THE POWERFUL AID OF THE MIND IN REBUILDING BODY HOW BODY HELPS MIND
“The body looks,” some
one has said, “as old as the mind feels.”
By virtue of a great mental law and at the same time
chemical law we are well within the realm of truth
when we say: The body ordinarily is as old as
the mind feels.
Every living organism is continually
going through two processes: it is continually
dying, and continually being renewed through the operation
and the power of the Life Force within it. In
the human body it is through the instrumentality of
the cell that this process is going on. The cell
is the ultimate constituent in the formation and in
the life of tissue, fibre, tendon, bone, muscle, brain,
nerve system, vital organ. It is the instrumentality
that Nature, as we say, uses to do her work.
The cell is formed; it does its work;
it serves its purpose and dies; and all the while
new cells are being formed to take its place.
This process of new cell formation is going on in
the body of each of us much more rapidly and uniformly
than we think. Science has demonstrated the fact
that there are very few cells in the body today that
were there twelve months ago. The form of the
body remains practically the same; but its constituent
elements are in a constant state of change. The
body, therefore, is continually changing; it is never
in a fixed state in the sense of being a solid, but
is always in a changing, fluid state. It is being
continually remade.
It is the Life, or the Life Force
within, acting under the direction and guidance of
the subconscious or subjective mind that is the agency
through which this continually new cell-formation process
is going on. The subconscious mind is, nevertheless,
always subject to suggestions and impressions that
are conveyed to it by the conscious or sense mind;
and here lies the great fact, the one all-important
fact for us so far as desirable or undesirable, so
far as healthy or unhealthy, so far as normal or aging
body-building is concerned.
That we have it in our power to determine
our physical and bodily conditions to a far greater
extent than we do is an undeniable fact. That
we have it in our power to determine and to dictate
the conditions of “old age” to a marvellous
degree is also an undeniable fact if we
are sufficiently keen and sufficiently awake to begin
early enough.
If any arbitrary divisions of the
various periods of life were allowable, I should make
the enumeration as follows: Youth, barring the
period of babyhood, to forty-five; middle age, forty-five
to sixty; approaching age, sixty to seventy-five;
old age, seventy-five to ninety-five and a hundred.
That great army of people who “age”
long before their time, that likewise great army of
both men and women who along about middle age, say
from forty-five to sixty, break and, as we say, all
of a sudden go to pieces, and many die, just at the
period when they should be in the prime of life, in
the full vigour of manhood and womanhood and of greatest
value to themselves, to their families, and to the
world, is something that is contrary to nature,
and is one of the pitiable conditions of our time.
A greater knowledge, a little foresight, a little
care in time could prevent this in the great
majority of cases, in ninety cases out of every hundred,
without question.
Abounding health and strength wholeness is
the natural law of the body. The Life Force of
the body, acting always under the direction of the
subconscious mind, will build, and always does build,
healthily and normally, unless too much interfered
with. It is this that determines the type of
the cell structure that is continually being built
into the body from the available portions of the food
that we take to give nourishment to the body.
It is affected for good or for bad, helped or hindered,
in its operation by the type of conscious thought
that is directed toward it, and that it is always influenced
by.
Of great suggestive value is the following
by an able writer and practitioner:
“God has managed, and perpetually
manages, to insert into our nature a tendency toward
health, and against the unnatural condition which we
call disease. When our flesh receives a wound,
a strange nursing and healing process is immediately
commenced to repair the injury. So in all diseases,
organic or functional, this mysterious healing power
sets itself to work at once to triumph over the morbid
condition.... Cannot this healing process be
greatly accelerated by a voluntary and conscious action
of the mind, assisted, if need be, by some other person?
I unhesitatingly affirm, from experience and observation,
that it can. By some volitional, mental effort
and process of thought, this sanative colatus,
or healing power which God has given to our physiological
organism, may be greatly quickened and intensified
in its action upon the body. Here is the secret
philosophy of the cures effected by Jesus Christ....
There is a law of the action of mind on the body that
is no more an impenetrable mystery than the law of
gravitation. It can be understood and acted upon
in the cure of disease as well as any other law of
nature.”
If, then, it be possible through this
process to change physical conditions in the body
even after they have taken form and have become fixed,
as we say, isn’t it possible even more easily
to determine the type of cell structure that is grown
in the first place?
The ablest minds in the world have
thought and are thinking that if we could find a way
of preventing the hardening of the cells of the system,
producing in turn hardened arteries and what is meant
by the general term “ossification,” that
the process of aging, growing old, could be greatly
retarded, and that the condition of perpetual youth
that we seem to catch glimpses of in rare individuals
here and there could be made a more common occurrence
than we find it today.
The cause of ossification is partly
mental, partly physical, and in connection with them
both are hereditary influences and conditions that
have to be taken into consideration.
Shall we look for a moment to the
first? The food that is taken into the system,
or the available portions of the food, is the building
material; but the mind is always the builder.
There are, then, two realms of mind,
the conscious and the subconscious. Another way
of expressing it would be to say that mind functions
through two avenues the avenue of the conscious
and the avenue of the subconscious. The conscious
is the thinking mind; the subconscious is the doing
mind. The conscious is the sense mind, it comes
in contact with and is acted upon through the avenue
of the five senses. The subconscious is that
quiet, finer, all-permeating inner mind or force that
guides all the inner functions, the life functions
of the body, and that watches over and keeps them
going even when we are utterly unconscious in sleep.
The conscious suggests and gives directions; the subconscious
receives and carries into operation the suggestions
that are received.
The thoughts, ideas, and even beliefs
and emotions of the conscious mind are the seeds that
are taken in by the subconscious and that in this
great realm of causation will germinate and
produce of their own kind. The chemical activities
that go on in the process of cell formation in the
body are all under the influence, the domination of
this great all-permeating subconscious, or subjective
realm within us.
In that able work, “The Laws
of Psychic Phenomena,” Dr. Thomas J. Hudson
lays down this proposition: “That the subjective
mind is constantly amenable to control by suggestion.”
It is easy, when we once understand and appreciate
this great fact, to see how the body builds, or rather
is built, for health and strength, or for disease
and weakness; for youth and vigour, or for premature
ossification and age. It is easy, then, to see
how we can have a hand in, in brief can have the controlling
hand in, building either the one or the other.
It is in the province of the intelligent
man or woman to take hold of the wheel, so to speak,
and to determine as an intelligent human being should,
what condition or conditions shall be given birth and
form to and be externalised in the body.
A noted thinker and writer has said:
“Whatever the mind is set upon, or whatever
it keeps most in view, that it is bringing to it, and
the continual thought or imagining must at last take
form and shape in the world of seen and tangible things.”
And now, to be as concrete as possible,
we have these facts: The body is continually
changing in that it is continually throwing out and
off, used cells, and continually building new cells
to take their places. This process, as well as
all the inner functions of the body, is governed and
guarded by the subconscious realm of our being.
The subconscious can do and does do whatever it is
actually directed to do by the conscious, thinking
mind. “We must be careful on what we allow
our minds to dwell,” said Sir John Lubbock, “the
soul is dyed by its thoughts.”
If we believe ourselves subject to
weakness, decay, infirmity, when we should be “whole,”
the subconscious mind seizes upon the pattern that
is sent it and builds cell structure accordingly.
This is one great reason why one who is, as we say,
chronically thinking and talking of his ailments and
symptoms, who is complaining and fearing, is never
well.
To see one’s self, to believe,
and therefore to picture one’s self in mind
as strong, healthy, active, well, is to furnish a pattern,
is to give suggestion and therefore direction to the
subconscious so that it will build cell tissue having
the stamp and the force of healthy, vital, active
life, which in turn means abounding health and strength.
So, likewise, at about the time that
“old age” is supposed ordinarily to begin,
when it is believed in and looked for by those about
us and those who act in accordance with this thought,
if we fall into this same mental drift, we furnish
the subconscious the pattern that it will inevitably
build bodily conditions in accordance with. We
will then find the ordinarily understood marks and
conditions of old age creeping upon us, and we will
become subject to their influences in every department
of our being. Whatever is thus pictured in the
mind and lived in, the Life Force will produce.
To remain young in mind, in spirit,
in feeling, is to remain young in body. Growing
old at the period or age at which so many grow old,
is to a great extent a matter of habit.
To think health and strength, to see
ourselves continually growing in this condition, is
to set into operation the subtlest dynamic force for
the externalisation of these conditions in the body
that can be even conceived of. If one’s
bodily condition, through abnormal, false mental and
emotional habits, has become abnormal and diseased,
this same attitude of mind, of spirit, of imagery,
is to set into operation a subtle and powerful
corrective agency that, if persisted in, will inevitably
tend to bring normal, healthy conditions to the front
again.
True, if these abnormal, diseased
conditions have been helped on or have been induced
by wrong physical habits, by the violation of physical
laws, this violation must cease. But combine the
two, and then give the body the care that it requires
in a moderate amount of simple, wholesome food, regular
cleansing to assist it in the elimination of impurities
and of used cell structure that is being regularly
cast off, an abundance of pure air and of moderate
exercise, and a change amounting almost to a miracle
can be wrought it may be, indeed, what many
people of olden time would have termed a miracle.
The mind thus becomes “a silent,
transforming, sanative energy” of great potency
and power. That it can be so used is attested
by the fact of the large numbers, and the rapidly
increasing numbers, all about us who are so using
it. This is what many people all over our country
are doing today, with the results that, by a great
elemental law Divine Law if you choose many
are curing themselves of various diseases, many
are exchanging weakness and impotence for strength
and power, many are ceasing, comparatively
speaking, are politely refusing, to grow old.
Thought is a force, subtle and powerful,
and it tends inevitably to produce of its kind.
In forestalling “old age,”
at least old age of the decrepit type, it is the period
of middle life where the greatest care is to be employed.
If, at about the time “old age” is supposed
ordinarily to begin, the “turn” at middle
life or a little later, we would stop to consider what
this period really means, that it means with both
men and women a period of life where some simple readjustments
are to be made, a period of a little rest, a little
letting up, a temporary getting back to the playtime
of earlier years and a bringing of these characteristics
back into life again, then a complete letting-up would
not be demanded by nature a little later, as it is
demanded in such a lamentably large number of cases
at the present time.
So in a definite, deliberate way,
youth should be blended into the middle life, and
the resultant should be a force that will stretch
middle life for an indefinite period into the future.
And what an opportunity is here for
mothers, at about the time that the children have
grown, and some or all even have “flown”!
Of course, Mother shouldn’t go and get foolish,
she shouldn’t go cavorting around in a sixteen-year-old
hat, when the hat of the thirty-five-year-old would
undoubtedly suit her better; but she should rejoice
that the golden period of life is still before her.
Now she has leisure to do many of those things that
she has so long wanted to do.
The world’s rich field of literature
is before her; the line of study or work she has longed
to pursue, she bringing to it a better equipped mind
and experience than she has ever had before. There
is also an interest in the life and welfare of her
community, in civic, public welfare lines that the
present and the quick-coming time before us along women’s
enfranchisement lines, along women’s commonsense
equality lines, is making her a responsible and full
sharer in. And how much more valuable she makes
herself, also, to her children, as well as to her community,
inspiring in them greater confidence, respect, and
admiration than if she allows herself to be pushed
into the background by her own weak and false thoughts
of herself, or by the equally foolish thoughts of her
children in that she is now, or is at any time, to
become a back number.
Life, as long as we are here, should
mean continuous unfoldment, advancement, and this
is undoubtedly the purpose of life; but age-producing
forces and agencies mean deterioration, as opposed
to growth and unfoldment. They ossify, weaken,
stiffen, deaden, both mentally and physically.
For him or her who yearns to stay young, the coming
of the years does not mean or bring abandonment of
hope or of happiness or of activity. It means
comparative vigour combined with continually larger
experience, and therefore even more usefulness, and
hence pleasure and happiness.
Praise also to those who do not allow
any one or any number of occurrences in life to sour
their nature, rob them of their faith, or cripple
their energies for the enjoyment of the fullest in
life while here. It’s those people who
never allow themselves in spirit to be downed,
no matter what their individual problems, surroundings,
or conditions may be, but who chronically bob up serenely
who, after all, are the masters of life, and
who are likewise the strength-givers and the helpers
of others. There are multitudes in the world today,
there are readers of this volume, who could add a
dozen or a score of years teeming, healthy
years to their lives by a process of self-examination,
a mental housecleaning, and a reconstructed, positive,
commanding type of thought.
Tennyson was prophet when he sang:
Cleave then to the sunnier
side of doubt,
And cling to Faith beyond
the forms of Faith!
She reels not in the storm
of warring words,
She brightens at the clash
of “Yes” and “No,”
She sees the Best that glimmers
through the Worst,
She feels the sun is hid but
for a night,
She spies the summer through
the winter bud,
She tastes the fruit before
the blossom falls,
She hears the lark within
the songless egg,
She finds the fountain where
they wailed “mirage.”