<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
<h2><span class="smcap">How to Eat.</span></h2>
<p>It is a settled fact that man
naturally chews his food.
The few faddists who
maintain that we should
bolt our nourishment, after
the manner of the dog and others of the
lower animals, can no longer get a hearing;
we know that we should chew our
food. And if it is natural that we
should chew our food, the more thoroughly
we chew it the more completely
natural the process must be. If you
will chew every mouthful to a liquid,
you need not be in the least concerned
as to what you shall eat, for you can
get sufficient nourishment out of any
ordinary food.</p>
<p>Whether or not this chewing shall be
an irksome and laborious task or a most
enjoyable process, depends upon the<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 100]</span>
mental attitude in which you come to
the table.</p>
<p>If your mind and attitude are on
other things, or if you are anxious or
worried about business or domestic
affairs, you will find it almost impossible
to eat without bolting more or less
of your food. You must learn to live
so scientifically that you will have no
business or domestic cares to worry
about; this you can do, and you can also
learn to give your undivided attention to
the act of eating while at the table.</p>
<p>When you eat, do so with an eye
single to the purpose of getting all the
enjoyment you can from that meal; dismiss
everything else from your mind,
and do not let anything take your attention
from the food and its taste until
your meal is finished. Be cheerfully
confident, for if you follow these instructions
you may KNOW that the
food you eat is exactly the right food,
and that it will "agree" with you to
perfection.<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 101]</span></p>
<p>Sit down to the table with confident
cheerfulness, and take a moderate portion
of the food; take whatever thing
looks most desirable to you. Do not
select some food because you think it
will be good for you; select that which
will taste good to you. If you are to
get well and stay well, you must drop
the idea of doing things because they
are good for your health, and do things
because you want to do them. Select
the food you want most; gratefully give
thanks to God that you have learned
how to eat it in such a way that digestion
shall be perfect; and take a moderate
mouthful of it.</p>
<p>Do not fix your attention on the act
of chewing; fix it on the TASTE of the
food; and taste and enjoy it until it is
reduced to a liquid state and passes
down your throat by involuntary swallowing.
No matter how long it takes,
do not think of the time. Think of the
taste. Do not allow your eyes to wander
over the table, speculating as to what<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 102]</span>
you shall eat next; do not worry for
fear there is not enough, and that you
will not get your share of everything.
Do not anticipate the taste of the next
thing; keep your mind centered on the
taste of what you have in your mouth.
And that is all of it.</p>
<p>Scientific and healthful eating is a
delightful process after you have learned
how to do it, and after you have overcome
the bad old habit of gobbling down
your food unchewed. It is best not to
have too much conversation going on
while eating; be cheerful, but not talkative;
do the talking afterward.</p>
<p>In most cases, some use of the will
is required to form the habit of correct
eating. The bolting habit is an unnatural
one, and is without doubt mostly the
result of fear. Fear that we will be
robbed of our food; fear that we will
not get our share of the good things;
fear that we will lose precious time—these
are the causes of haste. Then
there is anticipation of the dainties that<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 103]</span>
are to come for dessert, and the consequent
desire to get at them as quickly
as possible; and there is mental abstraction,
or thinking of other matters while
eating. All these must be overcome.</p>
<p>When you find that your mind is wandering,
call a halt; think for a moment
of the food, and of how good it tastes;
of the perfect digestion and assimilation
that are going to follow the meal,
and begin again. Begin again and
again, though you must do so twenty
times in the course of a single meal;
and again and again, though you must
do so every meal for weeks and months.
It is perfectly certain that you CAN
form the "Fletcher habit" if you persevere;
and when you have formed it, you
will experience a healthful pleasure you
have never known.</p>
<p>This is a vital point, and I must not
leave it until I have thoroughly impressed
it upon your mind. Given the
right materials, perfectly prepared, the
Principle of Health will positively build<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 104]</span>
you a perfectly healthy body; and you
cannot prepare the materials <i>perfectly</i>
in any other way that the one I am describing.
If you are to have perfect
health, you MUST eat in just this way;
you can, and the doing of it is only a
matter of a little perseverance. What
use for you to talk of mental control
unless you will govern yourself in so
simple a matter as ceasing to bolt your
food? What use to talk of concentration
unless you can keep your mind on
the act of eating for so short a space as
fifteen or twenty minutes, especially
with all the pleasures of taste to help
you? Go on, and conquer. In a few
weeks, or months, as the case may be,
you will find the habit of scientific eating
becoming fixed; and soon you will be
in so splendid a condition, mentally and
physically, that nothing would induce
you to return to the bad old way.</p>
<p>We have seen that if man will think
only thoughts of perfect health, his internal
functions will be performed in<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 105]</span>
a healthy manner; and we have seen
that in order to think thoughts of health,
man must perform the voluntary functions
in a healthy manner. The most
important of the voluntary functions
is that of eating; and we see, so far, no
especial difficulty in eating in a perfectly
healthy way. I will here summarize
the instructions as to when to
eat, what to eat, and how to eat, with
the reasons therefor:—</p>
<p>NEVER eat until you have an
EARNED hunger, no matter how long
you go without food. This is based on
the fact that whenever food is needed
in the system, if there is power to digest
it, the sub-conscious mind announces
the need by the sensation of hunger.
Learn to distinguish between genuine
hunger and the gnawing and craving
sensations caused by unnatural appetite.
Hunger is never a disagreeable
feeling, accompanied by weakness,
faintness, or gnawing feelings at the
stomach; it is a pleasant, anticipatory<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 106]</span>
desire for food, and is felt mostly in the
mouth and throat. It does not come at
certain hours or at stated intervals; it
only comes when the sub-conscious mind
is ready to receive, digest, and assimilate
food.</p>
<p>Eat whatever foods you want, making
your selection from the staples in
general use in the zone in which you live.
The Supreme Intelligence has guided
man to the selection of these foods, and
they are the right ones for all. I am
referring, of course, to the foods which
are taken to satisfy hunger, not to those
which have been contrived merely to
gratify appetite or perverted taste. The
instinct which has guided the masses of
men to make use of the great staples
of food to satisfy their hunger is a divine
one. God has made no mistake; if you
eat these foods you will not go wrong.</p>
<p>Eat your food with cheerful confidence,
and get all the pleasure that is to
be had from the taste of every mouthful.
Chew each morsel to a liquid, keeping<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 107]</span>
your attention fixed on the enjoyment of
the process. This is the only way to eat
in a perfectly complete and successful
manner; and when anything is done in
a completely successful manner, the
general result cannot be a failure. In
the attainment of health, the law is the
same as in the attainment of riches; if
you make each act a success in itself,
the sum of all your acts must be a success.
When you eat in the mental attitude
I have described, and in the manner
I have described, nothing can be
added to the process; it is done in a perfect
manner, and it is successfully done.
And if eating is successfully done, digestion,
assimilation, and the building of a
healthy body are successfully begun.
We next take up the question of the
quantity of food required.</p>
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<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg 108]</span></p>
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