There is great |
| sympathy existing between the mind and body, whatever affects the body |
| must of necessity affect the mind; versus. Whatever affects the mind |
| is sure to affect the body. The body is the house that the man lives |
| in, if the house is damaged in any way the man proper which is the |
| mind; through sympathy is sure to suffer from such injuries. |
| |
| The power of the mind over the body both in disease and in health, is |
| utterly beyond all the modern scientific conceptions. The mind has so |
| long been clogged and hindered by narcotics and over stimulants, that |
| it yet remains in its infancy. Every hindrance prevents the growth and |
| development of the mind. The body may soon attain to its greatest |
| development, but the mind never reaches its perfection in this sphere. |
| |
| Age and experience fortifies and strengthens the mind, they give it |
| greatness and power; every influence possible should be brought to |
| bear upon the intellect to improve the mind and advance it.--The ages |
| past have been more to hinder and to cramp the intellect, to hinder |
| reason and progress than to favor it.
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