Dr
Bridell’s logical
and rational & poetic and beautiful & completely
guaranteed Diet
#3: What Your Body will Do for You
By the Mysterious Dr Bridell
Author’s note:
This is the latest
installment of a column that explores a new diet based
on spiritual rather than physical paradigms. It is arranged
in "bite-sized chunks" that come each Friday
and that build on each other. The first few concepts
sound deceptively simple but require discipline and commitment
to implement — and they lay the foundation for the more
enlightening and revealing concepts to come. Your
challenge as a participant is to put the principles into
practice each week as they come to you. If you missed
earlier columns, catch up by clicking here
to go to the Bridell archives. Good luck!
With
a concept as simple as the challenge in last week's column
(just doing exactly what you already do, but cutting each
thing you eat in half and stopping when that first half
is gone), you’d think there would now be some much more
complicated follow-up column that outlines just what you
can and can’t eat and telling you how to count fat grams
or calories or carbs and instruct you to buy herbs or
supplements or organic food. In other words, if
phase one is about the quantity (eating half) then phase
two must be about the quality, right?
Yes and no. Yes, this
week's column is about quality and nutrition but no, it
doesn’t require you to count anything or plan elaborate
menus or buy specific kinds of food. In fact, it
isn’t about you doing anything for your body. It’s
about what your body will do for you in phase two as a
reward for the effort you make on phase one.
As your body gets used
to less quantity, it will start demanding more quality
and you will essentially be training and developing a
more selective appetite. You’re not trying to kill
or eliminate your appetite; rather, you’re developing
it so it will give you more joy and better results.
Vegetables and fruits and grains will become more appealing.
The secret to phase two is
this: Your body knows what it needs. Every cell
in your body knows what it requires to stay alive and
to thrive. But your body doesn’t wrest control from
your appetites and obsessions and bad habits unless you
train it to.
The body is an instinctive
mechanism. Unlike the mind, which can choose and
determine its own thoughts, the body — untrained and ungoverned
— will take the path of least resistance. Thus,
if you’re eating twice as much as you need, and much of
it is junk food or other unhealthy stuff, your body doesn’t
fight you, so long there’s enough food coming in to provide
what your cells need.
Say your body needs “3n”
of nutrients each day and it can extract that much from
a “6v” volume of fairly bad food. Your body is okay
with that even though the over 3v may be making you fat
or tired or full of cholesterol. If the food you’re
eating gets even worse in quality (say it now takes 8v
volume to get the 3n of nutrients), your body will push
you to eat even more.
But what happens if the mind
takes control by “eating half” and limits the body to
3v volume of food per day? If it’s all the same
fairly bad food, the body will be getting only 1-1/2n
and the appetite will push you to eat more. But
if the mind stays strong and holds the quantity line at
3v, the only recourse your cells have is to work on the
quality. Gradually, you start craving better, more
nourishing, more wholesome food until your body can get
its 3n of nutrients from a volume of 3v.
So if you stay true to phase
one, your body will gradually give you the gift of phase
two. Your tastes (as well as your taste) will change,
your body will lose weight, and every one of your cells
will be happier.
Can it really be that simple? Absolutely!
But simple things are often incredibly hard. How
in the world are you going to eat only half of your food?
If you've tried it for a week by now, you know how hard
it is! How can you do it — not just for one meal or one
day or one week, but from now on? It is an extremely
difficult proposition because any weakness in your conscious,
choice-making mind will be exploited mercilessly by your
instinctive body and your subconscious appetites.
And nobody else can do it
for you. No one can make it easy or give you some
magic pill. What I can do for you — what this column
is written to do — is to motivate you by making the whole
idea as appealing as possible by giving you some interesting
and stimulating new ways to think about it, and by helping
you see that it’s not only the results that will make
you happy, but the process — that eating twice as slow
and half as much is, as you get used to it, more enjoyable.
The thing to work on this
week is the "slow" part. Make your bites
smaller, chew them longer, so that eating half takes as
long as eating twice as much used to. Think quality
over quantity. Sip, Savor and Smell instead of Guzzle,
Gulp and Gorge. But wait, I'm getting ahead of myself,
in fact, that is the title of next week's column. See
you then.