Nourishment.
The human body is constantly undergoing change. Atoms of bone,
tissue, flesh, muscle, fat and fluids are constantly being wornout and
removed from the systern, and new atoms are constantly being
manufactured in the wonderful laboratory of the body, and then sent to
take the place of the wornout and discarded material.
Let us consider the physical body of man and its mechanism, as
a plant—and, indeed, it is akin to the life of the plant in its nature.
What does the plant require to bring it up from seed to sprout, from
sprout to plant, with flower, seed and fruit? The answer is
simple—fresh air, sunlight, water, and nourishing soil—these things,
and all of them, must it have in order to grow to healthy maturity. And
Man's physical body requires just the same things-all of them—in order
to be healthy, strong and normal. Remember the requisites—fresh air,
sunlight, water and food. We will consider the matter of air, sunlight
and water in other chapters, and will consider the matter of nourishing
food first.
Just as the plant grows slowly, but steadily, so does this
great work of discarding wornout material and the substitution of new
material go on constantly, day and night. We are not conscious of this
mighty work, as it belongs to that great subconscious part of Man's
nature—it is a part of the work of the Instinctive Mind.
The whole of the body, and all its parts, depend for health,
strength and vigor upon this constant renewal of material. If this
renewal were stopped disintegration and death would ensue. The
replacing of the wornout and discarded material is an imperative
necessity of our organism, and, therefore, is the first thing to be
considered when we think of the Healthy Man.
The keynote of this subject of food in the Hatha Yoga
Philosophy is the Sanscrit word, the English equivalent of which is
"NOURISHMENT." We print the word in capital letters that it may make an
impression upon your minds. We wish our students to associate the
thought of Food with the thought of Nourishment.
To the Yogi, food does not mean something to tickle the abnormal palate, but instead it means, first, Nourishment; second, NOURISHMENT, and third, NOURISHMENT. Nourishment first, last and always.
To many of the Western people, the ideal Yogi is a lean, lank,
scrawny, half-starved, emaciated being, who thinks so little of food
that he goes for days without eating—one who considers food to be too
"material" for his "spiritual nature." Nothing can be further from the
truth. The Yogis, at least those who are well-grounded in Hatha Yoga,
regard Nourishment as his first duty towards his body, and he is always
careful to keep that body properly nourished, and to see that the
supply of new, fresh material is always at least equal to the wornout
and discarded matter.
It is quite true that the Yogi is not a gross eater, nor is he
inclined to rich and fancy dishes. On the contrary, he smiles at the
folly of such things, and goes to his plain and nourishing meal,
knowing that he will obtain there full nourishment without the waste
and harmful matter contained in the more elaborate dishes of his
brother who is ignorant of the real meaning of food.
A maxim of Hatha Yoga is: "It is not what a man eats, but the amount that he assimilates,
that nourishes him." There is a world of wisdom in this old maxim, and
it contains that which writers upon health subjects have taken volumes
to express.
We will show you, later on, the Yogi method of extracting the
maximum amount of nourishment from the minimum amount of food. The Yogi
method lies in the middle of the road, the two opposite sides of which
road are traveled, respectively, by the two differing Western schools,
namely the "food-stuffers" and "starvationists," each of whom loudly
proclaim the merits of their own cult and decry the claims of the
opposing sect. The simple Yogi may be pardoned for smiling good
naturedly at the disputes raging between those who, preaching the
necessity of sufficient nutrition, teach that "stuffing" is necessary
to obtain it, on the one hand; and at those of the opposing school,
who, recognizing the folly of "stuffing" and overeating, have no remedy
to offer but a semi-starvation, accompanied with long continued fasts,
which, of course, has brought many of its followers 4own to weakened
bodies, impaired vitality, and even death.
To the Yogi, the evils of mal-nutrition, on the one hand, and
over-eating on the other, do not exist—these questions have been
settled for him centuries ago by the old Yogi fathers, whose very name
have been almost forgotten by their followers of to-day.
Remember, now, please, once and for all, that Hatha Yoga does
not advocate the plan of starving oneself, but, on the contrary, knows
and teaches that no human body can be strong and healthy unless it is
properly nourished by sufficient food eaten and assimilated. Many
delicate, weak and nervous people owe their impaired vitality and
diseased condition to the fact that they do not obtain sufficient
nourishment.
Remember, also, that Hatha Yoga rejects as ridiculous the
theory that Nourishment is obtained from "stuffing," gorging, or
over-eating, and views with wonder and pity these attributes of the
glutton, and sees nothing in these practices but the manifestation of
the attributes of the unclean swine, utterly unworthy of the developed
man.
To the Yogi understanding Man should eat to live-not live to eat.
The Yogi is an epicure, rather than a gourmand, for while eating
the plainest food he has cultivated and encouraged his natural and
normal taste so that his hunger imparts to these simple viands a relish
sought after, but not obtained, by those who hunt after rich and
expensive triumphs of the chef. While eating for Nourishment
as his main object, he manages to make his food yield him a pleasure
unknown to his brother who scorns the simple fare.
In our next chapter we will take up the subject of Hunger and
Appetite—two entirely different attributes of the physical body,
although to most persons the two appear to mean almost the same thing.
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