<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<h2><span class="smcap">What To Eat.</span></h2>
<p>The current sciences of medicine
and hygiene have
made no progress toward
answering the question,
What shall I eat? The
contests between the vegetarians and
the meat eaters, the cooked food advocates,
raw food advocates, and various
other "schools" of theorists, seem to be
interminable; and from the mountains
of evidence and argument piled up for
and against each special theory, it is
plain that if we depend on these scientists
we shall never know what is the
natural food of man. Turning away
from the whole controversy, then, we
will ask the question of nature herself,
and we shall find that she has not left
us without an answer.</p>
<p>Most of the errors of dietary scien<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 90]</span>tists
grow out of a false premise as to
the natural state of man. It is assumed
that civilization and mental development
are unnatural things; that the
man who lives in a modern house, in
city or country, and who works in modern
trade or industry for his living is
leading an unnatural life, and is in an
unnatural environment; that the only
"natural" man is a naked savage, and
that the farther we get from the savage
the farther we are from nature. This
is wrong. The man who has all that
art and science can give him is leading
the most natural life, because he is living
most completely in all his faculties.
The dweller in a well-appointed city flat,
with modern conveniences and good
ventilation, is living a far more naturally
human life than the Australian savage
who lives in a hollow tree or a hole
in the ground.</p>
<p>That Great Intelligence, which is in
all and through all, has in reality practically
settled the question as to what<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 91]</span>
we shall eat. In ordering the affairs of
nature, It has decided that man's food
shall be according to the zone in which
he lives. In the frigid regions of the
far North, fuel foods are required. The
development of brain is not large, nor
is the life severe in its labor-tax on
muscle; and so the Esquimaux live
largely on the blubber and fat of aquatic
animals. No other diet is possible to
them; they could not get fruits, nuts,
or vegetables even if they were disposed
to eat them; and they could not live on
them in that climate if they could get
them. So, notwithstanding the arguments
of the vegetarians, the Esquimaux
will continue to live on animal
fats.</p>
<p>On the other hand, as we come toward
the tropics, we find fuel foods less required;
and we find the people naturally
inclining toward a vegetarian diet.
Millions live on rice and fruits; and the
food regimen of an Esquimaux village,
if followed upon the equator, would re<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 92]</span>sult
in speedy death. A "natural" diet
for the equatorial regions would be very
far from being a natural diet near the
North Pole; and the people of either
zone, if not interfered with by medical
or dietary "scientists," will be guided
by the All Intelligence, which seeks the
fullest life in all, to feed themselves in
the best way for the promotion of perfect
health. In general, you can see that God,
working in nature and in the evolution
of human society and customs, has answered
your question as to what you
shall eat; and I advise you to take His
answer in preference to that of any
man.</p>
<p>In the temperate zone the largest demands
are made on man in spirit, mind,
and body; and here we find the greatest
variety of foods provided by nature.
And it is really quite useless and superfluous
to theorize on the question what
the masses shall eat, for they have no
choice; they must eat the foods which
are staple products of the zone in which<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 93]</span>
they live. It is impossible to supply all
the people with a nut-and-fruit or raw
food diet; and the fact that it is impossible
is proof positive that these are not
the foods intended by nature, for
nature, being formed for the advancement
of life, has not made the obtaining
of the means of life an impossibility.
So, I say, the question, What shall I eat?
has been answered for you. Eat wheat,
corn, rye, oats, barley, buckwheat; eat
vegetables; eat meats, eat fruits, eat
the things that are eaten by the masses
of the people around the world, for in
this matter the voice of the people is the
voice of God. They have been led, generally,
to the selection of certain foods;
and they have been led, generally, to
prepare these foods in generally similar
ways; and you may depend upon it that
in general they have the right foods and
are preparing them in the right way.
In these matters the race has been under
the guidance of God. The list of foods
in common use is a long one, and you<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 94]</span>
must select therefrom according to your
individual taste; if you do, you will find
that you have an infallible guide, as
shown in the next two chapters.</p>
<p>If you do not eat until you have an
EARNED hunger, you will not find
your taste demanding unnatural or unhealthy
foods. The woodchopper, who has
swung his axe continuously from seven
in the morning until noon does not come
in clamoring for cream puffs and confectionery;
he wants pork and beans, or
beefsteak and potatoes, or corn bread
and cabbage; he asks for the plain solids.
Offer to crack him a few walnuts and
give him a plate of lettuce, and you will
be met with huge disdain; those things
are not natural foods for a workingman.
And if they are not natural
foods for a workingman, they are not
for any other man; for work hunger is
the only real hunger, and requires the
same materials to satisfy it, whether it
be in woodchopper or banker, in man,
woman or child.<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 95]</span></p>
<p>It is a mistake to suppose that food
must be selected with anxious care to
fit the vocation of the person who eats.
It is not true that the woodchopper
requires "heavy" or "solid" foods and
the bookkeeper "light" foods. If you
are a bookkeeper, or other brain worker,
and do not eat until you have an
EARNED hunger, you will want exactly
the same foods that the woodchopper
wants. Your body is made of
exactly the same elements as that of the
woodchopper, and requires the same
materials for cell-building; why, then,
feed him on ham and eggs and corn
bread and you on crackers and toast?
True, most of his waste is of muscle,
while most of yours is of brain and nerve
tissue; but it is also true that the woodchopper's
diet contains all the requisites
for brain and nerve building in far better
proportions than they are found in
most "light" foods. The world's best
brain work has been done on the fare
of the working people. The world's<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 96]</span>
greatest thinkers have invariably lived
on the plain solid foods common among
the masses.</p>
<p>Let the bookkeeper wait until he has
an earned hunger before he eats; and
then, if he wants ham, eggs, and corn
bread, by all means let him eat them;
but let him remember that he does not
need one-twentieth of the amount necessary
for the woodchopper. It is not
eating "hearty" foods which gives the
brain worker indigestion; it is eating
as much as would be needed by a muscle
worker. Indigestion is never caused
by eating to satisfy hunger; it is always
caused by eating to gratify appetite. If
you eat in the manner prescribed in the
next chapter, your taste will soon become
so natural that you will never
WANT anything that you cannot eat
with impunity; and you can drop the
whole anxious question of what to eat
from your mind forever, and simply eat
what you want. Indeed, that is the
only way to do if you are to think no<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 97]</span>
thoughts but those of health; for you
cannot think health so long as you are
in continual doubt and uncertainty as
to whether you are getting the right
bills of fare.</p>
<p>"Take no thought what ye shall
eat," said Jesus, and he spoke wisely.
The foods found on the table of any ordinary
middle-class or working class family
will nourish your body perfectly if
you eat at the right times and in the
right way. If you want meat, eat it;
and if you do not want it, do not eat it,
and do not suppose that you must find
some special substitute for it. You
can live perfectly well on what is left on
any table after the meat has been removed.</p>
<p>It is not necessary to worry about a
"varied" diet, so as to get in all the
necessary elements. The Chinese and
Hindus build very good bodies and excellent
brains on a diet of few variations,
rice making almost the whole of
it. The Scotch are physically and men<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 98]</span>tally
strong on oatmeal cakes; and the
Irishman is husky of body and brilliant
of mind on potatoes and pork. The
wheat berry contains practically all
that is necessary for the building of
brain and body; and a man can live
very well on a monodiet of navy beans.</p>
<p>Form a conception of perfect health
for yourself, and do not hold any
thought which is not a thought of
health.</p>
<p>NEVER eat until you have an
EARNED HUNGER. Remember that
it will not hurt you in the least to go
hungry for a short time; but it will
surely hurt you to eat when you are not
hungry.</p>
<p>Do not give the least thought to what
you should or should not eat; simply eat
what is set before you, selecting that
which pleases your taste most. In other
words, eat what you want. This you
can do with perfect results if you eat in
the right way; and how to do this will
be explained in the next chapter.</p>
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<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg 99]</span></p>
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