Extremes in Diet
            
            
              227
            
            
              guest can be made welcome without burdening the housewife to
            
            
              [323]
            
            
              make extra preparation.
            
            
              All should learn what to eat and how to cook it. Men, as well as
            
            
              women, need to understand the simple, healthful preparation of food.
            
            
              Their business often calls them where they cannot obtain wholesome
            
            
              food; then, if they have a knowledge of cookery, they can use it to
            
            
              good purpose.
            
            
              Carefully consider your diet. Study from cause to effect. Culti-
            
            
              vate self-control. Keep appetite under the control of reason. Never
            
            
              abuse the stomach by overeating, but do not deprive yourself of the
            
            
              wholesome, palatable food that health demands.
            
            
              The narrow ideas of some would-be health reformers have been
            
            
              a great injury to the cause of hygiene. Hygienists should remember
            
            
              that dietetic reform will be judged, to a great degree, by the provision
            
            
              they make for their tables; and instead of taking a course that will
            
            
              bring discredit upon it, they should so exemplify its principles as
            
            
              to commend them to candid minds. There is a large class who will
            
            
              oppose any reform movement, however reasonable, if it places a
            
            
              restriction on the appetite. They consult taste instead of reason or
            
            
              the laws of health. By this class, all who leave the beaten track of
            
            
              custom and advocate reform will be accounted radical, no matter
            
            
              how consistent their course. That these persons
            
            
              “And every man that striveth for the mastery is tem-
            
            
              perate in all things. Now they do it to obtain a cor-
            
            
              ruptible crown; but we an incorruptible.”
            
            
              1 Corinthians
            
            
              9:25
            
            
              .
            
            
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              may have no ground for criticism, hygienists should not try to see
            
            
              how different they can be from others, but should come as near to
            
            
              them as possible without the sacrifice of principle.
            
            
              When those who advocate hygienic reform go to extremes, it is
            
            
              no wonder that many who regard these persons as representing health
            
            
              principles reject the reform altogether. These extremes frequently
            
            
              do more harm in a short time than could be undone by a lifetime of
            
            
              consistent living.
            
            
              Hygienic reform is based upon principles that are broad and far-
            
            
              reaching, and we should not belittle it by narrow views and practices.