Playing the Health Odds
If every time we did something that would bring eventual harm to
ourselves, to society or to the environment, we were given a
convincing jolt of electric shock, most problems facing humanity
would be almost instantly solved. But that's not the way things
are. Other than sticking our hand in a fire or falling off a
cliff, or similar easy lessons in living, most choices require
intelligent foresight, a measure of potential consequences
perhaps far into the future.
Therein lies our problem. We like to cheat, are lazy,
pleasure-for-the-moment driven, too clever with alibis and
excuses and particularly good at self-justification. We continue
whatever suits our fancy until eventually we are sufficiently
harmed, or the contrary evidence becomes so overwhelming that we
change due to the brute force of public opinion.
Although cigarette smoking, industrial smog, water pollution,
radiation, toxic gases emitted from modern construction
materials, and sedentary living are all proven to cause harm,
even grievous life-threatening harm, they continue because
immediate ill effects do not occur, or change would mean
inconvenience or sacrifice. Then there is Uncle Josh, who is now
a robust ninety-four, and yet has smoked a cigar, chewed tobacco
and swigged whiskey since he was sixteen. There is the
brother-in-law who works in the nuclear plant and has never
developed cancer. There is the classmate you saw at the recent
reunion who doesn't exercise, watches virtually every soap opera
and eats pounds of chocolates every week but yet looks more trim
and fit than you in spite of your tofu and jazzercise. Or how
about the NBA All-Star who eats greasy fast foods,
additive-laden soft drinks, and candy bars? Using such logic to
justify poor life choices is like pointing to people who drive
drunk habitually and have done so for decades without ever
getting in a wreck. Just because people can escape immediate
harm does not mean such a course is wise and that the odds are
not against you.
Here is an even better rebuttal to this myopic view of life
choices. The medical image here is a computed tomographic scan
of the head of an inebriated man admitted to the hospital. In
the side view, note an approximately 2" nail embedded in the
back part of the skull. In the front view, see that this nail is
in the center of the brain. The patient disclosed that some
twelve years earlier he had attempted suicide during a
depressive episode, and had used a nail gun directed between the
eyes to end his life. Since that time, he has done just fine.
http://www.wysong.net/articlesite/nail_head.htm
Everything is a matter of odds. If you can shoot nails into your
brain and survive essentially unscathed, then certainly you
might be able to smoke, lead a sedentary life, breathe toxic
fumes, be unfit, and eat almost anything and possibly escape
damage too.
For most of us, however, it would be much smarter to weigh the
odds in our favor and use our brain (minus nails) to exercise
judgment and foresight and make decisions now that increase the
odds for a better, longer, happier life.