<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br/> <span class="medium">THE INDIAN AND DIET</span></h2>
<p class="drop"><span class="upper">A man</span> is largely the result of what he eats. Indeed,
many scientific specialists now tell us that sex determination
is largely the result of the food eaten by
the expectant mother, so that according to what the
mother eats the unborn child becomes—male or female.
Ploss in his well-known “<i>Ueber die das Geschlechtsverhältniss
der Kinder bedingenden Ursachen</i>,” Düsing
in his painstaking “<i>Die Regulirung des Geschlechtsverhältnisses
bei der Vernehrung der Menschen, Miere
und Pflanzen</i>,” and Westermarck in the “History
of Human Marriage,” prove conclusively, from close
study of actual experimentation, that the sex of the
child is largely fixed by the quantity and quality of
nutrition absorbed by the mother. Hence it is not too
strong a statement that a man is largely the result of
his (or his mother’s) food.</p>
<p>At first sight it will appear foolish to many of my
readers to go to the Indian for ideas on diet, yet I
think I can prove, more conclusively than the learned
scientists whose books I have named above can prove
their theories, that the Indian has many ideas on diet
which the white race can learn to its great advantage.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="i_120" src="images/i_120.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">HAVASUPAI WOMAN MAKING BREAD IN THE OPEN AIR.</p> </div>
<p>In the first place, the normal aborigine, before he
began to use the white man’s foods, was perforce
compelled to live on a comparatively simple diet.
His choice was limited, his cookery simple. Yet he
lived in perfect health and strength. With few articles
of diet, and these of the simplest character, prepared
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
in the readiest and easiest ways, he attained a vigor, a
robustness, that puts to shame the strength and power
of civilized men. Why? The reasons are not far to
seek. In simplicity of food there is safety. We eat
not only too much, but too great variety, and every
student of dietetics knows that the greater the variety
the greater the possibility that too much will be eaten.
The Indian, living his simple life, was compelled to
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
be content with the maize, beans, pumpkins, and melons
of his fields, the peaches of his orchards, the wild
grass seeds, nuts, fruits, and roots he or his squaw
could gather, and the products of his traps or the
chase. Here, then, was a restricted dietary. He had
not much choice, nor a large menu for each meal.
The smaller the menu the less, as a rule, any person
will eat, be he Indian or white man. The extended
menu is a series of temptations to overeat. The simple
menu of the Indian was a preventive to gluttony. It
will doubtless be recalled that when the great Bismarck
was broken down in health, his physicians gave him
no other prescription as to food than that he should eat
but one kind of food to a meal. This is a dietetic
axiom: The less variety the less one eats. In a
diseased condition health can often be restored by giving
the stomach and assimilative organs less work to do.</p>
<p>Among the Indian race dyspepsia is almost unknown.
To this fact that they have a small variety of foods, this
healthful condition is largely attributable. On the
other hand, one has but to pick up any daily newspaper
to see the positive proofs of the dyspeptic condition of
the “greatest nation of the world” among the white
race. There are nostrums for dyspepsia without end.
Syrups, pills, doses that work while you sleep, and
dopes that work inside and out. Millions of dollars
are annually spent merely in advertising these damnable
proofs of our idiocy or gluttony, or both. A
thousand nostrums flout their damned and damning
lies in the faces of the “superior race”! And a drug
store on every corner of our large cities demonstrates
the great demand there is for these absolute proofs
of our vile dietetic habits. Every pill taken, every
nostrum swallowed, is a proof positive of our ignorance,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
or our gluttony, or our gullibility, and probably
a good deal of each. Seventy-five millions of dollars
were spent in 1905 in the purchase of patent
medicines, every cent of which was worse than wasted.</p>
<p>Before the white race came and perverted—pardon
me, civilized—him, what did the “uncivilized Indian”
know of patent medicines? What did he know of the
diseases which these nostrums are supposed to cure?
Nothing! He was as ignorant of one as the other. In
his native wildness he was healthy and strong; only
since he has been led into evil ways by a false civilization
has he so degenerated as to need such compounds.</p>
<p>Let us, then, forget our civilization,—this portion
of it,—and forego our physical ills and our patent
nostrums, and go back to a simple, natural, restricted
diet. In that one course of procedure will be found
more restored health than all the physicians of the
world can give otherwise in a score of years. Let us
learn to eat few things to a meal, and those of such a
nature that they will properly mix, and thus not overtax
the stomach in its work of digestion.</p>
<p>When I sit down to the laden tables of my rich
friends, or at the tables of the first-class hotels of the
country, I sometimes find my judgment stronger than
my perverted appetite. At such times I look over the
bill of fare. I see ten or a dozen courses, varying
from cocktails, oysters, and fish to ice-cream, fruit, and
wines. There are meats and vegetables, nuts and
fruits, cooked and uncooked, pastries and jellies,
soups and coffee, wines and spices, sauces, relishes,
and seasonings galore, and I am more or less disgusted
with the whole business, and eat sparingly of but two
or three dishes. At other times, alas! my appetite
asserts itself, and I “go the pace” with the rest. Now,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
when all these things, so elaborately prepared, so
daintily served, so “nicely” eaten, are disposed of
and in the stomach, let me ask (without any desire
to offend): Is there the slightest difference in the contents
of the stomach of such a person and the stomach
of a hog filled with swill? In the first case there is
cocktail and caviar, olives and celery, oysters and
soup, fish and entremes, entree and roast, game and
punch, ice-cream and cheese, pastry and fruit, nuts
and crackers, with water, coffee, tea, or wine to liquefy
it all, all taken separately, but now mixed in one
horrible mess within, and in the case of the hog they
were mixed first and swallowed mixed instead of in
“courses.”</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="i_123" src="images/i_123.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">HOPI WOMAN, WITH BODY PARTIALLY EXPOSED, GRINDING CORN AT THE MEAL TROUGH.</p> </div>
<p>O men and women of the white race, of the superior
civilization, quit such gluttony and disease-breeding
courses! Get back to the Indian’s simplicity in diet.
Learn the meaning of “low living and high thinking.”
Stop pampering your sensual appetites and feeding
your stomachs at the expense of your minds, aye, and
at the expense of your souls, for men and women who
thus live continuously, generally become selfish, indifferent
to the sufferings of others, “proud stomached”—which
means much more than it seems to mean—and
incapable of the finer feelings.</p>
<p>Nor is this all that the Indian may teach us as to
diet. While at times he eats everything he can lay
his hands upon and also eats ravenously, in his normal
condition he eats slowly and masticates thoroughly.
Since Horace Fletcher wrote his most interesting and
useful books on diet and life, the term “fletcherizing”
has become almost universal amongst thoughtful people
to express mastication to the point of liquifaction.
But I was familiar with “fletcherizing” before I had
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
ever heard of Mr. Fletcher. The Indians, with their
parched corn, had taught me years before the benefit
of thorough and complete mastication. I had gone
off with a band of Indians on a hard week’s ride with
no other food than parched corn and a few raisins.
This was chewed
and chewed and
chewed by the
hour, a handful of
the grain making
an excellent meal,
and thoroughly
nourishing the perfect
bodies of these
stalwart athletes,
who never knew
an ache or a pain,
and who could
withstand fatigue
and hardship without
a thought.</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG id="i_125" src="images/i_125.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">MY HAVASUPAI HOSTESS PARCHING CORN IN<br/> A BASKET.</p> </div>
<p>A marked and
wonderful effect of
thorough mastication
is that it decreases
the appetite
from 10 to 15 per cent, and reduces the desire for flesh
meat from 30 to 50 per cent. The more we masticate
the less we desire to eat, and the more normal our
appetites become. This in itself is a thing to be desired,
for it is far easier not to have an abnormal appetite
than it is to control it when it has fastened itself
upon us.</p>
<p>Then, too, while Indians will often eat to repletion,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
and at their feasts indulge in disgusting gorging,
they do know how to fast with calmness and equanimity.
I am not prepared to say that they will fast
voluntarily—except in the cases of those neophytes
who are seeking some unusual powers or gifts from
Those Above—yet I do know that several times I
have been with them when fasting was obligatory
because of the scarcity of food, and they accepted the
condition without a murmur. I know a very prominent
physician in San Francisco, who has an extensive practice,
who pumps the food out of the stomachs of several
of his gluttonous patients after their hearty French
dinners. He defends his course of procedure by
saying that his patients would not listen to him if he
counseled fasting for even one meal, yet they are
willing to allow him to remove the food after it is
eaten, and to swallow some harmless “dope” that he
gives them, because that is easy and requires no self-control.</p>
<p>I know the power of appetite; I know how hard
it is to eat only that which the reason tells us is best.
I know how hard it is to eat slowly and thoroughly
masticate the food, but I also know that these things
are imperative if one would have perfect health.
Therefore, in spite of my many lapses into the old
habits, I persist in asserting the good over the evil, and
in teaching the good to others, in the hope that, in my
own case, the good course will become the easiest to
follow, and in the case of the young who listen to me
they may learn the best way before they have fallen
into the evil way.</p>
<p>There is one other thing the white race might
learn from the Indian, and that is that the habitual
use of flesh is not essential to health. When Captain
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
Cook visited the Maoris of New Zealand, he found
them a perfectly healthy people, and he states that
he never observed a single person who appeared to
have any bodily complaint. Nor, among the number
that were seen naked, was once perceived the slightest
eruption of the skin, nor the least mark which indicated
that such eruptions had formerly existed. As
Dr. Kress says:</p>
<p>“Another proof of the health of these people was
the readiness with which wounds they at any time
received healed up. In a man who had been shot
with a musket-ball through the fleshy part of the arm,
‘his wound seemed well digested, and in so fair a way
to be healed,’ says the Captain, ‘that if I had not
known that no application had been made to it, I
should have inquired with very interesting curiosity
after the vulnerary herbs and surgical art of the
country.’</p>
<p>“‘An additional evidence of the healthiness of the
New Zealanders,’ he says, ‘is in the great number of
old men found among them. Many of them appeared
to be very ancient, and yet <i>none</i> of them were decrepit.
Although they were not equal to the young in muscular
strength, they did not come in the least behind them
in regard to cheerfulness and vivacity.’”</p>
<p>At the advent of Captain Cook, the Maoris were
practically vegetarians; they had no domestic or wild
animals on the islands, hence could not have been flesh
eaters.</p>
<p>While our Indians of the Southwest will eat some
forms of flesh at times, they are, generally speaking,
vegetarians. The Navahos scarcely ever eat meat
while in their primitive condition, and they are proud,
independent, high-spirited, vigorous, healthy, and
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
strong. So with the Havasupais and Wallapais, and
most of the aborigines of this region. The Apaches
also are largely vegetarians, and yet are known as a
fierce and warlike people. They are fierce when
aroused, but when friendly are kindly disposed, honest,
reliable and good workers, strong, athletic, vigorous,
and healthy. These facts demonstrate that flesh
meat is not necessary. Meat is another fetich of the
civilization of the white race, before which we bow
down in ignorant worship. The world would be far
better off, in my judgment, and as the result of my
observation and experience, if we ate no flesh at all.
Personally I am never so well physically and my brain
so active as when I live the vegetarian life, though
when I am at the tables of meat eaters I eat whatever
comes and make the best of it.</p>
<p>The experiences of thousands of healthy and vigorous
white men demonstrate that meat is not necessary
to the highest development. Weston, the great pedestrian,
is both a teetotaler and vegetarian; Bernarr
Macfadden and several of his muscular helpers are
practical vegetarians; and athletes, business men,
lawyers, judges, doctors, clergymen, and many others
testify to the beneficial effects of the vegetarian diet.
There is no man in the civilized world to-day that
works as hard and as continuously, physically as well
as mentally, as Dr. J. H. Kellogg of the Battle Creek
Sanitarium. He is a rigid vegetarian, and seldom eats
more than one meal a day. Yet he works from 16 to
20 hours daily, edits two magazines, writes continually
for scientific magazines and periodicals, attends to a
vast correspondence, is the business head of the
greatest sanitarium in the world, consults annually with
thousands of patients, and keeps daily watch of their
condition, gives numberless lectures, is always experimenting
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
on foods and surgical appliances and inventing
new instruments and methods for curing disease, and
at the same time performs more surgical operations,
perhaps, with less fatal results, than any other surgeon
in the country. Besides this he is the president of
the medical college, and lecturer to the students, and
gives many lectures to the Medical Missionary Classes,
and withal, finds time and strength to confer with,
direct the education of, and give personal love to the
ten or fifteen children he has adopted into his home and
made his own.</p>
<p>Here is an additional item which adds strength to
what I have written:</p>
<p>“The attention of medical men has recently been
called to the case of Gustav Nordin, a hardy Swede
who paddled his own canoe from Stockholm to Paris,
reaching there in robust health after the long voyage,
during which he lived on apples, milk, water, and bread.</p>
<p>“The <i>New York Herald</i> states that this dangerous
and arduous voyage was undertaken by the Swede to
show what could be done by a man who has given up
meat, tea, coffee, wine, beer, spirits, and tobacco.
He prides himself in eclipsing those ‘vegetarians’
who continue the use of tea and condiments.</p>
<p>“When in America, at the age of eighteen, Nordin
was suffering so from dyspepsia that he could not take
ordinary food. He therefore began a diet of fruit,
principally apples, whereby he attained to his present
robust condition of health.”</p>
<p>So, meat-eating, alcoholic-liquor-drinking white
race, cast aside your high-headedness and pride,
your dietetic errors and ill-health, at one and the same
time, and go and learn of the Indian simplicity of diet,
wise limitation of your dietary, careful and thorough
mastication, and abstention from all flesh foods.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span></p>
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