XII. The Irrigation of the Body
One of the
cardinal principles of the Hatha Yoga Philosophy of Health is the intelligent use of
Nature's great gift to living things-Water. It should not be necessary to even
call the attention of men to the fact that Water is one of the great means of
maintaining normal health, but man has
become so much a slave to artificial
environments, habits, customs, etc., that he has forgotten Nature's
laws. His only hope is to return to Nature. The little child knows,
instinctively, the use of water, and insists upon being furnished with it, but
as it grows older it gets away from the natural habit, and falls into the erroneous practices of the older people
around it. This is particularly true of those living
in large cities, where they find unpalatable the warm water drawn from
faucets, and so gradually become weaned away from the normal use of fluids.
Such persons gradually form new habits of drinking (or not drinking), and, putting off nature's demands, they at
last are not conscious of them. We often hear people say, "But why should
we drink water-we do not get thirsty?" But had they continued in Nature's
paths they would get thirsty, and the only reason why they do not hear Nature's calls is because they
have so long turned a deaf ear to her that she has become discouraged and
cries less loudly, besides their ears have ceased to recognize the vibrations, being so much taken up with
other things. It is astonishing to
find how people neglect this important feature of life.
Many drink scarcely any fluids, and even say
that they do not think it is "good for them." This has gone so
far that we know of one so called "health teacher" who puts forth the astounding theory that "Thirst is
a Disease," and counsels people against the use of fluids at all,
stating that the use of them is unnatural. We will not attempt to argue with such teachings-their folly must be
apparent to any one who will look at the natural life habits of man and the
lower animals. Let man go back to Nature, and he will see water-drinking all
around him, in all forms of life, from the plant up to the highest mammal.
So much importance does the Yogi
attach to the proper use of drinking water, that he considers it one of the
first principles of health. He knows that a large percentage of sick people are sick because of their lack of the fluids which the body requires. Just as
the plant needs water, as well as the food derived from the soil and
air, to bring it to healthy maturity, so does man require the proper amount of
fluids to keep him in health, or to bring him again to health in case he has
lost it. Who would think of depriving a plant of water ? And who would be so
cruel as to fail to provide the faithful
horse with the requisite amount of water? And yet, man, while giving the
plant and the animal that which his common
sense teaches him they require, will deprive himself of the life-giving
fluid, and will suffer the consequences, just as would the plant and horse
under similar conditions. Keep this example of plant and horse before you when
you consider the question of drinking water.
Let
us see what water is used for in the body, and then make
up our minds whether or not we have been living normal lives in this
respect
In the first place, about 70 percent of our physical body is water! A
certain amount of this water is being used
up by our system, and leaves the body, constantly, and every ounce that is used up must be replaced by another
ounce if the body is to be kept in a normal condition.
The
system is continuously excreting water through the pores of the skin, in the
shape of sweat and perspiration. Sweat is the term applied
to such excretion when it is thrown off so rapidly
that it gathers and collects in drops. Perspiration
is the term applied when the water is continuously
and unconsciously evaporated from the skin.
Perspiration is continuously being evaporated from the skin, and experiments
have shown that when it is prevented the animal dies.
In one of the festivals of ancient Rome a boy was covered
with gold-leaf, from head to foot, in order to represent one of the gods-he died before the gold-leaf could be removed, the perspiration being unable to penetrate the varnish
and the leaf. Nature's function was interrupted and the
body being unable to function properly, the soul threw off its fleshly
tenement.
Sweat and perspiration are shown by chemical analysis
to be loaded with the waste products of the system- the refuse and filth of the body-which, without a sufficient
supply of fluids in the system, would remain in the
body, poisoning it and bringing disease and death as
a consequence. The repair work of the body is continually
going on, the used-up and wornout tissue being
carried off and replaced by fresh, new material from the
blood, which has absorbed it from the nutrition in
the food. This waste must be cast out of the body,
and Nature is quite particular that it shall be gotten
rid of-she does not favor the storing up of garbage in the system. If this
waste matter is allowed to remain in the system it
becomes a poison and breeds diseased conditions-it serves as a breeding place
and a feeding ground for germs, microbes, spores and
bacteria, and all the rest of that family. Germs do not bother the clean and healthy system to any great extent,
but let them come around one of these water-haters,
and it finds his or her body full of uncast-off refuse
and filth, and they settle down to business. We will have
something more to say along this line when we come to the subject of
Bathing.
Water
plays a most important part in the everyday life of
the Hatha Yoga. He uses it internally and externally.
He uses it to keep healthy, and he teaches its value
to bring about healthy conditions, where disease has
impaired the natural functioning of the body. We will
touch upon the use of water in several parts of this
book. We wish to impress upon our students the importance of the subject,
begging them not to pass it by as unimportant because
it is so simple. Seven out of ten of our readers
need this advice. Do not pass it by.
This means YOU.
Both Perspiration and sweat are necessary, also, to dissipate
the excessive bodily heat by their evaporation. and thus
keep down the bodily temperature to a normal
degree. The perspiration and sweat also (as we have stated) assist in carrying
off the waste products of the system-the skin being, in
fact, a supplementary organ to the kidneys. And without
water the skin would, of course, be unable to
perform this function.
The normal adult excretes about one and one-half to two
pints of water in twenty-four hours, in the shape of
sweat and perspiration, but men working in rollingmills,
etc., excrete much greater quantities. One can endure a
much greater degree of heat in a dry atmosphere than in a moist one, because
in the former the perspiration is evaporated so
rapidly that the heat is more readily and rapidly dissipated.
Quite
a quantity of water is exhaled through the lungs.
The urinary organs pass off a large quantity, in
performing their functions, about three pints in twenty-four
hours being the amount voided by the normal
adult. And all this has to be replenished, in order to
keep the physical machinery going right
Water is needed by the system for a number of purposes.
One of its purposes (as above stated) is to counteract
and regulate the combustion constantly going on
in our bodies, arising from the chemical action of the
oxygen extracted by the lungs from the air, coming in
contact with the carbon arising from the food.
This combustion going on in millions of cells produces
the animal heat. The water passing through the
system regulates this combustion, so that it does not become too
intense.
Water is also used by the body as a common carrier. It
flows through the arteries and veins, and conveys the blood corpuscles and elements of nutrition to the various parts of the body, that they may be used in the building up process,
which we have described. Without fluids in the system,
the quantity of blood must decrease. On the return
trip of the blood through the veins, the fluids take up
the waste matter (much of which would be a rank poison if
allowed to remain in the system), and carries it to the excretory
organism of the kidneys, the pores of the skin, and lungs, where the poisonous
dead material and waste of the system is thrown off. Without sufficient fluids
this work cannot be accomplished as Nature intended. And (this a most important matter) without sufficient water
the waste portions of the food-the ashes of the system- cannot be kept sufficiently moist to easily pass
through the colon and out of the body, and Constipation, with all of its
attendant evils, result The Yogis know that nine-tenths of the cases of chronic
constipation arise from this cause-they
also know that nine-tenths of the cases
of chronic constipation may be speedily cured by the returning to the
natural habit of drinking water. We will devote a special chapter to this
subject, but we wish to direct the attention of the reader to its importance,
as often as possible.
Yes, a sufficient supply of water is
needed to aid in the proper stimulation and circulation of the blood- in the
elimination of the waste products of the system -and in the normal assimilation of nourishment by the system.
Persons who do
not drink sufficient fluids almost invariably are deficient in their supply of
blood-they are often bloodless looking creatures-pale, sallow, bloodless-looking anemic creatures. Their skin is
often dry and feverish, and they perspire but little. They have an unhealthy appearance, and remind one of
dried fruit, needing a good soaking
to make them look plump and normal.
They are nearly always sufferers from constipation-and
constipation brings with it a myriad of other disorders, as we will show
you in another chapter. Their large intestines, or colon, are unclean, and the
system is continually absorbing the products of the
waste stored away there, and endeavoring to get rid
of it by means of foul breath; strong, sweaty perspiration,
and unnatural urine. This is not pleasant
reading, but it is necessary to use plain words when calling your attention to these things. And all this for
the lack of a little water-just think of it. You who are so particular to keep yourselves clean on the outside,
allow yourselves to remain filthy within.
Man's
body needs water all over its inner parts. It needs
constant irrigation, and if that irrigation is denied
the bodies suffer just as does the land, denied its natural supply of water.
Every cell, tissue and organ needs water in order to
be healthy. Water is a universal solvent and
enables the system to assimilate and distribute
the nourishment obtained from the food, and to get
rid of the waste products of the system. It is often said that the
"blood is the life," and if this is so, what must the water be called-for without water the blood
would be but dust
Water is needed also for the purpose of enabling the kidneys
to perform their functions of carrying off the urea,
etc. It is needed in order to be manufactured into
saliva, bile, pancreatic juice, gastric juices, and all the other valuable juices of the system, without which digestion
would be impossible. Shut off your supply of
fluids, and you decrease your supply of all of these necessary things. Do you
realize that?
If you doubt these facts, thinking them to be but theories
of the Yogis, you have but to refer to any good
scientific work upon physiology, written by any of the
Western authorities upon the subject You will find all
that we have told you fully corroborated there. A
well-known Western physiologist has said that so much
water exists in the tissues of a normal system, that it
may be asserted as an axiom that "all organisms live
in water." And if there is no water, there can be no life, or health.
Yon
have been shown that the kidneys secrete about three
pints of urine in twenty-four hours, which is passed
off from the system, carrying in solution waste products
and poisonous chemical substances which have been
gathered up from the system by the kidneys. In addition
to this, we have shown you that the skin excretes
from one and one-half pints to two pints of water, in
the shape of sweat and perspiration, in the same
time. In addition to this there is a moderate quantity (average ten to fifteen
ounces) given off by the lungs in exhalation during
the same time. Besides a certain amount passes off
through the excretions from the bowels. And a small
amount is passed from the system in the shape of tears, and other secretions
and excretions of the body. Now, how much water is needed to renew this waste? Let us see. A certain amount of fluids is taken into the system with the food, particularly when certain kinds of food are eaten. But this is only a comparatively small portion of what has been thrown
off from the system in its cleansing functions.
The best authorities agree that from two quarts to
five pints of water is the amount necessary to be taken
daily by the average, normal man and woman, in order
to make up the waste. If that amount is not supplied to the body it will
withdraw fluids from the system until the person assumes that
"dried-up" state of which we have spoken,
with the consequence that all the physical functions are impaired, the persons
being "dried-up" inside as well as on the
surface-the machinery of the body being deprived of its lubricating and cleansing
material.
Two
quarts a day! Just think of that, you people who have
been taking about one pint, or even less, each day! Do
you wonder why you arc afflicted with all sorts of
bodily ailments. No wonder you are dyspeptic, constipated, bloodless,
nervous and generally all out of sorts. Your bodies are filled with all sorts of poisonous substances which Nature has not
been able to eliminate and throw off
through the kidneys and skin,
because you have shut off her water supply.
No wonder your colons are filled with impacted waste matter, which is poisoning your system, and which Nature
has been unable to pass off in the regular
way because you did not give her water with which to flush her sewers. No wonder that your saliva and gastric juices are deficient-how do you
suppose Nature can manufacture them
without sufficient water? No wonder
your blood is deficient in quantity-where do you suppose Nature is going to get the fluids from to make the blood? No wonder that your nerves are
out of condition, with all this
abnormal going on. Poor Nature docs
the best she can, even though you be foolish.
She draws a little water from the system in order that the machinery shall not
entirely stop, but she dare not draw
too much-so she compromises. She
docs just as you do when the water in the spring is nearly exhausted-you try to make a little do the
work of much, and must rest content
with doing things only half-way right.
The Yogis are not afraid to drink a sufficient amount of water each day. They are not afraid of "thinning the
blood," as are some of these "dried-up" people.
Nature
throws off the surplus quantity, if it be taken, very
readily and rapidly. They do not crave "ice water"-an
unnatural product of civilization( ?)-their favorite
temperature is about 60 degrees. They drink when they
are thirsty-and they have a normal thirst which
does not have to be restored as does that of the "dried-up"
people. They drink frequently, but mark ye this: they
do not drink large quantities at any one time. They
do not "pour the water down," believing that
such a practice is abnormal and unnatural, and injurious.
They drink it in small quantities, though often
during the day. When working they often keep a vessel
of water near them, and frequently sip therefrom.
Those who have neglected their natural instincts for many
years have almost forgotten the natural habit of water
drinking, and need considerable practice to regain it. A little practice
will soon begin to create a demand for
water, and you will in time regain the natural
thirst. A good plan is to keep a glass of water near you, and take an
occasional sip from it, thinking at the same time what you are taking it for.
Say to yourself: "I am giving
my body the fluids it requires to do
its work properly, and it will respond by bringing normal conditions back to me-giving me good
health and strength, and making me a
strong, healthy, natural man (or woman)."
The Yogis drink a cupful of water the last thing before going to bed at
night. This is taken up by the system and is used in
cleansing the body during the night, the waste products
being excreted with the urine in the morning. They also
drink a cupful immediately after arising in the morning, the theory being
that by taking the water before eating it cleanses the stomach and washes away the sediment and waste which have settled during the night. They usually drink a cupful about an hour before each meal, following it by some
mild exercise, believing that this prepares
the digestive apparatus for the meal, and promotes
natural hunger. They are not afraid of drinking
a little water even at meals (imagine the horror of
some of our "health-teachers" when they read this),
but are careful not to "wash-down" their food with water. Washing down the food with water not only
dilutes the saliva, but causes one to swallow his food imperfectly insalivated and masticated-makes it go down before Nature is ready-and interferes with the
Yogi method of masticating the food (see chapter on same). The Yogis believe that only in this way is water harmful when taken at meals-and for the reason
given, alone-they take a little at each meal to soften up
the food mass in the stomach, and that little does not weaken the strength of
the gastric-juices, etc. Many of our readers are familiar
with the use of hot water as a means of
cleansing a foul stomach. We approve of its use in that
way, when needed, but we think that if our students
will carefully follow the Yogi plan of living, as given in
this book, they will have no foul stomachs needing
cleansing-their stomachs will be good, healthy ones.
As a preliminary toward rational eating, the
sufferer may find it advantageous to use hot water in this way. The best
way is to take about one pint, slowly
sipping it, in the morning before breakfast, or about one hour before other meals.
It will excite a muscular action in the digestive
organs, which will tend to pass from the system the foul
matter stored up there, which the hot water has
loosened up and diluted, as well. But this is only a
temporary expedient Nature did not contemplate hot
water as steady beverage, and water at ordinary temperature
is all that she requires in health-and that she
requires to maintain health-but when health has been lost
through disobedience to her laws, hot water is a good thing with which to clean
house before resuming natural habits,
We will have more to say about the use of water in Bathing, outward application, etc, in other parts of
this book-this chapter is devoted to its internal offices.
In
addition to the properties, offices and uses of water, as
above given, we will add that water contains Prana in
considerable quantities, a portion of which it parts with in the system,
particularly if the system demands it and extracts it One often feels the need
of a cupful of water as a stimulant-the
reason being that for some reason the normal supply of Prana has become
depleted--and Nature, recognizing that it may obtain Prana rapidly and easily from water, causes the demand. You all remember how at times a cup of cool water has acted as a
powerful stimulant and "refresher" to you, and how it enabled you to return to your work with renewed vigor
and energy. Do not forget Water when you feel
"used up." Used in connection with Yogi Breathing it will give a man fresh energy quicker than
will any other method. In sipping
water, let it remain in the mouth a moment
before swallowing. The nerves of the tongue and mouth
are the first (and quickest) to absorb the Prana, and this plan will prove
advantageous, particularly when one is tired.
This is worth remembering.
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