In life—and healthcare—there’s a huge difference between what people like and what they need.
🔹 Doing what people like is business.
🔹 Doing what people need is treatment.
The problem?
People don’t always need what they like, and they don’t always like what they need.

Why?
Because most people don’t truly know what they need. Instead of thinking critically, they follow trends, blindly imitating others without questioning the long-term effects.
Rather than weighing short-term pleasure against long-term consequences, they choose comfort—even if it leads to harm.
And who benefits?
The ruling class, with its maladaptive aspirations, thrives on this ignorance.
The capitalist propaganda machine—driven by self-interest and greed—ensures people stay distracted, misled, and dependent.
The Real Question: What Do People Truly Need?
The truth is simple:
🔹 Struggle is needed.
🔹 Escape is liked.
The Butterfly Effect: A Lesson in Struggle
You’ve probably heard the story of the caterpillar and the butterfly.
A student, seeing a caterpillar struggle to emerge from its cocoon, decided to “help” by tearing the membrane open. Instead of setting it free, he unknowingly killed it.
Why?
Because that struggle was essential—it developed the butterfly’s lungs, wings, and strength to survive. Without it, the butterfly was doomed.
👉 Struggle creates strength—even the strength to fight disease.
The Medical Parallel: Fever & Immunity
When you get a fever or other acute symptoms, your body is struggling—but in a good way. These temporary discomforts are part of building immunity, often resolving naturally within hours or days.
But what do most people do?
They opt for palliative management—quick fixes that may feel good in the moment but lead to worse outcomes later.
When diseases are repeatedly suppressed instead of cured, a breaking point eventually comes. At that stage, people turn to curative treatment—but by then, their patience, body, mind, and finances are exhausted.
The Homeopath’s Dilemma
Patients come with unrealistic expectations, wanting instant relief without struggle. But healing requires patience. It requires effort.
The Ultimate Truth
Most people like palliative treatments.
But what they truly need is curative treatment.
If you recognize the need early, it transforms into choice—a conscious, empowered decision.
Because in the end…
“The right path is the one to which we must return.”