WHAT YOU NEED TO EAT 11
Drugs never
cure disease. They only change the form and location. Nature alone is the
effectual restorer, and how much better could she perform her task if left to
herself. But this privilege is seldom allowed her. If crippled nature bears up
under the load, and finally accomplishes in a great measure her double task,
and the patient lives, the credit is given to the physician. But if nature
fails in her effort to expel the poison from the system, and the patient dies,
it is called a wonderful dispensation of Providence. If the patient had taken a
course to relieve overburdened nature in season, and understandingly used pure
soft water, this dispensation of drug mortality might have been wholly averted.
The use of water can accomplish but little, if the patient does not feel the
necessity of also strictly attending to his diet.
Many are living in violation of the laws
of health, and are ignorant of the relation their habits of eating, drinking,
and working sustain to their health. They will not arouse to their true
condition until nature protests against the abuses she is suffering, by aches
and pains in the system. If, even then, the sufferers would only commence the
work right, and would resort to the simple means they have neglected--the use
of water and proper diet, nature would have just the help she requires, and
which she ought to have had long before. If this course is pursued, the patient
will generally recover, without being debilitated.
When drugs are introduced into the
system, for a time they may seem to have a beneficial effect. A change may take
place, but the disease is not cured. It will manifest itself in some other
form. In nature's efforts to expel the drug from the system, intense suffering
is sometimes caused the patient. And the disease, which the drug was given to
cure, may disappear, but only to re-appear in a new form, such as skin
diseases, ulcers, painful diseased joints, and sometimes in a more dangerous
and deadly form. The liver, heart and brain are frequently affected by drugs,
and often all these organs are burdened with disease, and the unfortunate
subjects, if they live, are invalids for life, wearily dragging out a miserable
existence. Oh, how much that poisonous drug cost! If it did not cost the life,
it cost quite too much. Nature has been crippled in all her efforts. The whole
machinery is out of order, and at a future period in life, when these fine
works which have been injured, are to be relied upon to act a more important
part in union with all the fine works of nature's machinery, they cannot
readily and strongly perform their labor, and the whole system feels the lack.
These organs, which should be in a healthy condition, are enfeebled, the blood
becomes impure. Nature keeps struggling, and the patient suffers with different
ailments, until there is a sudden breaking down in her efforts, and death
follows. There are more who die from the use of drugs, than all who could have
died of disease had nature been left to do her own work.
Very many lives have been sacrificed by
physicians' administering drugs for unknown diseases. They have no real
knowledge of the exact disease which afflicts the patient. But physicians are
expected to know in a moment what to do, and unless they act at once, as though
they understood the disease perfectly, they are considered by impatient
friends, and by the sick, as incompetent physicians. Therefore to gratify erroneous
opinions of the sick and their friends, medicine must be administered,
experiments and tests tried to cure the patient of the disease of which they
have no real knowledge. Nature is loaded with poisonous drugs which she cannot
expel from the system. The physicians themselves are often convinced that they
have used powerful medicines for a disease which did not exist, and death was
the consequence.
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