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Further
Reading
on Dr. Bach and
His Studies

BACH
FLOWER REMEDIES: THREE BASIC BOOKS (revised)
Edward Bach, M.D.
Includes the three basic books outlining Dr. Bach's
method of natural healing: The Twelve Healers, The Bach
Remedies Repertory and Health Thyself.
6" x 9" 182pp
$12.95

THE
ORIGINAL WRITINGS OF EDWARD BACH
Judy Howard and John Ramsell
This book contains the last written works of Dr. Bach.
Heal Thyself and The Twelve Healers and Other Remedies.
It is a wonderful insight into Dr. Bach's thoughts and
precise intentions for the future of his work.
5 1/4" x 8 1/2" 197pp
$13.95
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Only
a man with the qualities of Dr. Edward Bach could provide
mankind with the basic remedies for man’s physical
and psychological
Bach had an overwhelming compassion for mankind, a love of
nature and the mind of a genius. The poor health from
which he suffered made his body to be very sensitive to
its environment. This sensitivity, although considered
a curse by many, was a key to his ability to discern the
remedies in nature.
In his day, great numbers of people suffered from ill
health. Bach noted that the medical society did little
for people except to suppress symptoms and burden them
with heavy medical fees. He believed healing perhaps belonged
more to the Church than to a medical society and openly
shared this belief. Christ was the great healer and he
healed the body, the mind and the soul. However, to begin
his study of healing, Bach went to Birmingham University.
He then completed his education at the University College
Hospital in London; here he received a very proper medical
education.
Bach observed that the same treatment did not always cure
the same disease in each patient. He noted that much could
be learned by observing the sick person’s complaint
and seeing their various reactions to diseases. This seemed
to influence their prognosis. Bach also noted that a remedy,
which cured some, had no effect on others. Furthermore,
he observed that patients with a similar personality or
attitude would often respond in an identical way to the same remedy,
while others of a different temperament responded differently,
and consequently required a different remedy. |
Personality and Healing
Early in his career, Bach found that the personality of the individual
was more significant in the healing process than the state
of the physical body. Personality, he said, was the prime
indication of the treatment required. The patient’s
personality and emotions were the most significant indicators
of the remedy required to treat their physical problem.
As a follower of Hippocrates, Bach believed that healing
should be gentle, painless and noninvasive. Often, he
observed that the medicine or treatment given was painful
and in some cases, even more painful than the disease
itself. This observation led him to search for a better
way of healing. He was overheard saying, “It will
take me five years to forget all I have been taught.”
In 1913, Bach was appointed to the position of Casualty
House Surgeon at the National Temperance Hospital. In
this position he became even more dissatisfied with the
medical education he had received. He observed that allegedly
“cured” patients often did not stay cured
for long. Many people, he noted, did not respond to treatment
at all. He became convinced that the doctors were treating
the disease and not the patient. He believed that this
was due in part to the fact that they had such little
time for their patients. Most doctors kept so busy treating
the physical body that they were forgot about the patient
and their emotional health.
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