WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The old man's guide to health and longer life cover

The old man's guide to health and longer life

Chapter 2: CHAP. I. How a person in Years is to know he is in Health.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A practical manual for maintaining health in later life offers concise rules for diet, exercise, and simple remedies, emphasizing prevention over cure. It explains how to judge personal health by appetite, digestion, and the morning pulse, and recommends regular self-monitoring. Chapters advise adjusting nourishment and activity with advancing years and the seasons, using warmth and moderation to prevent chill-related, urinary, and bowel troubles, and favoring lighter meats, fish, gentle motion, ease, and cheerfulness. Frequent sudden changes are discouraged; attention to evacuations, clothing, and temperate habits is presented as the best defense against common infirmities of age.

CHAP. I.
How a person in Years is to know he is in Health.

It is allowed, we know so little of nothing, as of ourselves: it has been said often of the mind; but it is not less true of the body. Fancying we have certain diseases will sometimes bring them upon us: and there is as great danger in forcing ourselves to believe, against our feeling, that we are well; when we have some disorder.

To avoid both, let the elderly man read here, with a free mind. Let him not suppose, because God has blessed him with long health, he is above the reach of sickness; nor neglect the care which may conquer, in its beginning, a disease that would in the end conquer him. Let him be as ready to acknowledge real disorders; as careful to avoid imaginary.

Health consists in a good digestion of the food; and free circulation of the blood. The appetite, and the condition of the stomach after eating, will shew the first; and the latter may be known best by the pulse.

That old person’s digestion is always good, who has a sharp but not voracious appetite; and who feels no pain, nor sickness after food. To preserve this, let him be content with somewhat less than he could eat at every meal: to keep the stomach in order, do not overload it.

The best time to feel the pulse is in a morning: a little after getting up; and before breakfast. It should be a rule never to omit this examination. A constant and regular attention to the pulse will shew its slightest variations; and when any such happen, let care be taken of the health.

There are methods of counting the strokes by a watch; but ’tis idle and mechanical: a repeated attention in the plain way is better.

A frequent examination will inform us what is the condition of our pulse in health; and all deviations from this shew or threaten sickness.

While an old man feels his pulse regular, finds his digestion good, and with a mind at ease can take his usual exercise freely, he may be certain he is well. We shall tell him how to keep so: and when a fault is seen in time, ’tis easily remedy’d.

If the pulse beat too quick and high, the diet must be lower; if too slow, and weak, the food must be somewhat richer. This short direction will prevent half the diseases of mankind.