Transcript
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Okay, today's class is dedicated by
Daniel Penn in tribute to the brave
souls of the Israeli Defense Forces
whose tireless dedication and courage
defend our nation, our people, our
homeland, our freedom, our life. May God
bring all of them and every hostage home
safely. Amen. Graciously dedicated Osa
Khan Coronel in memory of her dear
beloved mother Bimma Basim Yak in
tribute to her yardite on the sixth day
of today.
May she remain an eternal source of
light, blessing and inspiration to you
and the entire family and all of the
Jewish people. Thank you very very much.
We're going to study today hashemarak
a a story that's related in the garra in
the talmud trackctate khaga page 14.
It's one of those stories when you read
it for the first time and even the
second or third time it's extremely
enigmatic. It's very you could see that
there are layers of profoundity
contained here but very difficult to
decipher what it means
and uh this particular story seems so
so enigmatic so filled with mystery and
the connection
and the just juxtaposition of ideas and
insights seems extremely difficult to
comprehend. And yet upon deeper
reflection, we're going to learn basm
that there's a whole world of ideas and
relevance that is unraveled here.
So let's begin. It's your first source.
You have it in the Hebrew, the original,
and it's also an English translation if
you want to follow the English
translation.
As I said, it's track page. That's 14b.
He begins with a following story. This
is a very well-known passage, but the
passages afterwards are a little less
known,
which means the rabbis taught
four people, four human beings, four
individuals went into the paradis.
Paradis literally means an orchard, a
garden. It's called the parades. And
here it's a metaphor. It's a euphemism
for they ascended mentally to a
spiritual state, a spiritual space. They
transcended the usual uh patterns of
thought and embodiment that we have and
they went into a transcend transcendent
state of consciousness. In fact, the
word pardis, I don't know if you know,
but in Greek, the word paradise,
paradise is connected to the word
parardis because the there's the word in
Greek that means both garden and
paradise. It's parardis. So that's why
we call paradise paradise. It comes from
this word which is parardis which also
means an orchard.
So they actually went into this state.
Who were these four people? Benazi
Benza.
Benazi the son of Azai. Z is a son of
Zer which means the other one which is
again not his real name. His real name
was Alicia Benuya they called him a
stranger the foreigner the other one and
the fourth one was Rabaka.
So these four great sages of the time
Benaz
Alisha Rabaka are about to ascend on
this incredible mystical journey where
they would see things that most people
never see. They would observe reality
from a completely different perspective.
The regular sensors of the brain that
filter out most of our unconscious and
access to different layers of reality
would now be removed and they would
enter into a different state of
consciousness.
Somebody got to prep you on a journey.
Before you go on a journey, integration
uh prepping is important. Rabaka who was
the master, he did the prepping. He
prepped them. What was his prep?
says to them,
"You're going to reach a place
of are stones." Shyish marble pure.
You're going to reach a place of pure
marble stones.
Do not say water. Water. Literally, it
means you're going to come to a place.
It's going to be beautiful pure marble
stones. They're going to look like waves
of water. Don't say water water.
This was his warning to them. He says
that would be a lie.
That would be a lie. The says this is
what happened. Benazi Benazi went hits
it. He gazed vase. He died. He never
came back. Ben hits it. He also gazed.
Venka it affected his mind. Was
demented.
Alicia
which means he plucked out the plants
from the garden which is a metaphor for
the fact that he became a heretic
yatasham
Rabaka is the only one who came out in
peace. So four people each of them was
affected dramatically different. Benazi
passed away. Ben Zmed affected his his
way of thinking his mindset. He was
never the same afterwards. Alicia Bavuya
abandoned Judaism and that's why he's
called a he became it's well known
Alicia Bavuya became a completely
different type of person and uh
Rakiva was the only one who went in in
peace and came out in peace
that's the end of the story right now
the Gmorra goes into a whole different
story
they asked Ben
are you allowed to sterilize are you
allowed to neuter a
He said to them, it says in
Leviticus 22:4,
you're not allowed to neuter. You're not
allowed to uh sterilize
any any animal, including a dog. What is
he referring to? So we have here in the
English if you look at the English
translation third paragraph in the
English Ben was asked is it permitted to
castrate to neuter a dog he replied with
the verse of our portion the says in
what's the context the context is that
in par the Torah talks about the
offerings that we bring in the in the
tabernacle in the sanctuary the mishk
later in the bik the holy temple and the
qualification is that every animal
brought needs to be tim it needs to be
whole shalim complete
So if you have an animal that's
blemished, it's called a balm. And the
Torah goes through a list of many
blemishes. It should not be brought as
an offering as a carbon. And then the
Torah continues, and this is the Ben was
referring to
English translation. Any animals whose
testicles were squashed, crushed, pulled
out, or severed, you shall not offer up
to the land, you should not offer up to
Hashem, to the Lord. And in your land,
you shall not do so. In other words, one
of the blemishes is an animal that is
neutered, an animal whose uh procreative
uh organs are compromised. But the then
adds, "And don't do this in your land."
What does it mean? Don't do this in your
land. So Ben says you're not allowed to
sterilize any animal in your land. Any
animal.
I don't want this to be happening in the
Jewish community which wasn't.
So this is the Ben answered. You're not
allowed to neuter even a dog.
Now you ask what's the connection? They
went into an orchard. Ben Za was
affected. And then they ask him about
neutering a dog and he brings from paras
you're not allowed.
And in fact this pusk is the source for
a very famous a very famous mitzvah that
according to Judaism we are not allowed
to neuter and compromise the procreative
ability of any animal any behemoth
kosher and even not kosher like a dog.
In fact, in Israel, if you go to Israel,
you know how many cats
you will meet. And what's the reason for
that? And the answer is because of this
issue. There were many mayors of cities
that wanted to uh eliminate the ability
of male cats to uh procreate. But
because it's forbidden for the Jewish
people, is forbidden even a cat, even a
dog. says he says her the says
and here it's not only a mitzvah in
even though it says because it's not
connected to the earth mitzvah that are
connected to the earth are usually
because the earth is holy the earth in
outside of doesn't have that holiness
but here it's not connected to earth
it's connected to any moving animal and
of course human being so therefore it's
not only in it's not only it's even in
not only that There's even an opinion in
Gmorra. It's not the that's accepted,
but there's an opinion by Sanhedrin,
many that this would even be a
prohibition on a gentile
wasn't accepted by many authorities. But
for Jews, it's an absolute prohibition
to do. And this is what Ben Z answered.
This should not be done. Then they asked
him another question
and this is going to get a even stranger
much stranger
benza. They asked this ben za another
question.
I'm not going to elaborate on this one
because it's it's you know sensitive
information. You could look it up
yourself if you want to know all the
details. I'm just going to give you the
general perspective.
is that also
needs to marry a woman who was never
married before. It's called absula. What
happens if he finds out after the
marriage she was pregnant?
Right? So what does this mean? Does he
have to get divorced? She says, "No, I
was never married before. I was never I
was never with anybody." What do you
mean? But she's ibra. She's lying. She's
lying. What? What? What? I don't What
happened?
And indeed the kind sees that she's
right. Doesn't look like there was
anything.
So they asked Ben what's
the maybe it's what taught taught that
there's a way of having relations
without splitting the without causing
any blood and that's why she's absula
and she's pregnant. Maybe that's what
happened and therefore he has to get
divorced even though it's his absula
because there were relations. And Ben Z
said, "No, no, no, no, no, no. That's
very, very, very rare. It's unique. We
don't focus. What happened was something
else and here you have 2,000 years ago,
something that they only discovered now
called artificial insemination." And he
discusses the fact that it could be that
she was in an ambata, she was in a
mikvah, she was in a bath and there was
a seat over there and it impregnated
her. The whole the fascinating this the
Gmorra discusses this. You're talking
about 2,000 years ago. Ben Za lived in
the times of Yakiva. You know 2,000
years ago the Gmorra talks about that
she went into an ambata a spa a bath and
over there there was a seed and it and
she conceived it and that caused a
pregnancy and therefore the koal doesn't
have to divorce her. She's absula she
was never married before. She didn't
have her life. This is what happened.
Now the question is how do you define
this child?
How do you define? So all the halas
today connected to IVF in vitro
fertilization is based a lot of it is
based on this based on this concept that
bin z introduced at that time and
therefore the kadel can trust her and
say it's fine even though you're talking
about a pregnant woman that's the next
conversation interesting conversations
after he comes out of this orchard first
they're talking about neutering dogs and
then they're talking about IVF
now comes a third story equally strange
Right after this,
the rabbis taught my Yeshua ben. There
was a story about he was another
contemporary of Raba.
He was standing on a step on the temple
mount. If you ever visited the harab
around the Harabas, there's the
everybody goes to on the west. But if
you ever took a tour to the east,
anybody knows the other side. It's
incredible place to see because over
there you could actually see an image of
the gates of the Harabayas that we
learned in Mishnayas how they went up
into the Harabayas. There were all these
gates and you could still see the
imprint. You know what I'm talking about
the imprint of the gates and mikvah
places that were used for mikvah and
steps going up. So this is what he
describes who by the way was still in
the second B mikdash. He was a ley and
he was one of the vocalists the
vocalist. There were musicians and
vocalists in the B mikdash every day and
he was one of them. He was one of them
the gammor says. So he was standing on a
step on a a mile a step bahabias on the
harabayas
what we call in English the temple mount
veren
saw him
but he didn't stand up before
this was unique because
was considered one of the greatest of
the sages and ben za was there too he
was walking and bishu was there on the
step and didn't stand up. Obviously,
Yeshua was on the step and was probably
sitting. I said he was walking. He was
sitting because if he was walking, he
couldn't stand up. He was sitting and he
didn't stand up.
Yeshua says to him,
"From where and to where?" Meaning,
where you coming from? Where you going?
May
means from where to where? In other
words, what's going on with you? Where
you coming from? Where you going? He
understood that ben za must be
overwhelmed by something because he
ignored him. Even though Yeshua was
there on the step of the rabbi, Ben Z
ignored him. And therefore he said,
where you going? Where are you coming
from? Where you going?
Oh my. So Ben Z says to him as follows.
I was gazing on the space between the
upper water and the lower water and I
realized there is only barely three
finger breaths between them.
The Tyra says in
God's spirit hovered over the face of
the waters.
like a dove which hovers over her young
without touching them
told his students
still doesn't get it. He's still
outside.
End of the story. So here we have the
completion of the story. Now, we're
going to try in this class to I'm not
going to say make sense out of the
story. That would be audacious, but try
to touch touch
a little bit the texture, the the the
depth of what's going on in the story.
The story has been obviously dissected
and analyzed and explored over
generations since it was written in Kiga
especially by some of the greatest
mystics and cabalists who discussed the
pardis at length.
This particular commentary we're going
to discuss is based on two sources. One
is the mehash which is aidic work by the
ishitzba the reb of isbbitz rabbi liner
was his name ishbbitz is a city in
Poland ishitzah that's where he's buried
as well and he has a work called the
waters of the spring which of course was
the mikvah that they used the basha the
spring they used for and other things is
very close to the place of the harabayas
last year I was in I had to go to the
mikvah over there in the meash. So it's
called the waters of the and in paras he
has a very profound commentary on this
story. So some of these ideas are based
on that and another also on the writings
of the Arizal and the balatana.
So let's just remember the structure
here. Four people go into an orchard.
They're all affected different ways.
Benzema doesn't die. Ben Z doesn't lose
his faith but something happens to his
mindset to his state of mind unlike
unlike Benaz right after that they ask
Ben Z a question the Garra doesn't give
a time frame but it comes right after
that means there's some connection
somehow the Gmorra sees it connected
they ask they ask him about neutering a
dog which is like this man just had the
experience of his life maybe you know
let him relax a little bit no we have to
know if we could neuter a dog maybe they
had problems with dogs in Jerusalem then
I don't know and says Absolutely not.
You're not allowed to do that. In other
words, it's not only a kosher animal,
it's also a non-coosher animal. Then
they ask him a second question which
seems completely completely far-fetched,
very rare about this kind who marries
this this girl who was never married and
she's pregnant and what's happening?
Does he have to divorce her? Does he now
divorce her? She claims she's absolutely
suitable for him. It's completely fine.
Even though she's pregnant, we want to
know if maybe there was an issue. There
were relationships without blood and
that's why she could still be Absula.
she didn't lose her virginity etc. And
he says, "No, we don't say that. That's
very unique even though it's possible.
We say that there was an issue of
artificial insemination and therefore
all is good and they can continue to
they can continue to enjoy each other
even though he's a high priest." And
then right after that there's the story
of the Harabas and he doesn't stand up
for
is is uh is somewhat astounded. What's
happening? What's going on? He wants to
know why didn't you stand up? What are
you involved in? What's bothering you?
What's overwhelming you? And he says,
"I'm busy looking at the space between
the higher water and the lower water.
And I realize that the space is only
three fingers, which of course is a very
very tiny space." And of course, he's
referring here to the story in Berius.
It says, "Hashem creates the light on
the first day and there was light. But
before that, the begins
and the earth was engulfed in darkness.
The spirit of Hashem was hovering over
the water. On the second day, Hashem
says, "Let there be a firmament in the
water and separate the water." And from
that day, there is what's called the
Mayim Elim, the higher water above the
heaven and the lower water, which we are
all familiar with below the heaven. On
the third day, he has the water retreat
into oceans and rivers and seas and
lakes and canals so that dry land can
emerge. That's on Tuesday. So, Ben Zima
is looking at the space between the
higher water and the lower water. And
it's only three breath, three finger
breaths. And that's why he says,
"Hashem's spirit is over the water like
a dove over her young where she's so
close, but she doesn't touch them. She
doesn't want to skin, doesn't want to
intimidate them. So she's right over. If
you ever see birds, how they're
protective of their young." Yeah. Almost
like Shamas, you got to be there. You
don't move. But
we don't want to completely take away
your freedom. So we're going to hover
there. And
she doesn't touch them.
And hears this. He says, "Ben Za is
still outside." What does this mean?
Well, he heard something and he said
he's still outside.
So,
in order to appreciate all this,
we have to
We have to really explore what's this
idea in this week's paren
says
that there's aic prohibition
of eliminating
the procreative the reproductive ability
of a living organism in our world. This
includes a human being. It includes
every single type of balai, every single
type of animal. And the fascinating
thing is, as we just learned, even
non-coosher animals. And it's not
because they're going to be brought as
an offering. They can be brought as an
offering, but even they're not being
brought as an offering unless it's an
issue of pikes. Of course, if the life
is in danger, then all the get
suspended. All the mitzvah get
suspended. But if it's not that case, so
then this remains the is known as the
Easter of serious the prohibition to to
castrate. What is what is the what is
the reason behind this? In fact in fact
even though one says this is what the
says but the Rambam writes in that
whenever we can give a reason whenever
we can try to understand we should try
to understand. So the
the gives a reason for it
and the reason he wants to give a reason
is he he likes to give a reason for
every mitzvah. But here the question is
even stranger because this was a
practice very very common in the past in
the days of your yester year. It's also
very common today especially among
farmers especially those who raise
animals and for a simple reason. The
reason is actually because it made life
much much easier.
When you have a uh bull in a farm,
right, a male bull in a farm, if
if in simple English, if he's not tamed,
if his abilities are not compromised,
within a very very short time, they're
going to be a lot a lot a lot of
offspring. And this is very hard for
farmers. Number two, bulls that are not
diluted, their abilities are not
compromised. They they could be very
very aggressive. It's very hard to train
them. They used to remember use oxen for
threshing, for plowing. For this, you
had to harness and train and discipline
your ox. Neutered oxen were much, much
easier to deal with. In fact, even in
terms of food, I believe it tastes much
better. So in terms of practicality and
pragmatism, this was and is something
that was universally practiced
almost in all cultures.
In Judaism, it's absolutely prohibited.
And not just Jewish animals, even a
kazer, a pig, a swine. You would think,
what does care if there going to be one
less kazer in the world?
what's going to be
in and even if I'm raising animals here
in Ma or anywhere in New York or
anywhere in the world outside of
fascinating why
so the
says something very powerful
says
and I'm going to read what he says I
have to add it to the source I forgot to
add it this morning but I'm going to
read his
He says, "Hashem,
Hashem created his world with
perfection.
There's nothing missing and there's
nothing extra.
He created a world in which every single
creature
constitutes and fulfills an
indispensable role in its own way."
That's you're talking about every worm,
every reptile, every fish, every bird,
every mammal, every plant, shrub, bush,
tree, every star, every galaxy. You
might say, "I don't see how the worms
are helping anybody."
That's what you might say. That's what I
might say until we find out that the
only reason we could live is because the
earth is fertile. Who makes the earth
fertile? There are billions and billions
and billions of worms that don't stop
moving around in the earth. And they
actually plow the earth all day and all
night. You know, we don't look at it
that way. You see a lightning a
lightning every eight or seven or eight
seconds a lightning somewhere in the
world. You know that. So it's a
lightning some electric explosion
because of we have the scientific
explanations today. We know that a
lightning we can't live without nitrogen
because nitrogen is what creates amino
acid which is the food of every single
cell and we have 70 trillion cells in
our body. There's nitrogen in the air,
but there's no way the nitrogen is
coming into the earth so that we can
grow from it. We can live from it. It's
the lightning that allows the nitrogen
to merge with the oxygen, which then
comes into the droplets of rain, which
goes into the earth. So whenever we eat
plants, so we eat fruits, we eat
vegetables, we eat animals that eat
vegetables and plants, we get that
nitrogen so we can live. So every single
every single detail that we learn about,
we discover how it constitutes a there's
something a purpose in it. It's an
incredible thing. We say in ash,
right? What does it mean? Generation to
generation, your your actions get
praised. The malb writes
in his commentary on the word actually
doesn't only mean praise. It means
enhancement.
Things get enhanced. He says every
generation
we appreciate more and more the
intricacies of every single aspect in
existence. So the says
nothing missing
and nothing superfluous. If something is
superfluous is extra. If something is
missing again it's imperfect. And the
says
and he wanted that the animals should
naturally procreate create new
generations and the same is true humans
of course
somebody who neuters somebody who
eliminates who ruins the procreator The
reproductive ability in a human or an
animal is demonstrating disgust or
repulsion for the act of the create for
the for the creature of the creator for
the work of the creator and it's a form
of wanting to destroy his good world. So
what the is telling us here is that the
wants to respect the integrity the
natural integrity of every single
creature because it's natural integrity
again if it endangers life then the says
you have to do whatever you have to do
is
but if not it's a form of respect for
everyone's role in creation and that
includes the lion and it includes the
hyena and it includes the cheetah and an
elephant and the dog and the cat and any
other mammal or any other actually
living creature that procreates.
The spiritual and theidic masters add
another very powerful point and that is
that the procreative ability is actually
the space in which the human being or
any creature resembles the divine in the
most powerful way. Hashem is a creator.
Where do we come closest to be divine?
When we create. So the creative ability
of the human being creating life is the
place where we most reflect the divine.
That's why the word for creator is yer
means creator and in Hebrew
means creativity which comes from the
word creator.
So eliminating this creative ability of
the person which literally allows us to
create life just like God. It's the
space where the human being touches
holiness in the profoundest way because
that's where we come closest to reflect
Hashem. What is more we create
everything we create is temporary
temporary it's limited but here it's
something we call in
it's something that's invested with the
power hopefully of eternity generation
after generation after generation after
generation for eternity. So this is the
eternal divine gift invested in the
human pro procreative ability to be able
to create like God and to be able to
create something that will continue for
for generations
for generations and generations
hopefully for eternity. Such a power you
don't eliminate. Such a power you don't
destroy. such a power you don't
compromise because you're you're you're
playing I'm touching something that is
so sacred so incredibly profound about a
human being of course of course there's
challenges in it any powerful any
powerful energy can be challenging
nuclear energy has to be protected
that's true I have to protect it I have
to know how to harness but not destroy
not eliminate
so this is on the basic level what the
meaning of the mitzvah is.
Every single mitzvah, every single law
and also has a spiritual and emotional
and symbolic dimension. In addition to
the physical, the concrete manifestation
of it, there's also the inner idea
behind it. Which means in this case the
concrete is you know I'm not allowed to
neuter a dog or a cat or any other
animal or any other mammal or a human
being etc. I'm not allowed. That's the
physical concrete. Eliminating the
creative ability to create a new
generation is forbidden in Judas.
But in every single mitzvah, the Rambam
writes, most mitzvah had they teach us
something about ourselves internally as
well. So in addition to the concrete
manifestation of a mitzvah, there's also
the spiritual and emotional and
psychological manifestation of a
mitzvah. What does that mean? In our
case, every person has creative powers.
Every person has a creative power, a
power to create. What's the first
mitzvah in the first mitzvah that's
given to
is the mitzvah to have children. Why is
that the first mitzvah? You would think
the first mitzvah should relate to
something in the person themselves,
herself or himself. But the first
mitzvah receive is
so why? So once said in Yiddish, he said
if
the first mitzvah is you're a Jew, make
another one, create another one.
That's the ability of a person to be
mashia to procreate. There's physically
of course, but there's also emotionally,
psychologically, spiritually. That's the
creative power of a human being to
create life to give life to infuse
somebody with life.
So the says this creativity of a person
this creative power of a person your
ability to give whatever that giving
consists of we must never ever
compromise or destroy or eliminate. But
it goes much deeper than this. As we see
the prohibition is not just on a human
being. The person is even an animal.
What does that represent in a per what
does that represent in our life? Even
the creativity of our animal, the animal
inside of us. Everybody has a nephew but
also a nepheam an animal consciousness.
So even the creativity of the animal
I have to respect.
I can't just destroy because the ox is
very wild or the dog is barking too loud
or the other mammal or is very very
aggressive and I'm having a very hard
time. I may be having a hard time. I
have to know how to deal with it. I have
to figure out ways of handling the
issue. But to destroy
sirus to destroy to eliminate that
creativity of my inner animal that the
gives us in Musahascal a general lesson
one has to be extremely careful not to
do that. Now let's understand a little
more what that means. What does that
mean in a person's life? In other words,
how do we understand this mitzvah really
as a reflection of a person's daily life
for ourselves, for our children, for our
students, really for all of our loved
ones?
[Music]
Sometimes
there could be a mindset that develops
and I would say it's probably not very
infrequent.
It's certainly not very I don't think
it's very uncommon.
Maybe the opposite, but you'll have to
decide that on your own how common it
is. But it's a certain mindset
that uh
we could feel in ourselves or we hear
from people and that is that somehow
religion or faith or yiddishkite or tyra
comes handinhand with a certain form of
repression, a certain form of
psychological repression. There are
people maybe even instinctively that's
how we're taught maybe it's ingrained
somehow in our psyche or our system for
whatever reason that
to be a good person often means that
some of my creativity
needs to go
dull needs to be dulled
stifled. I often get emails from people.
I mean pretty often I should say
lamenting this that in their community
or in their culture or in their
environment or our environment, their
system, they feel that
creativity is something that is seen as
dangerous or mocked. Somebody shared
with me in a different community, a very
beautiful community that he was trying
to do something very uh let's put it
creative
and it took audacity and guts. He really
wanted to change something fundamental.
And he said someone just came over to
him and said, you know, who do you think
you are? Just do what everybody else
does. You know, don't swim against the
stream. Just do what everybody else
does. Just be a men. Just behave
normally. Don't make noise.
Don't make noise, you know. Just just
acquies. Just surrender. Follow the
system. You'll be safe. You'll be safe.
It's a much safer space. And this is not
a judgmental statement. One can
understand where this person is coming
from. There's a lot of dangers in life.
There's a lot of pitfalls. There are
mistakes. There are stumbling blocks.
Originality is very interesting, but it
could sometimes lead me to places that
are dangerous. What do you have to be
original? What do you have to be
creative? You know,
Just follow the footsteps of others. You
don't have to go off the beaten shack
and create a new path because you're
full of imagination and creativity and
you're an artist. There were artists
before you. There were artists there
would be artists after you. Zill, just
be a good girl or a good boy.
I once uh saw somebody once shared a
story. His name is Clint Pulver. Clinton
Pulver said when he was 10 years old, he
was in school and uh non-Jewish boy and
he had this instinct of always banging,
tapping on the desk in the in the in the
in his class. So he was always like this
because the teacher was annoyed, the
students were annoyed, and the teacher
kindly asked him again and again, Clint,
this is not the place for it. You got to
be quiet. We're trying to have a class.
But he simply couldn't stop himself. He
sent him to the principal and the
principal gave him a brilliant idea. He
said, "Sit on both of your hands a whole
day. Sit on both of your hands and that
way you won't drum." So it helped for
like 90 seconds. And then instinctively
both of his hands came out and he
continued to drum and he was always sent
out of the class cuz he needed to relax.
And anyway, once he says he had a new
teacher, Mr. Johnson was his name. And
again, he couldn't help himself. He was
drumming. And Mr. Johnson, one of the
first days in the class, said, "Clint, I
want you to stay here after class." And
he was certain that's it. You know, his
time is up and it's expulsion time. He's
going to be sent home and this time for
good. When everybody left, he stayed
there with Mr. Johnson. And Mr. Johnson
said, "I just want to tell you
something. I was watching you. I don't
think that you really have a problem. I
don't think you really have a problem."
And he opened his drawer and he took out
a drum set and he gave it to Clint. This
was his first drum set with drumsticks.
And he said, "You were created to be a
drummer."
And because you were created to be a
drummer, that's what your mind is
telling your hands to do all day.
That's what you were created to do. And
Clint told the story and he said, "I
never let go of that drum." And today
he's a worldrenowned drummer. Literally
worldrenowned. He's in fact one of the
best drummers. And I was thinking to
myself, you know what? if he would have
had a different type of teacher.
Michelangelo was considered uh the
greatest sculpture, one of the greatest
sculptures in history. And they once
asked him how he creates his sculptures
and he says, "I see the angel trapped in
the marble and I chisel away on the
marble and I set the angel free."
So, it's really seeing the angel inside
of the marble. So, here was a kid. Yeah,
it was a problem for the class, but the
teacher understood
your brain is telling you your hands to
do what it has to do, to do what it's
supposed to do, cuz that's who you are.
That ability to be able not to be afraid
of one's uniqueness, one's individual
creativity is crucial also in education.
I once read a story about a kid. He was
in sixth grade and all day he would look
out the window, right? You remember that
one kid in the class all day looking out
the window and finally they used to call
it a he dreams all day. Today there's a
lot of diagnosis for him but then it was
one diagnosis for everybody. You dream
heals.
Finally the teacher lost his patience
and he says to him who do you think is
going to pay you for looking out the
window? You're not going to get a job.
If you look in the book you'll master
the text. You'll get an education.
You'll be able to make a living. But you
dream and you look out the window all
day, you're not going to be able to
support your family this way. Says today
he's 32 and he's a pilot.
So he says he gets paid for looking out
the window all day and much of the
night. That's what he shared.
But what is what what are we what are we
what are we referring here to?
And sometimes it's painful. You know,
you see people
I once met a woman Abalas Chuva and she
had tremendous courage to change her
entire life and and she was mocked
and then she told me and this was
painful she said you know what my
greatest goal is that nobody should know
my background I don't want anybody to
know I'm a bal chuva that's how much I
want to fit in and I told us the exact
opposite your experience will enrich
people's lives what often happens
happens is that people there's so much
pressure that I want to fit in and
become integrated. So my kids should be
able to marry all of the best families.
So that way I try so hard not to stick
out, not to be conspicuous. And people
who maybe had so much color in their
life and so much creativity and
individuality in their life but for some
reason consciously or unconsciously
because of pressure that's conscious or
unconscious or just somewhere in the
water that we drink feel the need to
suppress that or to repress that. I once
went to see somebody for some physical
ailment I was having and here in this in
my
he told me something it was very painful
very painful he said to me that uh he
made a big mistake in his life I said
what was the mistake so he said that 32
years ago he became a baluv and he was
diving in a particular sh and he was the
only one who didn't have a black hat and
in the beginning he was celebrated
because he was like you know the fresh
kid on the block but after a while he
was getting this pressure like new new
new.
So I said, "What was the mistake?" He
said, "The mistake was the day I put on
a black hat." I said, "Why was it a
mistake?" He said, "Cuz for me it wasn't
authentic. I was just copying other
people and trying to fit into other
people." I said, "Okay, so you put on a
black hat. I mean, it's not going to
kill you." He says, "No, but the
atmosphere in my home, my kids felt that
after that everything was inauthentic."
And he told me that they chose to uh
they they they left the path that he
brought them into. So I said, "What do
you think it's all the black hat?" He
says, "It wasn't the black hat. It was
the fact that somehow I came here
because of authenticity. And in the
process, I lost my authenticity. It
became much more about fitting in,
saying the right thing, doing the right
thing so I would be socially accepted
and conform.
It's like I think somebody once said, we
build institutions to facilitate our
greatest dreams and then our dreams
become prisoners to those institutions.
So I create an institution because I
have a dream. But now the institution
defines me rather than I define my
institution.
So it's not anymore the dream doesn't
fuel it. And this is natural because in
life we grow up and we have children and
there are systems and there are
structures and you want to be in those
structures because there's so many
opportunities and blessings. So it's a
very sensitive balance not to become
jaded and not to lose one's passion and
one's life force and one's authenticity
in a hashem.
You see the last source sheet is from
103.
Blessed are his angels.
Those who have tremendous they're
strong. Their worry was full of power.
Doing his word, listening to his word.
What is his point? To do Hashem's word.
It requires a person's full strength,
full creativity. That's what it means.
Is not an act of passivity, of
acquiescence,
of of suppression of a person's soul, of
a person's heart. It's it's showing up
to life with all your flavor, with all
your love, with all your presence, with
all your nama, with all your soul.
Hashem wants us to protect our
our creativity, our ability to create,
our ability to change, our ability to
transform, our ability to revolutionize,
our ability to dream, our ability to
serve as colossal great human beings,
ambassadors of infinite light and love
and hope that needs to be protected.
Initiative, craving, desire, color.
Trump doesn't want you to lose your
color. doesn't want you to lose your
your passion for life, your proactivity,
your expressiveness. I don't need to
sometimes I could feel, you know, that
religion means I should become somewhat
I mean emotionally hunchback
like you're an evashem and evadem means
be like a slave. So a slave means I'm
like hunchback. I'm fetched. I don't
mean fetched necessarily physically.
Maybe that too. I mean fetched
emotionally. It's an approach to
fetchite.
There's a
chapter 2.
My dove is in the cliffs of Iraq, hidden
behind a step. And this describes a
person who's hiding behind Iraq, hiding
in the cliff, you know, peeking out. I'm
afraid to be me.
And the tells the God tells the Jew,
come out of the rock. You don't have to
hide under the rock. You don't have to
hide.
Come out. I want to see your
countenance. I want to hear your voice.
Your voice is pleasant. It's sweet. Your
countenance is beautiful. In other wants
to feel the heartbeat of a person to be
fully present with life. A day is a day
of zaka. It says he came with all of his
days. every day was was saturated with
his with his and Sara's full light, full
energy, full full creativity
to utilize every resource, every talent,
every skill because like the says
nothing is superfluous, nothing is
missing. the skills, the talents, the
resources, the personality, the
circumstances, the life story, the
background, the home, the challenges,
the blessings, the gifts, and even the
difficulties that every person has in
their life are all part of the story,
are all part of the of the realities
that shape us, that help us, that
challenge us, stimulate us to become the
human beings we're capable of becoming.
When it says the Gar says in
Nothing was created in vain. We say in
everything that was created reflects the
glory of Hashem. That includes your
heart. It includes your talents. It
includes your resources. It includes
your soul. It includes your passion.
Now sometimes a person feels I have a
big Yates.
The word Yateser comes from the word
Yitzer. Yateser inclination is connected
to the word yitzer creative. And
sometimes people feel that their
creativity is dangerous. If I'm going to
allow my creativity and my individuality
to blossom, watch out.
It's much better if I get stifled. Maybe
some a person once told me, he says, "I
don't even want to feel what I'm
feeling. It's much safer." But how could
you live without feeling what you're
feeling? Living without feeling what I'm
feeling, I'm a dead man walking.
So yes, sometimes feelings are painful.
That's why some of us shut down our
feelings at a very young age. If I don't
feel, I can deal with much more stuff.
You know why? My computer functions much
better than me. You know that my
computer never gets into a bad mood
unless it gets a virus which is affected
by a human being. Only human beings ruin
computers. My computer never gets into a
bad mood. It never says, "I'm tired
today. We're not working." And if it
does, I throw it out and I buy a new
one.
Either it dies or it's alive. But a
human being is not a computer. We're not
artificial intelligence. If I don't live
with my heart, if I don't live with all
my parts, if I don't live with all of my
emotions, if I feel that I have to
neuter parts of me, I have to castrate
psychologically, emotionally parts of
me, half of my heart has to go into
jail. Half of my experiences I can't
talk about, half of me has to be
suppressed, repressed. Who's showing up
to life? A very very tame, timid,
beautiful, acquiescent, well-behaved
animal,
but one who lost its entire flavor and
texture and uniqueness.
Once said, it says
it's the
of Sunday from 24. Who will go up to the
mountain of God? Who will stand in his
holy place? Somebody who has clean
hands. Clean hands
is a pure heart. So I have to have clean
hands, which means I'm honest in all my
dealings with people. I have a pure
heart. I'm authentic. I have integrity.
I'm not a lawyer. I'm not a deceiver.
But then he says
he did not carry my soul in vain. What
does it mean to carry a soul in vain? So
he has this interesting example. So he
says that there was once two very close
friends. One was made it well one made
it he was wealthy other person was
povertystricken so the wealthy one gave
a huge loan to the poor person so he
should be able to invest and make a
living the poor person was a very honest
person so he took all the money and he
put it in a drawer he didn't touch it a
year later the wealthy guy comes back to
him and says new how did it go you give
me back my loan so he says absolutely
and with pride he opens the drawer and
he takes out the money and tacked
exactly what he gave me gives him back
he says
I gave you the money to do something
with it. I know you're an honest guy,
but I wanted you should invest and make
money. So,
you didn't carry my soul in vain. I gave
you a soul. I gave you a mind. I gave
you a heart. I gave you largeness. I
gave you creativity. I gave you talents.
I gave you resources. Don't just put it
in a drawer and hold on to it and you
won't do anything with it, but it's
going to be safe. That would have stayed
in heaven. The Gomorrah says in many
places
which means when we could mention the
prohibited view or the permissible view
we always try to mention the permissible
view.
Why? So Rashi says because in because to
prohibit something you don't have to be
a big matter. You're allowed to eat it.
No. You allowed to do it on Shabas? No.
You allowed to do it on? No. If you say
no you're always safe. To say yeah you
actually have to know how to learn
right? To say that could just say no.
No, no, no, no, no. Everything is
prohibited. So, in other words, the
power to permit is greater because it
means you're actually a real scholar.
There's also a deeper interpretation and
that is Yiddish has two parts and what
we don't do and what we do. The part
that we don't do is the foundation. It's
called discipline.
But that is not the the novelty of the
soul coming down into this world because
not doing we also had when we were up
there in ganed before we were born.
Staying away from negativity
is critical in life but it's not the
great purpose of the soul coming down
here because in heaven we also abstain
from all evil and all negativity in fact
much more and much better. What's the
uniqueness of the soul coming down? The
activity
the creation the changing something the
positive. So even though we need
abstaining as a foundation for life,
anyone who doesn't know how to abstain
and doesn't know how to say no to
certain cravings can't live and can't
survive is going to get into lot a lot
of stumbling blocks and fail. But the
the power of is because that's the
purpose why the came down. That's where
you didn't carry my soul in vain. you
actually actualized it to the best of
one's ability. Now a person always has
to know when an animal's creativity is
not compromised there are dangers. Yes.
And therefore I have to harness myself.
I have to discipline myself. I have to
haveim I have to have
I have to have red lines that I don't
cross.
But it doesn't mean God wants me to
become a zombie, a robot, devoid of me,
devoid of of my passion because that is
the gift that was given to me in order
to bring to bring light into the world.
And it's not an ego. There's a big
difference between being crushed like he
says and nishb means that I'm not driven
by an ego. I'm a channel for divine
light. I'm not stuck in smuggness or
arrogance or hoardiness.
But that's very different than being
crushed. Than feeling that the great
religious personality is the personality
of a schmata
of somebody who doesn't feel of somebody
who doesn't protect their dignity. Of
somebody who doesn't realize that they
are essentially a derivative of infinite
consciousness with the power with the
power to change the world in a very very
powerful way.
We say in Davening every morning,
Hashem knows our Yates. What does that
mean? It means God is not afraid of yet.
You also don't have to be. People
sometimes get so afraid of the Yates.
Don't be. He created it. He's stronger
than it. He knows it. He understands. We
don't have to be afraid. Imagine if
nobody was afraid of the voices inside
of them, the struggles inside of them.
The moment you're not afraid of any
voice inside of you, everything changes
because you realize this is part of my
journey. It's part of my mission. Put it
in the context of your creator.
He knows everything. He knows my
instincts. He knows my struggles. He
knows my demons. He knows my skeletons.
He knows my ghosts. Even those I'm not
aware yet. I'll find out about them in a
few months, maybe.
Even if it's in my unconscious, he still
knows about it.
So I don't have to be you don't have to
be afraid of I have to know how to deal
with it. On the contrary, when I know
that he knows it and this is part of my
mission. So then I'm not a loser. Part
of this has to do with shame. If people
are going to see me, they're also going
to see the other parts of me if I just
hide. So fine, you won't see anything.
You'll just think I'm a good person. But
when we can transcend that shame and
realize
every challenge, every struggle I'm
dealing with is part of my journey in
life. It's part of my it's part of my
mission in life. I don't have to be I
don't have to be embarrassed.
So the says
love is with because if I kill my I kill
something else. I kill my myer my
creativity. The katskarba once said
something very sharp. He said when a
person breaks a tya
they now have two.
When a person breaks a tya tya is a
craving they now have two. They break it
again they have four. They break it
again they have eight. What does that
mean? The katskyba didn't know that a
person needs to break a tya. There's two
ways of breaking a tya. One is I break a
tya out of with guilt and with shame. I
break it. You know what happens now? Now
I have two instead of one. In other
words, not only does it come back to
haunt me, it's increased. It's
strengthened. And the reason is because
I'm denying a piece of myself. Whenever
I deny a piece of myself, it comes back
usually to bite me. The real concept is
not breaking a ty. The real concept is
understanding that what I'm really
looking for is not the external
facade of what this ty says I want.
There's a void. I'm looking for
something. Even at the core, the is not
evil. It's a coping mechanism. It's
surviving.
Means understanding that inclinations
for horrible, toxic, negative things is
the external part of the story. Don't
break yourself in the process.
Understand your goodness and your
search, your quest for infinity and
oneness. and then see the craving as an
opportunity to learn about myself and
then when I have an opportunity to learn
about myself I don't want to resort to
this superficial component
sometimes and this is very true with
teenagers and it's true with teenage
girls and teenage boys and kids some of
them are very lively
and as they develop as young adults
different things get developed and there
are challenges
and the shame that is associated with
these challenges in so many youth is
debilitating.
I can't tell you how many people they're
now 20, 30, 40, 50 still dealing with
shame of age 16, 13, 14, 15 because of
internal experiences inside or things
that happen outside without any
vocabulary to process it, without any
self-respect, with so much inner guilt
and self-loathing and self-shame and
self-denigration.
And this is where it's so important for
parents to be able to develop as much as
possible a trusting loving vocabulary
language with their children to
understand our creative powers are not
our curses. They're our divine gifts.
And those parts that could be very
challenging are the parts that the says
don't eliminate them. Wouldn't it have
been much better for God to tell the
Jewish people I have a great idea for
every 14year-old?
Why don't you just eliminate all that
evil and you'll be an
At least do it in a dog. Even in a dog,
you're not allowed to do it.
Even in a you're not allowed to do it.
Even in a lion and a cheetah and a
hyena. Who needs hyenas? Tell me. You
really need the laughter of hyenas.
Elephants.
Hyenas.
So you look at yourself. There's a hyena
inside of me. There's a dog inside of
me. There's a behavior inside of me.
Don't be afraid and don't think that the
path of Judaism is destroying it. Why?
Because it's challenging. Yes, may be
challenging. But this challenge is
always coupled with your power, with
your creativity, with your passion. Now,
I have to not break it. I have to help a
person understand what's happening, see
what's happening, learn how to create
boundaries and borders and structures
that will bring out the best in me that
will bring out the best in my will also
be painful.
Help a person. Help a person distinguish
between what is healthy, what is
unhealthy, what is normal, what may be
an addiction, what may be destroying my
life because it has overtaken me and I'm
not a master anymore because of my own
wounds and coping mechanisms so I can
heal. But the process is not
self-loathing and self-destruction. The
process is celebration of all the parts
of myself and seeing where certain parts
completely went out of whack because of
my need to develop coping mechanisms
because of whatever story I was dealing
with or I am dealing with. But the
approach is one of tremendous respect
for the internal dynamics of a person
for the internal emotions of a person.
And therefore, what the is teaching us
in this mitzvah is that Hashem wants you
to be successful.
He's not afraid of big people, of
gigantic souls, of gigantic hearts. God
is infinite. He gave you a soul that's
infinite, not in order to crush it and
turn it into something tiny and small
hiding.
It's the largest of that happens through
the
through through the power of a person to
be to be to be to be to be a giant in
your goodness in your kindness because
it's it's not it's not arrogance it's
godliness that flows through you
someone once said I don't know a poet he
said most people live lives of quiet
desperation here the says don't
surrender to mediocrity we don't need
quiet desperation
I don't need you to be frustrated and
desperate. I was once in your inul and
uh Rabbi Adinstein you know Rabbi Evan
he was celebrating his birthday. So by
the somebody came over to him
I still remember was Rabbi Lipker from
the Shul in Bal Harbor. He came over to
Rabbi Stein and he asked him what are
your regrets on your birthday?
It's an interesting question. So he
said, 'I have made a lot of mistakes in
my life, but should I tell you my
biggest mistakes? My biggest mistakes
were things I did not try to do because
I was afraid I'm going to make a
mistake.
That was my biggest mistake. It was such
a p I was I was quite young at the time.
I don't think I was married. It was such
a lesson in life. Somebody once told his
son, "Son, I'm not afraid if you shoot
the basketball high and you miss. I'm
afraid if you lower the hoop so that you
never miss. I'm not afraid. It's a it's
a tall hoop and you're going to try and
you're going to miss and miss and miss,
but you're aiming high. I'm much afraid
you're afraid to aim high. So, you lower
the hoop and you'll never miss another
shot again. I'm never going to make a
mistake again. Everybody will always
say, "Ah,
[Laughter]
somebody who never makes any waves. I
don't go into the ocean. I don't want to
make I don't want to make waves."
It's not about being sensational or make
waves lame making waves so I could make
my mother, you know, like what's next
with this girl, right? We're not talking
about that. That's another form of, you
know, trying to get attention because I
don't like myself. We're talking about a
life where somebody is truly in touch
with the mission with the that Hashem
has given every single soul to light up
the world to light up themselves light
up their home their environment in the
world with the unique Hashem with the
unique light
says I don't want to carry my soul in
vain and every moment is part of me
carrying my soul
that's why we say inimm
Bring to Hashem Bim means the sons, the
children of the strong. Bring to Hashem
glory, strength, confidence. Why? Why
not bring weakness and mediocrities?
Because divinity requires courage and
strength. It requires openness. It
requires the ability to be able to think
out of the box, to be able to be open to
infinity. So I want to be able to have a
vessel to experience this.
There was once somebody said, his name
was Valen. He said, "There's two types
of Jews, two types of people." He says,
"You ever saw a portrait?" I mean, you
probably have in your home, in your
dining room, a living room, a salon, a
beautiful painting, a beautiful a
beautiful portrait.
And uh Mosha said, "It's it's it's it's
beautiful and it's perfect." Whether
it's a person smiling, whether it's a
painting or a picture of a great human
being, maybe a family, it's a it's a
beautiful beautiful picture or painting
that decorates your dining room or
living room. And the person in the
painting or the picture is always
smiling, always. They're always in a
good mood. And the colors are right
because it's a really good painting. And
there's the right contrast between the
sun and the shadows and the lights and
the colors and everything. Says the only
problem is it's not alive. A human being
has ups and downs. The colors are not
always perfect. A elect I'm alive. So
sometimes you have a person you know
every day is unpredictable. Everything
is predictable. The only problem is I'm
dead.
When you have a living person
there are fluctuations. There are ups.
There are downs. But that's what it
means. That's what it means. A mench
leapt. The person is alive. There's a
beating, pulsating heart. And when you
feel alive, there's no replacement for
that. There's no replacement for
somebody who's moving around physically
and emotionally and spiritually. Learn
presence, full presence, presence of of
soul, presence of mind, presence of
heart, presence of all the parts of
myself that show up to life, the good
and also the challenging. So now let's
come back to the story. You still
remember the story?
Okay.
Yeah.
Four people going to an orchard. They
see the world in a way that nobody sees
it anymore. As Tyra says, it doesn't
mean they physically went up somewhere.
It's a state of mind. It's a state of
consciousness.
It's when people go on a very very
serious journey into different layers of
consciousness.
[Laughter]
how they did it.
You want to know if what's if this has
if this is psychedelic?
They did it how they knew how to do it.
They knew how to do it probably through
uh meditation
and their souls were generally antennas
to higher places.
Um and they knew how to probably open
their brain to different layers of
reality
and they went into the pard
was the shame. They used God's name
which is also a technique of tuning into
deeper divine energy.
Benazi couldn't come back anymore. Once
he saw that reality, there was no way of
coming back like no. You know when the
electricity is flowing through a wire
and the voltage is too intense. Ever
happened to you and your computer or
tape recorder just died? Because the
electricity was too intense. Today they
make adapters to be able to help out
with that. But when you went to another
country, you put in the wrong plug into
the wrong thing. Kaput. You were done.
You were finished. Benazi the
electricity was so intense the body
couldn't contain it anymore either he
didn't want to come back or he couldn't
come back it's what we spoke before
purim about remember when slaughtered
the idea here is he saw a higher reality
with such clarity that coming back to
this world was simply not a possibility
for him mace Alisha went to the other
extreme
in order to come back he completely
disconnected this world from anything
else
which means he plucked all the plants
out of the garden. Everything is
connected. We're all connected
organically. The plug is always inside.
We couldn't live without it. We're fish
and water. We just don't see the water.
We're all connected. Alicia Navuya
decided for him to live in peace. That
was his way of coping.
Ribby was the one who integrated things.
He came back in peace. Ben was stuck in
the middle. He came back. He was alive.
But as it says Nivea, something was
affected in him. Something was affected.
So the mayo says something very
profound. People saw Ben Za. They saw
Alicia.
They saw Benazi. Benazi obviously passed
away. They saw a they sen. And they
wanted to understand where Ben Za what
happened to Ben Z. So the says all these
questions were not just questions. Are
you allowed to castrate a dog? Aud
married Absula. Married Absula. It's not
well they didn't have anything better to
do than to make him a sugar after this
journey.
So you could say well it's questions and
I understand it's questions in and
they're important but why here right
now? He says these were questions to try
to identify the issue.
They asked him are you allowed to neuter
a dog. They thought maybe what happened
to Ben Z was he went so up he went so
high he lost his respect for the
structure of this world. And this is
fascinating because when people go on
very very deep spiritual journeys, they
see that everything could be such a
joke, meaning
meaningless and almost like a mockery.
It's like you know how we take emotions
seriously and you said this and I said
this and he said this and she did this
and this happened by the shabraas and
then suddenly I realized that maybe you
know 50 years all of my emotional
experiences were based on a thought that
frankly was just an immature
three-year-old thought divorced from
reality and based on that thought I
developed this whole philosophy and all
my emotional reactions in my marriage
are based on this little inconsequential
thought that was developed because of
of of yeah because maybe of some pain I
experienced and I didn't know how to
process and because of something
pathetic and maybe been very serious but
basically I see that I was like I'm like
literally imagine I'm I go into a bubble
and I'm living in my bubble and that
bubble is my entire reality. It's
literally my entire all my relationships
are based on that bubble. The day you
realize that it's like omg not oh my
Google like omg like wow. So like you
come back and like so now you want me to
take a dog seriously? So they asked him,
"Are you allowed to neuter a dog?" Which
is basically like, "So what? Now we're
going to take the dog's needs and
passion seriously?" And they use the dog
because the dog is not a kosher animal.
And the dog is kev. Kev is koy. Kev, why
is why is the dog called man's best
friend? It says in Kabala, Kev is ko,
full of heart, full of emotion. So I'm
supposed to take that seriously. And the
procreative reproductive ability. Maybe
Benzy says, "Yeah, who cares?" Ben
Zimmer said, "No, you're not allowed to
neuter even a dog." Wow. So, even the
life of a dog, the personality of a dog,
the emotions of a dog, which are for
which are in the dog world, dog lovers
are going to love this class.
It's like, no, don't don't mess.
or even siruse ka. We're not talking
about siruse castrating audi a giant a
giant person. We're talking about a kev
the little puppy here hanging out
barking a whole night making all the
neighbors masha.
Well, they don't bark a whole night
whatever the beginning of the night. No.
So they realize Ben Za did not lose
that. Ben Za did not lose the respect
for the integrity of our world and our
relationships and our emotions.
Wow, that's amazing. So now they go to
the opposite.
They thought maybe it's the opposite.
Maybe Ben Za sees everything in magic
colors. Maybe he became so aloof and so
sublime. He sees things with an idealism
that is incredibly lofty. So it's not
that he disregards the world as bl as
schmata, as gornish, as bupkas, as
nothing, but maybe he elevated it to a
place of paradise. Maybe he doesn't see
earth anymore. Or you know how sometimes
you could have a vision and see things
that other people don't see, right?
Different levels, you know, when they
put on those uh glasses that you see
different layers
and it's like wow spiritually as well.
And this is where they asked him, you
know, and this is this is very this is
very deep and spiritual. They asked him
about a
marrying a kang. Now the kangda is
considered the holiest Jew on earth. So
it's a Jew who's experiencing things in
holiness and he marries a woman who is
this is a fresh marriage. She wasn't
married before. What's wrong with
marrying a woman who was married before?
It's not a in her right does not want to
marry an almon and there's what's the
it's not about the fault of a widow.
It's the idea of the everything is fresh
everything is new. Everything is is
there's no previous whenever there's a
second marriage, right? There's always
one has to deal with a past. We all have
to deal with a past. But the kudu
represents that newness. And then
suddenly he realizes this woman is
carrying a baby.
So what did they tell Benz Zima? Maybe
he has to divorce her even though she
says she's innocent. She says this baby
did not did not come because I was with
somebody else. So they said maybe she's
lying. How could she be lying? The coal
sees that nothing happened. She's
Absoolah. And what do we say? Okay, they
told Ben Za, maybe some people know how
to have relations without blood.
That's what happened. So really, she's
lying. I there's no blood. The himman
wasn't split because some people know
how to do that. In other words, they can
go to this place in reality without
getting bloody. Not just physically,
configuratively. Ben says
that's not normal. That's not how people
live. There's blood. There's blood.
That's why there's all the connected to
this. What happened was artificial
insemination. In other words, this girl
is trustworthy. She was never married
before. What is he really saying? They
suggested maybe there could be the
concept of relations and procreation
without blood.
What does it mean without blood? Not
only without getting bloody physically,
also emotionally.
Blood represents, you know, life pass.
I'm not going to elaborate on this in
this room. It's going to be a little
ridiculous.
But the point is maybe there's this
concept of transcendence of purity. Even
relations can happen that way. In other
words, they thought maybe benzo
looks at the world in a very magical
pristine idealistic way. Yeah, we could
be in this world but we don't need the
regular. We don't have the regular
limitations and cycles that God created
and most there could be a lot of things
happening including children without
having being inshed with all the
complexities of the monthly patterns
that God created which by definition
create dam create blood and create tum
etc. But Z said no we do not operate on
that level. This kayen is looking at
somebody who was pregnant and yet she's
absula. It means that it happened in a
spa. It happened in anata. So suddenly
they see here
he wasn't saying you could neuter a dog.
In other words, he was not dismissing
the dog and the structure of creation.
He was also not saying that and you know
they're living in a miraculous way. And
of course there's also a symbolism of
something else. And what is it? Ben
Zakiva lived in the times of
the birth of Christianity. And what's
the birth of Christianity? Mayh
you was thinking about that.
Of course, right?
Exactly. The child. Oh, God is the
father. What do you mean? There's a
woman there. Oh, we don't need men.
Right.
We don't need that. It doesn't happen
that way. People can be heavenly. This
woman was heavenly. She was impregnated
by the Lord. And we all know the results
of that one.
In fact, in parenthesis, I'm going to
add Mosha Feinstein once said, Mosha
Feinstein said he was over in Luban in
Luban in Russia
and there was a Jew leader in the
community. He called him. He was very
sick. He got a disease in his tongue
and he told Raosha had the story. It's
in the introduction to Igoras Marsha
volume 8
and his his grandson uh Rabbi Tendler
told me heard this from his himself.
I went when Dr. Tendler Rabbi Mosha
Tendler passed away son-in-law I went to
so his son Rabbi Tendler's son told me
that he heard from Mosha himself the
story but it's printed in the
introduction to his eth volume. So he
went to visit this person in Luban and
the person said that Friday night at the
meal it was paras vira and he was
speaking about the daughters of loit in
a very derogatory way he said who does
such a thing you make your father drunk
in order to be with your father
such a level of incest he was dismissing
them
that's what he said at the meal at night
he had a dream he tells the marsha two
women dressed dressed in white
almost completely covered. Come to see
him and they introduce themselves.
They're the daughters of Lit.
Okay, this is the 1920s in Luban, not so
long ago. 1920s, early 30s. And they say
to him, you spoke very negatively about
us, but you should know that it's not so
simple.
You know that Messiah is coming from us,
right? Cuz Moy, the first baby was Moy,
right? And Moy is the grandfather of
Roose and Roose is the great grandmother
of David Malik is of Mashia. Why do you
think that?
And the second son was Amis
comes from the second one. Why? Why do
you think Mashiah comes from us? These
horrible promiscuous uh law lawless
women.
So they said, "We knew that one day
there's going to be a religion that's
going to claim
that a woman could be pregnant, not from
a male
and it's going to be a Jew who's going
to start it." So we did this and we had
the story publicized in Tyra. We could
have also walked around and say God
impregnated us. We could have also said
that. We could have said God impregnated
us. We said no, it was light.
Until today, we're being denigrated by
people like you. Every year they read
our story and they're like weird, right?
Why? So that we that the real M we
shouldn't mistake the real Msiach with
the false Mashiach.
It even says from my father. Really? You
have no better name at the bris.
is not a good name for you. Yankl is
nishgit. David is nishgit.
Everybody has to know who the son is.
Great.
So that nobody should mistake the false
Messiah as a real Mashiach. And that's
why the real Msiah is going to come from
us.
The person passed away after Mosha
shared the story. So now we come back to
Ben Za. Benzo says, "No, no, no, no. I
didn't go on a trip and start thinking
that everybody's living in heaven.
And people can do these things and
become pregnant and there's no blood.
Yeah, there are rear rear real unique
situations. But that's not what happened
here. And therefore the kind doesn't
have to divorce her. So suddenly they
see Ben Za did not escape the world and
dismiss it as a place of
meaninglessness. He also didn't
romanticize life and suddenly everything
is supernatural and everything is
sacred. Everybody is holy. So they don't
know what's the mistake of ben za what
happened. So now he goes to the last
story. Rabi Yeshua said why didn't you
stand up for me? Where you going? Where
you heading? He says I'm looking at the
waters the higher water the lower water
and I see there's only three fingers
between them and says he's still
outside.
What does this mean? When they were
going into the orchard gave them prep.
You remember what was the prep? Don't
say water. Water. Don't say water.
water. What did mean don't say water?
Water water. What? What's the bad? What
if they say water? Water water. Who
cares?
So the on the bal say something
incredible. What's water water? The
second day of creation, the water was
split. There's higher water and there's
lower water said don't say.
Even though the Torah says there's
water, water, higher water, lower water.
If you're going to go into the paradise,
the biggest mistake is going to be to
say twice.
Why?
What's higher water? What's low water?
May in cabalistic tradition represents
desire.
It represents the orgasmic flow of
desire. That's what may is in Kabala.
There's something called Mayan and
Mayan. May is masculine flow. Mayan is
feminine flow. And in Kabala uses these
words constantly. And if you don't
understand these code languages, it
seems a little strange. But it's not
because everything physically comes from
the spiritual. There's nothing in the
physical world that's not rooted in the
spiritual. That's why water also
represents wisdom. The sea is connected
to also water produces pleasure. We all
know when you go to water, you go to an
ocean. What's the feeling most people
have? There's something calm, relaxing.
We don't even know why. leak in the
ceiling doesn't produce that pleasure.
Even though there's a lot of water, I've
had many leaks and I didn't feel calm.
But when you go to to an ocean, right,
you go to the beach or you even go to a
beautiful lake or a river, you all know
the feeling. There's something sensual,
something internal like spiritual,
emotional, there's a sense of
relaxation. It's called there's a sense
of pleasure and
says,
the water is the ingredient that
produces everything that grows, right?
All cheesecake and bopkick ultimately
needs water to live.
I know that's not your definition of
tyog, but for some of us preparing for
shv um it's very important.
So mayim is associated with pleasure of
intimacy with pleasure of life.
On Sunday of creation there was only one
water. On Monday God split the water
which means essentially there's only one
source of pleasure in life, one source
of tenuk. There can't be any other
source of tinug
is connection with the source of all
pleasure. The source of all pleasure is
Hashem.
Why is there pleasure in the world?
Where how do you have pleasure? How do I
have pleasure? Where is there love in
the world? A mindless cell that evolved
over 26 billion years. That's the new
age of the universe. It changed in the
last few months. You know that. No, I'm
serious. It was 15.3 billion years. A
few weeks ago, Newsweek said it's 26
billion years. Okay.
A mindless cell evolving after 20
billion years doesn't suddenly say,
"Wow, I'm in love." Love comes from a
source that's loving. All the pleasure
and love that we experience. Even the
pain we experience, behind all pain is
love. Think about any pain you have in
life. Pain with your child, pain with
your spouse, pain with yourself, pain
with with your brothers and sisters in
Israel. Behind the pain, there's love.
That's why there's pain. So all that is
coming from one source, the source of
all love and pleasure. On Monday, Hashem
splits the water. There's a higher water
and lower water. What does that mean?
There's two types of pleasure.
There's pleasure that comes from
attachment with the source and there's
pleasure that comes as a distraction
because I'm disconnected from the
source.
You understand? It's a split. There's
the higher pleasure and that's when I'm
in touch with this truth of reality and
my only bliss in the world is dus
connection with truth and authenticity.
My relationship with another person is a
real relationship because it's rooted in
our divinity and our godliness. But then
I may be distracted. I may be feeling
pain and I don't know how to access
that. So now I look for new forms of
pleasure. So for one person it may be
binging. For another person it may be
alcohol. For another person it may be
addiction to a phone. For another
person, it may be promiscuous websites.
For another person, it may be some other
form of craving or inclination or
addiction or distraction. It may even be
anger. That's a form of numbing my pain
or some fake pleasure or some fake
relationship. Whatever it is, it's
all those pleasures that we have in life
and they're not rooted in our oneness
with Hashem. So, if I'm having a juicy
conversation and it's all gossip, I'm
having pleasure, right? We're around the
table, we're having this great
conversation about some guy or some
woman, it's getting better and better
and better and better and better and
better and better. But if you pause and
you breathe and you ask your soul, how
much pleasure do you really have right
now? You'll know immediately this is
just a distraction. No real pleasure
comes from detachment from the source.
It can't. It's always fake. It's like a
counterfeit dollar. It's like
counterfeit money. Counterfeit money is
not money. It looks like money. It
sometimes smells like money until you're
caught. Maybe they're going to use it as
money, but at some point it's just not.
It's counterfeit. And that's why all
these pleasures are short-lived. The
pleasure I get from food or from alcohol
or from gambling or from any other
craving. Tomorrow I'm going to need
more. And then I'm going to need more.
I'm going to need more. I'm going to
need more. Why? Because it's like
pouring water into a hole that has a
that has into a cup that has a hole.
It's not going to get filled. You need
tomorrow more and more and more and
more. You're going to get more
frustrated because you'll only see I
just realized you're going to only
you're going to see that you need more.
Rabaka said to
don't say water water. When you're going
to go up to the paris the only way
you'll survive is if you understand that
ultimately there's a everything is one.
The way we experience it here is that
there's a split. That's the split we
need to work through. That's the split.
The whole tur came to work through that
split. But essentially
could come out in peace because he came
back to a world where he understood that
the split between the waters is a matter
of perception allowing for the human
being to reveal the truth with his or
her own initiative.
Ben Za was affected in the mindset. So
they said, "Oh, maybe you don't believe
in the world. It's nothing." thing. No,
he says you're not allowed to cast stray
dogs. Oh, maybe you think we're heavenly
and magical. There's no blood. He says
no. What's the issue? The issue is that
there's still three fingers between the
waters. So Yeshua said Za is still
outside. He's
why is he? He's outside. He's not
touching the ultimate truth of the
fusion between the waters. Which this
explains what benzy himself was talking
about the real concept of the dog
because if we see the world as mayim may
then I ultimately have to split myself
into two. I have higher water and lower
water. We all do. So we have to create a
split and choose. Do I choose between my
higher water or my lower water? Some of
us go this way. Some of us go that way.
Ribaka says no.
Novado,
we don't split between the waters. The
split of the water was a preparation for
third day for day three which is the
third millennium mat and ty where
there's going to be dry land and human
creativity will emerge to be able to
bring back the maya to be able to bring
back the may to be able to bring back
that's why mayam
on on a from a from a chemistry point of
view
right is H2
O two atoms of
hydrogen and one atom of oxygen.
And that's why it's me. Y me are the
atoms of hydrogen. Y is the atom of
oxygen. That's why it's two mems because
it's H2O. So there's two MEMS and one Y.
The chemistry in in Hebrew, the words,
the letters of every name are the
channels for the chemistry, for the
spiritual chemistry and therefore the
physical chemistry.
So the whole idea of may is to bring
together these atoms of hydrogen and
oxygen and two of them of hydrogen and
when I say mayim then I need to castrate
a part of me because there's a split. So
either I embrace the higher or I embrace
the lower or I live in this incessant
war and battle between the two parts of
me. comes and says you want to see the
partis and come back it's
the physical and the spiritual are
really one. Heaven and earth are one.
Soul and body are one. Love is all
pervasive. Truth is all pervasive. Even
the lowest parts in me and desires that
seem grotesque maybe or immodest or
promiscuous or immoral.
And who doesn't struggle with stuff?
Even there alum
realize I need to dig deeper. I need to
understand this is part of my mission.
It's an opportunity for awareness. It's
an opportunity for growth. I have to
understand what created it. I don't want
to break my ta into two. I want to
sublimate my Maya. I want to be able to
see the soul in the lower water. When
you see the soul in the lower water, it
doesn't mean I don't have discipline. I
need to have discipline. I need to be
able to say no. But when I say no, it's
not because there's a shame in my no.
It's a no that allows me, it gives me
the freedom and the the the catalyst to
be able to be in a mental space that I
can elevate my lower water rather than
fall prey to my lower water and
ultimately create full oneness. Have a
beautiful week.