Linus Pauling — "I am not a believer in the idea that you have to be sick to take vitamins."
I am not a believer in the idea that you have to be sick to take vitamins.
I am not a believer in the idea that you have to be sick to take vitamins.
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Taking vitamins isn't just for sick people — healthy individuals benefit from supplementation too. The quote challenges the reactive view of medicine, where treatment only begins after symptoms appear. Instead, it advocates a preventive approach: giving your body optimal nutrition before problems arise. Vitamins are tools for maintaining health, not just restoring it. Wellness requires proactive choices, not just crisis response.
Pauling won two Nobel Prizes — Chemistry in 1954 and Peace in 1962 — but devoted his later decades to orthomolecular medicine, arguing that high-dose vitamins, especially vitamin C, could prevent and treat cancer and infectious disease. He took several grams of vitamin C daily and co-authored 'Cancer and Vitamin C.' This quote reflects his conviction that biochemistry could optimize health, not merely cure illness — a position the medical establishment fiercely disputed.
In the late 20th century, conventional medicine was largely disease-focused — doctors treated illness rather than optimized wellness. The 1970s and 80s saw rising public interest in preventive health, nutrition science, and self-directed care, partly fueled by distrust of pharmaceutical companies. The FDA repeatedly clashed with supplement advocates over unproven claims. Pauling's stance anticipated today's massive supplement industry, built on the preventive, not reactive, model of health he championed.
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