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Everything you’ve ever wanted to know.
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Rabbi Yom Tov journeys through the subjects of conquering fear and aligning your life with truth. 
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by the Young Turks. And without the
Glazer, this running joke.
And also hit the notifications so you
can check out all these videos that I'll
be putting out cuz
because of popular demand, um just tired
of people asking me when you're going to
start again. So, here we are. Um today
we're going to talk a little bit about
um fears.
And what I mean by fears is
uh the things that stop you.
You know, some people you know, they
just get stopped around certain things.
Uh for example,
um the fear of rejection, being stopped
around
you know, worrying about what people
think of you.
And uh and then there's uh failure,
where you're stopped professionally, you
know, because or at least maybe in
school if you're younger.
Um where you're just you just don't want
to fail. And so, you're you're stopped
there and
stuck there. And and then there's the
fear of being controlled or overwhelmed
by things. Um controlled by others or
overwhelmed by, you know, events.
Um
and maybe even an event you need to be
throwing like a wedding or something can
make you feel totally out of control.
And now all of a sudden you're stuck
there again.
And um
and then there's the
the
fourth one is just the overall unknown
of the world. I mean, you don't know
what's coming. You don't know what's
next.
And uh maybe that's got you
frightened. And
and then there's the fear of like pain
and suffering and stuff like that.
Which uh also is a
big fear. And
and I'm sure there's more fears, but I
can generally put them all under this
category. There's the um
Oh, okay. So, so here's the story. I was
with this guy over here. Actually, maybe
you guys should switch seats for a sec
so he's in front of the camera more. But
um just for the
I'll do this pretty quickly. Anyway, but
I I'm with this guy across from me.
And
we're on our way to wedding in Yiddish
it's called the shvitz, the sauna,
which also has a ritual bath. And this
is Friday, so we first go to the sauna.
And everyone's paired up in there and
they're smack smacking each other with
these
leaves and uh or
uh these like kind of loofah sponge
things and these like brooms and
and um
Anyway, but by the time we went from my
house to the place, he had already
brought up three things that he's afraid
of.
And it all started with him telling me
that he doesn't need the glasses he's
using cuz they're a zero prescription.
And I'm like,
"By the way, they're zero prescription
glasses and you said that
uh
I think I don't remember where your
answer was, but it was something about
the way people will see you like people
will probably hold of him or uh more
respect, better looks, I don't know
what.
Anyway, so
he says he's listening to his child cuz
when he was 10 years old, whatever.
And
uh and I said, "Take those glasses off."
Immediately, that's not called listening
to your child. That's called listening
to
your pain.
And that that painful place that's in a
10-year-old's head. That's not your
child. Your child listening to your
child is listening to your 2-year-old
who was perfect and and beautiful and
unbelievable and full of energy and full
of health and love and expression. And
that's listening to your child. Get
those glasses off. Anyway, by the time
we got to the to the shvitz. Now, by the
way, this is the hottest sauna, the
hottest shvitz.
You know what? The word shvitz also in
Yiddish means to sweat.
So, it's the hottest
sauna in the world. You know, saunas
have levels you can sit on, so this one
has three levels, one, two, three. No
one's above the first level.
No one's above there. Although, we get I
went up there for at least a little bit,
but you'll see everyone's at the bottom
because it's that hot. I mean, we're
talking so it this place is so illegal
from any Western standards.
But I've been going there for over 30
years and
I know those guys like my own smell.
And we um anyway, but when we get in
there, so I'm with a couple students and
each one comes in and they're like,
"Whoa, it's hot." And and then
and then
I realize not everyone's in there. I
said, "Where is so-and-so?" And they
said, "Oh, he ran back out."
Well, it was the guy who had already
revealed to us three other fears. But
now suddenly he's faced with the heat.
And I run out of the sauna.
He's right outside the door. I grab his
arm. I
yank him. He's like, "No, this could be
dangerous. And and like this I don't
know if this is good for me." And and I
just
I hauled him through the first room. I
hauled him into the second room. So, now
he's really inside like there's there's
no air.
And
put him down, you know, on the lower
level there. And and you know, he
but he he started to relax and be there.
And I took care of each guy, each of
those students I brought. I gave them
like a good good smack down with the
the soapy broom and uh
each one got a massage. I hope that was
good for you. It relaxed your shoulders.
You
Anyway,
um
later we're getting into a refrigerated
pool, a ritual bath
um called a mikvah in Hebrew. We bring
him into the refrigerated pool.
And it's freezing. So, he's trying to
keep every bit of as he's going in, he's
trying to keep as much of his body out.
He's not breathing. And he's like, "Oh,
man, like this could be dangerous." And
and now he's finally at the lowest
level, which should have probably
covered his chest, which is quite large
cuz he goes to gym. And he he but he's
like trying to keep his chest above the
water cuz cuz he didn't want it touching
his nipples or something. And I mean,
it's cold water.
And of course I grabbed him again and
just like,
"Get in, you know." Pull him in. And
and now we're going under the water and
he plugs his nose
cuz
and I'm like,
"Don't plug your nose. What are you Are
you planning on breathing in the water?
Like you're Why would you breathe in the
water?" He's like, "I almost drowned
when I was older."
Fourth grade. 10. Nine. Yeah, almost
drowned when I was 10 years old.
Okay.
Um
Uh what does that have to do with now in
2024? Like you're into the mikvah and
you you also you want water surrounding
your whole body. You don't want blocking
the water cuz then the mikvah the ritual
bath doesn't work. You can't block part
of your skin. It has to surround you
fully enveloped like a in an amniotic
sac, born again.
And
uh anyway, so
so we did that, but the whole thing was
was he was feeling guilty
from from
something that had happened on Friday
and didn't believe the mikvah would even
work.
You understand that he he couldn't be
purified from the guilt he was feeling,
the shame he had. And so, here we are
again.
Is that another fear? That he's he's
he's damned or something. He's he's
finished. He's
and there's no way out.
And he's like, "Oh my gosh. Like how
many fears have we gone through now?"
All in this one guy. And meanwhile, all
the other students are in the mikvah and
all the all the native Jerusalemites.
It's a very native Jerusalem place. No
one comes there if you're not native.
And one of the guys, one of our
Yerushalmi guy, never even seen this guy
before, is already splashing him with
the cold water. He's He just sensed him.
They're very instinctual, Yerushalmis.
People who are 250 years in Jerusalem,
they missed World War I, they missed
World War II, they missed the whole
black hat movement, they missed They're
like a time capsule of Jewish life in
the shtetls
until the enlightenment, you know, until
all hell broke loose and you're They
missed the industrial revolution. They
missed it all.
And
and they missed the Holocaust. And
they just They know not They These are
the most
pious, holy Jews you've ever met and
they have no clue what all these black
hats are all about.
Anyway, the um
long story short is
um
we get him under the water
without plugging his nose. And no, he
did not breathe in the water, which is
obviously he's not going to breathe in
the water. And except it wasn't over cuz
I was still going to bring him into that
pool next door, which is 115°.
Now, the legal limit of a jacuzzi and
also legal limit that a jacuzzi is made
to be able to go. I mean, if you buy a
hot tub with a digital thing on the edge
of the hot tub, you can't can't I don't
know, maybe you can jerry-rig it. I
would only buy one you can jerry-rig.
But um you have to be able to rig it
that you can make it higher because my
mikvah in my neighborhood is is every
day it's 113°.
And this one's about 115°.
And the which is like
really hot. I mean, I don't think
there's probably a person watching this
video that's ever been in 115° water.
You have to go to the cold because the
cold tightens your pores, pulls in your
blood. Your blood's pulling in to keep
you warm. And then you quickly go into
the hot
so that, you know, while you get into
that hot water, it's not originally
burning you that badly until you're
already in. Once you're in, then your
pores open and you're just like
meltdown.
And I mean, going into the Sabbath with
this,
going into Shabbos with this before is
like
you have set yourself up for success
in how your prayers are going to come
out this year. You know, you're just
like
in a peaceful state and ready for the
peace of Shabbat and all the expression
of prayer that comes from a person who
has
this added soul that Shabbat brings
every week,
which by the way is kind of a miracle
if you think about it.
The first time I heard someone say that
the Sabbath gives you an added soul,
meaning you've got
you're you're always somewhat I don't
know if you call it 50/50 but probably a
lot of people aren't 50/50 but let's
just say you're 50/50 soul voice do the
right thing do the right thing be good
be good be good and body voice is like
do what you want to do and don't worry
about being good and that if you feel
like it do it. No, why do I feel like it
if I shouldn't do it? So, that's the
body voice. But what happens every
Shabbat is you get this extra soul.
And if you hear that the first time
you'd be like that's cute very poetic
you know who made that up.
But in fact it comes out in Jewish law.
For example,
in Jewish law you have to tithe your
vegetables you have to tithe your
produce meaning you don't just take it
from the fields and bring it into your
house and then start eating.
You have to separate a certain I don't
know certain amount for the Kohanim
certain amount for the Levites certain
amount for the poor.
And then it's your fruit. If you haven't
separated it that stuff is kryptonite.
You're Superman it's kryptonite it will
weaken you. It will mess up your
spiritual
uh cuz situation. It's literally
like it's gone from
produce to poison. It's spiritual poison
still produce but it's spiritual poison
and it'll mess you up.
And um
which is why someone shouldn't live in
Israel unless they're ready to keep
those laws.
You understand? You don't you don't just
come to Israel and start start uh
ignoring these things cuz if you're not
ready to do that live in New York. Go to
New York and eat whatever you want. It's
not the holy land. The holy land comes
with a lot of responsibility. And
who knows if the reason that we're in
the position we are today in 2024 and
this war and
you know our claim to the land and our
army and our might.
Who knows if we're not in this position
only because
of the desecration of the land.
You also have the sabbatical years you
have to rest the entire land of Israel
every seventh year.
You know what the Torah says
that if you don't
you've hit the digestive system of the
land. It's the only land in the world
with a digestive system and it will spit
you out.
The land will vomit.
It will vomit the Jews out of here if
you don't keep my my land rules. You'll
be vomited out. You know why? Cuz then
the land will rest every seventh year.
Why? Cuz there ain't nobody here to rest
it. It's going to rest without you.
It's either going to rest with you or
it's going to rest without you.
And yet our country still completely
ignores except for obviously the black
hat attitude community our country
completely ignores the sabbatical years
and as well as
much of the land much of the inhabitants
of the land are ignoring the produce
tithes meaning the parts that must be
separated.
And
and so
but you ready for this?
Ready for this? If you're in doubt
whether your host has separated the
stuff or not you're not allowed to do it
on Shabbos cuz there's that on the
Sabbath you don't fix anything.
Meaning whatever you cooked for Shabbos
that's what you eat on Shabbos. Whatever
lights were put on that's the lights
that will be on. Whatever lights were
off well good luck you're eating in the
dark if
if the you know if all
if all you had was if you forgot to turn
on your dining room light.
There's no
there's no manipulating matter. Why?
Because God manipulated reality and
created the world on six days and seven
days he stops manipulating.
So the Jewish people who are who are his
partners in creation because the world
couldn't figure things out in the first
2400 years. So he created this partner
in creation called the Jews
and and we we have to also not
manipulate matter. And there and taking
produce that is absolutely forbidden.
And and taking away and and separating
the tithes for the Kohanim and the
Levite and the
and the poor
is manipulating matter. You're taking
something forbidden and you're making it
now permitted to be eaten. You can't do
that on Shabbos.
So what do you do when you eat in the
home of an ignoramus?
You're at a meal and your host is an
ignoramus
and he serves up some food you know and
you're eating and you're there and
obviously if it's sabbatical seventh
year stuff you ain't eating nothing. But
if it's a regular year and the produce
might not have been separated you can
actually on your plate take a little bit
of this a little bit of that separated
off say the you know who this is
separated for
wrap it up in a little napkin and put it
in your pocket or leave it in your bag
and
just get rid of it. But you can't do
that on Sabbath when most people have
their guests.
So what are you supposed to do?
Well the answer is is that well
obviously if you have an ignoramus
hosting you your first thing you do is
you ask him did you tithe the produce?
If he says yes on weekday when he's not
looking you do it again.
Why? Because anyone who's that ignorant
of Jewish law meaning anyone who would
not take his time to figure out how to
do things right
probably wouldn't mind lying to his
guest cuz he shouldn't see himself as
lower in the eyes of his guest or
anything you know. Of course I tithed my
produce you know. Meanwhile if you're
the kind of guy who anyway I know is not
that careful with things well you're
probably not that careful with telling
the truth especially when your ego's on
the line. So
you know so maybe you're going to lie.
But Shabbat comes
and he tells you of course I tithed my
produce.
Guess what? Eat. You get to eat.
Why do you get to eat?
Why during the weekdays that produce is
inedible?
Cuz he might lie about it.
And somehow in Shabbos it becomes
edible.
So the answer is and that was a very
long way of explaining it but he might
as well have an extra soul.
Yeah he got an extra soul nobody's going
to lie with a little extra soul in them.
You know if you call it 50/50 well on
Shabbos it's not 50.
And so if he says he tithed his produce
he tithed his produce
period.
Although there might be another answer
for that.
And the other answer for that is that
you have a mitzvah to honor the Shabbos
and how do you honor the Shabbos well
with your tastiest the tastiest things
God created to give thanks to God and
enjoy those tastiest things but you
wouldn't be able to taste it. So you
can't fulfill that.
Cuz you wouldn't be able to eat it.
So couldn't be that on the doubt cuz
remember it could be did I don't know if
he's lying or not.
Could it be on the doubt so now I have a
doubt about that but I have a definite
Shabbos
that I got to honor the Shabbos with
taste of this food. Then I take that
doubt let's call it a 50/50 doubt and
the 100% that I got to enjoy the Shabbos
food.
I don't believe that's what I'm saying
right now is true.
I never saw that in the side.
So I don't know if that's true. I really
think that
what our sages say and our sages say
that he wouldn't lie on Shabbos.
But the reason why I'm saying that
possibility is because of another weird
law you ready for this?
What if you what do you do if you show
up Saturday night to go
you know collect something you left
behind you like let's say you forgot
your tallis there on Shabbos your prayer
shawl
at the Shabbos meal that day and you
come back Shabbos
Saturday night after the Sabbath
and he offers you leftovers.
Can you eat the leftovers you got to
separate?
Answer
you have to separate. Well I'll
separate.
What about the extra soul?
What about the extra soul that says he
wouldn't lie and it is kosherly
made and kosher.
Any terumah seen?
You got it?
Yeah what do you got? I'm saying like we
used to though that has to be that maybe
saying that because you have the law on
Shabbos something. That's why I came to
that conclusion.
So that's why I came to the what the
sages did not say is that you have a
50/50 whether he's lying but you have to
enjoy the Shabbos
with with the delicacies from God. And
so and which causes you to give thanks.
But again I you can put that in the
waste paper basket because I made that
up and
and I never make anything up unless I'm
going to tell you.
You understand? Nothing you should you
shouldn't know especially if you've been
my students for years.
Um I don't make anything up.
Okay?
And what is my job? My job is to
transmit.
I transmit.
And if I make something up I always tell
you.
I always tell you.
And and I make stuff up but I tell you I
made that up.
But I if I did not tell you I made it up
I did not make it up. And this is
something that I've learned
over my years sitting at the dust of the
feet of people that if you saw them
you would
probably fall on your face
and start sobbing.
And you would spontaneously combust
in this in these people's presence.
And
I can't believe I was ever so close to
people like this.
I never ever felt for one second
afraid in their presence. Meaning we're
talking thousands of hours
And they're pouring love into me.
And they're And the biggest proof of
their love is how much Torah they were
they were transmitting.
And I don't
I don't recall a single second
when I wasn't trembling.
The whole time.
And it was
the real deal.
Yeah.
There's very few people on the planet
left like this. And I'm embarrassed that
I don't go to see them much, but my life
was taken
I mentioned that.
I should By the time it's time that I
could say like I could go see Reb Shmuel
Silverberg for third meal or I or I
could go to the Itche Mayer
uh Morgenstern, you know, maybe for like
the post Rosh Hashanah thing. But
meanwhile, I'm coming from my shul that
that we only finish the prayers of Rosh
Hashanah to go have lunch
like 15 minutes before sundown, which
meant running home and washing. It takes
15 minutes to get back to my house to
wash for the Rosh Hashanah meal
that you know
and having prayed 12 hours straight.
So.
Hashem, please forgive me for not being
in the presence of these people more
often.
Um there's very few of them left and
and
and one of them
one of them I'm very connected to,
obviously. That's where I go to.
I believe that.
I'm not sure about so much. They used to
be two of them running around Jerusalem,
which is how I got to my neighborhood is
cuz our neighborhood was was there.
And
we moved there for that, but they all
passed away since then
with the exception of two
who are still there, but they're like,
you know, over 100 years old.
One of them actually came to shul last
week.
And he's he's so small now
that I think he's up to my belly button.
And he was still there and he still
stood up for that suit. And he still
stood up and
when we all left shul, he was still in
the standing meditation silent
meditation of his own.
Meaning he's still in the in his
hundreds.
And he he can't lift his head. You can
literally rest your drink on his neck
from all the years of studying. A head's
very heavy.
He used years like this Well, eventually
it was like this and eventually like
that. And now you can literally rest
your drink
on his neck and it would not fall over.
It would be perfectly flat.
So, I went to I want to say hi to him
and sit with him for a while cuz he's
like his wife passed away, so he's
taking care of my daughters.
Good reason to have daughters, by the
way.
Um
because you may live that long. And
you know, your your daughter-in-law
hears you and why can't your son take
care of you?
Don't ask me that question.
But you don't want your daughter-in-law
take care of you. You want your daughter
to take care of you at the end of your
life, you know.
Anyway, I
think I'll go for a down end of bend to
say shalom to say Shabbat shalom to him.
If his if the top of his head's my belly
button, he's looking at the floor.
I went all the way down.
I went as
low You know what I mean? I did a full
crouch a crouch from a squat full squat
in front of the shul.
Full squat and got my head as low as
possible that way.
And he saw me and he was like, "Young
thief."
We had our we had a little
connection there for a moment.
So, there we are in the cold mikvah and
I decided I'm going to train him for the
hot mikvah now.
Before I did, what I said to him was,
"Where are your What are all these
fears?"
And he he's been in therapy. How much
would you say you spent in therapy at
this point? Thousands.
How much approximately?
10,000.
Is $10,000 in therapy accurate?
Um I don't think therapy's really Less
than 10,000. A little less. Okay. Well,
you're young. What are you How old are
you? 21 years old? 20.
So,
he's a little less than $10,000 therapy
at 20.
Um I think maybe it'd be appropriate to
say By the way, I'm I'm only into
therapy. I was I'm formally trained in
that and I and I send people to all
kinds of therapy now, all kinds of um
phenomena,
but
um
one thing that I don't think is
appropriate is fear.
Fear is not for therapy.
And the thing that was mostly um
mostly um
uh paralyzing you
was
was fear.
It was always coming down the floor.
And it turned out he reveals in the cold
mikvah
I asked him, you know, or he had
revealed I didn't even ask him. He
revealed that he had been beaten
as a kid
by his old man, his father.
He'd been beaten.
And he took that beating
to become this very fear of life itself
because life gives you a beating.
Life is I mean, there's one thing you
can say about life, it's a beating. And
you These eyes have cried. You look at
my eyes.
You can I mean, people know somehow I
mean, they may not know know, but they
know
that if I'm talking to them about to
them about their own deep
pain
they don't feel they're being like
lectured.
They're they're they're hearing the the
They're hearing from someone whose eyes
are I'm already tearing up. Hearing from
someone whose eyes have cried many many
tears.
And um
anyway
what had happened was that the
the beatings took place.
And you know, like everyone else knows
that life's a beat down.
And you know, and
and uh
and it's also a beat down no matter what
because there's certain things you just
got to go through. We're all
reincarnated and who knows what we got
to go through. It's obviously a much
worse beat down if you'd like to go
against the fabric of creation, which is
truth. Meaning God created the world
with uh truthful speech as Peterson
would say.
Um truthful speech creating order out of
chaos. Meaning chaos and then God
created the world with speech that that
took chaos and made it into order. What
kind of speech? Godly speech. What's
godly speech? Truthful speech. Well, if
you want to go against the fabric of
creation and think you can get away with
something, which you cannot because
you're in a closed system.
We're
When you're in God's world, you're
you've never You think that's outside
over there?
Outside the window over there? You think
that's outside? That's not outside.
We're in a closed system.
We're all inside the mind of God and the
whole world was created with truth. What
kind of truth? The truth of a
a giant kaleidoscopic thing called Torah
that God shined light through the Torah.
And And we're literally this physical
world is the outside of the Torah.
You're inside the outer membrane of the
Torah.
And that whole thing is called truth.
And if you want to go against it cuz you
think you might get away with something
well, good luck. Good luck with that.
And you should know, by the way, if you
get away with it, it's going to get even
worse. You need to be a lot
What's the matter, comment?
Do I need to know it?
Yeah.
And so, it'd be a lot
it'd be a lot
better
to have not gotten away with it.
You understand? It'd be a lot better not
to get away with
what you said.
I mean, whatever you're trying to get
away with, it'd be better you not get
away with it in the beginning because if
you do get away with it, then you start
building an empire
on nothing. It'll be built on on
faulty foundations cuz it wasn't honest
to begin with. Well, just watch it
disintegrate.
And if you if you
doubt what I'm saying, so just look at
the news cuz I mean, not every news
station plays the news of people's
lives, but many many do. You know, I'm
I'm guilty of looking at the Drudge
Report.
That's kind of where I get my
international news.
And
definitely records the take down of
every famous person.
Um but they but when I grew up, there
were newspapers up at checkout counters.
I think they called them tabloids.
And it was just how the next person came
down and then the next person came down
and the next person came down. Who got
divorced and
who went bankrupt, who lost all their
money and
and uh it is very interesting to watch
Elon Musk.
He's very interesting to watch because
he's too Asperger's
to lie.
He doesn't know how to lie.
You know, so I mean, he doesn't know
necessarily what's true either, but the
lying, he doesn't do it.
And so
and the the guy's
it's crazy watching him.
Cuz he is such a great example of
somebody who doesn't even know what's
true, so who knows where you don't go.
He doesn't even know what's true, but he
knows he can't lie because he just
doesn't have enough social
um skills. Asperger's people, you know,
their number one symptom is
social interaction, social cues. Like
they they just don't know how to
interact.
And so,
Elon Musk is this amazing example of
what happens to somebody
who can only tell the truth.
So, if anyone's interested in becoming
the next uh SpaceX or
Tesla or What do you call his satellite
system around the world now? Starlink?
Anyone wants to be that guy? Okay. No.
Tell the truth without even figuring out
what it is. Um
and here in Jerusalem, we like figuring
out what the truth is.
Before we tell anything.
You know, before we even speak, we like
to first investigate.
And um you want to hear something
interesting is the word for desire. Like
cuz why do people lie or tell the truth?
They want something.
They want Why would anyone lie? They
want something.
What do they want? Maybe they want
money. Maybe they want a little thing.
So, they can lie about who they are by
being the star or the attention vampire
seeker.
They'll lie about themselves. Like
people love to lie to get what they
want, right? Well,
it's to get what they what? What they To
get what they want. Well, what's the
word want in Hebrew?
Ratzon.
Yeah, ratzon.
And it turns out in Hebrew, of course,
there's cuz
will, desire, is the underlying
substrate of all reality.
You understand? Desire is the substrate
of all reality. Yeah, you guys should be
actively commenting.
Are you actively commenting?
Should you go to my live stream and
actively comment?
So, anyway,
the um
the the
the word desire that you know how many
words there are for desire?
You ever counted the words in Hebrew of
desire?
I got up to 20. There were probably
more. But it's like it's weird. It's
like a crazy number of words for it.
And the um anyway, but let's just stick
with the word the simple word of
ratzon.
Nirtzof. So, what's the root of that?
It's a two-letter word and it's reish
tzadik.
The root of the word desire, the main
one, is ratzon and
and that's probably the most popular
one. Like say for instance, that one
that's beyond the whole high ratzon,
rats. Yeah, reish tzadik. It's a
two-letter root.
And the
Anyway, the
that What does the word rats mean, guys?
What does that actual root mean? It
doesn't mean want. What does it mean?
Run. It means run.
Yeah. The word actually means
run.
Well, think about it.
If you ever see someone running, I don't
mean jogging.
I don't mean they're racing. Although,
you know, they're racing, they want to
win. Okay, so maybe even racing. But if
you ever see someone running, what do
you know for sure? Yeah, on city
streets, you got a little briefcase and
you're running.
What do you know for sure? Is that he
he wants something. He maybe he wants to
get to a meeting on time. Maybe he wants
to make a train.
Maybe he wants to make his flight. But
nobody runs unless they have hit a point
of great desire.
Now, what do you call someone who runs?
What's a fancy word in English?
Begins with an M. It's got
four syllables.
You can call someone who's running, he's
got a lot of what?
And it's similar to running and the word
mo- locomo-
motive.
What is it? The word? Motivation. You
understand? Motivation. Which is
you know, is that not the discussion of
like
so many personal growth trainers trying
to get everyone motivated in life?
Well, think about it. Like a motive
moto- motor- cycle a mo- motor motor
vehicle a
a locomotive. It's It's
It's moving forward, you know?
And how do you get yourself moving
forward? And the answer is, well, you
got to figure out what you want.
I actually have a webinar called Desire
is 10 or so.
The webinar just on the subject of that
word desire, which is the substrate of
all reality, by the way.
Meaning this cup of water Well, the cup
and someone desired to make a living
making cups. There There are people who
desire having cups cuz it's really hard
to drink water
Without a cup. without a cup. So, and I
happen to want this water, so here I am
drinking a cup.
And some clothing designer said, "Why
don't we make this Hasidic wear?"
And he wanted to do that cuz want to
make a living with that. And some
salesman wanted to make a living in
sales and he sold it to me. And
And like my flesh is made out of the
desire of my parents for one another.
Yikes.
Like
the Brooklyn Bridge is made out of
desire. Yeah, you thought it was made of
metal? Is that what you thought of
Brooklyn? Did you think the Brooklyn
Bridge was made out of metal?
It's made out of desire. People want to
get from Brooklyn to Manhattan a lot
quicker.
And when there's desire, man, nothing
stands in its way.
You know, which is really why we have to
be so careful because if nothing stands
in the way of desire,
meaning if the world conspires to your
desire,
you better spend some time figuring out
what the hell you want because you're
going to get it.
But if you go to get it in a way that's
not authentic,
it's not really a true expression of who
you are
and what you should have, well, you're
going to get it and it it going to fall
apart
and it's going to be humiliating and
you're going to have to get another beat
down, which is the desire's subject.
Comes the beat down.
Because the world conspires to your
desire. That's the way God created it. I
could go into a lot of Kabbalah about
that.
Cuz I call it the the spiritual
is made of all these things called
malachim.
So, I call it the malachial universe.
You ever heard me say that?
Oh, yeah. Okay. It's called Have you
listened to a lot of my classes?
So, it's called the malachial universe.
And those
malachim conspire to your desire. And
that's why the whole world just goes
based on your desire. But you got to
make sure you want the right things.
Now,
um
Anyway, but the Brooklyn Bridge is made
of desire and airplanes are made of
desire and everything in this physical
world and this whole world is made of
the desire God created the world. And in
fact,
what is the what is of the tree of life,
meaning the the the um
tree of life is the um
you know, the sacred geometry of tree of
life.
It's the actual fabric of this creation.
What is the top
top of the tree of life? What is it
called? What's the crown on the top of
the tree of life?
Keter. It's the word is keter. The crown
of the keter. Well, what is what is
that?
It's desire.
Like you want to hear something amazing?
You know what flows from it?
What flows from it? I mean, obviously,
the whole creation flows from it because
God desired to create a world. So, the
world flows from it. But guess what else
flows from it?
The 13 attributes of mercy.
Why?
What are those doing there? We only need
the 13 attributes of mercy mercy because
people sin.
And the whole world would cave in if we
didn't have these attributes where God
will basically look the other way than
destroy the place. You know, and and
just be able to suffer it.
God can suffer the humiliation. What I
mean by humiliation? Well, think about
it. If the whole creation is you, cuz
can God create something he's not?
No. So, if the whole creation is you and
people want to brain in the stars or the
sun or the moon or anything, they want
to lie to get what they want.
Well, what are you?
Something very simple. Something we love
on our Shabbos plate after the fish.
What is that?
Chopped liver. Yeah? Now Now God's
chopped liver.
Well, if you are the creation and the
creation itself has rebelled against
you, kind of like diarrhea,
you know, which is your body rebelling
against you,
well, what do you do?
Flush it.
Flush the whole thing down the toilet.
So, in the very desire God creating the
world, he had to have already involved
with it the forgiveness that the world
would need.
So that he can play So the So, as Bob
Marley said, you know, we've got to
fulfill the book. You So that he can
fulfill his story, history, his story.
Cuz it's a big story and God's got a
plan, man.
This plan for this place. And the only
way the plan could work, which was his
desire, is that it would come with the
13 attributes of mercy so that the world
would not be knocked out of existence.
And that the world would actually come
to completion, which is we're very very
close at. And those who are watching us
should know that by now.
I'm about 100 yards from a gold dome.
I'll let you do the rest of the math.
Now, um
But I'm glad there's a gold dome there,
by the way. I know a lot of Jews aren't
happy about the gold dome, but
I like the gold dome.
You know why?
I like the gold dome because um it had
been the Christians left it. Did I say
the Christians? Sorry.
Frank said.
Um maybe it was the Holy Roman Empire
that made me say that. But the Romans,
when they destroyed our temple, which is
100 yards from me, um they they left it
as rubble specifically. It stayed rubble
right there in order that it would be a
testimony of the Jews no longer chosen
and
the Christians now the chosen people.
And so, they left it rubble. The Romans
left it rubble. Um by the way, the
Romans just left it
and ripped the Jews back to Rome and
whatever. And then Israel became a
vassal state. Same old stuff. And um
and the um
But they That was all left in rubble and
ruins.
Later, the the Christians decided to use
it as like it should never be
um cleaned up up there or anything else
built up there because this will be the
testimony cuz think about it. It's a
pretty radical claim that God's got a
new chosen people.
Let me explain why it's so radical. I I
once sat with a Christian group in a
restaurant here in the old city. I was I
was I was eating in the restaurant and
these Christians saw, you know, me and
they're like, "Oh, great. This We got to
We got to talk to this guy." So, the
whole group No, it was all a group. I
guess the the their pastor was paying
the bill. I don't know if that whole
group comes to my table.
And uh
And I said to them, I said, "Do you
believe God is a just God?" And they're
like, "Of course God's a just God." And
I said, "Well,
obviously, the only way to get a people
to keep 613 commandments,
which, you know, which is 45,000 laws
how to keep those commandments, and many
of them are expensive, many of them are
difficult, many of them are even require
quite a bit of self-sacrifice, if not
even dangerous, I I resting the entire
land for a year on the promise of a
6-year bumper crop, like, that's
dangerous,
you know?
And so and so
obviously, to get a nation to do that,
you have to tell them personally.
You know, imagine you you imagine he
went out outside, yeah? He went out
there and whatever he was going to the
bathroom, he was going to get a drink,
whatever. He comes back and he says,
"You guys aren't going to believe this.
The word of God came to me when I was in
the bathroom."
Just kidding. God ain't coming to nobody
in the bathroom.
You you have to be in a very clean
state.
Talk about ritual baths and names of God
and stuff, but anyway,
but he goes out,
he's overlooking the Western Wall, which
is basically this whole neighborhood and
he
comes back and says, "I heard the word
of God."
And
comes back in and he's And we said, "Oh,
yeah? Wow, amazing. What did he say?"
And he says,
"Um God told me that um all of you have
to give me 10% of your income for the
rest of your life."
You going to give this guy 10% of your
income for the rest of your life?
That's only one commandment.
You understand that the only way to get
the Jewish people to be this nation that
types down the the actual pints of
creation, which remember the Torah's the
the the overhead projection, like an
overhead projector. It's the actual
transparency that the whole thing comes
through. And to get a nation actually
keep all those laws, you got to tell
them privately. You can't just send
somebody.
It has to be
a national revelation, which is what
happened at Sinai.
You understand? You have to tell the
whole nation.
And by the way, how do you tell a secret
to 3 million people?
Well, if you don't know the answer to
that,
I'm suggesting to anyone who's watching
this
that you take a
3-day trip, 5-day trip,
and go down to Jordan and Sinai desert,
and freak out in the most amazing desert
in the world.
But that is a place. I mean, it is
unbelievable. It's like Joshua Tree
on steroids.
And
and I'll just never forget it. And if it
wasn't for this war, I would have been
down there for three times since October
7th.
And
the
the it's really something. Do you know
where it is?
The actual Mount Sinai?
We don't know where it is.
Anyway, we don't know, but if you could
get there,
you could tell 3 million people a
secret.
Bottom line is, God couldn't get it done
unless he told all of us, so he brought
us all into a covenant. And
obviously,
in order for there to be a new covenant,
otherwise known as the new I'm not going
to say
I just say so tired of getting Christian
things wrong online, so I'm just not
going to say
it. But it's it's a part of the male
anatomy and it begins with
the same word. But anyway, the um
I'm I'm trying to be better behaved.
The
the bottom line is that the
that in order to create that covenant,
it has to be with the people themselves.
Now, it turns out the covenant itself
says over and over again that it's an
eternal covenant.
So, you realize that automatically, if
you try to create a new covenant, that's
the Christians and Muslims did,
you'd have to erase those parts. So, if
you really believe the Torah's divine,
well, then you've lost your claim.
Automatically, you've lost your claim.
Not to mention the fact that virgin
births do nothing because the Torah's
very specifically telling us that the
Messianic uh
the Messianic era will be ushered in by
a person who's from the tribe of Judah.
Well, tribes come through fathers.
It has to be through the father. It has
to be the seed
of a man
who's from the tribe of Judah, which is
King David's tribe.
And
so that was a really bad idea. I
understand telling people in those in
that era, you know,
which I don't I'm not even going to go
into what the IQ problem was, but
the uh
telling people in that era
about a virgin birth with would probably
be pretty impressive.
And then, of course, just bring in the
whole hell business and you've got
the
uh what I want to say is that I asked
this Christian uh
"Do you believe God's a just God?"
And they said, "Of course he's a just
God." And I said, "Well,
the only thing would have been like the
right thing to do to tell the Jewish
people
the covenant's over?
Like, if you're the new covenant,
why didn't you let them know?
Why would you Why would you have them
falsely believing
that they're still in the what it said
it was, an eternal covenant,
and have them absolutely raped over the
coals for the next 2,000 years?
Not to mention
like
conflicting prophecies all coming true
for the Jewish people throughout their
exiles cuz the prophecy goes about
what's going to happen to the Jews when
they get exiled because they didn't keep
the Torah in the land.
So, it's like
it's such
everything's just so obvious, you know?
Anyway, so I asked them, "What's What
kind of just God would make a covenant
with another people and completely
leave the eternal covenant people
without saying anything?"
Anyway, they're they're By that time,
their pastor had come.
And
and he was like pretty upset that they
were talking to me, and especially that
I just asked this question.
And they um
And then I looked at him and I said,
"And by the way,
you know,
you realize, pastor,
you believe that someone can act
in all wrong ways throughout his whole
life, just lie, cheat, and steal, rape
and pillage,
but if he takes
Jesus as his
as dying for his sins and his eternal
savior, he goes to heaven,
while we and me
who's like
done
endless endless endless endless endless
sacrifice. You know, my father asks me
sometimes, he says,
he says, "You know, for all your work,
you know, and your organization and all
your travels and everything, shouldn't
you have some money to show for it?"
And I'm like, "Dad, I made four weddings
the last 2 years.
And I got more to make, you know?"
And
you know, like he says I said, "I have a
lot to show for it. I have a four
Jewish homes being being that are
starting to flourish, you know? And
yeah, I've got what to show for that
money."
He's like,
yeah, my father's like, you know, Donald
Trump capitalist, you know?
He's just like,
"I don't mean that." You know? And I'm
like, "Well, I do mean that, you know?"
And anyway, but I said to this pastor
after everything I've said with this guy
with extreme conscience.
You have extreme conscience. My
conscience is nuts, like.
Even today, while I was praying, I was
like,
"Did I say very specifically the whole
time when I put on my tefillin that I
betrothed you to me?" You got speaking
us cuz when we wrap our finger
with the leather strap, we bring in
these beautiful sentences of God
betrothing himself.
Yeah, I can sing it for you.
Uh we'll betroth you forever.
Uh we'll betroth you with righteousness
and with justice, kindness, and mercy.
And with justice, kindness, and mercy.
I will betroth you forever.
I will betroth you with righteousness.
I will betroth you with faithfully.
And we will be as one.
Anyway,
I know it's not very beautiful, but if
you know Jewish law, it's sort of
relevant whether or not you actually
said it or forgot to say it. You've
totally totally done your job in all the
prayers.
But here I am, like, do I even go on or
should I just say?
And I was at a part where you're allowed
to say something, so I was like,
"I'm saying it."
I mean, that's how conscientious I am.
I'm crazy conscientious. And I've got
45,000 laws to deal with, and I'm crazy
conscientious about them. Not to mention
all the everything I've done for
creating this family and and it's not
over, man. The second this thing's over,
the second this class is over, I'm going
to
take my teenagers out
to do stuff I don't want to do,
but and and pay money that I ain't got
to
to be a father to them.
Cuz cuz raising kids observing is a big
ask.
It's a big ask.
Meaning an ask of them.
And so
there's only one way you can ever have a
big ask. It's big relationship.
And that's something to think about in
business, too.
Like before you ask, maybe you should
make sure there's a relation.
And
you want to have You got a big ask? Big
relation.
God has a big ask.
Mhm. Not for Jews, at least.
And the Gentiles, they keep the seven go
to heaven. You have seven laws, connect
to God all you want, you know, you're
all set.
And doesn't matter what you do with your
penis.
And Jews
not so simple.
A lot of relation.
So much relation.
And if you're willing to be
a little deeper
feel the light
course through your veins, through your
heartbeat, through your body.
You feel your consciousness alive
in this very moment.
You're in a relation. It's so awesome to
have the
infinite infinite, literally in a form
to you.
And then just close your eyes, too.
Relax.
Take a deep breath. Breath works. Breath
just short circuits the brain and brings
you straight to the heart.
And just feel
the flow
of the infinite, finite light,
which is you, into you,
into your soul, which is part of the
infinite.
Feel the gratitude and the power of the
presence. You may have been tired, feel
that your tiredness goes away.
Like that beautiful child that
that beautiful inner child that's full
of energy always until he passes out.
Opening up your eyes.
And so I said to the pastor, the guy who
lied, cheated, stole, raped, and
pillaged is going to heaven forever
for having accepted Jesus for having
died for his sins.
Is he eternally saved?
He goes to hell. Straight to hell.
Forever.
Whereas I
Yomtov Glazer
your
sweetest rabbi on Earth
who
is going to hell forever. Forever.
On on like a technical error.
And
I forgot to say something right before I
died. You know.
Which I
You know.
I'm actually going to die before I say
it.
And it's like
I forgot to say something I'm supposed
to say before I die, but I would die
before I'd say it.
And
the uh
And And not so much that I I can't say
it cuz it doesn't mean anything to me.
It was that It's that anyone would think
that that I even gave someone a second
the thought for a second that I would
even think to say I'd rather die.
That I'd even consider.
And not And not because it's such a big
deal. I mean, if if Christians that's
what they want to believe.
Good luck.
But the um
It's that
It's that it's It's an
It's an insult to It's an insult to the
very fiber of
my being that has spent
I guess since I was 11 when I started my
journey
that has spent
What would that make it? 45 years
of learning to align with
vibrational resonance that is true and
it's never ever ever failed me.
And that just doesn't ring true.
Doesn't ring true.
Sounds made up to me.
The same thing when they told me there's
a virus and that we've all been put on
leave
in the in the spring of 20
I was like, "No."
That ain't real.
You know, and then they said it was
natural, I was like,
"Don't think so."
And when they said they were doing
hurricane speed with a with a
with a cure
Mhm.
No, I don't think so, either. I think
this
This is a plan-demic. Yeah.
And uh And by the way, I don't know what
it is, but every fiber of me And when
they told me to wear a mask
I don't think that's going to be
effective. If if it is what you say it
is, that will not be effective. It's
like make up your mind. You know, if
you're saying what it is it is, we don't
need a mask.
But
And if it is what you say it is
And And if you
If it is what you say it is, masks won't
help. But if you're going to tell me
that it is what it is and then tell me
the masks will help.
So then where this is all something new.
The world's gone screwy. We're in mass
hysteria. By the way, there is such a
thing as a mass psychosis.
I actually witnessed one in Jerusalem.
That moved from neighbor to neighbor. It
was the craziest craziest like 2 years
in probably in thousands of years of
Jewish history. There There was a mass
hysteria that happened in Jerusalem.
It's amazing when it
when it hit Rabbi Nachman's
neighborhood. He called me into his
office cuz he knows it hit my
neighborhood.
What was it from?
What?
What was it from? It's just the same I
can't even begin to tell you. It was
like It was like
I could tell you. I mean, it's like kids
are saying that they're having ritual
torture.
Ritual torture. They're being taken in
tunnels into churches in the old city.
These are Jewish kids. They don't know
there are churches in the old city.
They've never heard of churches.
And they they don't know where they are.
And and
and
being, you know,
I don't I don't want to go into the gory
details of of their anatomy and of what
was happening in the ritual torture.
Things that these kids I know these
kids. I raised my kids in these
communities. They They didn't even know
that such a thing exists. And we're
talking about very little kids. Those
kids are now coming home from school as
I witnessed this to other neighbors'
kids that were there. Cuz when they were
telling their parents,
they're like, "And guess who else was
there?" They go The The The parents now
run to the neighbor and say, "I know my
kid was in school all day." But they're
coming up with these crazy stories. And
they go to the neighbor's parents and
the neighbor's son said, "My teacher
told him the same story and said he was
with your kid." But our kids are in
different schools. They haven't seen
each other since last Shabbos.
And they implicated your kid being
there.
I I just can't even tell you what
happened. It was
And I'm not telling you where it went
from there. But let's just say it wasn't
pretty and the effects are still Is it
We're going back I don't know how many
years it was. 12 years ago?
10 years ago? 15 years ago? I don't even
remember. Oh, I do know how long.
Cuz I have a 14-year-old who was born
that year.
So it was
15, 14 It was 13 years. Is it still
around now? What? Is it still around?
Yeah, it stopped.
It went through several neighborhoods.
Anyway, so when it hit Rabbi Nachman's
neighborhood, Rabbi Nachman says today
is probably the at least of the
English-speaking
community of the planet
is maybe the of the greatest rabbis of
the generation. He's a big Also has a
side job. He has several side jobs. But
one of his side jobs is he's the rabbi
of a community of English speakers in
Jerusalem.
He calls me immediately.
And he says like, "Whatever happened in
your neighborhood has hit my
neighborhood. What do I do? Like what do
I do?" You know, cuz he wasn't really
part of what was happening in my
neighborhood, which is all Yiddish.
So
So I said
I said, "Let me tell you, Rabbi.
Don't touch it. Don't touch it with a
10-foot pole. Just stay out." And he
says,
"Um Rabbi Nachman says,
I have crying women at my door. I have
parents fathers having nervous
breakdowns. Like the kids are in massive
trauma. This is a community-wide
child psychology event happening where
the kids are going to need therapy.
And you're telling me that I shouldn't
touch it with a 10-foot pole."
And I said,
"Good luck, Rabbi."
He's called He is We spoke a year later.
You know, we We're not
Now we're in touch much more lately, but
we're in touch now.
Anyway, we saw each other a year later.
He called me in and he said He said I
should have listened.
I should have listened.
Not that he He couldn't There was
nothing he could do. He was the rabbi of
the community.
But anyway, my neighborhood it hit his
neighborhood. It hit Arona.
It hit Beit Shemesh.
It hit the A little neighborhood near
Strauss somehow got this.
It was very strange. But But that was
it. And then any other neighborhood it
skipped.
But there if you check it out, if you
want to YouTube it, I forget what it's
called exactly. It's a It's a group
psychosis. A A mass hysteria group
psychosis. I forget there was Trimper.
Um there were witch hunts and many
people were killed in America. This
happened Maybe it was England.
Um where the same exact thing happened.
And many people were killed as a result.
Um
And um
I say to this to this priest,
"What kind of just God
What kind of just God would have me burn
in hell for that?
For what, you know? For life.
For life's goodness."
And he says to me,
He said something that he should not
have said to me.
He quotes
the the Torah. Quotes the Bible.
Quotes the Torah and he says,
It says,
"Your offerings
Your offerings are like
vomit to me.
Your offerings are eaten.
Your offerings are like vomit to me.
No, I should have just taken my entire
plate of food and
uh
bring my drink and just go like
to say such thing.
You thought he could get away with it
cuz he was quoting the Bible and he knew
at least
the Torah would know the quote.
You know.
Your offerings are like vomit.
So now he's like, obviously I'm going to
throw a plate of food at the guy. I
don't
It's like I only love.
Um you should know as much as I love, I
I'm never violent. have a little secret
of mine.
I'm actually considered one of the most
loving people you'll ever meet.
You should know that
most of the times you see me loving, not
all the time, sometimes it's just
genuine love.
But much of the time you see me being
very loving, it's uh got a root. There's
actually a root underneath my tree of
love. It's a tree that roots.
You know what my root is?
The root of my love is rage.
It's rage.
There's an avid neighbor who's
pretty zealous and he he screams at when
we're when we're on the when we're on
Shabbat. He screams at the cars that are
driving on Shabbat. You're not allowed
to drive a car on Shabbat.
And so while we walk, we're friends, so
we should move it on the you know, that
week's Torah portion walking. But every
time a car drives by, I know it's going
to be a pause. And then he get does this
bloodcurdling
yell at the cars if they're not
listening. There's air conditioning,
music's pumping out of the car. It's
when he doesn't close. But this guy goes
into his bloodcurdling scream.
Shabbat!
Waving his fist at the car.
And then we go back to our conversation
as if nothing happened.
And
he says to me, Matt,
Matt,
he says, one time we walk a lot. And he
says to me one time, he says, you should
know you don't have to. I thought a lot
about it and I realized that you're more
of a zealot than I am.
I'm more of a zealot than you are. I'm
sure the ultimate zealot, man. You're a
crazy freak. You know, screaming at
these cars. No one's listening to you.
And they already know what you're saying
just cuz they've met enough idiots like
you. You know, like screaming Shabbat at
a car.
And he um with like
horrific anger on your face, you know.
And he says, you're more of a zealot
than me. Cuz he says, listen, I'm not
going to a play. I can't do it. You do
it.
So what's left my mission is to scream
Shabbat at the cars.
I know that every time we end our
conversation, you go into your house
and there's anywhere between 15 and 20
Shabbat guests. My Shabbat meal probably
costs
you know, 300 shekels. Your Shabbat meal
probably costs a couple thousand
shekels. It's like five, six, seven
dollars.
And you got a penthouse.
And it was when, you know, my family was
young. So every seat in the house was
just all the way back. So it was my
kitchen. We have We can add a table
there.
It's uh
And he's like And what do you do? You
love them.
That none of these people at your table
keep Shabbat.
They're just showing up at your Shabbat
table because free food, experience, you
know, little meditation,
uh
you know, some love and connection and
And he was so right.
And we know that Abraham
who was famous for his having guests,
that his original attribute wasn't
kindness. His attribute was rage.
He's the guy who who destroyed his
father's idols.
His father wasn't just the idol maker.
He was the one who was the master of
spirituality. He knew how to imbue the
idol with the power of that idol.
And he And he took his entire shop of
idols and destroyed everything and put a
hammer in one of the idol's hands. And
his father said, "What have you done?"
He says, "I wasn't It wasn't me. It was
that one."
The idol with the hammer, he must have
done it.
Which made the father look down and said
like, "You child maker."
You know.
Anyway, that's the Abraham in all of us.
By the way, it's the Abraham in me
that's messing with all these new
covenant people. That's the Abraham in
me that's like,
Sorry to break your idols, you know, but
that's that's what I'm going to do.
You know, and it's with love. It's with
love. I'm not angry at anybody. You
First of all, whatever you do,
you know, I if I think it's a mistake,
you don't have to
listen to me. But um
but
you know, just be good.
And being good doesn't mean emulating
JC. Being good means emulating God.
Like why do you
Why do you need that?
You want to emulate something, emulate
the creator.
That'll do the trick.
You know.
You got to emulate
a
mythological
character like some rabbi the Jews
killed 2,000 years ago?
You're worshiping a Jew and emulating a
Jew. And we ourselves, we don't mind
emulating our righteous holy
people. But but when we're emulating our
holy righteous people, what are they
emulating? They're emulating God.
You know, cuz you can get to the levels
of studying a lot of Kabbalah.
And you get to the level you start to
understand quite a bit about who at
least what God had in mind, maybe not
his own mind, the way he had in mind.
You can start to figure out and you can
start emulating.
Okay, so you're not a Ben Kallah. So I
emulate the people that emulate him.
But
anyway, bottom line is the pastor says,
"Your offerings are like vomit."
Now just to give you the context into
what was going on.
Is the Jews had It was a done deal. The
Jews had lost their merit to be in the
land. We were going to be exiled.
You know, we were we were heading up to
Babylon. Yeah?
And on our way to Babylon,
we had not get thrown out yet. We still
had an altar and we were still bringing
the offerings. And God says through the
prophet, "Your offerings are like vomit
to me."
And then it says something very
beautiful.
Like how about you guys just love each
other?
Like Like how about instead of amazing?
And of course I'm sure they say this in
Christianity, but it's our Torah. It's
Jeremiah saying, "Your offerings are
like vomit.
Why don't you all just love each other?
Like if you could at least get along, I
would maybe keep you in the land.
If you could just stop judging and
and love one another.
And then you can start bringing your
offerings again, you know.
But at this point, with you not loving
each other, your offerings are vomit."
Which is very beautiful.
And just think of how it works. Like if
you could have only loved each other,
then maybe I'd take the offerings and
say, "Okay, well they love each other,
so that's enough. We'll take the
offerings." But offerings without loving
each other is vomit to God.
You ever thought about it that way? It's
pretty interesting.
Um
What?
I was telling you about the miracle
story. Yeah, we're I'm almost there. I'm
almost there. Anyway, so I look at the
priest and I say to him,
"You know damn well
what that sentence means in the Torah.
How dare you
misuse that
and make it talk about
the covenant of the Jews for 2,000 years
of hell we've been through.
It's complete I mean, besides obviously
all the apostate Jews in Hollywood and
Wall Street, you know, but in banking.
But with
to to to conflate
our
that's
very contextual piece of Torah
with
a context of of the Jews serving God
through these exiles for 2,000 years.
It makes my life that I mentioned of my
own sacrifices
zero compared to what the Jews have been
through.
Like the Black Sabbath. You guys have
Black Sabbath I know it's a rock band.
But it's it's when the three most
beautiful towns on the Rhine River
Worms, Mainz, and Speyer
which were Jewish kind of big Jewish
towns of the greatest scholarship with
traditions going back to the first
temple that were untouched
by the exiles. These were like These
were bastions of Torah, bastions of
purity, bastions of goodness, bastions
of of protection of of the goodness that
was at the second temple period.
And on one Sabbath,
the Christians came in
and massacred every man, woman, and
child. One Shabbat, all three towns.
These were not small towns.
Talking tens of thousands of people in
each town, not hundreds.
Not one man, woman, or child was left
alive.
And
you know,
when I meet a Jew apologizing for
Christianity, and I'm just like
I'm not even having this discussion. You
need is a history lesson.
And the um
Anyway, so I said that to the priest. I
said, "How dare you? You know very well
what context of that sentence is."
And uh
that verse.
And he uh
he looks at me and says, "He And that I
can give him this." He said
Oh, actually, no. No, no. He said,
"Where is?" He said He said, "Well,
that's what we believe."
No, no, no, no. No, no. He gave it to
me. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I got to give it
to him. He said He said, "You're right.
I'm sorry."
He said, "You're right. I'm sorry."
And then I said, "Well, what about the
question of a just God? What kind of
just God
would create such a theology
as you claim?"
And he says
he says to me, "Well, that's just what
we believe."
Come on, everybody. We got to leave.
And they all filed The whole thing just
filed out of the restaurant.
And as it's filing out of the restaurant
I shouldn't have done it. I I look back
at it a bit maybe uh
with regret. I'm not sure if I should
have done this. I'm so conscious that I
can't get over it. But
as they're leaving the restaurant I was
saying I said I was saying
I said
Like the old door hit the last one on
the rear end.
The last of the sheep sheep
went out.
Now, um
we're in the hot mikvah.
And
we got a net Sorry, cold mikvah. Now we
got to go into the hot mikvah. And I
know getting in that hot mikvah is nuts.
It's not something I would do myself for
me.
Even after cold water, and I getting
this guy
get it.
You know, so we needed to have a little
discussion. And what was the discussion?
Why has your $10,000 in therapy
and all the time you've spent over all
these years not made it even the tiniest
dent? Not even a dent.
It's the fear that stops you.
With everyone wherever you're hitting
the brakes in life, I promise you
there's a fear right behind it.
Everywhere you hit the brakes, your life
shaped from your fears. And that's a
scary thing to know.
But I'm telling you right now, and I
hate to say this to you guys, but you're
Who's sitting in your chair right now?
Who's watching this right now? The shape
of your life is your fear.
The way I used to like to say it's like
my daughters um when they bake they have
a a piping bag and icing bag. You ever
seen an icing bag? They have a whole
tool chest of shapes.
And so they'll make a flower. My
daughter will walk up to me and say,
"Daddy, Daddy, do you see this beautiful
flower, Daddy?
Daddy, look at this flower I made."
And I tell my daughter, "That's a
beautiful flower."
But
a personality like me, when I see the
piping bag, that shape at the end, what
is the job of that shape? The job of
that shape is to keep the icing in the
back.
It's job is to preserve the icing in the
back and only let out what
can get out through that shape.
It's the stuff that escapes.
Well, if you think about it, those five
fears, your fear of rejection, your fear
of failure, your fear of being out of
control, your fear of being alone, and
your fear of pain and suffering
are the shape of your life.
Because every time you get afraid you
say the word You said in the past cuz we
did the work.
Every time your fears came you always
said the word no.
And every salesman who needs a afraid to
go out saying no to him he says no to
making the call. Your all your no's of
your life, and by the way, nothing
happens in this world with the word no.
Nothing.
And look at anything you see. Not only
is it made of desire, it's made of the
word yes.
Every single thing you see came with a
yes. You might have had to pay for it.
You know, you know this guy who made
this mirror here. Okay, you know, he
said yes cuz they said that they came to
an amount of money. At some point the
guy was like, "I'll give you this one."
The guy said, "No." Eventually he got to
a yes.
Then he built the mirror.
The whole world occurs in yes. Nothing
occurs in no.
Everywhere you've ever come to is only
been with the yes. But my question is
how much no
has been shaping you?
In other words, how much fear has been
shaping you?
Because those five fears are the shape
of your life.
They are the shape of your life.
This is why I created the Possibility
Seminar. The Possibility Seminar is
where you come and finally learn how to
say yes with courage.
How to say yes, how to be truthful about
yourself. The possible you as opposed to
the predictable you. And how predictable
was your life?
How predictable with all your damn no's,
man? One after the other after the
other.
With all your no's, how predictable does
that make life? And the answer is
extremely
and predictably adventurous? No.
Predictably no.
Predictably no. Predictably exciting?
No. Predictably boring.
The chance of you living the most
boring, predictable life ever. It won't.
Very simple. Just live your life
fearlessly.
Live your life with the word no.
Well, you'll always know what you get
with no. But with the word yes,
that's where all the action begins.
And we actually have a sentence in Torah
that God created the world out of yes.
I mean, we all know that, obviously. He
said, "Yes, I'll make a world. And yes,
I'll create water. Yes, I'll create
earth. Yes, I'll create." But I don't
just mean like that. The world's
literally The sentence is "Olam hesed
yibaneh." I'm creating I'm building a
world out of yes. Cuz what's the word
yes? Hesed. And what's the word no?
Gevurah.
Right?
Yes is hesed. I created the world out of
yes.
Gevurah is no.
Yes is the right side. No is the left.
And yeah, I mean, there's a time to say
no. If If If yes to you is going to be
no to me or my family, the answer is no.
If yes to you is no to God, no.
There's a time to say no. But if
And by the way, this is the beauty
Give it all of this. This is the beauty
of the 613
Sorry. This is the beauty of the 365
negative commandments. Easy to remember
cuz 365 like the year.
And there it's not coincidental.
By avoiding the 365 negative
commandments and the some 30,000 laws
that have to do that cuz not one
Torah commandment tells you how to do
it. Not one. So, which means you have to
have no law.
But the But the 365 commandments
are how a Jew stays out from under the
influence of the stars.
How you How you remain in direct
relationship with the creator with no
intermediary uh influencing you.
No zodiac. No horoscope.
How does a Jew stay clear of his
horoscope? By avoiding the 365
negative commandments.
Simple as that.
And the uh anyway, but what I want to
say about it is that What's the beauty
of having 365 negative commandments?
Meaning 365 no's.
Which is much more than that because
each one has to be explained.
It's 30,000 laws.
You know what I love about it? It's cuz
it's a yes world.
This is a yes world. Everything happens
with yes. Nothing happens with no.
Is that if we have a God-given prophetic
knowledge
30,000 things that you shouldn't do.
You know, the obvious inference is don't
do those things.
But anything else that's being offered
get in there, man. Go do it. Oh, you
have an idea that could could uh trans
you know
transform the world, do it. You have an
idea that can make you a bunch of money.
Okay? I mean, obviously go speak to
people who made those mistakes in the
past. You don't have to make your own
mistakes.
Um you Anything that's not on that list
of 365 negative commandments means go
for it, man. So, if everyone's getting
in the cold water, hit the cold water.
If everyone's going for the hot one, get
in the hot.
If everyone's going in the sauna, well,
get in there. Nothing happens with no.
And by the way, if you don't ask, the
answer's always no.
I'll finish with uh
the situation in the mikvah. So, there
we are.
And
I told him a very simple thing. That's
not thousands of hours or hundreds of
hours or tens of hours or an hour of
therapy.
I said a very simple
I asked him a question.
Why did Why you
Why can't you get over your fears? Why
Why Why are you still getting beat by
your father
as a 20-year-old man in
Jerusalem?
Why?
And he kind of looked at me dumbfounded.
Didn't know the answer really.
And I said I
I said, "You know, it's when I
live live in ID
The answer is
identity.
Identity.
Human beings have no idea who they are.
And when we develop identity
and we squeeze to it like a
white-knuckled roller coaster ride.
Even if it's stuff we wouldn't even want
to believe about ourselves, but well,
that's who we are, you know.
Anything not to be nobody.
It becomes your identity. When you're a
little kid
and you start developing identity.
No, I mean, think about it. Most people,
what's the scariest thing in the world?
It's the loss of identity.
Losing your identity. Wouldn't that be
the scariest thing? What would it be
like to wake up one day and not know who
you are?
And by the way, you could be an expert
and not know who you are.
I am I am probably at a some very close
friends who are experts as well, but and
that makes us best friends, actually.
But all of us are so busy in the yes
world that we never even get to talk.
It's just like a WhatsApp here and
there. And we all we're always
high-fiving when we cross cross each
other's paths.
But we become experts at having no idea
who we are in a yes world.
Which is what I created the possible you
for. Is to be able to literally be a
full possible you. And literally create
who you are, cuz the whole world's made
of words, and create and all the
negative stuff that caused all that
fear, all those negative beliefs inside
you are all words.
And so, it becomes your identity. What
people are scared to death of it. It's
called an identity crisis. What's an
identity crisis? The identity you don't
who you thought you were isn't who you
are.
You notice like nobody's afraid of
alcohol.
But put them anywhere near a mushroom
and they get weird.
And so, you say to the guy, you know,
gee, you know, this is kind of this
mushroom's causing a lot of reaction out
of you. Like, you obviously must know a
lot about it. And he goes, I know
nothing about it.
Oh, you never researched mushrooms?
Okay.
I've never researched, but I know I'm
scared. You know,
I'm not getting anywhere near that
mushroom.
Why does it have such a reaction? You
can't have a fear reaction against
something you have no knowledge of.
Tell me you studied it and now you're
scared. Okay, fine.
Why is it automatically
that anything surrounding psychedelics
cause a reaction? There's a great line
by Timothy Leary, who was You can look
up Timothy Leary.
He was the pied piper of the psychedelic
era in the 1960s. By the way, I'm only
bringing this up not as an advocate of
psychedelics, but just the subject of
the fear of identity crisis. Meaning the
fear of waking up one day and not being
who you thought you were.
So, Timothy Leary said something.
He says, um, psychedelics are known to
cause,
um,
paranoia
and panic amongst those who have never
taken them.
For that line?
You look like you've never heard that
line. Like, have you heard that though?
Yeah, I've got his picture.
Nixon called him the most dangerous man
in America.
Yeah, well, well, we can blame, uh,
psychedelics being put as, uh, what do
they call it? A class one?
Class one narcotic?
It's it's the number one cure of
narcotics and it's not addictive.
Meaning it cures people of addiction
more than any other thing they've ever
found in the history of rehabilitation.
But it got put on there because of
probably because of him. Well, I don't
know.
The whole world the whole world had gone
crazy over it at the time. So, it was
like
it was unstoppable, but he was
definitely the pied piper.
Um,
anyway,
to get back to the mikvah,
to get back to the mikvah, the, um,
it's identity.
Meaning you have come to identify with
those fears. Those fears have become
you.
And and
get this.
Can you get rid of identity?
Can you get rid of an identity
in 15 minutes of therapy?
You can't.
Well, well, what do you mean? Well, I'm
going to come back each week. So, it's
going to come out to be hundreds of
hours of therapy.
No, because if you come back every week,
you're already re-fortified. Well, how
much how much can the 50 minutes chip
away if your entire
energy
And then think how exhausted you are, by
the way. How exhausted are you? Where
your entire energy, which is totally
exhausted you, is spent
20 every waking hour,
17 7, 17 hours a day, 7 days a week, to
constantly
create
every fortification you can that nothing
should ever poke a hole in who you think
you are.
Which you don't even like. Which is the
craziest thing in the world.
You don't even like who you are and
you're so alone.
Anyway, so what we said was that to
finish this
diatribe here.
Um,
what we said in the end was
was that you've come to identify with
these fears. It's become you.
And what you're really doing is you've
come to identify You've identified what
happened to you being beaten by your
father with your whole life.
And every single thing that
is a beat down, which is life,
is just once again you get beat by your
father and you are completely identified
with that.
And
when we hit that hot water, the first
thing that's going to burn is your toes.
And it's going to be your feet, and then
it's going to be your ankles, and then
it's going to be your knees, and
and I'm going to ask you when you get in
that hot water, are you your toes?
And what's the obvious answer?
He's shaking his head. The obvious
answer is,
say it out loud. You're going to burn up
first.
No.
Are you your toes? No.
Are you your knees? No. And then the
burning hit his waist. Are you your
waist? No.
And he just kept getting in.
Just kept getting in
till he was in till here in 115° water.
Which is basically scalding.
And
he's freaking out. I said I told him the
whole time, breathe the whole time. Just
breathe.
Because the identity
of
even identifying with the body's pains
is the same as any emotion. They're not
the same, but
it's all identity.
And it's not who you are.
We finished with the mikvah, we got
showered up, we got, you know, our fresh
clothes. We went in to the synagogue.
We prayed with all our hearts. It's a
I'm hardly an ecstatic prayer synagogue.
It's an extremely intimate prayer
situation. Usually hundreds of people.
We probably only had maybe 150
Screamed screamed at the top of our
lungs the prayers of King David. Meaning
the the songs of King David.
We made our way to my house and this guy
was like butter.
He was asking people if he could hug
them at the table.
It was
unbelievable. He became like butter.
He's like the sweetest human.
You mean that?
Yeah, you're sweet, man.
You're sweet. How you feeling? Amazing.
Yeah, oh [ __ ]
I feel clear, I don't
Okay, everyone.
Shalom, shalom.
Shalom, guys. Go ahead and subscribe and
hit the like button. I mean the bell
button to get notified.
And, um,
yeah, send it out to your friends. And
again, if I offended you in any way, it
was not that I wanted to offend you. I
don't want to offend you. I love you.
Um,
I I if I was offensive in any way, I I I
can't not going to apologize for what I
said, but I what I will apologize is
that I never came to this world to
offend a single person.
And and if you're feeling hurt, look in
the mirror.
Just look in the mirror.
Cuz I I said everything I said was love
and not hate.
Yeah, there was some rage.
It was not rage being directed at you.
It was rage against It's just rage
against against
false.
As it says in the Psalms,
we scream this too.
Can I scare all of you guys here?
And my voice is a warning from me.
And the words are, "Ohave Hashem sine
uvo."
Those who love God
hate evil.
Not dislike it. Not don't be
indifferent. Don't be neutral.
You got to hate it with a consummate
white fire hatred.
And when I say evil, I'm not talking
about the devil and all your
evil stuff. Not that stuff.