I agree with lack of physical activity and a unhealthy diet with lack of physical activity this could lead to heart disease and much more health risks.
While traveling through the Second Ring, Dante and Virgil come across a place with many dark trees, but no actual people. They can hear voices screaming in pain, but they can't see them. Virgil tells Dante to break off a twig from one of the trees, after which the tree cries in pain and starts bleeding. Virgil then explains that all of these trees are souls of people who've hurt themselves during life, those who have willingly discarded their own bodies and committed suicide. Thus whenever the tree is hurt (a branch broken off), they feel pain as if they were dismembered.
Sadly, Captain Canot didn't believe that the treatment of slaves was a problem. Like most people in his time, it was common to think of slaves as only sub-humans. To Captain Canot he was just carrying regular old cargo that just so happened to be alive and breathing.
Captain Canot was a person who captured slaves to make them work for him, he gave them little privileges and had zero qualms about it.
(I wasn't able to get access to any text for a clearcut example, but essentially you're supposed to find an example in whatever text you are reading to support that he was completely ok with slavery. Like, in what ways did he explicitly imply that slavery is a good thing, or what actions and feelings do he have towards it being a thing? And then explain it.)
The answer would be the second option - love can overcome all obstacles. Nectar in a Sieve is a 1954 novel by Kamala Markandaya. The novel is set in India amid a time of serious urban advancement and is the account of the marriage between Rukmani, most youthful girl of a town headman, and Nathan, a sharecropper. The story is told in the principal individual by Rukmani, starting from her orchestrated marriage to Nathan at 12 years old to his demise numerous years after the fact.