You get scared sometimes, but you rarely get a disease right after. There's no direct chain of cause and effect. My wife gets scared a lot more than I, but we get sick around the same amount. By your logic, she would get more respiratory ailments than I.
Your statement is invalidated immediately by ‘get a disease’. You don’t ‘get diseases’. Get? Like, from the store? Being scared is dis-ease. You treat the word disease as if it refers to symptoms. It doesn’t. It refer to you not being at ease. Furthermore, what you’ve called an ‘ailment’ is not an ailment, just a natural part of recovery process.
Ok let’s hear your explanation.
You get scared sometimes, but you rarely get a disease right after. There's no direct chain of cause and effect. My wife gets scared a lot more than I, but we get sick around the same amount. By your logic, she would get more respiratory ailments than I.
Your statement is invalidated immediately by ‘get a disease’. You don’t ‘get diseases’. Get? Like, from the store? Being scared is dis-ease. You treat the word disease as if it refers to symptoms. It doesn’t. It refer to you not being at ease. Furthermore, what you’ve called an ‘ailment’ is not an ailment, just a natural part of recovery process.
Yes. Dis-ease of mind is the use of the word. Language has been so perverted people can't communicate.