November 1947 Vol. 28, No. 11
Business Men's
Health
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Business men, who pay large sums in taxes
to defray the cost of public health services, and donate millions
of dollars every year to health causes, are too often negligent
about looking after their own wellbeing.
It is not a fair attitude. Even if they don't care, personally,
whether they live to a green old age (and some really act
as if that were true) every man owes something to his family,
his firm and his country. The more successful and enterprising
he is, the greater gap his passing will leave in many lives.
This article is to suggest that it is time to pause and
ask: "How fast am I going - and where?" It will not attempt
to tell what you should or should not do, and it is not a
prescription for whatever ails you. It will simply point to
some features about health, and hint at a few things that
may add happy years to your useful life.
Not all ailments can be pinned down to bodily illness, and
much of this Monthly Letter will be about upsets originating
in the mind. It is an indisputable fact that these two - mind
and body - go closely in harness. For this reason physicians
are more and more breaking away from the last century idea
of treating a patient's body as a kind of phenomenon in a
vacuum. Symptoms of illnesses must be looked upon as being
the result of the patient's past life, present environment,
economic, social and cultural experiences.
Throughout this letter, when a distinction is made for the
sake of clarity between body and mind mechanisms, it should
be recalled that man is a totality whose sorrows and ambitions,
fears and hopes, all share in determining his physical condition.
The Changed Pace of Life
Some are inclined to brush off efforts to improve their
health with the statement that bad health is the inevitable
result of the changed pace at which life is lived; Earlier
civilizations had, relative to their stage of development,
just as onerous conditions, just as exciting and worrisome
experiences, but they were forced, by the lack of modern inventions,
to have periods of inactivity.
As illustrations, consider the following:
The absence of adequate artificial light forced many projects
to be confined to daylight hours: now they are carried on
into the night.
The slowness of transportation gave much more leisure in
travelling, though there was less comfort.
The slow rate of communication forced transactions to be
spread over a longer period of time.
The dearth of professional entertainment - stage, screen,
radio and others - left time for meditation and thought.
The dispersal of a smaller population over rural districts
provided fewer social contacts than are necessitated by today's
urban crowding.
As a prominent physician said to us when discussing this
subject: "Not so very many years ago the words 'meditation'
and 'contemplation' commanded a good deal of respect. Some
people published their 'Meditations', and 'The Contemplative
Life' was considered to be quite respectable and not without
value to the community. Since then, in our Western civilization,
the fashion has grown of putting more emphasis on 'doing'
rather than 'thinking'. Many people have formed the habit
of filling every waking hour with 'doing something', so that
they are incapable of spending an hour alone with their thoughts
without being bored and unhappy."
Throughout the change one principle holds true: whatever
the strain or crisis, whipping a tired horse may make it go
faster for a lap or two, but it doesn't help the horse's physical
wellbeing. On occasion, such as in time of war, men
and women become expendable and are used up at a fast rate.
In normal times no man owes it to himself or to anyone else
to whip himself into physical or nervous exhaustion.
People, of course, deny that they are under tension or strain.
They think that to admit being upset would be somehow degrading.
They keep piling up grains of irritation, like the drunken
Rip Van Winkle in Jefferson's play, who excused himself for
every fresh tipple by saying: "I won't count this one." Well,
he may not count it, but it is being counted none the less.
Down among the cells and tissues the count goes on, registering,
and storing it up to be used against him. "Nothing we ever
do," said Professor James, "is, in strict scientific literalness,
wiped out."
Emotions
It is wrong to look upon emotional states as merely reflecting
bodily states. They quite as often determine the wellbeing
of the body. Not hard work, but bottledup emotion is
the corrosive force eating away many a man's health and tranquillity.
We are told by a Montreal physician that evidence from scientific
investigation suggests that the emotions arise from the region
of the interbrain, an area below the cerebral cortex
which is concerned mainly with thought and intelligence. They
make manifest their effects through the involuntary nervous
system which is mainly distributed to internal organs of the
body, such as the heart and blood vessels, the kidneys, the
stomach and intestines, the glands of internal secretion and
involuntary muscles. Therefore, as one might suspect, the
effect of emotions is mainly felt by these organs.
The location of the centre for emotions being below the
cerebrum or "thinking" part of the brain suggests they developed
at an earlier stage in our evolution. It is believed that
they were important means of defence which enabled our remote
ancestors to survive. For example, anger marshalled all the
powers of the body to fight; fear caused flight from danger;
love perpetuated the race.
The function of the emotions has been partially taken over
by the intellect, and the thinking part of our brain is able
to modify them to some extent, but not completely. Thus we
cannot stop growing angry, feeling afraid or being in love,
but we can control the effect of our emotions to a considerable
extent.
These emotions which were so useful and necessary to our
ancestors are quite often a nuisance and a danger in our present
civilization, although they are still of definite value. Perhaps
the most difficult task every man has to face during life
is to modify and control his emotions so that he will preserve
their values and avoid their illeffects.
Worry
Let's mention worry as one ingredient in tension. Everyone
knows that a man in laughing, cheerful, kindly, happy mood
is less likely to be sick or fatigued than if his mood is
one of discontent, grief or despair, but many persons who
are doing important jobs find themselves in need of treatment
because their moods are getting them down.
It is generally conceded that worry can be beaten if problems
are honestly sought out, faced up to, and analysed. If the
problem is actually your business, don't brush it aside. Tackle
it. If you solve it, you have nothing more to worry about;
if it is a problem you can't solve after honestly trying,
then you must write it off as you do a bad debt. Should the
worry be about something that is not your business, or something
remote about which you can do nothing, make a clean sweep
of it out of your mind.
Some people will say: "It's easy enough to talk like that,
but not so easy to do." Right there is where the danger lies.
Just as soon as a useless worry shows signs of seizing a firm
hold upon you is the time to abandon appeasement and take
grim measures. The resulting effort will not be nearly so
difficult as you think, nor so depressing as the effect of
allowing worry to degenerate into nervous breakdown.
Heart Diseases
Heart diseases account for more deaths in North America
than the total of the next five major causes of death. The
fatalistic acceptance of this situation may be caused by an
apathetic "it can't be helped - it's part of human nature"
outlook, similar to the way people looked upon plagues in
the 14th and 15th centuries.
Dr. Hans Selye, whose recently published volume in the monumental
"Encyclopedia of Endocrinology" is hailed as a great contribution
to medicine, has made interesting" statements regarding heart
ailments. Dr. Selye, whose laboratory is in the University
of Montreal building, has conducted ten years' intensive research,
and just a few months ago he told a Maclean's Magazine writer
he believes diseases of the heart and circulatory system are
the result of continual worry, fear and overwork. They are
diseases practically unknown among animals in their natural
state and among primitive peoples living an agrarian life.
However, once affected, the heart needs treatment, and Dr.
Selye is attacking this clinical part of the job in hospitals
in both Canada and the United States by both diet and medication.
Dr. John A. Oille, one of Canada's leading heart specialists,
contributed an article on "Exercise the Heart" to a recent
issue of the magazine "Health". If given reasonable work to
do, says Dr. Oille, the heart will perform in a way to put
the best manmade machine to shame.
"Nothing Organically Wrong"
Many of us become puzzled when, feeling badly, we visit
the doctor and he tells us there is nothing organically wrong
with us. Certainly, the suffering seems real enough to us.
If it keeps up, even after the physician's assurance, it probably
means that we are the victims of tension.
Trouble in your stomach or a pain in your neck or the feeling
that you are coming down with pneumonia may all result from
emotional unrest, and this, if neglected, may lead into nervous
disorders of various kinds. Probably no affliction is more
misunderstood. in spite of its widespread nature. In an article
in Nation's Business for June entitled "You Don't Have To
Cut Paper Dolls", Lawrence Galton points out that nervous
breakdown is mowing an ever widening swath through the ranks
of big and little business men. Actually, he says, it is just
an emotional crackup, of which the cause is not work or weariness
but worry.
The remedy sometimes suggested is to return to the simple
life. It is said that while modern invention has relieved
physical drudgery it has increased the nervous strain. Dr.
William Harvey, renowned as the first authority to describe
the circulation of the blood (in 1616) contributed in an interesting
way to this thought. Dr. Harvey carried out an autopsy on
Thomas Parr, who died at the rather advanced age of 152 years
and 9 months after working hard until he had passed his 130th
birthday. Dr. Harvey attributed Parr's death to the change
from a frugal diet of subrancid cheese, milk and coarse hard
bread to the rich feeding he received in London, and to the
change from the healthy air of Shropshire to the foggy climate
of the metropolis. He also dwelt upon the important fact that
Parr, by leading a peasant's life, free from care owing to
its simplicity, contributed to his very advanced age. Parr,
who left a son who lived to be 127, was buried in Westminster
Abbey.
Parr's kind of "simple life" has little appeal to men of
affairs, and today's people would not be willing to exchange
the variety and pleasure of their way of life for the chance
of living to 152 in the dullness of Parr's village. And yet,
many of these selfsame moderns could increase their enjoyment
of life and keep living for a longer time if they brought
into their lives just a little bit of the calmness, regularity
and sensible eating and drinking usually associated in our
thoughts with a country village.
It is not necessary to return to the "simple life" of former
times completely and permanently, but it might be wise to
make an occasional and partial return. This might well be
done on annual holidays or weekends.
Leisure hours are frequently not used in a manner to give
health and relaxation. The city club, the golf club, the summer
home in the country, and even the holiday itself are too often
used for business entertainment and the promotion of business
affairs and contacts.
Each person must work out his own salvation regarding the
kind of holiday that will do him the greatest amount of good,
but if he gives the matter some thought he is likely to do
better than if he just blindly follows custom.
What to do About Health
The first thing is to start both prevention and cure early,
a principle emphasized in every one of our articles dealing
with health. It isn't necessary to have a complete breakdown
of the works before seeking an overhaul job. Even if all that
is wrong is a personality kink, it's better to get it straightened
out before it ties itself into a hard knot. Frightening pains
and symptoms often do not arise until the damage is expensive.
If, however, something has happened, and it is too late
for prevention, then action must be taken to recover the lost
ground and prevent further slipping. Selfprescribed
medicines, fads and cults may be harmless diversions, but
they do not cure. Only analysis of the situation and discovery
of the cause can lead to treatment which will effect a permanent
cure. Only a skilled physician is competent to diagnose your
condition.
There are a few simple things people can do to help keep
their bodies and minds in good working condition. They should
slow down and relax every once in a while. Relaxation isn't
magic, but it does give the body a chance to pull itself together.
Next to rest comes exercise. Persons who have continuous
and heavy responsibilities need to engage in outdoor activity.
Watching a game creates tension: participating in it is relaxation,
but it is just the best kind of serious and responsible persons
who either have no time for exercise or content themselves
with attending games as spectators. The kind and extent of
exercise to be taken depends upon age, weight, and stage of
fitness, and if you have not kept in training don't start
in suddenly without consulting your doctor.
Nutrition is important. We have it on authority of Dr. C.
Ward Crampton, at one time chairman of preventive medicine
of the New York County Medical Association, that whether a
man at 60 will be as vigorous as the average man of 40 or
decrepit and miserable as the average octogenarian depends
largely on diet. Men and women in middle life hesitate to
ask for food different from that of the rest of the family,
and as a consequence they often get too little calcium, iron
and protein, and eat too much starch and sugar. If there is
a lack of calcium, for example, the blood will rob the bones
to get what it needs, and hence the bones of old people break
easily. It is well to check with a medical practitioner whether
your body is using efficiently the food you are eating. The
most perfect food is useless if your digestive system does
not absorb it.
The habit of selfmedication with sedative drugs settles
nothing, heals nothing and gives only fictitious ease. At
the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association
in Montreal this year it was reported by a New York psychiatrist
that overindulgence in bromides leads to four principal varieties
of psychoses, sometimes piling up one psychosis on top of
another. Simple bromide intoxication is characterized by dullness,
sluggishness, forgetfulness and irritability. The administration
of some few drugs, if given under the direction of a skilled
and competent physician, may be of temporary benefit and thus
enable the patient to be more capable of giving calm and thoughtful
consideration to his problems.
Making Business Life Easier
Many factors enter into making a good business man, but
probably the basic need is physical and mental health. Alertness
has to be coupled with sober judgment and clarity of thought.
i11 guiding his subordinates over obstacles and past dangers,
the executive faces a demand upon his energy that only virility
of body and keenness of mentality can supply.
An important feature about the lives of successful business
men is that they have schooled themselves to save themselves.
The executive who takes things coolly has, apparently, plenty
of time. He does not seem burdened by his task, yet he gets
through more work with less fuss than the man in the next
office who says he can spare you only two minutes. The first
man has learned to channel his steam through the cylinders
where it does the most effective work; the second lets it
go through the whistle, making a lot of noise but wasting
its force. The busier and more efficient the man, the clearer
his desk, the clearer his mind, and the better prepared he
is to tackle new problems.
A rational plan of living would ease the tension of business
life greatly. Contrary to what was confidently expected back
in war years, the pressure of business life has not eased
off. It may be time for a slow down, time to defend yourself
against subordinates whose principal job in life seems to
be building molehills into mountains for you to dispose of;
time to dispense with impossible standards, such as that of
being perfect in everything. The executive who is right most
of the time is doing very well, and if he is content to be
right most of the time he is keeping his mental balance. It
is time to abandon the flashiness of great bursts of speed,
impressive though they may be, in favour of steady work at
a moderate pace. It is time to recall that behaving excitedly
does not pay off in results for an executive nearly as well
as carrying out his task in a calm manner. No mere mask of
composure will do. It is the inward peace and relaxation that
counts in your health, not the pretense assumed to create
an impression.
More Men Live Longer
More men are living well into their second forty years than
ever before. Half a century ago the average life expectancy
at birth was between 45 and 50 years; today it is nearly twenty
years longer. Much of the increase is due to control of diseases
which formerly took great toll of young people. The science
of medicine, the spread of good sanitation, and strides in
agriculture have contributed to longevity.
Our population is getting older. Between 1921 and 1941 the
number of people from 0 to 19 decreased from 43.4 to 37.5
per cent of total population, while persons 65 and over increased
from 4.8 to 6.7 per cent of total population. Here are the
figures for Canada, abstracted from census reports twenty
years apart:
| |
1921 |
1941 |
Increase |
Per cent increase |
| Total population |
8,787,949 |
11,506,655 |
2,718,706 |
30.94 |
| Ages 0 - 19: |
3,816,110 |
4,318,586 |
502,476 |
13.17 |
| Ages 0 - 64: |
8,368,859 |
10,738,840 |
2,369,981 |
28.32 |
| Ages 65 and over: |
419,000 |
767,815 |
348,725 |
83.21 |
Interpretation of the significances in that last column
must await another time. They affect all of social and economic
life, the strength of the nation now and in the next generation.
In this Letter we are concerned mainly with the thought that
so many more persons are living into ages which, as regards
health, were always referred to as the "dangerous ages". It
is commonplace to have people say: "Oh, well, after 40 you
can't expect..." this and that.
It is true that science has not found an injection that
provides renewed youth at forty, but it can show how to continue
some of the advantages of youth into these later years.
The Art of Living
There are four main components of life from adolescence
on: work, recreation, physical health and mental health. When
these four are balanced, and lead us along creative lines,
then life can be very satisfying and will be enjoyed longer.
How are we to achieve this balance? First of all it is necessary
to recall that the factors are closely related. If you are
emotionally upset, unhappy in your work, deprived of an outlet
for your creative urges, your depression may cause pain symptoms
in your body.
Next thing is to realize that no hocuspocus is going
to make you over. Get competent advice, start periodical medical
examination, and believe your physician. Don't shy away from
new practices just because they are different from those to
which your grandparents were accustomed.
It is not so many years ago that "psychology" was a highbrow
word whose users were looked upon as faddists. Today every
high school child knows that it means the science that deals
with the human mind and its activities, a science which has
yielded knowledge of boundless value to people of this era.
Similarly, "psychoanalysis" was a new word not long ago,
and because of misunderstanding and abuse it fell into disrepute.
Since it means simply a study of the subconscious mind there
need be nothing fearsome about it, and just because a few
followers years ago garbled the teachings of Freud is no reason
to brush aside a useful aid to mental health.
There has recently come into use another expression which
conveys a truth of vast importance to mankindthe
connection between mind and matter. It is "psychosomatic (psyche
- soul; soma - body) medicine."
The business man having made up his mind that though he
feels no aches and pains he had better take ordinary precautions
by having a medical examination, may learn that he needs something
more than medicine. He will find today's physicians qualified
in this field. More and more people are gaining relief at
the hands of regular physicians who devote themselves to rational
psychotherapy.
The world does not owe anyone health or wealth: they have
to be earned. Everybody wishes so to live that he shall extract
the greatest satisfaction from living, and it is in this pursuit
that the art of living manifests itself. Many people fail
in the quest because they never clearly think out just what
the most satisfactory things for them may be.
Human beings lead all other animals in the ability to deceive
themselves, and it is a common experience for men to devote
much time and energy to gaining something which proves in
the end to be not what they wanted at all. To live wisely
and well is indeed an art and he who gains skill in this greatest
of all arts is favoured of the gods.
Published by RBC Financial Group. All editions from the RBC
Letter collection are available on our web site at www.rbc.com/responsibility/letter.
Our e-mail address is: rbcletter@rbc.com.
Publié aussi en francais.
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