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I can't believe I'm saying this #judaism #marriage #shorts
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In this candid monologue, Michael shares his personal journey with "torah class" and how he connects to "judaism". He discusses the Talmudic concept of 'kinyan' in "relationships" and its stages, drawing a powerful analogy to acquiring "jewish" learning. Michael's raw honesty about his path to Torah, even if unconventional, resonates deeply, particularly when discussing concepts akin to a "jewish wedding" in their spiritual progression.
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
My response, and I can't believe I'm
about to say this. I had a Havruta this
morning and we were learning Kiddushin.
I don't [music] think I'd be learning
today if not for Ersh L'mo. I'm going to
come out and say it. You want to know
why? Because we learned this morning, I
can't believe I'm saying this, a woman
is acquired, not purchased. You don't
buy a woman three ways: with money, with
a contract, and with a physical
relationship. It's not all three. It's
not that you do all three at once in a
vacuum. It's that you start off with
Kesef, then you get the Shtar, and then
finally you do the epitome of the
relationship, which is the act of being
with someone. That is that process
[music] of being Kona a woman. I feel
the same thing with Kona of Torah. If
you give Tzedakah, you give charity to
someone who's learning, [music] it
connects you to Torah. If you're singing
for Tefillah to connect to God, it's
connecting you through Torah. [music]
And then you can get to Torah, it's a
beautiful thing. It's not meant for
everybody. I'm sorry that I'm on a
second grade level of learning, but calm
down. There's a lot of us out there. And
I'm sorry that I'm not the person that's
just going to rip open a Gemara and
start learning all day and just learn
Torah. I might need to be inspired
[music] by something else in order to
get there, and I'm unapologetic for it.