"Forward, March" eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 159 pages of information about "Forward, March".

"Forward, March" eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 159 pages of information about "Forward, March".
is a stranger.  But we all know well enough the personal value of certain doctors for certain cases.  Mere hygienic advice will win a victory in the hands of one man and obtain no good results in those of another, for we are, after all, artists who all use the same means to an end but fail or succeed according to our method of using them.  There are still other cases in which mischievous tendencies to repose, to endless tire, to hysterical symptoms, and to emotional displays have grown out of defects of nutrition so distinct that no man ought to think for these persons of mere exertion as a sole means of cure.  The time comes for that, but it should not come until entire rest has been used, with other means, to fit them for making use of their muscles.  Nothing upsets these cases like over-exertion, and the attempt to make them walk usually ends in some mischievous emotional display, and in creating a new reason for thinking that they cannot walk.  As to the two sets of cases just sketched, no one need hesitate; the one must walk, the other should not until we have bettered her nutritive state.  She may be able to drag herself about, but no good will be done by making her do so.  But between these two classes, and allied by certain symptoms to both, lie the larger number of such cases, giving us every kind of real and imagined symptom, and dreadfully well fitted to puzzle the most competent physician.  As a rule, no harm is done by rest, even in such people as give us doubts about whether it is or is not well for them to exert themselves.  There are plenty of these women who are just well enough to make it likely that if they had motive enough for exertion to cause them to forget themselves they would find it useful.  In the doubt I am rather given to insisting on rest, but the rest I like for them is not at all their notion of rest.  To lie abed half the day, and sew a little and read a little, and be interesting as invalids and excite sympathy, is all very well, but when they are bidden to stay in bed a month, and neither to read, write, nor sew, and to have one nurse, who is not a relative,—­then repose becomes for some women a rather bitter medicine, and they are glad enough to accept the order to rise and go about when the doctor issues a mandate which has become pleasantly welcome and eagerly looked for.  I do not think it easy to make a mistake in this matter unless the woman takes with morbid delight to the system of enforced rest, and unless the doctor is a person of feeble will.  I have never met myself with any serious trouble about getting out of bed any woman for whom I thought rest needful, but it has happened to others, and the man who resolves to send any nervous woman to bed must be quite sure that she will obey him when the time comes for her to get up.

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"Forward, March" from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.