Quit Your Worrying! 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quit Your Worrying!, by George 
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Title: Quit Your Worrying! 
Author: George Wharton James 
Release Date: July 4, 2004 [EBook #12813] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUIT 
YOUR WORRYING! *** 
 
Produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. 
 
QUIT YOUR WORRYING! 
BY 
GEORGE WHARTON JAMES 
AUTHOR OF 
"Living the Radiant Life," "What the White Race may learn from the 
Indian," "The story of Scraggles," "California, Romantic and 
Beautiful," "Our American Wonderlands," etc. etc. 
PASADENA, CALIF. 
1916 
TO THOSE 
who are standing on the banks of worry before the ocean of God's love
I cry aloud 
"COME ON IN--THE WATER'S FINE!" 
 
CONTENTS 
FOREWORD 
I THE CURSE OF WORRY II OURS IS THE AGE OF WORRY III 
NERVOUS PROSTRATION AND WORRY IV HOLY WRIT, THE 
SAGES AND WORRY V THE NEEDLESSNESS AND 
USELESSNESS OF WORRY VI THE SELFISHNESS OF WORRY 
VII CAUSES OF WORRY VIII PROTEAN FORMS OF WORRY IX 
HEALTH WORRIES X THE WORRIES OF PARENTS XI 
MARITAL WORRIES XII THE WORRY OF THE SQUIRREL 
CAGE XIII RELIGIOUS WORRIES AND WORRIERS XIV 
AMBITION AND WORRY XV ENVY AND WORRY XVI 
DISCONTENT AND WORRY XVII COWARDICE AND WORRY 
XVIII WORRY ABOUT MANNERS AND SPEECH XIX THE 
WORRIES OF JEALOUSY XX THE WORRIES OF SUSPICION 
XXI THE WORRIES OF IMPATIENCE XXII THE WORRIES OF 
ANTICIPATION XXIII HOW OUR WORRY AFFECTS OTHERS 
XXIV WORRY VERSUS INDIFFERENCE XXV WORRIES AND 
HOBBIES 
 
JUST BE GLAD 
BY JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY 
_O heart of mine, we shouldn't worry so, What we have missed of calm 
we couldn't have, you know!_ 
_What we've met of stormy pain, And of sorrow's driving rain, We can 
better meet again, If it blow._ 
_We have erred in that dark hour, we have known, When the tear fell 
with the shower, all alone._ 
_Were not shine and shower blent As the gracious Master meant? Let 
us temper our content With His own._ 
_For we know not every morrow Can be sad; So forgetting all the 
sorrow We have had, Let us fold away our fears, And put by our 
foolish tears, And through all the coming years, Just be glad._
FOREWORD 
Between twenty and thirty years ago, I became involved in a series of 
occurrences and conditions of so painful and distressing a character that 
for over six months I was unable to sleep more than one or two hours 
out of the twenty-four. In common parlance I was "worrying myself to 
death," when, mercifully, a total collapse of mind and body came. My 
physicians used the polite euphemism of "cerebral congestion" to 
describe my state which, in reality, was one of temporary insanity, and 
it seemed almost hopeless that I should ever recover my health and 
poise. For several months I hovered between life and death, and my 
brain between reason and unreason. 
In due time, however, both health and mental poise came back in 
reasonable measure, and I asked myself what would be the result if I 
returned to the condition of worry that culminated in the disaster. This 
question and my endeavors at its solution led to the gaining of a degree 
of philosophy which materially changed my attitude toward life. 
Though some of the chief causes of my past worry were removed there 
were still enough adverse and untoward circumstances surrounding me 
to give me cause for worry, if I allowed myself to yield to it, so I 
concluded that my mind must positively and absolutely be prohibited 
from dwelling upon those things that seemed justification for worry. 
And I determined to set before me the ideal of a life without worry. 
How was it to be brought about? 
At every fresh attack of the harassing demon I rebuked myself with the 
stern command, "Quit your Worrying." Little by little I succeeded in 
obeying my own orders. A measurable degree of serenity has since 
blessed my life. It has been no freer than other men's lives from the 
ordinary--and a few extraordinary--causes of worry, but I have learned 
the lesson. I have Quit Worrying. To help others to attain the same 
desirable and happy condition has been my aim in these pages. 
It was with set purpose that I chose this title. I might have selected 
"Don't Worry." But I knew that would fail to convey my principal 
thought to the casual observer of the title. People will worry, they do 
worry. What they want to know and need to learn is how to quit 
worrying.    
    
		
	
	
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