
Dear All, 🙏🏻💕
Let us clarify: it is not the medicine that heals, but the DOCTOR who, with the help of Divine energy and remedy as a mediator, awakens the body’s own regenerative processes of healing in the being seeking help.
Illness, in essence, is a BLOCKAGE at some level—a condition that can be resolved. This state is marked by altered thoughts, emotions, and eventually, physical sensations.
Those who think that simply going to a pharmacy and buying a “medicine” will heal them are gravely mistaken. All they have done is ingest chemicals into their body, which may set them back for years. True healing is not a technological process. Humans are not machines but souls temporarily inhabiting this body!
The soul can be healed with the help of a doctor who, through Divine guidance and remedy as a mediator, assists the being that is ready to accept help. Those who are ready are the ones who do not reject every act of kindness done for them but embrace assistance without resistance. 🙏🏻🥰💕
What does this mean?
It means accepting one’s imperfections, reducing pride and selfishness, and remembering sincerity and love. Healing is part of the play called “Life.” If we know that “Someone up there sees everything,” then we also know that they see the behavior of those seeking healing.
The humble and simple heal the fastest. 🙏🏻💕
Dr. Mirjana Zivanov 🙏🏻
Three Outcomes of Treatment: Allopathy, Well-Being, and Spiritual Maturation

1. Allopathy – Absence of Symptoms
The patient presents with chronic insomnia, inner tension, and episodes of anxiety. After the introduction of pharmacological therapy, sleep stabilizes, tension decreases, and anxiety becomes manageable. The patient functions in everyday life and states that they “no longer have problems.”
Therapy continues through maintenance of the achieved state. Upon discontinuation or under increased stress, symptoms return in the same or a modified form.
Clinical outcome:
Symptoms are removed or controlled. The inner dynamics of the disease remain active.
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2. Well-Being – Subjective Sense of Improvement
The patient begins a complementary approach alongside existing therapy. A general improvement occurs: more energy, better sleep, and a reduction of physical complaints. The patient feels “lighter,” more optimistic, and more functional.
Although symptoms are not currently present, during periods of emotional or physical strain, milder but recognizable episodes of previous problems appear. The patient feels “better than before,” yet a sense of uncertainty remains.
Clinical outcome:
Quality of life is improved, but the process is not complete. Reactivity is reduced, but not eliminated.
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3. Spiritual Maturation – Lasting Resolution
After a correctly chosen Simillimum, the patient notices a gradual withdrawal of symptoms, without abrupt fluctuations. The key change is not only in physical functions, but in the mode of reaction.
Situations that previously triggered fear, tension, or physical symptoms no longer provoke a pathological response. Even under demanding life circumstances, the organism remains stable. There is no need for further therapy, nor fear of disease recurrence.
The patient does not describe the state as “especially good,” but as normal and calm.
Clinical outcome:
The inner dynamics of the disease are resolved. Symptoms do not return because they no longer have a function.
Dr Mirjana Zivanov

Why a New Name Does Not Mean a New Doctrine
In the history of medicine and science, new names are often perceived as a threat to existing knowledge. However, naming does not necessarily imply the introduction of a new doctrine. Most often, it represents a clarification of an already existing experience that had not previously been clearly differentiated in language.
Homeopathy already possesses a complete theoretical foundation for understanding health and disease. The Organon of Medicine clearly defines disease as a dynamic disturbance of the Vital Force (§9–§11) and defines the aim of treatment as its permanent removal (§3). In this sense, no new principle is being added.
What has long been missing is a term that distinguishes temporary improvement from a completed healing process.
In contemporary practice, the absence of symptoms, subjective well-being, and lasting health are often treated as synonyms. Such an equation creates confusion in the evaluation of therapeutic success and leads to suppression, control, and adaptation being proclaimed as cure.
The introduction of the term Spiritual Quality does not alter homeopathic doctrine; rather, it introduces precision where a terminological gap previously existed.
This term:
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does not redefine health
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does not change the goal of therapy
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does not introduce a new ontology
It designates a stable state that arises once the goal has already been achieved.
In other words, the doctrine remains the same — only the language used to describe its outcome changes.
A similar development has occurred in other areas of medicine, where new terms were introduced to differentiate phases of a process that had previously been vaguely grouped together. Naming such states did not create a new medicine, but enabled more accurate clinical communication and clearer criteria of success.
In homeopathy, the criterion of lasting cure is not the patient’s subjective feeling at a given moment, but the stability of the Vital Force over time. When such stability is established, symptoms disappear not because they are suppressed, but because they are no longer needed as expressions of inner imbalance.
The term Spiritual Quality is used exclusively to denote this state of stability. It does not introduce an additional therapeutic phase, nor does it require a new interpretation of the Organon. On the contrary, it remains fully consistent with Hahnemann’s description of health and healing.
If the term is removed, the doctrine remains unchanged.
If the term is retained, communication becomes more precise.
In this sense, a new name does not mean a new doctrine, but a clearer understanding of what homeopathy has always aimed to achieve.
Dr Mirjana Zivanov

The Absence of Symptoms is Not the Same as Health
In contemporary medical practice, it is often assumed that the absence of symptoms is equivalent to health. When pain ceases, when laboratory parameters stabilize, or when organ function is pharmacologically regulated, the patient is considered cured. Such an understanding of health, although practical, remains functional and superficial.
Within this framework, disease is viewed as a problem to be eliminated, rather than as a dynamic state requiring resolution.
Homeopathy begins from a different premise.
According to Hahnemann, disease is not a material defect but a disturbance of the Vital Force, which manifests through symptoms. When a symptom is removed without resolving this disturbance, the disease does not disappear — it is merely silenced. Temporary improvement is then mistakenly interpreted as health.
Such a state often produces well-being: the patient feels better, functions more easily, and experiences subjective relief. However, well-being does not represent the completion of the process, but rather a pause in its expression.
True healing, in the homeopathic sense, occurs only when there is no longer an inner need for symptoms. When opposing internal tendencies are integrated, the Vital Force ceases to use disease as a mode of expression. At that point, symptoms do not disappear because they are suppressed, but because they have become unnecessary.
This point marks the organism’s spiritual maturation.
Spiritual maturation does not imply emotional elevation, nor a state of euphoria. It does not signify moral or religious advancement. It represents a qualitative change in the mode of functioning, in which the organism as a whole behaves coherently, without inner conflict requiring compensation through disease.
In contemporary medicine, a patient without symptoms is considered healthy.
In homeopathy, a patient without symptoms poses a question:
Has the disease been removed, or merely silenced?
Only when symptoms do not return, when there is no need for constant regulation, and when the organism demonstrates stability under changing life circumstances, can the healing process be considered complete.
This stable post-therapeutic state is designated by the term Spiritual Quality.
Not as a new therapeutic goal,
not as a new doctrine,
but as a name for a state in which health no longer needs to be proven by the absence of symptoms.
Dr. Mirjana Živanov






