BODILY CONDITIONS FOR EFFECTIVE STUDY
It is a truism to say that mental
ability is affected by bodily conditions. A common
complaint of students is that they cannot study because
of a headache, or they fail in class because of loss
of sleep. So patent is the interrelation between
bodily condition and study that we cannot consider
our discussion of study problems complete without
recognition of the topic. We shall group our discussions
about three of the most important physical activities,
eating, sleeping and exercising. These make up
the greater part of our daily activities and if they
are properly regulated our study is likely to be effective.
FOOD -- It is generally agreed
that the main function of food is to repair the tissues
of the body. Other effects are present, such as
pleasure and sociability, but its chief benefit is
reparative, so we may well regard the subject from
a strictly utilitarian standpoint and inquire how
we may produce the highest efficiency from our eating.
Some of the important questions about eating are,
how much to eat, what kind of food to eat, when to
eat, what are the most favorable conditions for eating?
The quantity of food to be taken varies
with the demands of the individual appetite and the
individual powers of absorption. In general,
one who is engaged in physical labor needs more, because
of increased appetite and increased waste of tissues.
So a farm-hand needs more food than a college student,
whose work is mostly indoors and sedentary. Much
has been said recently about the ills of overeating.
One of the most enthusiastic defenders of a decreased
diet is Mr. Horace Fletcher, who, by the practice
of protracted mastication, “contrives to satisfy
the appetite while taking an exceptionally small amount
of food. Salivary digestion is favored and the
mechanical subdivision of the food is carried to an
extreme point. Remarkably complete digestion
and absorption follow. By faithfully pursuing
this system Mr. Fletcher has vastly bettered his general
health, and is a rare example of muscular and mental
power for a man above sixty years of age. He
is a vigorous pedestrian and mountain-climber and holds
surprising records for endurance tests in the gymnasium.
“The chief gain observed in
his case, as in others which are more or less parallel,
is the acquiring of immunity to fatigue, both muscular
and central. It is not claimed that the sparing
diet confers great strength for momentary efforts ’explosive
strength,’ as the term goes but that
moderate muscular contractions may be repeated many
times with far less discomfort than before. The
inference appears to be that the subject who eats
more than is best has in his circulation and his tissues
by-products which act like the muscular waste which
is normally responsible for fatigue. According
to this conception he is never really fresh for his
task, but is obliged to start with a handicap.
When he reduces his diet the cells and fluids of his
body free themselves of these by-products and he realizes
a capacity quite unguessed in the past.
“The same assumption explains
the fact mentioned by Mr. Fletcher, that the hours
of sleep can be reduced decidedly when the diet is
cut down. It would seem as though a part of our
sleep might often be due to avoidable auto-intoxication.
If one can shorten his nightly sleep without feeling
the worse for it this is an important gain.”
But the amount of food is probably
not so important as the kind. Foods containing
much starch, as potatoes and rice, may ordinarily be
taken in greater quantities than foods containing
much protein, such as meats and nuts. So our
problem is not so much concerned with quantity as with
the choice of kinds of food. Probably the most
favorable distribution of foods for students is a
predominance of fruits, coarse cereals, starch and
sugar and less prominence to meats. Do not begin
the day’s study on a breakfast of cakes.
They are a heavy tax upon the digestive powers and
their nutritive value is low. The mid-day meal
is also a crucial factor in determining the efficiency
of afternoon study, and many students almost completely
incapacitate themselves for afternoon work by a too-heavy
noon meal. Frequently an afternoon course is
rendered quite valueless because the student drowses
through the lecture soddened by a heavy lunch.
One way of overcoming this difficulty is by dispensing
with the mid-day meal; another way is to drink a small
amount of coffee, which frequently keeps people awake;
but these devices are not to be universally recommended.
The heavy meal of a student may well
come at evening. It should consist of a varied
assortment of foods with some liquids, preferably clear
soup, milk and water. Meat also forms a substantial
part of this meal, though ordinarily it should not
be taken more than once a day. Much is heard
nowadays about the dangers of excessive meat-eating
and the objections are well-founded in the case of
brain-workers. The undesirable effects are “an
unprofitable spurring of the metabolism
more particularly objectionable in warm weather and
the menace of auto-intoxication.” Too much
protein, found in meat, lays a burden upon the liver
and kidneys and when the burden is too great, wastes,
which cannot be taken care of, gather and poison the
blood, giving rise to that feeling of being “tired
all over” which is so inimical to mental and
physical exertion. When meat is eaten, care should
be taken to choose right kinds. “Some kinds
of meat are well known to occasion indigestion.
Pork and veal are particularly feared. While we
may not know the reason why these foods so often disagree
with people, it seems probable that texture is an
important consideration. In both these meats
the fibre is fine, and fat is intimately mingled with
the lean. A close blending of fat with nitrogenous
matter appears to give a fabric which is hard to digest.
The same principle is illustrated by fat-soaked fried
foods. Under the cover of the fat, thorough-going
bacterial decomposition of the proteins may be accomplished
with the final release of highly poisonous products.
Attacks of acute indigestion resulting from this cause
are much like the so-called ptomaine poisoning.”
Much of the benefit of meat may be
secured from other foods. Fat, for example, may
be obtained from milk and butter freed from the objectionable
qualities of the meat-fibre. In this connection
it is important to call attention to the use of fried
fat. Avoid fat that is mixed with starch particles
in such foods as fried potatoes and pie-crust.
The conditions during meals should
always be as pleasant as possible. This refers
both to physical surroundings and mental condition.
“The processes occurring in the alimentary canal
are greatly subject to influences radiating from the
brain. It is especially striking that both the
movements of the stomach and the secretion of the gastric
juice may be inhibited as a result of disturbing circumstances.
Intestinal movements may be modified in similar fashion.”
“Cannon has collected various
instances of the suspension of digestion in consequence
of disagreeable experiences, and it would be easy for
almost anyone to add to his list. He tells us,
for example, of the case of a woman whose stomach
was emptied under the direction of a specialist in
order to ascertain the degree of digestion undergone
by a prescribed breakfast. The dinner of the
night before was recovered and was found almost unaltered.
Inquiry led to the fact that the woman had passed
a night of intense agitation as the result of misconduct
on the part of her husband. People who are seasick
some hours after a meal vomit undigested food.
Apprehension of being sick has probably inhibited
the gastric activities.
“Just as a single occasion of
painful emotion may lead to a passing digestive disturbance,
so continued mental depression, worry, or grief may
permanently impair the working of the (alimentary)
tract and undermine the vigor and capacity of the
sufferer. Homesickness is not to be regarded
lightly as a cause of malnutrition. Companionship
is a powerful promoter of assimilation. The attractive
serving of food, a pleasant room, and good ventilation
are of high importance. The lack of these, so
commonly faced by the lonely student or the young man
making a start in a strange city, may be to some extent
counteracted by the cultivation of optimism and the
mental discipline which makes it possible to detach
one’s self from sordid surroundings.”
Almost as important as eating is drinking,
for liquids constitute the “largest item in
the income” of the body. Free drinking is
recommended by physiologists, the beneficial results
being, “the avoidance of constipation, and the
promotion of the elimination of dissolved waste by
the kidneys and possibly the liver.” In
regard to the use of water with meals, a point upon
which emphatic cautions were formerly offered, recent
experiments have failed to show any bad effects from
this, and the advice is now given to drink “all
the water that one chooses with meals.”
Caution should be observed, however, about introducing
hot and cold liquids into the stomach in quick succession.
Other liquids have been much discussed
by dietitians, especially tea and coffee. “These
beverages owe what limited food value they have to
the cream and sugar usually mixed with them. They
give pleasure by their aroma, but they are given a
peculiar position among articles of diet by the presence
in them of the compound caffein, which is distinctly
a drug. It is a stimulant to the heart, the kidneys,
and the central nervous system.”
“Individual susceptibility to
the action of caffein varies greatly. Where one
person notices little or no reaction after a cup of
coffee, another is exhilarated to a marked degree
and hours later may find himself lying sleepless with
tense or trembling muscles, a dry, burning skin, and
a mind feverishly active. Often it is found that
a more protracted disturbance follows the taking of
coffee with cream than is caused by black coffee.
“It is too much to claim that
the use of tea and coffee is altogether to be condemned.
Many people, nevertheless, are better without them.
For all who find themselves strongly stimulated it
is the part of wisdom to limit the enjoyment of these
decoctions to real emergencies when uncommon demands
are made upon the endurance and when for a time hygienic
considerations have to be ignored. If young people
will postpone the formation of the habit they will
have one more resource when the pressure of mature
life becomes severe.”
Before concluding this discussion
a word might be added concerning the relation between
fasting and mental activity. Prolonged abstinence
from food frequently results in highly sharpened intellectual
powers. Numerous examples of this are found in
the literature of history and biography; many actors,
speakers and singers habitually fast before public
performances. There are some disadvantages to
fasting, especially loss of weight and weakness, but
when done under the direction of a physician, fasting
has been known to produce very beneficial effects.
It is mentioned here because it has such marked effects
in speeding up the mental processes and clearing the
mind; and the well-nourished student may find the
practice a source of mental strength during times
of stress such as examinations.
SLEEP -- “About one-third
of an average human life is passed in the familiar
and yet mysterious state which we call sleep.
From one point of view this seems a large inroad upon
the period in which our consciousness has its exercise;
a subtraction of twenty-five years from the life of
one who lives to be seventy-five. Yet we know
that the efficiency and comfort of the individual
demand the surrender of all this precious time.
It has often been said that sleep is a more imperative
necessity than food, and the claim seems to be well
founded.” It is quite likely that some students
indulge in too much sleep. This may sometimes
be due to laziness, but frequently it is due to actual
intoxication, from an excess of food which results
in the presence of poisonous “narcotizing substances
absorbed from the burdened intestine”.
This theory is rendered tenable by the fact that when
the diet is reduced the hours of sleep may be reduced.
If one is in good health, it seems right to expect
that one should be able to arise gladly and briskly
upon awaking. By all means do not indulge yourself
in long periods of lying in bed after a good night’s
rest. If we examine the physical and physiological
conditions of sleep we shall better understand its
hygiene. Sleep is a state in which the tissues
of the body which have been used up may be restored.
Of course some restoration of broken-down tissue takes
place as soon as it begins to wear out, but so long
as the body keeps working, the one process can never
quite compensate for the other, so there must be a
periodic cessation of activity so that the energies
of the body may be devoted to restoration. Viewing
sleep as a time when broken-down bodily cells are
restored, we see that we tax the energies of the body
less if we go to sleep each day before the cells are
entirely depleted. That is the significance of
the old teaching that sleep before midnight is more
efficacious than sleep after midnight. It is not
that there is any mystic virtue in the hours before
twelve, but that in the early part of the evening
the cells are not so nearly exhausted as they are later
in the evening, and it is much easier to repair them
in the partially exhausted stage than it is in the
completely exhausted stage. For this reason,
a mid-day nap is often effective, or a short nap after
the evening dinner. By thus catching the cells
at an early stage of their exhaustion, they can be
restored with comparative ease, and more energy will
be available for use during the remainder of the working
hours.
A problem that may occasionally trouble
a student is sleeplessness and we may properly consider
here some of the ways of avoiding it. One prime
cause of sleeplessness is external disturbance.
The disturbance may be visual. Although it is
ordinarily thought that if the eyes are closed, no
visual disturbances can be sensed, nevertheless, as
a matter of fact the eye-lids are not wholly opaque.
Sight may be obtained through them, as you may prove
by closing your eyes and moving your fingers before
them. The lids transmit light to the retina and
it is quite likely that you are frequently awakened
by a beam of light falling upon your closed eye-lids.
For this reason, one who is inclined to be wakeful
should shut out from the bed-room all avenues whereby
light may enter as a distraction.
The temperature sense is also a source
of distraction in sleep, and it is a common experience
to be awakened by extreme cold. The ears, too,
may be the source of disturbance in sleep; for even
though we are asleep, the tympanic membrane is always
exposed to vibrations of air. In fact, stimuli
are continually playing upon the sense-organs and are
arousing nervous currents which try to break over the
boundaries of sleep and impress themselves upon the
brain.
For this reason, one who wishes to
have untroubled sleep should remove all possible distractions.
But apart from external distractions,
wakefulness may still be caused by distractions from
within. Troublesome ideas may be present and
persist in keeping one awake. This means that
brain activity has been started and needs suppression.
Various devices have been suggested. One is to
eat something very light, just enough to draw the surplus
blood, which excites the brain, away from the brain
to the digestive tract. This advice should be
taken with caution, however, for eating just before
retiring may use up in digestion much of the energy
needed in repairing the body, and may leave one greatly
fatigued in the morning.
One way to relieve the mind of mental
distractions is to fill it with non-worrisome, restful
thoughts. Read something light, a restful essay
or a non-exciting story, or poetry. Another device
is to bathe the head in cold water so as to relieve
congestion of blood in the brain. A tepid or
warm bath is said to have a similar effect.
Dreams constitute one source of annoyance
to many, and while they are not necessarily to be
avoided, still they may disturb the night’s rest.
We may avoid them in some measure by creating conditions
free from sensory distractions, for many of our dreams
are direct reflections of sensations we are experiencing
at the moment. A dream with an arctic setting
may be the result of becoming uncovered on a cold night.
To use an illustration from Ellis: “A man
dreams that he enlists in the army, goes to the front,
and is shot. He is awakened by the slamming of
a door. It seems probable that the enlistment
and the march to the field are theories to account
for the report which really caused the whole train
of thought, though it seemed to be its latest item.”
Such dreams may be partially eliminated by care in
arranging conditions so that there will be few distractions.
Especially should they be guarded against in the later
hours of the sleep, for we do not sleep so soundly
after the first two hours as we do before, and stimuli
can more easily impress themselves and affect the
brain.
Before leaving the subject of sleep,
we should note the benefit to be derived from regularity
in sleep. All Nature seems to move rhythmically
and sleep is no exception. Insomnia may be treated
by means of habituating one’s self to get sleepy
at a certain time, and there is no question that the
rising process may be made easier if one forms the
habit of arising at the same time every morning.
To rhythmize this important function is a long step
towards the efficient life.
EXERCISE -- Brain workers
do not ordinarily get all the exercise they should.
Particularly is this true of some conscientious students
who feel they must not take any time from their study.
But this denotes a false conception of mental action.
The human organism needs exercise. Man is not
a disembodied spirit; he must pay attention to the
claims of the body. Indeed it will be found that
time spent in exercise will result in a higher grade
of mental work. This is recognized by colleges
and universities by the requirement of gymnasium work,
and the opportunity should be welcomed by the student.
Inasmuch as institutions generally give instruction
in this subject, we need not go specifically into
the matter of exercises. Perhaps the only caution
that need be urged is that against the excessive participation
in such exhausting games as foot-ball. It is
seriously to be questioned whether the strenuous grilling
that a foot-ball player must undergo does not actually
impair his ability to concentrate upon his studies.
If you undertake a course of exercise,
by all means have it regular. Little is gained
by sporadic exercising. Adopt the principle of
regularity and rhythmize this important phase of bodily
activity as well as all other phases.
In concluding our discussion of physical
hygiene for the student, we cannot stress too much
the value of relaxation. The life of a student
is a trying one. It exercises chiefly the higher
brain centres and keeps the organism keyed up to a
high pitch. These centres become fatigued easily
and ought to be rested occasionally. Therefore,
the student should relax at intervals, and engage
in something remote from study. To forget books
for an entire week-end is often wisdom; to have a
hobby or an avocation is also wise. A student
must not forget that he is something more than an
intellectual being. He is a physical organism
and a social being, and the well-rounded life demands
that all phases receive expression. We grant
that it is wrong to exalt the physical and stunt the
mental, but it is also wrong to develop the intellectual
and neglect the physical. We must recognize with
Browning that,
all good things
Are ours, nor soul helps flesh more, now,
than flesh helps soul.