<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<h2><span class="smcap">In a Nutshell.</span></h2>
<p>There is a Cosmic Life which
permeates, penetrates, and
fills the interspaces of the
universe, being in and
through all things. This
Life is not merely a vibration, or form
of energy; it is a Living Substance. All
things are made from it; it is All, and
in all.</p>
<p>This Substance thinks, and it assumes
the form of that which it thinks about.
The thought of a form, in this substance,
creates the form; the thought of
a motion institutes the motion. The visible
universe, with all its forms and
motions, exists because it is in the
thought of Original Substance.</p>
<p>Man is a form of Original Substance,
and can think original thoughts; and
within himself, man's thoughts have<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 117]</span>
controlling or formative power. The
thought of a condition produces that
condition; the thought of a motion institutes
that motion. So long as man
thinks of the conditions and motions of
disease, so long will the conditions and
motions of disease exist within him. If
man will think only of perfect health,
the Principle of Health within him will
maintain normal conditions.</p>
<p>To be well, man must form a conception
of perfect health, and hold thoughts
harmonious with that conception as regards
himself and all things. He must
think only of healthy conditions and
functioning; he must not permit a
thought of unhealthy or abnormal conditions
or functioning to find lodgment
in his mind at any time.</p>
<p>In order to think only of healthy conditions
and functioning, man must perform
the voluntary acts of life in a
perfectly healthy way. He cannot think
perfect health so long as he knows that
he is living in a wrong or unhealthy<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 118]</span>
way; or even so long as he has doubts
as to whether or not he is living in a
healthy way. Man cannot think
thoughts of perfect health while his voluntary
functions are performed in the
manner of one who is sick. The voluntary
functions of life are eating, drinking,
breathing, and sleeping. When
man thinks only of healthy conditions
and functioning, and performs these
externals in a perfectly healthy manner,
he must have perfect health.</p>
<p>In eating, man must learn to be
guided by his hunger. He must distinguish
between hunger and appetite, and
between hunger and the cravings of
habit; he must NEVER eat unless he
feels an EARNED HUNGER. He
must learn that genuine hunger is never
present after natural sleep, and that the
demand for an early morning meal is
purely a matter of habit and appetite;
and he must not begin his day by eating
in violation of natural law. He must
wait until he has an Earned Hunger,<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 119]</span>
which, in most cases, will make his first
meal come at about the noon hour. No
matter what his condition, vocation, or
circumstances, he must make it his rule
not to eat until he has an EARNED
HUNGER; and he may remember that
it is far better to fast for several hours
after he has become hungry than to eat
before he begins to feel hunger. It will
not hurt you to go hungry for a few
hours, even though you are working
hard; but it will hurt you to fill your
stomach when you are not hungry,
whether you are working or not. If
you never eat until you have an Earned
Hunger, you may be certain that in so
far as the time of eating is concerned,
you are proceeding in a perfectly healthy
way. This is a self-evident proposition.</p>
<p>As to what he shall eat, man must be
guided by that Intelligence which has
arranged that the people of any given
portion of the earth's surface must live
on the staple products of the zone which<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 120]</span>
they inhabit. Have faith in God, and
ignore "food science" of every kind. Do
not pay the slightest attention to the
controversies as to the relative merits
of cooked and raw foods; of vegetables
and meats; or as to your need for carbohydrates
and proteins. Eat only when
you have an earned hunger, and then
take the common foods of the masses
of the people in the zone in which you
live, and have perfect confidence that
the results will be good. They will be.
Do not seek for luxuries, or for things
imported or fixed up to tempt the taste;
stick to the plain solids; and when these
do not "taste good," fast until they do.
Do not seek for "light" foods; for easily
digestible, or "healthy" foods; eat what
the farmers and workingmen eat. Then
you will be functioning in a perfectly
healthy manner, so far as what to eat
is concerned. I repeat, if you have no
hunger or taste for the plain foods, do
not eat at all; wait until hunger comes.
Go without eating until the plainest food<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 121]</span>
tastes good to you; and then begin your
meal with what you like best.</p>
<p>In deciding how to eat, man must be
guided by reason. We can see that the
abnormal states of hurry and worry
produced by wrong thinking about business
and similar things have led us to
form the habit of eating too fast, and
chewing too little. Reason tells us that
food should be chewed, and that the
more thoroughly it is chewed the better
it is prepared for the chemistry of digestion.
Furthermore, we can see that the
man who eats slowly and chews his food
to a liquid, keeping his mind on the
process and giving it his undivided attention,
will enjoy more of the pleasure of
taste than he who bolts his food with
his mind on something else. To eat in
a perfectly healthy manner, man must
concentrate his attention on the act,
with cheerful enjoyment and confidence;
he must taste his food, and he
must reduce each mouthful to a liquid
before swallowing it. The foregoing<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 122]</span>
instructions, if followed, make the function
of eating completely perfect; nothing
can be added as to what, when,
and how.</p>
<p>In the matter of how much to eat,
man must be guided by the same inward
intelligence, or Principle of Health,
which tells him when food is wanted.
He must stop eating in the moment that
he feels hunger abating; he must not
eat beyond this point to gratify taste.
If he ceases to eat in the instant that
the inward demand for food ceases, he
will never overeat; and the function of
supplying the body with food will be
performed in a perfectly healthy manner.</p>
<p>The matter of eating naturally is a
very simple one; there is nothing in all
the foregoing that cannot be easily practiced
by any one. This method, put in
practice, will infallibly result in perfect
digestion and assimilation; and all
anxiety and careful thought concerning
the matter can at once be dropped from<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 123]</span>
the mind. Whenever you have an
earned hunger, eat with thankfulness
what is set before you, chewing each
mouthful to a liquid, and stopping when
you feel the edge taken from your hunger.</p>
<p>The importance of the mental attitude
is sufficient to justify an additional
word. While you are eating, as at all
other times, think only of healthy conditions
and normal functioning. Enjoy
what you eat; if you carry on a conversation
at the table, talk of the goodness
of the food, and of the pleasure it is
giving you. Never mention that you
dislike this or that; speak only of those
things which you like. Never discuss
the wholesomeness or unwholesomeness
of foods; never mention or think of
unwholesomeness at all. If there is
anything on the table for which you do
not care, pass it by in silence, or with
a word of commendation; never criticise
or object to anything. Eat your food
with gladness and with singleness of<span class='pagenum'>[Pg 124]</span>
heart, praising God and giving thanks.
Let your watchword be perseverance;
whenever you fall into the old way of
hasty eating, or of wrong thought and
speech, bring yourself up short and
begin again.</p>
<p>It is of the most vital importance to
you that you should be a self-controlling
and self-directing person; and you can
never hope to become so unless you can
master yourself in so simple and fundamental
a matter as the manner and
method of your eating. If you cannot
control yourself in this, you cannot control
yourself in anything that will be
worth while. On the other hand, if you
carry out the foregoing instructions,
you may rest in the assurance that in
so far as right thinking and right eating
are concerned you are living in a
perfectly scientific way; and you may
also be assured that if you practice what
is prescribed in the following chapters
you will quickly build your body into a
condition of perfect health.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg 125]</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />