The ABC Homeopathy Forum
storing remedies
Hello, I read a lot that you shouldn't store remedies near electro-magnetic fields, including the refrigerator. However, Luc De Schepper writes that if you have a liquid remedy for a chronic condition, you SHOULD store it in the refrigerator, because otherwise the liquid remedy will spoil (the water will go bad). Why do some sources say not to store remedies in the refrigerator?fiona12 on 2015-05-09
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♡ simone717 9 years ago
That is not going to do anything. If you are making a
remedy in water only, some people set it aside, not in
the fridge, but it only will last a couple days.
I put ones in water only in the fridge for years, but again they won't last long.
So the best thing is to get a dropper bottle,
put 4/5th water in it- then 1.5th rum, brandy
or vodka. That will last for years. Just
take a couple drops out of that and put it
into 1.4 cup of water for a dose.
There are variations on this, as far as hitting
the dropper bottle 5 x and then having the
potency go up a bit if needed by hitting it
10x etc.
remedy in water only, some people set it aside, not in
the fridge, but it only will last a couple days.
I put ones in water only in the fridge for years, but again they won't last long.
So the best thing is to get a dropper bottle,
put 4/5th water in it- then 1.5th rum, brandy
or vodka. That will last for years. Just
take a couple drops out of that and put it
into 1.4 cup of water for a dose.
There are variations on this, as far as hitting
the dropper bottle 5 x and then having the
potency go up a bit if needed by hitting it
10x etc.
♡ simone717 9 years ago
fiona12 9 years ago
Then you need to make the remedy in water,
store it in the fridge for a few days,
and then make it up again.
store it in the fridge for a few days,
and then make it up again.
♡ simone717 9 years ago
I am not sure that I agree with the opinion that storing homeopathic remedies inside a fridge exposes it to electromagnetic radiation. The fridge motor is typically located outside the fridge housing and the fridge housing is basically a metal box. It's an electromagnetic concept that anything inside a metal box is heavily shielded from EM (just google "Faraday Cage"). In fact, I would argue that your fridge is probably one of the most EM-free areas inside your whole house. I have tested the inside of my fridge using an EMF meter for high-frequency EMF and the Watts/m^2 fell to zero as I closed the fridge door. Of course, the fridge motor produces low-frequency EMF and I couldn't test for this but the concept should be the same. I could only see the motor posing a problem if, for some reason, your fridge doesn't have any metal between the motor and the housing, but that doesn't seem to be the norm based on the fridges that I have seen.
That's not to say that you would want to store your remedies inside the fridge: it's just that the food odors and moisture sound like a bigger concern to me than EM.
That's not to say that you would want to store your remedies inside the fridge: it's just that the food odors and moisture sound like a bigger concern to me than EM.
graemeav 8 years ago
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