『PEACE, POWER, AND PLENTY - 5. HEALTH THROUGH RIGHT THINKING - Orison Swett Marden』のカバーアート

PEACE, POWER, AND PLENTY - 5. HEALTH THROUGH RIGHT THINKING - Orison Swett Marden

PEACE, POWER, AND PLENTY - 5. HEALTH THROUGH RIGHT THINKING - Orison Swett Marden

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PEACE, POWER, AND PLENTY - 5. HEALTH THROUGH RIGHT THINKING - Orison Swett Marden (1909) - HQ Full Book.„Your ideal is a prophecy of what you shall at last unveil.“In Chapter 5 of Peace, Power, and Plenty, titled “Health Through Right Thinking,” Orison Swett Marden presents a bold and spiritually infused philosophy on the power of the mind over physical health. Drawing from personal experience, medical authorities, and spiritual principles, Marden constructs a comprehensive argument that health begins—not in the body—but in thought. Through persuasive anecdotes and reflections, he positions right thinking as the true foundation for wellness, and wrong thinking as the root of nearly all physical ailment. The Power of the Mind Over the BodyMarden opens with the idea that mental attitude profoundly influences physical condition. Quoting Harvard psychologist William James, he introduces the notion that ideas, particularly optimistic and spiritually grounded ones, have the capacity to annul pain, invigorate life, and sustain vitality even in the face of serious illness. He gives the striking example of a woman with advanced cancer who, through the power of belief and cheerful thinking, continues to live an active, uplifting life far beyond what physicians predicted. This is not a denial of medicine, but a spotlight on the unrecognized power of internal conviction. Marden stresses that the body inevitably reflects the dominant thoughts of the mind. Just as impure mental images make moral purity impossible, so too do disease-laden thoughts erode physical harmony. “You cannot hold ill-health thoughts… without having them outpictured in the body,” he writes. Thoughts are causes; physical manifestations are effects. Mental Discord and Physical DiseaseThe chapter discusses how different negative emotions influence specific parts of the body. Marden details how:Selfishness, envy, and covetousness adversely affect the liver and spleen.Hatred and anger inflame kidney disorders.Fear, worry, and anxiety directly disrupt the heart and circulatory function.Grief, anxiety, and mental shock are associated with cancer, jaundice, and digestive issues. These observations, drawn from medical literature of the time and authorities like Dr. Murchison and Dr. Snow, are not meant to stand as scientific proof, but to emphasize the emotional origins of much chronic illness. Marden does not reject heredity or physical causes, but urges readers to confront the mental root of disease with just as much, if not more, seriousness. The Danger of Negative Self-TalkMarden condemns the widespread habit of talking about one’s ailments, rehearsing symptoms, and expecting sickness. “Never affirm or repeat about your health what you do not wish to be true,” he warns. To constantly observe, label, and worry about every physical symptom is to invite illness into one’s life. He takes particular issue with the self-diagnosis trend—people reading medical books and imagining themselves to have every condition they read about. This morbid curiosity intensifies fear and actually contributes to the realization of disease. He observes how some people almost nurture their ailments, watching them with a strange pride or obsessive concern. This, he says, is the surest way to prolong illness. Conversely, replacing these thoughts with visions of strength, vitality, and health will often bring about actual healing. “Healthy thought is the greatest panacea in the world,” Marden declares. The mind is a sculptor; what it molds is what the body becomes. The Destructive Power of Hereditary FearAnother enemy of health is the dread of hereditary disease. Marden discusses how many individuals live their entire lives under the psychological shadow of their ancestors’ illnesses—believing they, too, are destined for early death or chronic suffering. This belief, he argues, often becomes self-fulfilling. It crushes ambition, drains energy, and sabotages the will to live fully. He describes the tragedy of brilliant young men and women, full of potential and aspiration, crippled by the thought that they might not live long due to family history. To him, this is both unnecessary and tragic—a surrender to a phantom rather than an engagement with the true source of health: constructive thought. The Cure Through Affirmation and IdealismMarden insists that affirmations of health must be embraced with energy and conviction. He uses a courtroom metaphor—urging readers to act like a lawyer pleading the case for their own health. Gather evidence of vitality. Argue for it. Visualize strength and wholeness. Never plead the cause of disease. He recounts the story of a patient overhearing a doctor say he would not live. Rather than accept the sentence, the patient declared, “I will live.” That affirmation, rooted in belief, played a part in his eventual recovery. The body, Marden claims, responds to mental command. This is not mere ...

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