Into this situation steps the brave and devoted classical homeopath. The challenge is substantial but the payoff is huge. The practitioner has the potential to give a child's life back and save an entire family. More than this, they can demonstrate to the world that homeopathy can work wonders when allopathy can offer nothing. For this reason, the autism epidemic provides a tragic but awesome opportunity for homeopathy in promoting itself. The parents of autistic children are desperate, intensely invested in their children, and will not forget what homeopathy has done for them. I'm a case in point! I know of several other "autism mom's" who have gone on to become practitioners and ardent promoters of homeopathy.
I'll conclude this article with a short description of my son Max's recovery story. It is an edited excerpt from an article I wrote for
Mothering Magazine that appeared in January 2006. Max's recovery demonstrates, in my view, many key things: the effectiveness of classical treatment; the important role of nosodes in autism treatment; the utility of LM dosing (which I believe provides the gentle and frequent "nudge" that many autistic children need, in addition to involving the parents and their intentionality in the process); the role of special diets that remove certain foods (notably milk, gluten, food colorings, and corn) that are essentially maintaining causes for many children and can be reintroduced once food sensitivities are healed by homeopathic treatment; the importance of engaging the whole family in the healing process; and the need for parents to be patient, observant, pliable to changes and improvements, heartfully connected to their child, and faithful in the potential for recovery. I encourage you to read Impossible Cure if you are interested in more details of Max's story. Many parents find that this book provides invaluable guidance and quite a few practitioners require that all their patients buy and read the book -- not just their autism families. See
www.impossiblecure.com.
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In January of 1995, an article in Mothering about the homeopathic treatment of children's behavioral problems led me to seek out homeopathic treatment for my then autistic son, Max. Back then, my husband Steve and I were struggling to understand and come to terms with Max's inability to communicate and socialize with others. Unfortunately, this experience has become increasingly familiar to more and more parents since that time. In 1995, the dramatic rise in autism rates in the USA was just beginning, and the world of autism resources and treatments was in its infancy.
In the spring of 1994, when Max was nearly three, his preschool program called us in for a conference and recommended medical attention. Max was becoming increasingly detached, did not make good eye contact or respond well to his name, and was manifesting self-stimulation activities like spinning. During story time, he seemed oblivious; if he was not being held in a teachers lap, he would run off and play quietly elsewhere in the room. When other children were playing outside, the teachers would find him staring raptly at a toy or animal in a classroom. Although Max was generally happy in demeanor, he had only ten or twenty words in his vocabulary and was not yet making two-word sentences. Nor did he seem to really understand or respond to us when we spoke to him. If I tried to read to him at bedtime, he'd be all over the bed, running his fingers on the wall and the bedspread. However, he was amazingly adept with blocks and computers, knew his numbers and letters, and loved watching TV and dancing to music.
On the advice of a speech therapist friend, we did not take Max to the Stanford University clinic that had been recommended to us. She told us they'd just label him and instill a sense of hopelessness in us. Instead, she recommended an excellent language therapist in Palo Alto a woman who is still the top therapist working with children like Max in our area. As with so many other things that happened to us that fateful year, someone up there was watching out for us; notoriously impossible to get an appointment with, this therapist took Max on as a client immediately. And rather than labeling him, she just set to work.
The summer of 1994 I also learned about the Feingold diet. One of the most suspect items on their problem-food list was cow's milk and Max was addicted to it! The bottle was his lovie and he would sometimes drink eight bottles a day. Once we took milk out of his diet, a veil seemed to lift, and Max finally was able to build two-word sentences. He was still autistic in style, but he was definitely more present. Several years later I discovered that sensitivities to milk and other foods are highly characteristic of autistic children. Other dietary changes we made at that time included avoidance of food colorings and corn.
In the fall of 1994, Max's appointments with his language therapist continued, including a weekly session with two other boys on the autism spectrum. Max was the best behaved but the least verbal and most spaced out. After testing, he qualified for county special education benefits. Max's progress in therapy was slow and he had begun to manifest characteristic autistic symptoms like echolalia, speech echoing. We were heartsick but determined to try everything we could. Truly, this was my worst nightmare coming true. My brother is severely mentally ill, so I knew very well how Max's problems could impact our entire family. At that time we enrolled Max in a Montessori school, which was much better suited for him, and also tried to adopt ideas from the book Son Rise by Barry Neil Kaufman for example, spending intensive focused individualized time with him. On the bright side, Max was usually happy, even if he wasn't fully there.
That was the state of things when I learned about Homeopathy from Mothering. Somehow, the short feature article by Judyth Reichenberg-Ullman, ND rang a bell in me; I instinctively knew that this form of treatment could be our answer. Like I said, someone up there was watching out for us! The next day I called an acupuncturist friend of mine and asked where can I find a homeopath? She referred me to John Melnychuk, a practitioner who had just set up a practice in Palo Alto. We quickly got an appointment, and Max's journey to recovery began.
Our first appointment with John was typical of classical homeopathic treatment. John observed Max, listened to all of the symptoms I related about Max's sleep and eating habits, sweat patterns, physical symptoms, behavior, and personality. He also took into account Max's gestation, birth, and our family's medical histories. This first appointment took approximately two hours. After taking a couple of days to analyze the case, John called to tell us the name of a remedy that he felt was best-matching or homeopathic to Max. (In Max's case, this was Carcinosin LM1.)
Luckily, fate was smiling upon us once again. Within days of beginning on a daily liquid dose of the remedy, Max began showing subtle changes. His speech became slightly more fluid, he used some new phrases, and he seemed more socially aware. The following week, Max's therapist remarked that something had definitely shifted. Even though we did not tell her about the homeopathy, she quickly asked, "What did you do?!" For example, Max was suddenly able to follow a sequence of two commands rather than just one.
As the months progressed, the changes in Max became more and more noticeable. Each month we would increase the potency of his remedy and would notice a characteristic pattern of response. Upon starting a new bottle of the remedy in a higher potency, we would see a 3-day period of increased hyperactivity followed by a discrete improvement in cognition and behavior. Since Steve and I are both scientists, we even conducted a simple experiment. Steve gave Max his remedy for a two-week period and changed the potency at a time unknown to me. I made observations trying to notice that sudden improvement in behavior and I noticed it exactly three days after the dose had been changed.
After six months of treatment, John recommended that we also take Max to a cranial osteopath. John now treats many autistic children, and he has found that skilled cranio-sacral treatment can speed up improvement in many of his cases. Max had several treatments with the osteopath and we noticed that it made a real impact on him. It seemed to calm him and also increased his desire for physical contact and affection.
After nine months of homeopathic treatment, Max's therapist felt that her sessions were no longer necessary. One-and-a-half years after beginning treatment, Max was testing above age level. When we signed the papers releasing him from eligibility for special education benefits, our therapist told the county representative that it was not her treatment that had helped Max, it was homeopathy. In fact, she told us that she had never seen anything like it before. She had seen autistic kids improve, but she had never seen a child lose their autism like Max had.
At that point, Max was probably 80% cured. The remaining 20% took a period of several years marked by transitions to new remedies as Max improved and changed. By the time he was in 4th grade, no one would suspect his former autism.
(Obviously, each child requires individualized treatment with remedies selected on the basis of their own symptoms. Each autistic child will likely need completely different remedies. However, for benefit of the homeopaths reading this, I will briefly describe the course of Max's treatment. Max initially progressed from Carcinosin LM1-13 over the first year of treatment. At this point the aggravation was consistent and dosing was halted. Six months later, due to a relapse because of a TB test injection, we began again with Carcinosin LM1, progressing up to LM8 over the course of eight months. After this, Carcinosin was not used again, nor was LM dosing necessary. Over the years, occasional remedies were given only as needed, notably Op, Cicuta, and Hyoscyamus. Pulsatilla and Arnica were important as acute remedies. Now, at age 17, Max is probably healthier and needs less homeopathic help than the rest of our family.)
Admittedly, Max's response to homeopathic treatment was exceptional and close to ideal. But Max is not an isolated case. As more and more families are beginning to try homeopathy for their autistic children, I am hearing more and more experiences of true healing from around the world. And with an incurable disease like autism, even modest improvements can make a huge difference in quality of life. Many of the homeopaths I speak with report at least some significant form of improvement in a majority of their autism cases.
As you might imagine, Max's cure set an even larger journey in motion for our family. For one thing, homeopathy became our primary mode of medicine. Over the years the homeopathic miracles I've witnessed among friends and family are just mind-boggling. My experience with Max also inspired me to change the course of my own life. My work as a researcher in computer science suddenly seemed trivial and mundane in comparison to the miracle that had touched our lives. I felt a call to devote myself to learning, promoting, and supporting homeopathy in the United States. I couldn't believe that most of the people in this country don't know about homeopathy. The more I learned, the more I realized that it was like a hidden treasure.
Soon, I gave up my work in computer science and began to study homeopathy myself first by reading, and then through more formal study in courses and seminars. I began to help out with various national homeopathic journals and groups, I got involved in the California health freedom movement, and I now serve on the board of the National Center for Homeopathy (
www.nationalcenterforhomeopathy.org).
I also began to write. First, I began with articles that I placed on the web. Ultimately, I decided to write an introductory book to let the public in general, and the autism community in particular, know about the power of homeopathy. The result is "Impossible Cure" a general introduction to homeopathic philosophy, history, and science that includes the story of our family's experience along with dozens of other first-person cure stories from people from all over the world, for a wide variety of physical and emotional problems. This book has also been translated into German, Greek, and soon Arabic. (See
www.impossiblecure.com)
Another interesting turn of events for our family has been a growing awareness of the dangers of vaccination. Several clues over the years have hinted that Max's autism was likely due to a vaccine injury. For example, while we did not re-vaccinate him at age five, he did get the TB test and he immediately had a marked relapse in his autistic symptoms. Luckily, we resumed homeopathic treatment and he rebounded. I also discovered, years later, that Max had received his Hib and MMR vaccines just as he was recovering from Roseola. I have now learned that vaccinating a child who is already in a compromised state can sometimes be a recipe for disaster.
Because of my increasing involvement with the autism community and because my husband Steve and I are both computer scientists, we were approached by the Alan Yurko Project to improve the accessibility and usability of the VAERS database the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. This database of vaccine injury cases is supplied online by the CDC, but is virtually unusable for research by most people. Steve took the VAERS data, combined it into a single large database, and made it accessible online via the web. Many people in the autism and medical community now use this database for their research. It is sponsored by the National Vaccine Information Center and can be found at
www.medalerts.org.
Without a doubt, Max's story of recovery and our family's experiences are exceptional. Today Max is 17, a happy and healthy popular teenager who is an excellent student and talented artist. He is currently in the process of applying to university to study animation. (Check out his web site at
www.maxamania.com). Our family has been truly blessed by the healing brought to us by homeopathy and I will always be thankful for the miracles it can perform.
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Amy L. Lansky, PhD was a Silicon Valley computer scientist when her life was transformed by the miraculous homeopathic cure of her son's autism. In April 2003 she published
Impossible Cure: The Promise of Homeopathy, one of the best-selling books on homeopathy in the USA (
www.impossiblecure.com). Amy is an executive board member of the National Center for Homeopathy in the United States.