Every student needs to understand the relation between plain living and high
thinking. It rests with us individually to decide whether our lives shall be
controlled by the mind or by the body. The youth must, each for himself, make
the choice that shapes his life; and no pains should be spared that he may
understand the forces with which he has to deal, and the influences which mold
character and destiny.
Intemperance is a
foe against which all need to be guarded. The rapid increase of this terrible
evil should arouse every lover of his race to warfare against it. The practice
of giving instruction on temperance topics in the schools is a move in the
right direction. Instruction in this line should be given in every school and
in every home. The youth and children should understand the effect of alcohol,
tobacco, and other like poisons in breaking down the body, beclouding the mind,
and sensualizing the soul. It should be made plain that no one who uses these
things can long possess the full strength of his physical, mental, or moral
faculties.
But in order to
reach the root of intemperance we must go deeper than the use of alcohol or
tobacco. Idleness, lack of aim, or evil associations, may be the predisposing
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cause. Often it is
found at the home table, in families that account themselves strictly
temperate. Anything that disorders digestion, that creates undue mental
excitement, or in any way enfeebles the system, disturbing the balance of the
mental and the physical powers, weakens the control of the mind over the body,
and thus tends toward intemperance. The downfall of many a promising youth
might be traced to unnatural appetites created by an unwholesome diet.
Tea and coffee,
condiments, confectionery, and pastries are all active causes of indigestion.
Flesh food also is harmful. Its naturally stimulating effect should be a
sufficient argument against its use; and the almost universally diseased
condition of animals makes it doubly objectionable. It tends to irritate the
nerves and to excite the passions, thus giving the balance of power to the
lower propensities.
Those who accustom
themselves to a rich, stimulating diet, find after a time that the stomach is
not satisfied with simple food. It demands that which is more and more highly
seasoned, pungent, and stimulating. As the nerves become disordered and the
system weakened, the will seems powerless to resist the unnatural craving. The
delicate coating of the stomach becomes irritated and inflamed until the most
stimulating food fails of giving relief. A thirst is created that nothing but
strong drink will quench.
It is the
beginnings of evil that should be guarded against. In the instruction of the
youth the effect of apparently small deviations from the right should be made
very plain. Let the student be taught the value of a simple, healthful diet in
preventing the desire for unnatural stimulants. Let the habit of self-control
be early
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established. Let
the youth be impressed with the thought that they are to be masters, and not
slaves. Of the kingdom within them God has made them rulers, and they are to
exercise their Heaven-appointed kingship. When such instruction is faithfully
given, the results will extend far beyond the youth themselves. Influences will
reach out that will save thousands of men and women who are on the very brink
of ruin.
Diet and Mental Development
The relation of
diet to intellectual development should be given far more attention than it has
received. Mental confusion and dullness are often the result of errors in diet.
It is frequently
urged that, in the selection of food, appetite is a safe guide. If the laws of
health had always been obeyed, this would be true. But through wrong habits,
continued from generation to generation, appetite has become so perverted that
it is constantly craving some hurtful gratification. As a guide it cannot now
be trusted.
In the study of
hygiene, students should be taught the nutrient value of different foods. The
effect of a concentrated and stimulating diet, also of foods deficient in the
elements of nutrition, should be made plain. Tea and coffee, fine-flour bread,
pickles, coarse vegetables, candies, condiments, and pastries fail of supplying
proper nutriment. Many a student has broken down as the result of using such
foods. Many a puny child, incapable of vigorous effort of mind or body, is the
victim of an impoverished diet. Grains, fruits, nuts, and vegetables, in proper
combination, contain all the elements of nutrition; and
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when properly
prepared, they constitute the diet that best promotes both physical and mental
strength.
There is need to
consider not only the properties of the food but its adaptation to the eater.
Often food that can be eaten freely by persons engaged in physical labor must
be avoided by those whose work is chiefly mental. Attention should be given
also to the proper combination of foods. By brain workers and others of
sedentary pursuits, but few kinds should be taken at a meal.
And overeating,
even of the most wholesome food, is to be guarded against. Nature can use no
more than is required for building up the various organs of the body, and
excess clogs the system. Many a student is supposed to have broken down from
overstudy, when the real cause was overeating. While proper attention is given
to the laws of health, there is little danger from mental taxation; but in many
cases of so-called mental failure it is the overcrowding of the stomach that
wearies the body and weakens the mind.
In most cases two
meals a day are preferable to three. Supper, when taken at an early hour,
interferes with the digestion of the previous meal. When taken later, it is not
itself digested before bedtime. Thus the stomach fails of securing proper rest.
The sleep is disturbed, the brain and nerves are wearied, the appetite for
breakfast is impaired, the whole system is unrefreshed and is unready for the
day's duties.
The importance of
regularity in the time for eating and sleeping should not be overlooked. Since
the work of building up the body takes place during the hours of rest, it is
essential, especially in youth, that sleep should be regular and abundant.
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So far as possible
we should avoid hurried eating. The shorter the time for a meal, the less
should be eaten. It is better to omit a meal than to eat without proper
mastication.
Mealtime should be
a season for social intercourse and refreshment. Everything that can burden or
irritate should be banished. Let trust and kindliness and gratitude to the
Giver of all good be cherished, and the conversation will be cheerful, a
pleasant flow of thought that will uplift without wearying.
The observance of
temperance and regularity in all things has a wonderful power. It will do more
than circumstances or natural endowments in promoting that sweetness and
serenity of disposition which count so much in smoothing life's pathway. At the
same time the power of self-control thus acquired will be found one of the most
valuable of equipments for grappling successfully with the stern duties and
realities that await every human being.
Wisdom's "ways are
ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace." Proverbs 3:17. Let every
youth in our land, with the possibilities before him of a destiny higher than
that of crowned kings, ponder the lesson conveyed in the words of the wise man,
"Blessed art thou, O land, when ... thy princes eat in due season, for
strength, and not for drunkenness!" Ecclesiastes 10:17.