Fallacies
about Colds and Catarrh
We shall
never understand the real nature of a cold or of catarrh until we get away from
orthodox medical ideas. The common phrase, ‘I’ve caught a bad cold’ is
thoroughly misleading. For this term implies that the ‘cold’ has come from
without, and that it has been taken from someone else by infection. There are
certain factors which give an air of plausibility to the theory of infection.
For example, one member of a family starts with a cold, and the cold sometimes
then goes through the house, all the other members of the family having it in
turn. But this is by no means conclusive proof that the cold has been conveyed
to the others by infection. It must be remembered that the whole family are
very probably living under very similar conditions as to faulty diet,
ventilation (or rather the lack of it), inadequate bathing, and unhygienic
living generally. And it is these conditions that lay the foundations of colds,
not the transfer of germs from one person to another.
Primary
Causes
When
treated by Nature Cure methods, catarrh cases in every instance have been
found to have present one or more of the following basic factors:
- A clogging mucus-forming dietary
- Over-eating
- An excess of protein, sugar and starch, or fat
- Insufficient cleansing and acid-neutralising
foods and drinks
- Constipation
- Lowered vitality, especially of the lining
membranes of the nose and throat
- Ill-ventilated, overheated and dusty rooms
- Excessive indulgence in alcohol and tobacco
- Worry and wrong mental conditions which lower
the vitality and natural resistance of the body
We are
now beginning to realise that catarrh is not quite so simple a matter as
catching a germ, or being exposed to wet weather.
We eat
our colds. We accumulate, by our shabby treatment of our bodies, filth and
waste and debris within us, until, at length Nature has set to work to clear
out the rubbish. This she does by means of the mild feverish process we call a cold,
or by the slower, more latent method of chronic catarrh.
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