Plain Facts for Old and Young by John Harvey Kellogg
4. If during gestation the mother is fretful, complaining, and
67 words | Chapter 20
exacting; if she requires to be petted and waited upon; if she gratifies
every idle whim and indulges every depraved desire and perverted
appetite--as thousands of mothers do--the result will surely be a
peevish, fretful child, that will develop into a morose and irritable
man or woman, imperious, unthankful, disobedient, willful, gluttonous,
and vicious.
If such undesirable results would be avoided, the following suggestions
should be regarded:--
Chapters
1. Chapter 1
2. INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
3. INTRODUCTION.
4. 1. In childhood, and until about the age of puberty, respiration in
5. 2. Although there is a change in the mode of respiration in most females,
6. 3. We believe the cause of this modification of respiration is the
7. 4. We have met a number of ladies whose good fortune and good sense
8. 1. Do not allow the boy or girl to be overworked, either mentally or
9. 2. Keep the mind occupied. While excessive labor should be avoided,
10. 3. Abundant exercise out-of-doors is essential for both sexes. Sunshine
11. 4. Watch carefully the associations of the youth. This should be done
12. 5. None too much care can be exercised at this important epoch of human
13. 2. Intense mental excitement, as well as severe physical labor, is to
14. 3. A third hint, which is applicable to both sexes and at all times,
15. 4. Take daily exercise, as much as possible short of fatigue; if
16. 4. Perhaps nothing tends more directly to the production of menstrual
17. 1. If a child is begotten in lust, its lower passions will as certainly
18. 2. The same remarks apply with equal force to the transmission of other
19. 3. The influence of the father is, at the outset, as great as that of
20. 4. If during gestation the mother is fretful, complaining, and
21. 1. For the beginning of a new life, select the most favorable time,
22. 2. If a child has been properly conceived, the duty then devolves upon
23. 3. After birth, the mother still possesses a molding influence upon
24. 1. During the development of the body, all its energies are required
25. 2. The reproductive act is the most exhaustive of all vital acts. Its
26. 3. The effects upon the female are even worse than those upon the male;
27. 2. That a robust man requires more than one woman to satisfy his sexual
28. 3. That there are more women than men; and since every woman has a right
29. 4. That the great men of all ages have been polygamists in fact, if
30. 5. That monogamy is a relic of the paganism of the ancient Greeks and
31. 6. That it is the only proper and effective cure for the "social evil,"
32. 1. We deny most emphatically the assertion that polygamy is either
33. 2. The second argument is based upon the asserted fact that man
34. 3. While it is true that there are a few more adult women than men,
35. 4. In proof of the propriety of polygamy, as well as of its necessity,
36. 5. The fact that monogamy was practiced among the ancient Greeks and
37. 6. The argument that polygamy will cure the "social evil" is exactly
38. 1. They are useful as well as healthful. While they call into action
39. 1. The sexual function is for the purpose of producing new individuals
40. 2. In the animal kingdom generally, the reproductive function is
41. 3. In those exceptional cases in which the organs of the male are in
42. 4. Fecundation of the female element can only take place about the time
43. 5. The desire for sexual congress naturally exists in the female only
44. 6. The constant development of the sexual organs in human males is a
45. 7. The time of sexual congress is always determined by the condition
46. 1. The fact that in all animals but the human species the act can be
47. 2. The fact that the males of other animals besides man in which the
48. 3. The general law that the reproductive act is performed only when
49. 1. The moment that prostitution is placed under the protection of law
50. 2. Why should so vile a crime as fornication be taken under legal
51. 3. By the use of certain precautionary measures the fears of many will
52. 1. Those which may arouse suspicion, but any one of which, taken singly,
53. 2. Those which may be regarded as positive. Several suspicious signs
54. 1. _General debility_, coming upon a previously healthy child, marked
55. 2. _Early symptoms of consumption_--or what are supposed to be such--as
56. 3. _Premature and defective development_ is a symptom closely allied
57. 4. _Sudden change in disposition_ is a sign which may well arouse
58. 5. _Lassitude_ is as unnatural for a child as for a young kitten. A
59. 6. In connection with the preceding symptom will generally be found,
60. 7. _Sleeplessness_ is another symptom of significance. Sound sleep is
61. 8. _Failure of mental capacity_ without apparent cause should occasion
62. 9. _Fickleness_ is another evidence of the working of some
63. 10. _Untrustworthiness_ appearing in a child should attract attention
64. 11. _Love of solitude_ is a very suspicious sign. Children are naturally
65. 12. _Bashfulness_ is not infrequently dependent upon this cause. It
66. 13. _Unnatural boldness_, in marked contrast with the preceding sign,
67. 14. _Mock piety_--or perhaps we should more properly designate it as
68. 15. _Easily frightened_ children are abundant among young masturbators,
69. 16. _Confusion of ideas_ is another characteristic of the devotee of
70. 17. Boys in whom the habit has become well developed sometimes manifest
71. 18. _Round shoulders_ and a stooping posture in sitting are
72. 19. _Weak backs, pains in the limbs, and stiffness of the joints_, in
73. 20. _Paralysis_ of the lower extremities, coming on without apparent
74. 21. The _gait_ of a person addicted to this vice will usually betray
75. 22. _Bad positions_ in bed are evidences which should be noticed. If
76. 23. _Lack of development of the breasts_ in females, after puberty,
77. 24. _Capricious appetite_ particularly characterizes children
78. 25. One very constant peculiarity of such children is their extreme
79. 26. _Eating clay, slate-pencils, plaster, chalk,_ and other
80. 27. Disgust for simple food is one of the traits which a victim of this
81. 28. _The use of tobacco_ is good presumptive evidence that a boy is
82. 29. _Unnatural paleness_ and colorless lips, unless they can be
83. 30. _Acne_, or _pimples_, on the face are also among the suspicious
84. 31. _Biting the finger nails_ is a practice very common in girls
85. 32. The eyes often betray much. If, in addition to want of luster and
86. 33. An habitually moist, cold hand, is a suspicious circumstance in
87. 34. _Palpitation of the heart_, frequently occurring, denotes a
88. 35. _Hysteria_ in females may be regarded as a suspicious circumstance
89. 36. _Chlorosis_, or _green sickness_, is very often caused by the unholy
90. 37. _Epileptic fits_ in children are not infrequently the result of
91. 38. _Wetting the bed_ is an evidence of irritation which may be
92. 39. _Unchastity of speech_ and fondness for obscene stories betray a
93. 2. Loss of the seminal fluid.
94. 1. The composition of the nerves and that of spermatozoa is nearly
95. 2. Men from whom the testes have been removed before puberty, as in
96. 1. Begin by a resolution to reform, strengthened by the most solemn
97. 2. Resolve to reform _now_; not to-morrow or next week, but this very
98. 3. Begin the work of reform by purging the mind. If a lewd thought enters
99. 4. As a help to purity of mind, whenever impure thoughts enter,
100. 5. Avoid solitude, for then it is that temptation comes, and you are
101. 6. Strictly comply with all the rules laid down for the cultivation
102. 7. Above all, seek for grace and help from the Source of all spiritual
103. 1. _Never overeat_. If too much food is taken at one meal, fast the
104. 2. _Eat but twice a day_, or, if supper is eaten, let it be very light,
105. 3. _Discard all stimulating food_. Under this head must be included,
106. 4. _Stimulating drinks_ should be abstained from with still greater
107. 5. In place of such articles as have been condemned, eat fruits, grains,
108. 1. From seven to nine hours' sleep are required by all persons. The
109. 2. Arise immediately upon waking in the morning if it is after four
110. 3. If insufficient sleep is taken at night, sleep a few minutes just
111. 4. Never go to bed with the bowels or bladder loaded. The bladder should
112. 5. The position in sleeping is of some importance. Sleeping upon the
113. 6. Soft beds and pillows must be carefully avoided. Feather-beds should
114. 7. Too many covers should be avoided with equal care. The thinnest
115. 8. Thorough ventilation of the sleeping-room, both while occupied and
116. 9. If wakeful at night, instead of lying in bed trying to go to sleep,
117. 10. One of the most effectual panaceas for certain varieties of
118. 1. It is not a remedy, since, as in the case of illicit intercourse,
119. 2. If it were a remedy, it would not be a justifiable one, for its use
120. 3. As another reason why the remedy would not be a _proper_, even if
121. 1. Give the matter prompt attention. Do not delay to adopt curative
122. 2. Set about the work of getting well with a fixed determination to
123. 3. Avoid watching for symptoms. Ills are greatly exaggerated by
124. 4. Never consult a quack. The newspapers abound with lying
125. 5. Do not despair of ever recovering from the effects of past
126. 6. Every sufferer from sexual disease must make up his mind to live,
127. 2. The production of similar individuals which shall also have the power
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