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We are in Parshat Devarim. We're
starting a brand new Chumash this week.
Also this week, the diaspora and Israel
are back together for the last
uh
almost 2 months, the diaspora was
lagging before behind in the parashot
because of Shavuot. And we were one
parasha ahead. Now we're matched
together back to Parshat Devarim
starting a brand new Chumash.
And I want to address today a very
important, yet sensitive, difficult, and
hard
thing that we all try to
somehow incorporate into our life, but
find it
very difficult to be successful.
Now, we're all doesn't matter who you
are, you're either a parent, you're
either a spouse, you're either an
educator, and you can be even a friend.
That that don't have to be such a unique
individual.
We all part of it that not once or not
twice we wanted to help somebody
by telling them something that they're
doing wrong.
And it's coming from a place of love.
I'm not even calling it at this point a
rebuke. I'm just telling that I you, me,
everyone
you want to help another person cuz you
notice them doing something
inappropriate, wrong, difficult,
whatever it is.
And you want to say say or share your
opinion
and that opens up World War III. And
what did I say? I just wanted to say
something
to improve your behavior.
Now, of course, this will come a lot in
marriages, in
relationship between parents and kids,
but it comes often between one person to
another. And all I wanted to do is help.
I'm noticing you doing something
inappropriate, wrong, or
could be even as worse as a sin, and I'm
just trying to to help. Oh, you know
what? Sometimes something sits on my
mind, and I I I I think I can tell you
what's on my mind, whether it's my wife,
my kids, my boss, my employee.
And that
triggers World War III.
And
how can I
find the way to approach a person that
does something that bothers me?
And I have all the rights in the world
to say something that bothers me,
especially if it's in a important
relationship, but how do I do that
without triggering the other person to
be upset, angry, and flip out, and be
completely against me?
So, I'm sure you had this
encounter not once and not twice, that
you're coming from a good place, or you
feel that you are mistreated, and so
forth, and there's no communication.
Now, the reality is that in most
encounters, that's there going to be the
results. There are very little
encounters that they result from
approaching with a with a problem, it
comes smoothly. Cuz you know why?
Because most people have an ego, and
they don't like when you come and tell
them something that they did wrong.
So, with that said,
this week's parashah, and the next few,
by the way,
we are introduced to a different
approach in the Torah. The last four
books
are really Uh,
you know, Hashem talking to the to the
world, to the people through Moses,
through Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and
many encounters. But the entire Chumash
of Devarim, it's Moshe Rabbeinu talking.
Even though it's called the Five Books
of Moses, really this is the book of
Moses because he's the one who's talking
and all the other books Hashem is
talking.
How many times it says in the Torah,
"Vayedaber Hashem el Moshe lemor." That
Hashem spoke to Moshe in order for him
to give it over. This entire Chumash,
Moshe is talking to the nation.
And in the next few parashot, he's not
talking nice things.
He starts
the Chumash by telling them a few things
and then he goes on a rampage of three
parashot.
This week's parasha, next week, all the
way to Ekev, and Moshe Rabbeinu is
giving it to them.
Now,
what's interesting here is this whole
thing happens five weeks before Moshe
dies.
Where were you 40 years
approaching the nation? Now, five weeks
before you die,
you talk to the entire nation.
Lenei kol Yisrael, and now Moshe
Rabbeinu opens up his mouth and he lets
it all go.
Now, up until now, Moshe was the image
or the the the leader that
was uh symbolized by love, unconditional
love to the nation.
Fought for the nation, was willing to be
erased from the Torah if chas v'shalom
Hashem doesn't uh
uh forgive the nation. Loving, caring,
supporting, never said anything. Okay,
one time, a slip of the tongue. He says,
"Shim'u na hamorim." Listen to me, you
rebels. At the time with the water, the
incident with the water and the rock.
But for 40 years
kept his mouth shut, never said
anything, showed great love and caring
to the nation.
What happened?
What what what what suddenly changes the
approach of Moshe Rabbeinu after 40
years of leading the nation?
Greatly, suddenly, he flips over.
Now,
as I mentioned, the whole thing happens
5 weeks before Moshe Rabbeinu dies. As
if he knew that he's about to die, he
knew that he's about to give over the
leadership to Yehoshua, and he says,
"Okay, now's the time to let them know
what I really think."
And he talks to the entire nation of
Israel.
Not just to the sages, just to the
Kohanim, to the priests. Call call
Israel.
Like as if he had some Zoom broadcasting
system and he's talking to everybody and
somehow miraculously they all heard him.
Now, you would think that before Moshe
Moshe Rabbeinu leaves,
what would you expect him to
conclude the 40 years?
With blessings.
"I'm about to leave. I want to bless you
that you should be successful, that you
should have nachas, happiness from your
kids." That's what you would expect, no?
That Moshe Rabbeinu should give them
send them off with blessings. "I'm about
to leave. I want to leave uh you know, a
good memory, some uh you know, some good
taste in my mouth in your mouth."
Okay.
All that you hear is just complaints.
For the next three parshiot, all we're
going to hear is complaints.
One complaint after the other what we
didn't hear for 40 years.
Now, that begs two questions.
First of all,
now?
Before you leave?
Why now?
At least leave some leave us with some
nice memory.
And the more difficult question is,
where were you till today?
And if you're rebuking us
to make us better, wouldn't it make
sense that you would rebuke us 40 years
ago that we can do chuvah?
Now?
What took you 40 years to wake up?
Moshe?
Okay, Rashi says something very, very
interesting.
Rashi says, you know why Moshe Rabbeinu
kept his mouth shut for 40 years?
He says, it wasn't the right time.
He says it in a in a more metaphorical
way, the time was not ripe.
Okay, 40 years didn't the time didn't
ripe?
What are you waiting for the right
moment? Yeah, Rashi says, yeah, he was
waiting for the right moment. It wasn't
the right time to talk to them.
He had to wait for the right time.
Okay.
So now comes another question. What's
the right time?
It's almost like me saying, listen, I
have an issue with with my kid. Some
something bothers me with my wife. Well,
I'm going to wait 40 years to tell her?
It's not the right time when she came
home upset from work.
You know, so when is the right time?
When do you tell somebody what's on your
heart?
Which that of course we're going to
address throughout the class. Is it the
right thing to do or the wrong thing to
do when something's sitting on your
heart? Is it good to keep it in or is it
or do you have to say it? We'll address
that as we go.
So,
now we are presented with three
questions. First of all, why is Moshe
Rabbeinu doing it right before he
leaves? He's uh leave uh on a good note.
Second question, where were you for 40
years? What took you so long to rebuke
the nation? And the third question now
is,
uh okay, you you you answered the second
question with saying it wasn't the right
time. So, the third question, so what is
the right time? How do you determine the
right time to open your mouth and tell
the person in front of you what is on
your mind or on your heart?
Now comes another problem. Is the Torah
commands us to rebuke
my fellow friend.
That's a commandment from the Torah.
So, if the Torah is commanding me to
rebuke, this mitzvah is called
to the mitzvah.
If the Torah is commanding me to rebuke
my fellow,
then why why did Moshe Rabbeinu wait so
long?
Now, interestingly on that, the Gemara
says
there's many mitzvot to do, but one of
them is very very difficult.
Now, you would think maybe our sages
will say,
you know,
observing Shabbat it's very difficult.
Or not speaking
not slandering another person, that's
very very difficult.
Our sages don't choose to say that. Our
sages choose to say about one mitzvah
that is very difficult and almost
impossible to do, what is the mitzvah?
Of rebuking and proving your fellow
friend. That's what our sages choose to
say, that's a very hard mitzvah to do. I
mean, Shabbat that's should go on like
that. Kosher, slandering,
everything, not to murder, not to commit
adultery, that's as they say easy peasy,
right? That's what they say?
But to rebuke another person,
that I don't think you you can handle
that.
Which now comes and sheds some light
that up until now all the rebukes that
we do is not the real rebuke, it's
coming from a place of either anger, a
place of ego, a place of control. It's
not It's not a real rebuke.
Now, just to be
official, the mitzvah that we're talking
about The mitzvah in Hebrew is called
You can find it in the book of Vayikra,
chapter 19, verse 17. And there the
translation the the verse goes, "You
shall not hate your brother in your
heart." Which means that if I'm not
telling you what you're doing wrong, I
actually hate you.
"You shall surely rebuke rebuke your
fellow. You have to rebuke your fellow."
Whether it's your son, your daughter,
your wife, your boss, doesn't matter.
Now comes the
big question. Why did our sages choose
that is a mitzvah that is hard to do? I
find many other mitzvahs difficult to
do. That?
So, our sages say, "You know why that
mitzvah is very difficult to do? Because
very few people are willing to accept
rebuke."
If you would be accepting the rebuke, it
would be easy for me to come and tell
you what you're doing wrong. But since
it's not easy for people to accept it,
in most cases people don't accept it,
therefore it becomes a very difficult
mitzvah to do cuz I can't really do it.
If I'm now walking on eggshells cuz I
don't want to tell you something that
you're doing, and for that I can't
rebuke you, then of course it's
difficult to do.
And now my mind I have to when do I when
is the good time? When should I tell him
without him flipping out?
So, this is the case.
How do you do it? How do you rebuke
another person?
On one hand, the Torah commands you to
do it. Which means that when I see you
doing something wrong, inappropriate,
unacceptable, I have to come and tell
you excuse me.
Sorry, I didn't I don't want to bother
you much. I know you're having a pretty
bad day, but
uh
So, how do I do it?
If the Torah is already commanding me,
then give me the the ways how to do it.
How many times did you try to help
another person by saying something like
that, and you got a normal response?
I mean, you tried a few times, but when
did you get a normal response? Most of
the response will be a uh
uh
a uh uh uh
comeback.
Not like, "Oh, okay, I'm sorry. I didn't
notice."
It usually will come back as some
other response.
Okay. So, when the Talmud is talking
about that this is a very difficult
mitzvah to do,
it says, "Who can actually fulfill this
mitzvah?"
And of course, the Talmud is saying it's
very difficult to do. Why? Because when
you're coming and approaching a person,
right away you'll get a war.
And again, with exceptions, many times
you will tell a person something they
did, and they will accept it. In many of
the cases, they won't just won't react.
Let's say there's a little bit of
refinement. They won't react bad, but
they don't accept the rebuke.
You're talking about a fraction of the
times that a person will actually accept
the rebuke and be like, "Wow, thank you
so much that you're telling me that."
Now, what would be the cause that most
people will not accept the rebuke? It's
because of ego.
Pride. The pride will not allow them to
accept,
"Why are you telling me that I'm doing
something wrong?"
Now,
the Talmud, when it's addressing this
issue, it says that if a person will
come, the the example that it says that
a person comes and tells their friend,
"Uh by the way, you you have something
stuck in your teeth."
Now, wouldn't what wouldn't you want
somebody to come and tell you, uh
you know?
I told you the story not once and not
twice, maybe a thousand times already.
The one time I gave a class,
after the class was done, it was loaded
on YouTube. After a day or two, somehow,
I don't even know why, I saw the video.
And the whole class, my entire peyos
standing like this.
I look like Krusty the Clown, like one
is like a one antenna.
And I'm like, "Oh, no. Oh, no."
And it happens to be that my kids were
with me. They were laughing. "Look how
you look." And I'm like, "Oh my gosh.
I look like a fool."
I I wait Oh, my god. And I tell the the
editor, the YouTube guy, "Get it off.
Take it off."
He's like, "What do you mean take it
off? You know how many places this
video's already on?
It's all over the place. You can't take
it off."
And in my mind, I'm like, "Uh this is
ridiculous. I look like a fool."
But I came to the conclusion, I said,
"Okay, you know what? A few thousand
people got a good laugh. Good.
Nothing wrong with me looking like a
fool." But the next day, when I returned
to class, I told the local people, "You
couldn't tell me? You're sitting in
front of me. You don't see that my peyos
sticking out. You can't just go like
this to me?
Why won't you tell me that?
Now, wouldn't you want somebody to come
and tell you, "Uh by the way, your your
Sometimes your collar is off, whatever,
something is it looks weird. Now, you
don't see it?
You know how many times happens that I
leave the home and there's some dirt in
the beard. I need somebody to come and
tell me, "Uh by the way, your
So, the Talmud says, gives an example
that a person has something stuck
between their teeth.
How many times do you eat something,
there's something in your tooth? And
imagine you going to your million-dollar
uh interview or some business deal, and
you have a piece of seven stuck in your
tooth, then you look like a fool.
So, the example that the Talmud says is
that a person comes to his friend and
tells him, "Take a toothpick, you have
something stuck in your tooth." And the
person lashes out at them and tells him,
"I have something between my teeth? You
have a bar between your eyes that you
can't even see yourself."
I came to tell you have something stuck
in your tooth. You look
like a fool, and you're attacking me
back.
Now, the thing is,
it's the How does the Talmud conclude
the story? It's not that there's no
person that knows how to receive the
rebuke.
The problem is that nobody knows how to
tell the rebuke.
Receiving the rebuke, that's one thing.
Nobody knows how to receive it.
No one wants to hear their faults.
The problem that the Talmud concludes is
nobody knows how to say it.
Even when I come to say, "Listen, you
have something stuck in your teeth." Say
it in a nice way.
Say it in a loving, caring, quiet. You
don't have to say publicly.
So,
before we continue,
just to emphasize the idea of the say
how you say the message,
I'll tell you a quick story. I think I
told you the story not once and not
twice, but I'll say it again in case you
forgot.
That there was once
uh a single mother
and with little kids that couldn't make
ends meet.
One month after the other dragged more
and more debt, and at some point,
the bank wasn't
willing to take it, and they gave the
lady a notice that she has to leave the
apartment, and they're going to throw
her out to the street.
She didn't know what to do. Crying,
upset, she goes to the rabbi and tells
him, "This is the situation. What am I
going to do?"
And he says, "You know
I actually know the banker. I'm going to
go and talk to him. Please, rabbi,
whatever you can do, I will be
grateful."
So, the rabbi chooses to go to the
banker not during business hours into
his home.
He goes to his house in the evening.
Happens to be it was winter, it was
cold. The rabbi knocks on the door.
The guy opens the door and says, "Oh,
rabbi, whoa, father, you know, the rabbi
comes to me. How can I help you? Come
in." "No, no, no, no, no, no need to
come in. I just wanted to tell you one
very short thing and then I'll be on my
way." "Of course, what do you have to
say?" So, the rabbi starts telling him
about the weekly portion and then starts
telling him here and telling that.
Oh, it starts getting cold. Now, the guy
is standing outside like, "Rabbi, you
know, it's a little bit cold. Maybe
you'll step in. I'll make you a cup of
tea." "No, no, no, I'll be going to be
on my way in a minute. I just came to
tell you something very, very small."
And he tells him a story and another
thing and this. The guy is like already
shivering and in his mind, "Oh, rabbi,
maybe you come in. I mean, it's it's
it's very cold."
He says, "No, no, no, I'll be on my way
in 1 second. I just came to tell you one
short thing. You know, Mrs. So-and-so
that you said that you're about to throw
them to the street, you're not
comfortable right now in the cold,
right?" He's like, "No, I'm freezing."
He's like, "Well, that's how they're
going to feel if you're going to throw
them to the streets."
And the banker got the point.
If the message would be said while he's
in a heated room, HE WOULDN'T ACCEPT.
NO, SHE OWES THE MONEY. WE can't do it
anymore. When he was outside freezing,
he got the point.
So, it's not the message, it's how the
message is given.
That's why the Talmud said, "It's not
that you can't accept the rebuke. It's
the people who give the rebuke don't
know how to give it."
Now, since I am a father, I'm a husband,
I'm a boss, I'm many things, I need to
know how to give rebuke. I have kids. I
have
a lot of situations in my life that I
need to give a rebuke.
And I'm not limiting it to me cuz one
might say, "Okay, you know, you're a
rabbi for many students. You need to
know how to give rebuke."
And I'm saying that as a side note that
most rabbis don't even know how to give
rebuke. Either they don't give it at all
cuz it will hurt their popularity or
their image or whatever. Oh, when they
give it, they
butcher the person.
Not too long ago
It's actually is too long ago. I was
about to say not too long ago. I was on
one one of my tours. 3 years now is
marking the last tour I did ever. So,
it's already long ago. But nevertheless,
somebody met me. Oh, I watch all your
videos and
all the I love two rabbis, you and Rabbi
So-and-so. Okay.
And he tells me, "You know the
difference between you and him?
Rabbi So-and-so is like a butcher. You
You're like a surgeon. Quietly you and
you
It's not painful.
You don't feel, but you do the same job.
But just no no no pain.
So, most rabbis don't even know how to
give rebuke and that's their job, by the
way.
But nevertheless, going back to what we
were saying, it's not that most people
don't know how to accept the rebuke.
It's most people don't know how to give
the rebuke. Now, whether I'm a father, a
parent, a teacher, it doesn't matter.
You all will come to a point that you
have to face your spouse, your neighbor,
your your your your your partner. It
doesn't matter. Tell them what's on your
heart.
And that will come under the umbrella of
rebuke or request or a comment. So, how
do you do it? How do you do it that the
other person will accept what you have
to say?
Not too long ago, even, I met an
individual that unfortunately hard times
he had to lay off had to fire some of
the workers. He comes and tells me I
have a guy working for me for 20 years.
How do I fire him without him being
upset?
I don't want to fire him. He's a great
worker.
But we don't have the money. We don't
have the job. We don't have any more
work. How do How do I How do I do that?
And letting the person leave
I unfortunately I can't even give him
any bonus or anything. How do I do that?
The person will be upset. Now you're
firing me. I can barely pay my my bills.
Now you're going to fire me? How do you
do such a thing?
So I'm now broadering broading the
options of how do I do such a thing?
So
to make a little bit of seder a little
bit of order here
then in this Chumash this book the fifth
book of the Torah then like I told you
before this it's this should be called
the book of Moses not all five of them.
But nevertheless
Moshe Rabbenu starts the book
starts the parashah
with rebuke. Right away.
No preparation here. Right away lets it
go.
But
he starts it in a very unique way by
saying all sorts of locations
that they were but we never really heard
of these locations.
Dizahab
Mul Suf
It's not locations that we read in the
Torah. If you would say the names of the
places where they parked I understand.
But you're throwing all these names
first
and weird that he's just throwing all
these locations.
I once heard a beautiful explanation
that you know when a father goes on a
vacation with his kids then he tells
them listen I want you to behave I want
us to have a nice vacation. And please
don't misbehave. You remember what
happened when we're when we're when we
went to Yerushalayim?
He doesn't say what happened. Just
remember when we were Oh, hm.
Remember when we were at your aunt? Oh,
yeah.
So, he doesn't say what happened. He
just says remember when
The same thing. So, some of the
commentaries says, "Yeah, Moshe Rabbeinu
was naming places. He didn't want to say
what really happened there. He just said
the place that Oh, yeah, yeah, we
remember."
But why are you using places that we
never heard of? Say the actual place.
Why are you using all these words?
Okay.
So, the Rashbam, a commentary, he says,
"No, it's uh it's talking about
locations where they did sins."
Rashi says, "No."
Uh it's
like codes to the failures. He's just
reminding them. He's not telling them
really the place or what happened. Kind
of like a reminder. Remember then? Oh,
yeah.
But that's a a weird way to start your
rebuke.
Okay.
Now, of course, we're going to have to
address the first question. Why did
Moshe Rabbeinu wait 40 years?
Okay. So, Rashi says, "Yeah,
uh
it wasn't the right time."
But it doesn't even make sense because
all of the sins that Moshe Rabbeinu is
rebuking them was the previous
generation.
Now, you're talking 40 years later. It's
a brand new generation. So, are you
telling the kids
"You know, remember what happened
there?" I wasn't even alive.
So, besides that the time wasn't right.
It's not the right crowd.
It's like me rebuking my grandkids for
the actions their parents did, my kids.
My grandkids would be like, "I don't
know what you're talking about. I wasn't
even born. It was 40 years ago."
So, why is Moshe Rabbeinu now waiting 40
years to give it to the new generation.
Wouldn't you say to the older generation
that they can repent and do chuvah now
that you waited for all of them to die?
And then the new generation comes in.
They're about to go into the land of
Israel. Now you remember to open your
mouth.
Okay.
So first of all
as we said, why didn't you do it before
that?
And
the same question in a different way,
why now?
Don't we don't understand it. This
doesn't make sense.
Okay. So Rashi says it makes perfect
sense.
Because you know I Moshiach waited for
40 years. He waited before the farewell.
And you know why?
Because if he would say it a long time
ago
then the kids, so to say, will be like,
okay, our father just, you know, rebukes
us. They will get up and leave.
If you would have a father that all day
long would bang on your head, you're
bad, you're wrong, you failing, you
this, the kid would say, to hell with
it, I'm out.
So Rashi says, Moshiach says if he would
rebuke then
then they will be like, you know what?
That's the type of leader we have, a
leader that bangs us on our head all day
long. I'm not staying here. I'll find
myself a new leader.
More than that
then of course later on Rashi says,
Moshiach learned it from Jacob. Jacob
did the same thing. Jacob rebuked the 12
tribes moments before he died.
He also didn't send them with presents
and and an inheritance. He did right
away on the deathbed was telling them
all the bad things.
So later on the commentary says,
Moshiach learned it from Jacob.
But Rashi is trying to be nice and kind
and and courteous and saying, you know,
Moshiach just made a quick calculation
that if he would constantly rebuke them,
nobody will stay. They wouldn't like
him. They wouldn't even listen to him.
But now this is brings us to a big
problem. If that's really what Moshiach
was waiting for or that was his approach
then he's not fulfilling the mitzvah
that he taught us about Hochiah tochiach
es amitecha.
He taught us that we have to rebuke our
fellow. So he himself is not doing it.
So Rashi's explanation is very nice, but
that doesn't resonate very well. Why
would Moshe Rabbeinu do it?
So there's an interesting explanation
that's saying that Hochiah tochiach es
amitecha, you shall surely rebuke your
fellow is when the person is about to do
a sin and you're stopping the person
from doing a sin.
You're sitting in the shul, a person is
talking behind you, you turn around.
about to sin.
Or the person is coming and telling you,
"You know what I heard?"
Lashon hara, I don't know what you
heard, I don't want to hear what you
heard. Let's both be saved from lashon
hara.
So some will say that Hochiah tochiach
es amitecha, you shall surely rebuke
your fellow is to prevent you from doing
a sin.
That's why the continuation of the verse
says velo tisa alav chet, that you
should not carry his sin.
Because if I'm seeing that you're about
to sin and I'm not stopping you,
your sin becomes my sin cuz I could have
stopped you.
Now if I rebuked you and you still
sinned, your sin.
I didn't rebuke you and you sinned, I I
carry now the sin.
Read the verse.
The verse ends by saying velo tisa alav
chet, you should If you won't do it,
you'll carry his sin.
So some will say, "Okay." So the
rebuking is stopping you from making a
sin.
And Moshe Rabbeinu when he was rebuking,
it wasn't on the actual act,
rather
is exposing and explaining and pointing
on the past
to learn for the future.
Whole different type of rebuke.
I'm not coming and telling you stop
because you're about to sin. Rather, I'm
telling you, you know, in the past
this and this was done. How can we
change it?
This is the same approach what I told
you many, many times.
Every time that we fast, the 10th of the
vet, the 17th of Tammuz, now in Tisha
B'Av.
Then I always said the same thing. If
you're fasting
to remember what was and to cry and what
happened, okay. So, so you fasted.
But if you're fasting by saying, "Okay,
let me see what was wrong then so I can
change it." Ah, now your fast has some
meaning.
And I said it in the connection because
many people told me when I the first
became observant and up until today,
have a meaningful fast. A meaningful
fast? I'm starving. I'm I'm tired. I
have a headache. I can't function.
What's meaningful?
So, it took me a decade to understand,
"Oh, you know what's a meaningful fast?
That I just didn't lie on the bed for 24
hours and cried that something happened
2,000 years ago. It becomes meaningful
when I say, "Okay, something went wrong
in the past. What am I learning from
what caused it to be wrong so I can
change it to the future." Ah, now your
fast became meaningful.
Same thing here.
So, Moshe Rabbeinu wasn't rebuking them
because they did a sin.
Yeah, you're right. That's the previous
generation. But Moshe Rabbeinu comes
with the approach by saying, "You know
what happened in the past? Don't repeat
it.
Learn from your forefathers' mistakes
and change the past
that the future should be a much better
future." So, that's coming with a
completely different approach. As some
will say, Moshe Rabbeinu wasn't even
rebuking. he was giving them musar. He
was teaching them ethics, morals,
a right a right way to conduct conduct.
He wasn't banging them on the head, he
was giving them nice good musar.
What's wrong with that? That's actually
a great blessing.
Great present, a farewell present.
So, with that I can understand the
importance of the rebuke.
And the importance of when I have
something on my heart that I have to
give it over. If I don't,
I can't carry it with inside.
If you carry what you have inside, the
the the the the the anger, the the How
do you say the when a person
is when you're disappointment, whatever
it is.
The resentment.
You just You know what happens when you
carry it? Eventually, instead of you
saying it out as a rebuke, it comes as
an explosion.
So, we have to understand that when I
say something,
whether it bothers me or it's to better
you, it's it's important. You can't just
keep it. You see something, you know now
they have it. I remember last time I was
in New York, they have on the subways
all these stickers, if you see
something, say something.
Right?
They They We had that in Israel 40 years
ago when there was a
When I was a kid, there was constantly
these Hefaz Hashud,
unidentified object, not the ones that
are flying in the sky. They a bag, cuz
there was bombs everywhere. So, we were
educated, I remember as a little kid, if
you see something, right away call the
the security forces. And every second
day there was a bomb squad coming and
blowing up a
a briefcase or something.
So, if you see something, say something.
Why are you just standing there?
Now, when I understand the importance of
me coming and approaching another
person, It matter right now in what
respect, a father, a
a a child, spouse.
The problem is that today when people
are about to rebuke, they have already
the attitude of they're not going to
take it, they're not going to listen.
Why why should I bother?
You see something going on, you're like
you're saying
let's say you are
a little bit older, you see kids do
something, you coming and saying what am
I going to tell these kids right now?
They're going to brush me off anyways.
They're not going to listen.
And how many times I have said to other
rabbis, why aren't you
rebuking your your congregation? Why
aren't you speaking out? You have a you
have a stage. Oh, no, they're not going
to accept it. What?
What do you mean they're not going to
accept it? You deciding who's going to
accept what? So figure out a way how are
they going to accept it.
So the approach of many people is that
why bother?
Tell the kid he's doing something wrong.
He's not going to listen. This
generation.
But that's not the right approach.
The approach has to be no.
You shouldn't accept it.
You shouldn't accept it and you can't
keep it inside.
Sometimes there's a certain situation
with between a husband and a wife and
you tell the wife or the husband, why
aren't you saying anything?
He's like this already for the last 20
years. Nothing's going to change. But
why are you accepting it?
So the first point that needs to be
understood is saying what you have to
say is very important. It whether it's
going to be accepted or not it's
irrelevant right now.
But it's important to say it and not to
have the approach of they're not going
to accept it. Okay, so figure out a way
how they will accept it.
So now comes the million dollar
question. How do you say something to
somebody, rebuke, advice, something that
bothers you without triggering now World
War III?
And that's the question that most people
ask on a daily base. How can I tell my
wife now? How can I tell my boss, my
employer? Whatever it is. How do I
approach
without starting a world war?
Now, many times I can tell only on
myself. I sit in a shul, somebody's
talking.
And I don't have any I'm not embarrassed
by anybody to turn around and say,
"Shh."
But how many times it's in your mind?
Should I say something? Should I not
something? They'll accept, they're not
going to accept, they're going to be
angry. What's going to be the reaction?
What's going to be the result? Oh, by
the time you're thinking, the person is
already He left.
So, how do you do that?
Now comes I'm going to just present
another question before we address it.
Is that before I told you that many say
that the rebuke the
to hear that I mean that you should
surely rebuke your fellow
is about a sin.
Not me coming to my wife and telling
her, you know, I'm not happy with the
situation of the mess. I'm telling with
my kid, I'm not happy with your grades
in school. Okay, that I mean that you
are about to do a sin.
Now comes here a bit a great difficult
the great difficulty because sometimes I
see a person is about to sin.
Now I have a dilemma.
If I don't say anything and that person
will sin, then the status of the sin is
a very weak status because it's called
shogeg. My mistake, he didn't know.
But if I tell him
and they do the sin,
now it's already deliberately. It's
called mezid. Now, what do you do?
I had this issue 20 years ago. I went to
my rabbi. I told him, "Listen, here's an
individual that doesn't observe Shabbat.
If I don't say anything,
their Shabbat desecration is by mistake.
It's shogeg.
You know how it changes the the the
status here?
Completely different status. Shogeg, my
mistake, I didn't know.
Person was born in Alaska, don't even
know what Shabbat. Can you hold them
accountable?
They don't even know what it is.
Leave the person shogeg. Now, I'm going
to come and tell the person, "Listen, by
the way, it's Shabbat and you can't
light fire and you can't do this and
that." Now they already know, which
means now when they sin
now I made it worse for them because now
they're doing it knowing.
I didn't know what to do.
So, at the time I went to my rabbi, I
told him, I said, "What do I do?" She
says that you still have to say, "Even
though yes, you you're putting them in a
worse place cuz now it's they're chayav,
it's already mezid, deliberately.
They're obligated.
But because of you telling them then
they you're giving them the option of
doing teshuvah and repenting and fixing
it.
And you still have to say? You can't not
say nothing.
I'll give you an example how I came to
that question. It's not so much on the
subject, but I think it will contribute
a lot to what we're talking about.
Going back the the those 20 years
one of my wife's good friends got
married and we got an invitation.
Okay, in the invitation
uh whether it was on the invitation or
verbal, I don't remember. I think it was
verbal that my wife's friend told
that they want my wife to say a blessing
under the chuppah.
So, in the beginning I thought they were
talking uh you know, you know, you
should be happy.
Uh in mazel tov.
I didn't know
In the beginning I didn't know that they
she they want her wanted my wife to read
one of the sheva brachot.
And I was like, "You can't read a sheva
brachot under the chuppah?
What What of a wedding is that?"
So, when we looked at a little more in,
then we understood very quickly that the
type of the ceremony would be held by a
reformed female rabbi, and the entire
wedding is like a reformed wedding. That
they wanted my wife to say a blessing
under the huppah.
So I told to my wife, you can't say a
blessing under the huppah.
And if it's a reformed ceremony, you
can't even be present at the huppah.
Cuz if you're present at the huppah, you
are showing your consent. You are
approving that this is okay. You can
come to the wedding, but not
stand at the huppah. Now what am I going
to do? This is a childhood friend. I'm
not going to show up. I said, no, we
will show up. But at the time of the
huppah, we'll step out. And when the
huppah is over, we'll come back in.
What's the big deal?
Now of course me being
a young excited
baal teshuvah, I said, listen, we got to
tell your friend that she's doing she's
doing it wrong. She can't get married
like that.
And my wife who says, okay, you're
right. We should go and tell her this is
the wrong approach. You can't make a
joke out of the religion, out of the
Torah, having a woman officiating the
the marriage. Not that we have anything
against the women, but that's not
acceptable. It's not the way of the
Torah. This is not what you do. Besides
the fact that your wedding won't be
valid, etc., etc.
So I went and asked my rabbi, what do I
do in a situation like this?
He told me,
don't say anything.
I said, what?
Up until now now, your record shows that
something is about to be done wrong, you
put your foot down and you come and you
say so. Now you're telling me not to say
anything?
He says, in this specific case, you
don't say nothing.
And I'll tell you why.
If they marry with a reformed ceremony,
then you're right. They're not really
married.
And every time that they will have
marital relations, it's a sin.
Severe sin.
And if they have kids, that's a problem,
because they're not even married. And
there there's no marriage there,
basically.
Which I told you that many many times
that 80% of the marriages in the world
they're not marriages, by the way.
I told you a a few times I have a
wedding album of
couples that got remarried or really
married because they heard me say that.
Because the majority of the couples
around the world they're not really
married according to the Torah. And
that's a severe problem.
Every time they're together physically,
they're committing a severe sin. It's a
man and woman that are together having
marital relations, they're not even
married.
And many other implications with the
kids and issues.
Many many times when couples came to me
with marital problems, specifically with
their kids, we have issues with their
kids, my question was, "Are you
married?" "Of course we're married. Look
at this diamond ring, $40,000. What are
you talking about?
Of course we got married.
Rebbetzin Herschel married us."
So, I'm sorry to tell you you're not
married. Now, since you're not married,
are you wondering now your kids why your
kids are
behaving in the wrong way? You never got
married.
It's a big problem what's going on in
our generation because many rabbis or
ones who officiate the chuppahs are not
checking anything, marrying whoever they
want, whatever they want, and the result
is that the majority of weddings are not
real weddings.
Which is important to say, cuz a lot of
people are married for 30 years, they
don't understand why they have
constantly frictions, arguments, shalom
bayit issues. You're not really married.
You're not really married. You're living
with a person that you are not married
to.
Not you. Sorry, I'm looking at you, but
the thing is that
So, going back to my rabbi, he told me
don't say anything. And I was like,
"Why? But I'm now going to cause them to
sin."
He says, "I'll tell you what's the
problem.
If they don't care about how they get
married the right way,
what's going to happen if you going to
convince them somehow? You'll put
pressure, you'll convince them to get
married the right way.
But they don't really care about that.
Now, what's going to happen in 5 years
or 10 years when they divorce? They're
not going to care about a get.
They're just going to separate. Now,
they're going to remarry,
have kids, and these kids are going to
be mamzerim.
The translation is a bastard, but a
mamzer is a child that was born from a
couple that not married
while they're married to another person.
Not just two single people. That's not a
a bastard, not a mamzer.
A mamzer is that a child is born
while the parents were married to other
people. So, he says, "Now you have a
more severe problem. Just let it be."
Which was very hard for me. How am I not
How am I going to stand there and see
these couple getting married and I'm not
stopping it?
So, going back to what we were saying,
how can I now put myself in this
situation that I'm about to stop you
from doing a sin,
but I'm changing now your status. This
is it's it's a it's a very difficult
situation.
You know, many people I know that they
don't observe Shabbat, and if I come and
tell them now it is Shabbat and you have
to observe That's it, I changed their
status completely. From being completely
not obligated, not knowing, everything
is not knowingly, suddenly they're
obligated.
But nevertheless, you have to do it.
You have to do it. That's what the Torah
tells you.
Okay, excuse me.
So, going back to our question,
why did Moshe Rabbeinu wait 40 years?
Then let's take the approach of Rashi,
it wasn't the right time.
Why?
Why wasn't it the right time?
Okay, I understand Rashi's approach, but
why?
Give an explanation why it's not the
right time. Because I need to learn from
this to my life.
Everything that I'm learning from my
Torah from the Torah is to
to apply it into my life. If I didn't
apply it to my life, what what it's not
a history book.
I need to take situations from the
Torah, take a lesson from it, knowledge
and how to apply it in my life. Okay, so
you said it's not the right time. Why?
I have a child that is misbehaving. I
want to tell him off. Oh, it's not the
right time. Why? I have to wait for him
to be 30?
And when am I When is it going to be the
right time? When he's in jail?
Oh, when Hashem Shalom
in a I don't want to even say. What do
you mean it's not the right time? And
then what's the right time? When the
divorce comes? When the person dies?
So, the answer that we have about the
why,
why Moshe Rabbeinu, I'm talking about
Moshe Rabbeinu right now, not you, but
we have to learn from that. Why did
Moshe Rabbeinu figured out it's not the
right time?
Because the rebuke has to come from a
place of love and care.
And Moshe Rabbeinu said, I didn't gain
their love, trust, and respect
till now to tell them what I have to
say.
And if I would come and say it prior, it
would come as me
like as a pretentious leader. Oh, I'm
better than you or the
Their rebuke has to come from a place of
love and caring and they have to
understand and know and feel that I love
them and that I care for them. The fact
that they didn't figure that out in the
last 40 years, that's their issue. But
I'm not ready to come and tell them the
rebuke.
Because they'll accept it the completely
wrong way.
Or better to say, they won't accept it.
They would think that I'm coming and
showing off, telling them off. They
won't accept it as love.
I'll tell you a quick story that I heard
not too long ago.
I think I even actually shared that
story once.
But it will
clarify the approach.
And of course from that we learn how to
apply it into our life.
So in the Lubavitch dynasty, the fourth
Lubavitch Rebbe
there's a very interesting story with
him and his brother.
It happens to be that the older brother
did not become the Rebbe, the younger
brother became the Rebbe.
And when they were kids, they were
playing. Now, they didn't have then
PlayStation 3 or 4 or 5 or all the rest
of the junk that the kids play today and
you know, being the child of a
great Rebbe, their games were different.
So what did they play when they were
kids?
They were young and 10 years old, they
played the role of a Rebbe and a Hasid.
Like little girls, they play kitchen and
or doctor or whatever, they played the
role of I'll be the Rebbe, you'll be the
student, the Hasid.
Okay.
So the older one, who his name was
Zalman, he was the Rebbe. He went in,
put the coat on, put the the gartel, the
belt, the shtreimel, the whole thing,
sat, took a big book, opened the book,
went like this, just imagine a
10-year-old.
And the younger brother
Shalom, he was the Hasid.
So, he comes to his brother who's now
playing the Rebbe and tells him, "Rebbe,
I need you to give me a tikkun, a
rectification. I did something not
knowingly and I desecrated Shabbat."
The halakha in the Shulchan Aruch says
like this and like that, but in the
siddur, in the prayer book, it says it
different and I desecrate and I need a
tikkun.
So, the brother who's pretending to be
the Rebbe tells him, "No problem. Learn
the laws of Shabbat, learn these this
Gemara, learn this Mishnah, and you'll
do a rectification to your sin."
Okay.
A few days pass. The mother, who was a
very smart individual, comes to the
young boy. He was about 9 years old. She
tells him, "No, did you do the tikkun
that your Rebbe told you to do?" He
says, "No."
He She says, "Why didn't you do it?"
So, the brother the young brother says,
"You know why?
Because he's not a real Rebbe."
So, the mother says, "Yeah, but the what
he said is actually right."
He says, "I can't accept from him. He's
not a real Rebbe.
If he would be a real Rebbe, he would
sigh before giving me the rebuke."
A real Rebbe would be like
Okay.
This is what you need to do.
He
came in with authority told me, "You
have to do this." That's not I can't
accept it. He's not a real Rebbe.
Which of course years to come he became
the Rebbe, the leader of the fourth
Rebbe of the dynasty of Chabad.
Now, this is a game of two kids.
And he said something very powerful.
The the rebuke, the the
uh the criticism
it has to be given from love and
respect.
It cannot be that I'm letting my anger
out.
Sometimes I come home, I'm upset, things
didn't work well, I'm angry right now.
Then I come and give my criticism.
That's not how you give criticism.
That's you letting out your anger.
So he says the criticism, the rebuke,
you have to give only from a place of
honor and respect and it has to come
from love. If you're coming here just to
let your anger go, this is don't go do
it somewhere else.
Now you can ask yourself a big question.
I'm coming to help you.
Right?
Why is it so hard?
I'm just coming to help. I see a fault
in you. I'm coming to help.
Why Why does it have to be so hard? Now
I ignore now the fact that the person
has an ego and they don't want to
listen.
So the answer why it's so hard is
divided into three ways.
The first thing is when you criticize
me,
I will take it as a threat.
That's the first thing.
And why a threat? Because it means I'm
not okay. You coming and telling me that
I'm not okay.
You coming to telling me that you better
than me, that you are much greater than
me. You're not doing it, I'm doing it.
Now you know how person reacts when
they're threatened?
They threat back.
You think I'm going to accept a threat
and I'm just going to sit there?
You're coming to threat me, I'll threat
you back.
So the first thing, the first reason is
the criticism and the rebuke, it it's
interpreted as a threat. Wait a minute,
you're telling me I'm wrong. You're
telling me I'm not doing something
right. That's not good for my peace and
quiet right now.
Second thing
is that when you criticize me or you
rebuke me, it demands now a change.
Now I have to change. Let's say I was
over able to over
over
How do you say overpass, to ignore, to
accept that I'm You're right, I'm wrong.
Now I have to change.
Now, that's a big thing.
To accept that I'm wrong is one thing,
but to change now?
You know how many people I told them my
personal story?
And the reaction was, "I don't believe
you.
You're making it up.
I don't think so."
Why? Why would I lie to you?
There was one honest person, doesn't
matter who right now, one honest person
in the last 20 years that when I told
that person my personal story, the
person told me, "You're crazy." And I
was offended. I said, "You really think
I'm crazy? You think I would bother? You
think I would waste my time to tell you
my personal story?" She And the person
tells me, "You know what? You're not
It's not that you're crazy, but the
problem is that if you are right,
I'm wrong.
And if I'm wrong, it means I have to
change.
And I don't want to change.
I'm very happy eating in any restaurant
that I eat like. I'm very happy going
wherever I want, whenever I want,
without being restricted.
And I'm very happy with my life.
So, if I accept what you have to say,
I'm saying in other words, you are
right, I am wrong.
And with that, means I have to change.
And I don't want to change.
So, number two, why we don't want to get
accept the criticism, cuz it means I
have to change.
If not, then the person is not only
right, he's more than right.
I'm not I'm failing and not changing.
And the third
is that
I know it's It's bit childish to say,
but the third reason it's because it's
not fair.
You're changing the rules of the game.
That's not fair. There were rules to the
game.
Now you're changing it.
I have to change.
Now where do you see that the most? You
have a young couple, they get married,
they love each other, they're in love.
Two or three months into the marriage,
fights, arguments, put it here, don't
put it here, you did this, you did that.
You change I I had rules to my life, now
you're changing them. Don't do this,
don't do that.
Stop behaving like this, you have to
behave like that. I have to change for
you?
So I'm telling it in a childish way,
it's not fair, but yeah, you have to
you're changing the rules.
I used to put my things here, now you're
telling me put the things here.
Not so simple.
Therefore, when I want to come and give
rebuke or criticism,
then it has to come with a lot of
preparation.
What is the definition of that
preparation? It's one word, love.
If I'm
feeling that I need to tell you
something, I can't just
throw it out.
That's why when our sages say it's not
that you can't accept the rebuke, cuz
you don't know how to give the rebuke.
Ah, so you came to the conclusion that
this person has to be rebuked,
prepare it.
It might take you a month.
How? You build up.
When the person came and told me not
long ago, how do I fire my worker for 20
years? I told him, listen, you come and
tell him, you know what? In the last 20
years, I never saw any worker so
dedicated like you.
You you you are you know,
you you flatter him.
You tell the person,
anyone would want an employee like you.
You build him up, and then you tell him,
I'm sorry to tell you, the situation is
very bad. I I have to. I I've no other
option but to let you go.
You can't even imagine what a loss it is
for my business, for my
You prepare. You don't just throw the
bomb on the person.
You know, in the in the Midrash
on this parashah, Midrash Rabbah on the
book of on the parashah of Devarim
it says
how come Moshe Rabbenu got the job to
rebuke and Bilaam got the job to bless?
Right?
It should be the other way around. Moshe
should come and bless the nation and
Bilaam should come and rebuke them or
curse them.
We just read about Bilaam. He came and
and blessed blessed the nation.
Very good question.
The answer is if Bilaam would come and
rebuke them
then you know what the nation would say?
Ah, he hates us. Of course he says that.
He doesn't even mean it. He hates us.
So, it's coming from a place of hate.
So, the rebuke had to come from a place
of love. Moshe Rabbenu says, I love you.
Therefore, I tell you where you're
failing.
People will only accept the criticism
criticism and the rebuke from a person
that really loves them.
If it's a If the person is not really
loved, they're not going to accept it.
It's going to be interpreted as an
attack.
Now, where do you learn this tactic
from?
From the source. Look at the master of
the universe.
The God of all gods, when he came down
to Mitzrayim, to Egypt, to take the
nation of Israel out of Mitzrayim
he first took them out of Egypt
and if you are following the text in
many different places
Asher otzetanu me eretz Mitzrayim, you
took us out of Mitzrayim why? To give us
the Torah.
Why did Hashem take us out of Mitzrayim?
Only to give us the Torah.
So, doesn't it make sense to first come
and say, "Hey, listen. I have a Torah.
If you will accept the Torah, I'll take
you out of Mitzrayim. If you're not
accepting the Torah, sorry to tell you,
you stay."
Right? That's what would make sense.
Hashem does the complete opposite.
First, he takes them out of Mitzrayim,
shows them a year of miracles, plus all
the journey to Har Sinai, then he gives
them the Torah.
You would think
that first, he would put the condition
if you get the Torah.
But, Hashem says, "No, first I do the
miracle,
then I will come with my offer."
He took the chance that they might say,
"We don't want the Torah."
It wasn't mandatory.
It wasn't Pfizer.
He says, "You You want the Torah? It's
It's It's a zechut."
Hashem took the chance that they might
say, "Thank you so much for taking us
out of Mitzrayim. We don't want the
Torah."
But, that's what we learn from Hashem.
First, you show miracles. First, you
show the love and the caring and the
respect, then you come and say, "Oh, by
the way,
you know, on that note, we learned not
too long ago about the concept of the
red heifer."
There's a big question
if you follow and you pay attention that
doesn't make sense. The red heifer is
coming to purify the person who's impure
from the impurity of death.
But, the ones who are dealing with the
heifer, the priests, they become impure.
Someone's coming to do you a favor to
make you pure and I become impure.
What's What's the common sense here?
Why would it be like that? Making a
situation that the ones who are going
out of their way to make you pure, they
should not be affected.
Only the answer is only to prove that if
I want to make you pure, I have to go
down to your level.
And when I'm going down to your level,
then I'm able to make you pure. That's
in the respect to
the red heifer.
So, when I want to help you, I can't
come like this.
I have to go down to your level. Why are
you behaving like that? What's your way
of thinking?
Maybe there's a an agenda. Maybe there's
some type of What's going on? Try to
relate with the person. If you don't
relate to the person, how can you come
and just say
like this and like that?
Yeah?
And I told you that I told you that many
times. I'll tell you again the same
story.
The son of the Baal Shem Tov Tanya
once a person
came to him to a
a meeting.
And within 3 seconds of the meeting, he
threw him out of the room, locked the
door,
and for 3 days he was didn't come out of
the room. Didn't eat, didn't participate
in the the prayers.
They didn't understand. What's What's
this type of behavior?
3 days pass, he opens the door, tells
his secretary bring the person back in.
The person comes in, sits with him for
about an hour. Person goes out.
The students they come and say, "I mean,
what was this all about? You person is
coming for advice, and you throw him out
of the room?"
He says, "Yeah, the person came and told
me confessed about a horrible sin, and
he wanted me to give him
rectification at the what to do.
So, I had to let him go out of the room.
I had to fast 3 days
and to meditate in such a way to go down
to the level to understand
how can a person do such a sin?
And only when I can relate with the sin
and understand why a person would do
such a sin, how, what would be the
motive, what would be the pleasure,
then I can tell him how to correct it.
Other than that, I can't relate with the
sin. How can I tell him what to do?
And I told you that in the respect that
Moshe Rabbeinu had to relate with
everything.
When Moshe Rabbeinu wrote the Torah,
when God told him, "You should not
kill." Moshe Rabbeinu had to imagine in
his mind all the types of murders.
Murdering with an axe, murdering with
stabbing, murdering with drowning a
person, murdering with throwing somebody
out of the window. Why? So he can come
and say, "Oh, I understand what it means
not to kill, and I can also tell you how
to repent and fix it after you did it."
But if I don't relate with the sin,
then how would I be able to help you?
Same thing here.
If I want to make you a better
individual,
if I'm coming to rebuke, if I'm coming
to criticize,
then I have to create this closeness
between me and the person
and come with honor, respect, and love,
then I'm able to affect a person that
the person will come and say, "Huh,
you know, okay."
That's why the time is that you has to
be the right time.
And when it just comes out,
it's not going to work.
It's not going to be the right way.
Now, Rashi says when we were asking,
"Why did Hashem make all these invited
Moshe Rabbeinu had all these hints?"
is because
First of all, there's a question, "Why
would he hint on all these places? Just
say it
Say it clear. Just say you sinned here,
you sinned there.
So, the explanation why Moshe Rabbeinu
was saying everything with hints
is that the rebuke has to start with a
good word.
You can't come right away and attack.
Like I told you with that employee that
I with the person, don't come and tell
him, "You're fired." After 20 years, you
come and say, "You know what? You are
the best employee I ever had. You are so
dedicated. You are so honest. You are so
this. You are so that."
And after you start with a good word,
then you come with the bad news.
That's why Moshe Rabbeinu started with
hints, not to come right away so so
strong.
Now, I'll give you an example.
Not too long ago, literally literally a
few weeks ago,
somebody came and told me something
coming as a rebuke.
I walk in the street, I go out of my
house, the person stops in front of me,
and he lets it all out.
Now, I have no problems with rebuke or
criticism. If somebody comes, I listen.
And I'll make a very quick analysis if
the person is right, I will accept and
change, or if the person is some
attacking or going on some rampage or
whatever.
And I told you
a different story many many times about
this certain individual who was a
worker, who was an employee, he was a
volunteer who helped, and and the person
came and told me something that was very
irritating to me. I think I told you
that story maybe a thousand times.
Well, I'm exaggerating. 990.
This individual was close to our family,
worked for us, volunteered with our
organization in many different things.
And one time that person came and told
me something
that hit a home run.
Now, in a negative way.
Now, I didn't react. I didn't say
anything. I just nodded and said, "Thank
you so much for letting me know." And
then I went home. And for the whole day
I was upset. I I upset. I was like a
volcano inside of me. How dare that
person tell me
that I'm doing and
and after not eating for a few hours,
and not being a settled, focused or
doing anything, I asked myself a simple
question. Why are you so upset?
And you know what the answer was?
Because she's right.
The person was right.
So, needless to say, I accepted it. I
said, you know,
she's 100% right. Now I have to work on
myself, change, and then it was very
easy to thank the individual.
So, I I know I'm turning the on myself
right now. I know how to accept the
criticism because I put a
uh
uh partition.
Don't let my ego get upset. I listen,
and very quickly make the analogy if the
person is done attacking me, or there's
something there. And I was able to bring
myself to a place after 20
years of hard work to be a little bit
humble, to accept that I'm not perfect.
So, this person comes and stops me on
the street, and lets it all go,
but in a real rude and not nice way,
about something.
And then he looks at me after letting it
all out. He probably had a bad day.
And he looks at me and he's like,
"You're not going to comment?"
And I said, "No."
He said, "You're not going to react?" I
said, "No."
So, he got upset. Why?
I said, "Because you don't want to hear
what I have to say."
So, he got even more upset.
"I want you to comment." I said, "I'm
not going to comment to you. You're not
going to like what I have to tell you.
You said what you have to say.
Okay. Now, you can leave."
I'm not going to You're not going to
drag me into an argument. You're not
going to drag me to come and say some
react some comment or some reaction.
What do you want me Do you want me to
lose my temper? You want to see if I'm
going to use foul language or has vision
on do something that is not appropriate.
I heard what you have to say. Move on.
Happens to be that it was next to my
wife my house and my wife overheard it.
What happened? What was it? Right?
I said listen, he said what he had to
say. I I heard. I made already the
calculations. He's right, he's not
right. He's wrong.
I heard what he had to say. That's it. I
need now to be offended because I don't
need to be upset. Need to now call him
out names. I need to answer. He wanted
me to answer him. I don't know what to
answer you. I don't want to answer you.
You said what you had to say. And I said
I did plus one plus one. What you said
is irrelevant. Move on.
So the thing is that
if he would come and tell me
in a completely different way. Doesn't
matter the what the claim that he said
was
But I was saying to myself this is a
perfect example. Stop like a mensch.
Like a you know, with a little bit of
I'm not
we I'm not expecting respect. Well, come
with a little bit of respect. A little
bit with some Derek Erretz and tell me,
you know, this and this happened and
happened.
Then I would probably be much much nicer
to you and maybe you would actually
would get a a comment from me. You came
and you right away attacked. Right away.
Spoken in a not appropriate way. Well,
why would even deal with you?
Why would I want to deal with you? I
said thank you. Leave.
Now happens to be that what he said was
didn't had any any vow. It wasn't valid.
But this is a perfect example. You want
to get my attention. You want to get my
response a nice respond. Then I'm coming
to attack me right away on the street.
Come and say, "Listen, I need to talk to
you about a certain matter that bothers
me. I think it would be of your interest
to hear what I have to say. Maybe I'm
wrong. Maybe I'm right." Okay, come to
me like I'm not going to do anything
wrong to you. I didn't murder your kids.
Come and approach me in a nice way.
So, with that we can understand that
when I want to come and rebuke or
criticize my wife, my child, my
employer, my employee, my neighbor,
doesn't matter.
And it doesn't matter right now in what
aspect it's coming from. I want to come
and tell you something that I think is
the right thing to do.
Then it has to come with the right
preparation. It has to come with two
things. First,
that I have to create this connection
and this closeness that you are not
feeling intimidated and you feel that
I'm coming from a place of care.
Not coming to put you down. Not coming
to show off I'm better than you. I'm not
coming to now insult you or attack you.
I'm coming to
make you better.
So, I have to create the situation of
this
closeness.
And
the second thing is that I have to come
with the approach that you are important
to me.
How you behave is important to me. You
are dear to me. And I actually care
when you are successful or not.
If I don't come with that approach,
99.9%
the person will be like, "I'm not
accepting nothing from you."
Cuz you're just coming to attack me. You
had a bad day. You trying to prove that
you're better, smarter, stronger,
whatever it is.
So, the Torah comes and gives me a very
valued
very important lesson that I constantly
come to the situation that I need to
approach another person,
then I have to use the approach of Moshe
Rabbenu. I can't come and attack another
person because it's not convenient to
me. I don't like it.
If I'm coming from that place, then I'm
not coming to criticize or rebuke. I'm
coming to let out let
steam out.
Then don't say it and keep it to
yourself. Better not to say nothing.
How many times is a situation and the
answer that you get, what should I say?
Better not to say nothing.
Why?
Don't say anything.
I think I said that advice maybe a few
thousand times. Better not to say
nothing.
Why? Because you're not coming in the
right approach.
You're coming to complain.
You're coming to show you with a
comeback. It's It's You don't really
care for that person to become a better
person. You don't really care for that
person to refine themselves.
So you have to think in your mind when
you are coming to share your thoughts,
your opinion,
thinking or hoping that it will affect
the person in a positive way, rebuking,
criticizing, helping, suggesting, then
wait like Moshe Rabbeinu. I'm not
telling you to wait 40 years.
But wait to the right time when you feel
that it's that you are ready to come and
give it over.
And when you're ready to give over your
musar, your ethics,
and it's done in the right way, it will
be accepted by the recipient.
If you're not coming in the right time,
it not only that it wouldn't be
accepted,
you would create you would create
greater damage.
As they say, think twice before you
talk. Think before you act. Prepare your
your case
and come in the right approach. And the
the the really the major question you
need to ask yourself is do I really care
about your well-being or I'm coming to
say that because I want to gain the
extra point to be above you?
More right, more s-
stronger, more correct. And if you
that's your ego already.
You have to come from a place of caring,
loving, and that you really want that
person to better their life.
And therefore, you have to prepare
yourself the right way, come in the
right time, come with the right
approach, and then when it comes from a
place of love and caring, then you
actually able to affect another person
and change another person's life and
make that person's life a much, much,
much better life.