keywords: androgenetic alopecia, migraine, asthma, light sensitivity, cold light, heavy air, weightlessness, rocket, propulsion
Remedy: Xenon

Divya Chhabra