As a Matter of Course eBook

Annie Payson Call (author)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 82 pages of information about As a Matter of Course.

As a Matter of Course eBook

Annie Payson Call (author)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 82 pages of information about As a Matter of Course.

The patients who resist recovery are quite as numerous as those who keep themselves ill by resisting illness.  A person of this sort seems to be fascinated by his own body and its disorders.  So far from resisting illness, he may be said to be indulging in it He will talk about himself and his physical state for hours.  He will locate each separate disease in a way to surprise the listener by his knowledge of his own anatomy.  Not infrequently he will preface a long account of himself by informing you that he has a hearty detestation of talking about himself, and never could understand why people wanted to talk of their diseases.  Then in minute detail he will reveal to you his brain-impression of his own case, and look for sympathetic response.  These people might recover a hundred times over, and they would never know it, so occupied are they in living their own idea of themselves and in resisting Nature.

When Nature has knocked us down because of disobedience to her laws, we resist her if we attempt at once to rise, or complain of the punishment.  When the dear lady would hasten our recovery to the best of her ability, we resist her if we delay progress by dwelling on the punishment or chafing at its necessity.

Nature always tends towards health.  It is to prevent further ill-health that she allows us to suffer for our disobedience to her laws.  It is to lead us back to health that she is giving the best of her powers, having dealt the deserved punishment.  The truest help we can give Nature is not to think of our bodies, well or ill, more than is necessary for their best health.

I knew a woman who was, to all appearances, remarkably well; in fact, her health was her profession.  She was supposed to be a Priestess of Health.  She talked about and dwelt upon the health of her body until one would have thought there was nothing in the world worth thinking of but a body.  She displayed her fine points in the way of health, and enjoyed being questioned with regard to them.  This woman was taken ill.  She exhibited the same interest, the same pleasure, in talking over and dwelling upon her various forms of illness; in fact, more.  She counted her diseases.  I am not aware that she ever counted her strong points of health.

This illustration is perhaps clear enough to give a new sense of the necessity for forgetting our bodies.  When ill use every necessary remedy; do all that is best to bring renewed health.  Having made sure you are doing all you can, forget; don’t follow the process.  When, as is often the case, pain or other suffering puts forgetting out of the question, use no unnecessary resistance, and forget as soon as the pain is past Don’t strengthen the impression by talking about it or telling it over to no purpose.  Better forego a little sympathy, and forget the pain sooner.

It is with our nerves that we resist when Nature has punished us.  It is nervous strain that we put into a useless attention to and repetition of the details of our illness.  Nature wants all this nerve-force to get us well the faster; we can save it for her by not resisting and by a healthy forgetting.  By taking an illness as comfortably as possible, and turning our attention to something pleasant outside of ourselves, recovery is made more rapidly.

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Project Gutenberg
As a Matter of Course from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.