- Melon or cantaloup
- Two tablespoonfuls of nuts
- One or two fresh vegetables, including an ear of tender corn
- Fish, eggs, or buttermilk
- Plain ice-cream, if something sweet is desired
GENERAL DIRECTIONS FOR SEDENTARY WORKER
The student will recognize that in these menus the heavier foods are prescribed sparingly, while the lighter or the more readily soluble articles predominate. From these suggestions a fair idea of a fall and winter diet can be drawn.
Indigestion, sour stomach (hyper-chlorhydria), constipation, malassimilation, and general anemia are the disorders with which the sedentary worker is most commonly afflicted.
In dealing with each and all of these conditions, including obesity, which is often the result of sedentary habits, the first thing to be done is to limit the quantity of food to the normal requirements of the body, and in extreme cases a diet below the normal should be observed; no one was ever made ill by underfeeding. Then, with proper care as to the selection, combination, and proportions of food, and an increased amount of exercise and deep breathing, the person of sedentary habits should be made as healthy and strong as the outdoor worker in the fields of manual labor.
CLIMATIC EXTREMES
In considering a diet to meet the requirements of climatic extremes, either hot or cold, it is necessary to reckon from normality, both as to climate and as to the health of the individual.
All the foregoing lessons, taken as a whole, are designed to teach one method or theory, involving two principles: