Bri Hurlburt  0:03  

Welcome back to Homeopathy at Home with Melissa. 


Hey, Melissa.


Melissa Crenshaw 0:08

Hey Bri. 


Bri Hurlburt 0:09

And Happy Birthday.


Melissa Crenshaw  0:11  

Thank you.


Bri Hurlburt  0:12  

I know this will come out later. Yeah, it'll come out later, but we're recording on Melissa's 50th birthday.


Melissa Crenshaw  0:20  

Hey, I’ve had a great day.


Bri Hurlburt  0:23  

Good. That's exciting. You should. 

And thank you to all of you who loved on her. I know a lot of you are listening or watching. 


Melissa Crenshaw  0:35  

Oh my goodness.  So good. So good. I got so many cards and gifts and just love from all of you, from all of our listeners, and students and clients. And thank you so much. Yes, that was amazing.


Bri Hurlburt  0:50  

It was really great. I'm so glad it worked out well.  You deserve it. 


Melissa Crenshaw 0:54

Thank you. 


Bri Hurlburt 0:55

Today before we record our episode, I wanted to read a question that we got from one of our students or one of our listeners. I'm going to ask it and if you want to answer it for us, Melissa. 


She said, “I watched your video about how to make homeopathic tinctures on your YouTube channel and you mentioned that it doesn't matter what size bottle to use. So is it possible to have a gallon glass jar with 80% water 20% 80 proof-alcohol and still only use three to five pellets?” Then she said, “I'm just curious, I wouldn't need one that big. But am I understanding that concept correctly?”


Melissa Crenshaw  1:36  

It’s such a great question and I'm so glad this is asked. You know, I recorded that video so long ago I don't remember saying that, but obviously she just listened to it and heard me say any size bottle. I don't think that I agree with that. If I ever did agree, if I meant that., I don't think I agree with it anymore. So no, I would use more ... Okay. My memory’s coming back. 


Dr. Murphy said, “Yes.” I learned from him that you could drop one dose into a trough of water for horses or cows. 


Bri Hurlburt 2:12

Yeah. We have heard of people doing that, too.


Melissa Crenshaw 2:14

That's where I got that from. So really, yes, you could. Yes, you could drop one dose into a gallon., but what I personally would do now is maybe I would just increase it some. I'll maybe do two doses. I don't have anything to back me up in that, why I would, other than just a feeling. I feel like I would just do more.


Bri Hurlburt  2:36  

Just to be sure it's going to work. But essentially the idea is if you have any amount of the medicine in there, it will work, but because they're sprayed on the pellets, is that why you would just want to put enough in there to make sure you got a good dose? 


Melissa Crenshaw 2:53

That’s right. Yeah. 


Bri Hurlburt 2:56

Okay. Then, kind of a couple follow up questions to that. If that's the case, would you still only give one teaspoon as needed as a dose?


Melissa Crenshaw  3:03  

That’s right.  Yup. Yes.


Bri Hurlburt  3:05  

Okay. 


Melissa Crenshaw  3:08  

A teaspoon or half a dropper full.  Yeah, whatever you get, I just give the dropper a good squeeze.  


Bri Hurlburt  3:12  

Okay. And if you're pregnant or an infant, is that safe to take with the alcohol in it? And what about an alcoholic? So two different questions in one there.  


Melissa Crenshaw  3:23  

Two very good questions. So infancy and pregnancy, I think is case by case. I think you have to decide. I can't tell you if that's okay. Really, for the infant, I think I would have to refer you to the pediatrician and let them help you decide. For pregnancy, refer you to your OB or your midwife and let them help you decide. And if you think about it, there's really just a tiny bit of alcohol in it. If you're concerned about the alcohol, then you can take that half a dropper full and even dilute it some more in a little bit of water. That would dilute the alcohol.  You're not diluting the medicine and making it weaker. 


And then same for an alcoholic. I think it depends on the person, right? Because I know, alcoholics, totally recovered. One that I believe he or she could just take a dose of it and just be totally fine and then I know others that really shouldn't even have it in the house.


Bri Hurlburt  4:31  

So that’s using your own discernment in that situation. Okay. Thank you. And thanks for asking the question to whoever asked that question.


Melissa Crenshaw  4:41  

Yes. Thank you. That was a good question. All right. Yeah. 


Bri, I'm sorry. I want to bring some questions like that as they come in because these are really good questions and I want to be able to share these answers with all of you in case you haven't thought of these.  Or maybe you had this question and now you’ve got your answer.


So today's episode is pretty short. What were you going to say? Were you going to tell us about that?


Bri Hurlburt  5:09  

That’s what I was gonna say. I was going to introduce our topic for today.  It is pretty shor. Shorter than some. We're going to discuss milk allergies and how to deal with those and hopefully uproot them using homeopathy. So you want to kick that off Melissa? You have a few remedies here.


Melissa Crenshaw  5:30  

Yeah.  So when we say short, there's not a lot here in our notes to talk about, but it's a big problem, right? It’s a really big problem. A lot of people have milk allergies. 


Aethusa.  And remember, let me say this, too. These are all transcribed. I've been getting this question a lot lately, too. All of these podcasts are transcribed onto my blog so if you are hearing the word Aethusa and you're like, what? How do I even spell that? What is she saying?  Go to my blog at melissacrenshaw.com, click on the blog tab, and you'll see it.  They’re in order backwards, so from newest to oldest. Then you'll see this one is going to be called How to-, something with milk allergy. I'm sorry, I haven't named it yet. I don’t know.


Bri Hurlburt  6:34  

I know. That is hard. We didn't talk about that yet. Okay.


Melissa Crenshaw  6:37  

I usually name it as I'm getting it ready, editing and uploading, because … It’s so funny, I have not even thought about this. This is how I taught my children to write paper. You don't name your paper, your essay or whatever, you don't title it until you're finished writing it. And then you go back and you title it. So that's what I do, too. So it's going to have something to do with milk allergy.


Bri Hurlburt  7:02  

And we do have taglines.  Like our little … what do you call those words?   Tag words or something like that? 


Melissa Crenshaw 7:09

Yeah, that's right. 


Bri Hurlburt 7:10

You can look at allergies or whatever and click on that and it will help you find it. But this will be the newest one right now if you're looking for it.


Melissa Crenshaw  7:18  

It might say milk intolerance. Look for the word milk. I know it's gonna say milk in the title. 


Bri Hurlburt  7:24  

I do have a question on that note to clarify  before we start. Are we talking true milk allergies and intolerance? Or is this more intolerance?


Melissa Crenshaw  7:34  

I think both, yeah. Milk allergy and intolerance.


But then the other thing is that all of these podcasts are on my YouTube channel. If you didn't know that I have a YouTube channel, if you would rather watch this podcast episode that you're listening to, you can go to YouTube, and my channel is MMC, Homeopathy. MMC Homeopathy. Or if you're watching this on YouTube right now, and you can see us sitting in front of you and you will rather listen to it. Then go over to, everywhere, all the major podcast players. It's there.


Bri Hurlburt  8:13  

And we're so entertaining to watch. I'm totally kidding. It's not that exciting but maybe you want to watch.


Melissa Crenshaw  8:22  

I do have my dog in here with me tonight so I hope she doesn’t bark.


Bri Hurlburt 8:25

Okay, good.


Okay, back to Aethusa.  


Melissa Crenshaw  8:29  

Aethusa.  Aethusa is fool's parsley. And this is Aethusa cynapium.  C-Y-N. There's probably more than one Aethusa.  Fool’s parsley is what we're looking at. This is a very important remedy for children. Big, big remedy for children. This is the main remedy for pyloric stenosis and projectile vomiting. One of my children did that. I didn't know it was milk back then but she would literally … It was projectile. I've never seen anything like it in my life.  It seemed like it went across the room. And I was like, “How in this world is this little baby doing this?” This child drinks milk and has severe violent reactions. So that projectile vomiting, that's a severe and violent reaction, right? This is not just a little bit of spit up. This is a big deal.


Bri Hurlburt  9:34  

This is interesting. I just looked up what pyloric stenosis is because I did not know. I've heard it but didn't know what it was. And it's a condition in which the opening between the stomach and small intestine thickens. It said it most often occurs in babies under six months. In this condition the pylorus muscles block food from entering the small intestine and causes that forceful vomiting.  Our bodies are so smart. They're amazing.


Melissa Crenshaw  10:05  

Yes. And look at how homeopathy can help. Okay, so I feel like I have to also say here. If you have a baby that's projectile vomiting and you try cutting out dairy. Again, you have to use your discernment when to have the baby seen. If there's a block, yes homeopathy can help but you might also need to go to the doctor. So, yes.


Also this child can have severe diarrhea followed by dehydration and weight loss.  So they consume dairy or milk and they projectile vomit, they have violent reactions, they have violent explosions of diarrhea and they can get dehydrated and lose weight. Then they're labeled failure to thrive. And often Mama's milk supply is to blame. When baby's not gaining weight, gaining weight appropriately, or there's failure to thrive, we often blame milk supply or how the baby transfers the milk from mama to baby. So, you know, we also should consider a severe milk allergy and look at Aethusa.  


Aethusa has lots of gas and bloating, so if you see that baby with a distended belly.  Aethusa doesn't have to be just for babies or children. It can be for adults, too. And children. 


Epilepsy in children where the eyes turn downward. So, if you, or your children, have epilepsy, and if you can know during the seizure which way the eyes turn, downward, upward, right or left, all those things can be looked up in the Materia Medica. 


While eating, the child has colic with knees turned upward. So think about that baby who's breastfeeding and they scrunch up.  They bring their knees up and they scrunch up really tight while they're trying to feed or right after they feed, then you might think of Aethusa.  They have lots of crying and screaming all the time, so you're thinking of your colicky baby. They're in pain. Milk can cause a lot of pain. And okay, let's also be clear that it's dairy.  Dairy is cow's milk, goat's milk, mammal’s milk, right? Really just bovine and goat.  Goat tends to have a less severe reaction. I'm not suggesting that you give your baby goat milk. And I'm also not saying there's anything wrong with that. I'm saying I'm not telling you what to do there. What I am saying is that I’m not talking about breast milk. I'm talking about if mama is consuming dairy, then that dairy that mama has consumed can cause these reactions in the baby. So I just wanted to just say that. When I say milk, I am talking about dairy from a cow in the form of cow's milk. 

Alright, so colic … just lots of screaming all the time.   


Mental problems.  So, can't focus. Now we're talking about the older child, maybe ADD/ADHD.  Even the adult who has trouble with milk and can't concentrate or focus. I=  believe that Aethusa was in our ADHD and/or hyperactivity podcast episodes. If you missed that one, go back. 


Can't focus their attention. Failure to thrive I already mentioned. Can be allergic to breast milk or cow's milk is what Dr. Murphy says. And I believe it would be the cow's milk that's within the breast milk. I remember when I was in school with Dr. Murphy, and he would say …listen, I'm quoting him so don't shoot the messenger. He would say, “Those La Leche League people. They think that breast milk is flawless. They think it's flawless. They think no baby can ever be allergic to breast milk or can have any trouble with breast milk.”  And when he said that I just laughed. This was so long ago, right? And I just laughed. I'm like, “Oh, Dr. Murphy.”


Bri Hurlburt  15:14  

Like, if only he knew I'm a La Leche … Well, are you a La Leche leader?  


Melissa Crenshaw  15:19  

Not anymore.  I was.  


Bri Hurlburt 15:20

Okay.


Melissa Crenshaw 15:21

Mm-hmm.  Okay, so Aethusa has the most severe reaction, so that's what you're looking at. How severe these reactions are. 


All right, the next remedy is Natrum carb.  Nat carb. And this is the main remedy for milk allergy. There's lots of digestive symptoms: gas, bloating, colic, and diarrhea. There's a lot of indigestion and burping, and flatulence, which is gas. So that sounds just like Aethusa.  You think, “Well, how do I choose?”  Well, Aethusa is the main remedy for pyloric stenosis and projectile vomiting. And remember, Aethusa has the most severe reactions.  So Nat carb, the reactions are going to be less severe. There's still a milk allergy or intolerance. There's still the digestive symptoms: the gas, bloating, colic, indigestion, burping, but the reactions aren't as severe as Aethusa.  


Bri Hurlburt  16:30  

Does Aethusa usually come with some bigger mental picture then maybe Nat carb or no?


Melissa Crenshaw  16:35  

Yes, it can. 


Bri Hurlburt 16:39

But it doesn't have to doesn't have to?


Melissa Crenshaw 16:40

It doesn’t have to. Yeah.


Bri Hurlburt  16:41  

Okay. I was looking in my Materia Medica for just some other Nat carb things. 


Melissa Crenshaw 16:51

Oh, good. 


Bri Hurlburt 16:53

That's something, too, to do.  I always do that if I find myself in that place where there's a few good options. Then I just look at the Materia Medica for anything else that might stand out between the remedies.


Melissa Crenshaw  17:05  

That’s right.  Always go and read the remedies. What we're doing in these podcast episodes is giving you keynotes.  Ideas. 


In looking at Aethusa in the Materia Medica.  I know I'm backing up. You're looking at Nat carb, right? 


Bri Hurlburt 17:23

Yup.


Melissa Crenshaw 17:24

I’m looking at Aethusa so we can kind of compare. Let's look at abdomen. So Aethusa has the colic followed by vomiting, vertigo and weakness. That's the bold part of Aethua.  What does Nat carb say?


Bri Hurlburt  17:41  

Abdomen says indigestion, gas, and bloating. Hard, bloated, swollen abdomen. Violent sharp pain somewhat better after eating, or during eating it looks like.


Melissa Crenshaw  17:59  

Okay, so that would be a differentiation.


Bri Hurlburt  18:03  

Yeah. And it does give … It's pretty detailed. So I do think it would be really good to look up some of these.


Melissa Crenshaw  18:13  

Aethusa has a bubbling sensation around the navel.


Bri Hurlburt  18:19  

And this one around the navels says colic with retraction of navel and hardness of skin.


Melissa Crenshaw 18:27

Interesting.


Bri Hurlburt 18:28

Pressure in lower abdomen as if everything in abdomen would fall out.


Melissa Crenshaw  18:32  

Yeah, these are the things you're going to look at to differentiate and decide.  


Food. Food is intolerance of milk. regurgitation of food long after eating, digestion affected from brain exhaustion. That one doesn't have anything to do with what we’re talking about.  What does Nat carb say, if anything?


Bri Hurlburt  19:02  

Very weak digestion. Food allergies. Oversensitive to errors in diet. So it sounds like just a sensitive stomach.  Aversion to milk. This is interesting. Must drink in order to swallow solids. Drowsiness after meals.  Heartburn from fats


Melissa Crenshaw  19:26  

And we are reading from Dr. Murphy's Materia Medica, both of us just.  We're both in the fourth edition. Okay, you just said something that made me think of … let's see what did I see?


Oh man, what did you … Oh, you said sensitive to food errors So that reminds me of the person who accidentally gets a little bit of whatever in their meal.  They go out to a restaurant and they didn't realize the vegetable was cooked in butter or they sprinkled butter or whatever. And then they have a reaction. So this is that accidental little bit. Mm-hmm.


Bri Hurlburt  20:16  

Drowsiness seems to be a big part of Nat carb.  Drowsiness after you eat.


Melissa Crenshaw  20:22  

Okay, that's a good one to note. 


And then we also have modalities. You always want to look at the modalities.  What makes it better? What makes it worse?  For Aethusa, they are better in open air, better for company.  Worse from milk.  Worse from coffee, wine. Worse from frequent overeating. Worse from three to 4am. Worse in the evenings. So think about your little baby. If you notice a pattern. Your baby's having these reactions, 3 or 4 AM, and in the evenings. These are some of the modalities of Aethusa.  Worse for warmth.  Worse for overexertion. Heat causes all eruptions to itch intolerably. So really heat seems to be a big one. Aethusa is not going to do well in the heat.


Bri Hurlburt  21:23  

That's similar to Nat carb.  It sounds like heat makes it worse. Something I am noticing repeating through Nat carb is better from eating. So like you feel better while you're eating. Aversion to cold air, like you said. Better rubbing, motion and pressure. Worse from milk. Worse from overexertion. So I mean, those are some similar things but the better from eating sounds like I didn't hear that in Aethusa.  


Melissa Crenshaw  21:56  

I still haven't seen that in Aethusa.  


Bri Hurlburt 22:00

Yeah, that's interesting. 


Melissa Crenshaw 22:02

And then go through because there's still stomach to look at.  Maybe there’s skin.  If you have skin eruptions you can look at that when you're trying to differentiate between remedies. We still have a couple more remedies to do that we'll also look at, but temperature you might look at and anything else that pertains to the thing that you're dealing with. Having a Materia Medica is very, very helpful, but also just having Materia Medica knowledge, so knowing your remedies.  Just getting into your Materia medica, reading the remedies, is a great way to do that. My Quizlet classes are a great way to help you learn the remedies and memorize what they do. And my mentorship program is a great way to learn the remedies. We go through a lot of that in there. Materia Medica knowledge is important, and we have Materia Medica Mondays that we're doing now.


Bri Hurlburt  23:06  

Yeah.  It’s not quite every other but -ish, about every other podcast we've been doing a new remedy in detail.


Melissa Crenshaw  23:12  

Yeah. All right. So, another big milk ... Were you going to say something else?


Bri Hurlburt 23:18

No. 


Melissa Crenshaw 23:19

Okay. Another big milk intolerance or allergy remedy is Silica.  That's a really big one. Silica is the little, tiny, puny, baby. Frail, pale. Failure to thrive, probably. Regurgitates milk and failure to thrive.  It’s right there.  Weakness. The Silica baby or child or person is thin, frail, pale, weak. They have that weak digestion and they can't tolerate milk. 


Do you want to look at Silica while I talk about Calc carb and then I'll look up Calc carb and we’ll differentiate between those two. 


Bri Hurlburt 24:02

Yeah, I got it right here.


Melissa Crenshaw 24:03

Calcarea carbonica is another big one. That child, of course, can't handle milk. Tell us what the main things of Silica are while I’m looking up Calc carb.


Bri Hurlburt  24:19  

Silica?


Melissa Crenshaw 24:20

Yeah.


Bri Hurlburt 24:22

I remember you saying the disposition of a Silica person, too, and you've mentioned some of this but sensitive, timid, weak.  Abdomen is hard and bloated. Distended, hard and hot, with thin legs, especially in children. Clothing across abdomen feels too tight after eating. Pain or cold feeling. Flatulence with much rumbling, so that is good. I feel like that's something I have experienced before. Like you feel it inside moving around that doesn't feel good. I'm looking at some other things. Food: excessive thirst, loss of appetite, but also maybe voracious appetite. Desires only cold things. Disgust for meat and warm food and milk. Worse after eating. Aversion to mother's milk. Child vomits as soon as it nurses.


Melissa Crenshaw  25:32  

So Silica has an aversion to milk.


Bri Hurlburt  25:36  

Mm-hmm.  And it says drinking cold water causes dry cough.  


Melissa Crenshaw 25:40

Wow.  So interesting. 


Bri Hurlburt 25:42

Yeah.


Melissa Crenshaw  25:44  

And then Calc carb’s food has poor diet and nutrition. Loss of appetite. Loss of appetite when overworked. Ravenous hunger. Didn't Silica say that too? Cravings for eggs. So Calc carb has a big craving for eggs, ice cream, salt and sweets, and indigestible things.  So all you mamas out there with your kids who like to eat all the ash and the coal and …


Bri Hurlburt 26:15

This is like My Strange Addiction. 


Melissa Crenshaw 26:17

Crayons. That's Calc carb.  That really is Calc carb.  I mean, there are other remedies that do that but Calc carb’s a big one. Yeah, so aversion to meat, milk, boiled things, fat.  Worse after eating. Nat carb … no, what was it? Was it Nat carb that was better for eating? 


Bri Hurlburt 26:40

Yeah, yeah.


Melissa Crenshaw 26:41

Calc carb is worse for eating. Thirst for cold drinks.


Bri Hurlburt  26:47  

So that's a good one too to know because Silica and Nat carb both said they have an aversion to cold drinks. Cold water. They don't like it. So Calc carb like cold. 


Silica seems to be worse after vaccinations. I've seen that a couple times. So maybe after vaccinations you notice those gut problems, or the aversion to milk, or the reaction.  That may be a good place to start.


Melissa Crenshaw  27:15  

Yeah, absolutely. What else? Did you look at abdomen or stomach?


Bri Hurlburt 27:22

I did do abdomen.  I did that first.  


Melissa Crenshaw 27:25

Let me see what abdomen says in Calc carb.  Increased fat in the abdomen. Remember we're not just talking about babies and children here. This is everybody.  Large and hard abdomen, sensitive to the slightest pressure.  Cannot bear tight clothing around the waist. Distention with hardness.  Better slightest pressure. Cutting pain in swollen abdomen.  Colic with coldness of thighs after stopped coryza or with cold feeling abdomen. Twisting or cramps about the umbilical region. Umbilical hernia. The navel is sore. 


Bri Hurlburt  28:17  

Silica for stomach says slow and painful digestion.  Screwing, pressing, twisting pain in stomach after drinking. Intense heartburn. Nausea is a big one, with an appetite. It looks like there's a few different areas it says nausea. Feeling of emptiness in stomach with nausea


Melissa Crenshaw  28:52  

Interesting.  And then Calc carb’s stomach says heartburn and loud belching. Frequent sour belching. Sour vomiting of curdled milk. I've seen that. Have you seen that? I've seen that.  Cramps in the stomach, worse for pressure, worse for cold water.  Swelling over the pit of the stomach like a saucer turned bottom up. Interesting. Drinking water can cause nausea but not if it's iced.


Bri Hurlburt  29:34  

So Calc carb really likes that cold ice water. 


Melissa Crenshaw 29:38

Mm-hmm. 


Bri Hurlburt 29:39

Interesting. 


Melissa Crenshaw 29:40

Yeah. Mm-hmm.


Bri Hurlburt 29:45

I know a lot of adults with a milk allergy or at least intolerance. Do you think it would take longer to uproot something like this the older you are? Do you think it takes a long time?


Melissa Crenshaw  29:58  

I do.  Well, I don't know that it takes a long time, but what I see is it takes longer the older you are


Bri Hurlburt  30:06  

Do you recommend cutting dairy out of your diet as you're treating this? Maybe you discern that depending on how severe your allergy is?


Melissa Crenshaw  30:15  

I think it depends on how bad it is. Because if you have lots of inflammation, and it's very severe, yeah, cut it out so your body can heal. Use the homeopathy to help your body heal and then try to reintroduce healthy dairy because likely there's a high chance that we got this intolerance by drinking the junky, even if it's organic store bought..


Bri Hurlburt  30:39  

That’s a whole other podcast.


Melissa Crenshaw 30:42

It really is.


Bri Hurlburt 30:44

Really.  But raw dairy. You should just Google it if you don't know what we're talking about. There's literally charts that compare processed dairy versus raw dairy.


Melissa Crenshaw  30:56  

Or go to rawmilk.com.


Bri Hurlburt  30:59  

Go to rawmilk.com. Is that what you said? I think that's what you said. You froze a little bit.


Melissa Crenshaw  31:08  

Okay, I’m back.  I don't know why it just kicks me off my hotspot sometimes. It's so random. I don't know if you heard what I said.  Rawmilk.com is where I would go, or Western A. Price Foundation, to learn about it.  


Bri Hurlburt  31:25  

A lot of good information.  And really nowadays, there's stuff on Instagram. Like Weston A. Price has an Instagram and that might be a little bit, short snippets, better for you to digest a little bit at a time. But it does make a big difference and that's something to consider as you have dairy in general. To eat quality, good, raw dairy.


Melissa Crenshaw  31:46  

Whether we're talking about a baby or an adult, choose a remedy, take it for a couple of months, and then reevaluate all the things around.  If you cut dairy out, then you're going to say, “Well, how am I going to know?” Well, there's other things. There’s stool patterns.  There’s sleep.  There's headaches.  There's skin things. There's all these other symptoms, all these other pieces of the puzzle. Look at those things. And then if there is some improvement, then go for another couple of months, but towards the end of that next couple of months, reintroduce a little bit of dairy, and see how you do. If it doesn't go well, if you get constipated, or vomit or whatever, then you just weren't ready. It's okay. Stop it. Keep going on with the remedies.  It doesn't mean you did it wrong, or you got the wrong remedy, or you're not healing. It just takes time.


Bri Hurlburt  32:42  

Yeah, that's really good. 


Melissa Crenshaw  32:46  

One more thing that Dr. Murphy taught me was potentized milk. So whatever milk you're drinking, so if it's baby drinking mom’s mok, or whatever milk you're drinking at home, potentize the milk and give a 6c three times per day until the sensitivity is gone.


Bri Hurlburt  33:14  

That’s amazing.  If somebody does that, please let us know. We will want to talk about it. 


Melissa Crenshaw  33:22  

We really would.  In fact, if you do that and you have success, you need to come on the show and talk to us about it. 


Bri Hurlburt 33:27

Yeah, we'll do an interview. 


Melissa Crenshaw 33:30

So potentized.  What does that mean? You take a drop of the milk that you're using, whether it's mama's milk like I said, or whatever milk you're drinking at home. Take a drop of milk, and put it into … so we're talking about using a 6c, you put it into 99 drops of a water/alcohol solution. And I don't know the exact ratio on that so now you're like, “Well I can’t even do this.”  Don't make it like a recipe.  Don't put too many rules on it or make it too complicated. It's likely going to work however you do this.  Take one drop of that and put it in 99 drops.  One drop of the milk into the 99 drops is your 1c. Then one drop of that into the next 99 drops is your 2c.  So then you go to the 6c and take it.  


Bri Hurlburt  34:27  

And you succuss it.  


Melissa Crenshaw 34:30

That’s right.  Thank you.


Bri Hurlburt 34:31

But it’s okay because hopefully you're looking this up and doing it. 


Melissa Crenshaw 34:35

That’s right.  


Bri Hurlburt 34:36

And not just trying to remember.  If you're really going to potentize it.


Melissa Crenshaw  34:41  

We should do a video on how to potentize things.


Bri Hurlburt  34:47  

That'd be fun. 


Melissa Crenshaw  34:49  

Yeah, we will. Okay.


Bri Hurlburt  34:51  

Yeah. Thank you for listening. I feel like this was a shorter one, well less remedies I would say, but good, specific ones. I think this is a really useful, relatable issue a lot of people have so let us know your success stories as you try it for you or your babies.


Melissa Crenshaw  35:12  

Absolutely. We'll see you guys next time.