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Silvia Bukovac. Image from BigStockPhoto.com
Today's article
is the fourth regular monthly update of a column that ran in Meridian
for 45 straight weeks, exploring a new diet based on mental and spiritual
rather than physical paradigms. All 45 of those installments are still
available in the Bridell
archive. Dr. Bridell's promise to you who follow the diet
is that you will lose a substantial amount of weight — and that this
weight loss will actually be the least important of the ways
in which you will benefit! ALL of the past columns are now in the
process of being edited into a book that will be published next month,
and Meridian readers will be able to get first edition copies at a
discount. (Dr Bridell feels that Meridian readers, through their
comments and encouragement, helped write the book, so they should
get a discount when they buy it!) There will also be a "Bridell
Posse" formed to round up others who need the diet. Click
here to read the overview of how the Posse and the www.DrBridell.com
website will work.
Big News on Bridell, The Book
Well, here is the news: Bridell the Book will be published, bound, and ready to ship next month. Those of you who have ordered the author's discounted first edition copies will be receiving an email notice and discounted invoice so that you can get them hot off of the press. It will be a 200-page, 6X9 high-quality trade paperback book (quite attractive if I do say so) containing all of the material from all of the Meridian columns ? along with some additions.
It will have a regular retail price of $20. My author's discount is 40%, so as promised, Meridian readers who have reserved copies will be billed for just $12 per book plus standard shipping and handling charges. If you still wish to reserve copies, you have only one more week to do so because we will need a final count. If you have NOT reserved copies, and wish to, write to me at www.drbridell.com and indicate the number of books you want from the first edition.
The best thing about these first edition copies (I think) is that with my publisher we have figured out a way for these copies to have a personal and unique signature appear on the inside of each first-edition copy you receive.
It is truly amazing how this book has developed and come together with the help of Meridian readers. Originally it was just a column, but it got so much feedback (and started producing so much weight-loss results) that the idea was born to print it as a book. I decided to see how many people might want a copy by indicating that we would give away 250 copies from the first printing ? not knowing if I would really receive that many requests.
We had more than that the first couple of days, so we announced that, while we could give away only 250, I would get my author's discount for as many Meridian readers as requested copies before the first edition came out. WE HAVE NOW HAD REQUESTS TO RESERVE NEARLY 10,000 COPIES. We (Meridian and I) have decided to devote the entire first edition to Meridian readers, and make other outlets wait for the second edition.
We have also decided to let Meridian readers who want to act as "personal bookstores" and continue to receive books in lots of 10 or more at a discount to sell or give to friends, relatives, neighbors or whomever they believe would benefit. We have even begun to form the Bridell Posse (see www.drbridell.com ), an organization of Bridell dieters and advocates who will "round up" others who ought to be brought into the fold. (There's a bit of a mixed metaphor there ? sorry).
Anyway, it's all good, and I am both pleased and honored to be involved with so many of you who are living healthier (and lighter lives) physically, mentally, and spiritually.
Giving Credit to James
Although we have referred to the book of James many times in previous columns, we have never given this great Prophet and Apostle (and, as many believe, half-brother of Christ) the full credit for the beautiful Bridling metaphor.
Although I try hard not to reveal too much personal information about myself, I will tell you that James is my favorite book of scripture. Whether or not he was the Lord's half-brother as many experts suggest, he was a powerful and poetic writer who captured the essence of the Gospel in his five brief chapters.
In the first part of his third chapter, James speaks of "bridling the whole body," and says "We put bits in the horses' mouths, that they may obey us/ and we turn about their whole body." He is referring specifically to bridling our tongues, and the enormous potential for evil and destruction that that small member has. (This was elaborated beautifully in Elder Holland's last conference talk.)
But I love the broader picture that James paints through his bridle metaphor. The bit, like the tongue, is in the mouth, and the mouth is both the place that we have to have control over ? both in terms of what comes out of it and in terms of what we put into it.
The bit is the part of the bridle that allows us to turn the whole body of the horse. The tongue is the part of the body that we have to control if we wish not to hurt others or ourselves with our words. And the mouth, and what goes into it, is what we have to learn to bridle if we wish to turn our own whole bodies into the kind of bodies we want them to be.
Bridles, in actuality or in metaphor, are small things that control large things. They are devices that allow us to have control over things that, unbridled, are stronger than we are. Horses, in actuality or in metaphor as an appetite or passion, are large and very powerful things that must be bridled in order to be controlled.
Giving Credit to Alma
The other scriptural prophet who used the bridle symbolism so well was Alma. I love the letters that he wrote to his three sons. The sons were apparently very different from each other, because each of the three letters is completely unique, completely suited to each individual son and his particular needs.
The letters reveal Alma as a great parent who understands who each of his sons are and who has thought a lot about exactly what advice each of them needs. I have always been particularly drawn to his letter to Shiblon, in chapter 38. Alma is so proud of this son's "steadiness and faithfulness" and grateful to him for the "great joy he has found in him already."
I think Alma sees in Shiblon a young man of great abilities and strength and passion, so the main thrust of advice is that he control and channel that power, never boasting, being careful of overbearance, and always remembering to give credit to God. Then comes this beautiful, summarizing phrase: "See that ye bridle all your passions that ye may be filled with love."
I love this phrase ? first, because it distinguishes between passion and love, but even more because it teaches us that feelings and passions and appetites grow purer and more beautiful when we learn to control and direct them, and when we apply them correctly and point them in the directions the Lord wants. We grow and expand our love not by letting our passions run away with us, but by mastering them. We get the most joy out of a horse not by letting it run away with us, but by bridling it.
Regular readers know by now that I love horses. I rode, just yesterday, up a lovely, early spring canyon, on a horse that took me much further and much faster than I could have gone on my own. I saw more, felt more, and loved more than I could have without that horse, and it was the bridle that kept the joy from turning into danger.
The Bridell Diet is about Joy and Love
The Bridell Diet is all about bridling and being filled with love. Appetite is not the enemy, but a powerful asset and ally to be used and appreciated and bridled.
Appetite, when bridled, is a source of joy and love. A bridled horse becomes trained, and soon starts to take us to where we want to go almost automatically, with only a very light touch from the reins. A trained appetite can start to take us to the right foods in the right quantities almost automatically, without us having to constantly rein it in and hold it back.
The Bridell Diet is the bridle. As we discipline ourselves to eat half, our appetites gradually change from demanding quantity to demanding quality and begin to take us to where we want to be with very little pressure from our conscious reins. But the initial discipline and training is hard, and we need all the help we can get. You may want to go to the Bridell archives and re read the first ten columns and be sure you are using all the bridling techniques (water, sipping and savoring, fasting, poetry, and so on) that will be helpful in training your horse.
The most important thing about the whole bridling idea, as James and Alma make so clear, is that it works mentally and spiritually as well as physically. The things that the physical diet can do for your body have counterparts in the things that the mental diet can do for your brain and that the spiritual diet can do for your soul. These aspects are also available in the archives, and will be expanded in the upcoming book.
Share your response to today's article, and share your ideas/experiences/successes/failures and observations on the Bridell diet by writing drbridell@meridianmagazine.com . Also, write in to join the Bridell possee and/or to order and reserve your “mysteriously signed and personalized,” discounted copies from the first edition. Be sure to specify how many copies you want to reserve. This is your last chance.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved. |
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| About
the Author: |

The
Mysterious Dr Bridell
“Dr Bridell”
is a pseudonym — both the "Dr" and the "Bridell."
I’m not a doctor. I’m not a dietitian either, or an
exercise therapist or anything else that would give me even the
remotest of the usual "credentials" for writing about
the usual kind of diet. What I am is basically a practical person
who is interested mostly in results. I’m also a writer who
keeps noticing that diet books are always on the best-seller list.
(And most of them promise far more than they can deliver and never
reach the emotional and spiritual causes of our physical problems.)
I don’t know a thing about calories or fat grams or metabolism
or antioxidants or even proteins or carbohydrates. In a way this
ignorance is bliss. I don’t get confused about why the experts
keep changing their minds about what is really good or bad for
you. But I do know — absolutely — a couple of important
things: 1. I know a way almost anyone can lose weight, for sure,
for real, and keep it off and be healthier and actually enjoy
the process; 2. I know that there is a direct, unbreakable connection
between human happiness and the control of human appetites —
and I don’t just mean the appetite for food.
Just how sure am I about this? Well, as you noticed in the first
column, I’m sure enough to guarantee it. You try this diet
and if it doesn’t work, I want to know about it, and I will
think of a way to reward you for your (my) failure. But that won't
happen, because I know this stuff works. I know it by experience,
and I know it because it is based on principles that work —
on spiritual principles that never fail. And as you will see in
future weeks, my diet is about much more than physical food and
losing physical weight.
What I like about the subject of dieting is that it’s current,
it’s present, it’s about the now, about our daily
habits and routines, about what you’re going to eat today
and tonight. You can start trying things right now. As you do,
and as you have results, and thoughts, and comments, and ideas,
and questions, write to me by clicking here (drbridell@meridianmagazine.com).
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