How To Swallow a Pill
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
DIGG THIS
It's remarkable
to think of the basic tasks of life many people have yet to master.
I'm not talking about covering your mouth while sneezing.
I mean, in
particular, the art of swallowing a pill. You will be sitting in
a restaurant and at the start of a meal, a lady at the next table
will take out her pill box and put one in her mouth. What follows
is excruciating. Gulps of water and then the crazed head toss, again
and again, flinging the head backwards in jerky motions as if this
will cause the pill to go down. Sometimes it manages its way down,
and yet there are special occasions when it does not work, and the
woman coughs it back up in to her hand.
We've all seen
this and winced because we know what is next: another attempt, and
another attempt. Just to watch this take place causes our own throats
to tighten, and strange things to happen to our appetites.
Clearly, something
has to be done to get this matter under some control, but it turns
out that the online advice one gets on this subject is uniformly
vague or bad. One site – I'll not link it because it is too humiliating
for the blogger – actually recommends putting the pill on the tip
of the tongue and flinging the head around. Obviously, this is no
help.
The worst result
of not mastering this task is to get a dry pill stuck deep in your
throat. You cough and cough, even convulse to the point of absurdity.
If you go to bed with a pill such as an aspirin or an ibuprofen
stuck in your throat, the darn thing will bore a hole right through.
You will be sick as a dog for days, and no amount of antacid will
cure it. Coffee will feel like a cruel acid, and even soft foods
will feel like they are ripping at your esophagus.
Follow this
advice and you will never have a hard time again.
The key is
how you think about it. The pill is not a unique good, a special
something that behaves differently from any other things you swallow.
Yes, it can be a bit harder but it is about the same size as many
foods we eat routinely. We eat hotdogs and chew them only here and
there and down the hatch they go. Same with steak. We chew a bit,
mash it around somewhat, and down it goes. Same with biscuits, rolls,
sausage, chocolate cake or any number of other foods. We know we
should chew our food into a pulp but we do not. We often just manipulate
it into a reasonable size and swallow. That reasonable size is often
far bigger than a pill.
So why do we
have such trouble with a pill? Because we are thinking about it
as a dreaded pill instead of as yummy chewed food. I submit that
if you change the way you think of the pill, the throat will open
and it will go down easily without any crazed head tosses.
Now, for lifetime
pillphobics, there is a small moment right before the pill goes
down when panic sets in and the gag reflex takes over. We suddenly
realize "Oh my goodness, I'm taking a PILL!" and then disaster sets
in.
How, then,
to prevent this? What you need is something to think about, some
physical action to focus on that distracts us from pill consciousness.
It comes down to three words: "Open the throat." If you concentrate
on that task and that task alone, the pill will be down before you
know it.
As for the
advice that you put the pill on the tip of your tongue, this is
a disaster. It should not go there, if only because that gives it
a longer length to travel before it comes to the critical part of
the throat, and thereby imposes a greater length of time for psycho-freakout
to set in.
It should not
go on the tip of the tongue. A pill belongs in the center.
There is one
other matter too that insures a flawless pill swallowing. Think
of it. When you chew food, what is also happening? You mouth is
being lubricated with saliva, which permits the food the flow down
easily.
Now, you can't
chew most pills so you need to think of ways to simulate this saliva
stimulation. Simple. You can take a drink of water before you take
the pill. Or you can just work the glands themselves and make the
tongue gooey wet. Then place the pill on the center of the tongue.
And down it goes.
In short, there
are four steps: 1) make the mouth wet, 2) place the pill in the
tongue center, 3) think: this is only food, and 4) open the throat.
It works every
time. Once you conquer your phobia, you will marvel that anyone
else has trouble taking pills. At least now you have an article
you can print to hand that poor soul at the next time who is making
life so difficult for himself.
A
final caution: don't think that this doesn't matter. Society has
a low regard for people who cannot conquer such a simple task as
this. What does it indicate about other life skills? It only takes
a few minutes of practice to master the craft, and then there are
only a few other thousand routine tasks in life left to master.
January
4, 2008
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
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