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I Spoke At A Seminary And Challenged Them About Self Love
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[music]
>> So, it's a pleasure to be here. My name
is Hillel Eisenberg. I live not too far
from here.
And
I like to thank Mr. Blumenthal. We we
tried making this happen
a long time ago. I don't know what
happened. Life happens.
And here we are.
And it's a zchus to share some words of
chizuk with you. This doesn't have to be
a speech. It could be interactive. It
could be a speech. Sort of up to you. Um
I don't bark.
Um but I'd like to begin with the
following.
The time that we are in right now is a
time of introspection.
And I'd like to ask a question.
And that is
do you love yourself?
I know you're thinking
Wait a minute. Of course I love myself.
Who doesn't love themselves?
But are you sure it's so simple?
Is it so black and white?
We are currently living in the most
self-curated,
self-loved,
self-absorbed, and self-obsessed
generation in all of human history. You
walk into a bookstore and the largest
section is the self-help section. You
have hashtags on Instagram, #glowup,
#loveyourself,
#lookatyourself,
#youonlyliveonce.
Billions
of views. You have influencers where
their entire career is morning routines
and ice baths and loving yourself. We
are living in a time where the beauty
industry is worth hundreds and hundreds
and hundreds of billions of dollars.
More people today are getting plastic
surgery than ever in all of human
history. We are obsessed with ourselves.
So, you would think
that in such a society
where we are so into caring for ourself
that we would all be running around
so loved.
We would feel so cared for and
emotionally stable, right?
Well,
the statistics
do not seem to bear that out.
Suicide rates in the United States have
risen by roughly 37% since the year
2000. Bizarre. I thought we love
ourselves.
About one in four Americans are
diagnosed with depression.
Antidepressants are among the most
commonly prescribed medications in the
country. Roughly one in five adults
experience anxiety every year. Roughly
one in six adults experience a major
depressive episode at some point in any
given year. Among young people, anxiety
levels have been the highest they've
ever been in all of recorded history.
Emergency room visits for self-harm
amongst teenagers more than doubled in
the past decade.
So, my obvious question to you
is if we are so massively obsessed with
ourselves and loving ourselves and
caring for ourselves
what isn't working?
Why in the world
is it failing so drastically?
So, the question becomes what in fact is
self-love?
What does the Torah have to say about
it? Does it have to say anything about
it? Usually answers yes. Torah has to
say a lot about a lot of things.
I believe
the story of Rebbe Akiva
and the mitzvah of v'ahavta l'rei'acha
kamocha
could shake this whole thing up.
We all know the story.
>> [clears throat]
>> Rebbe Akiva had 24,000 talmidim who
died. These were the greatest people of
the generation. If we would walk into
the room and they were in it, we would
be burnt from their holiness. That is
how holy they were. And they died. So,
we learned this story in first grade. I
don't know if we thought about it since
first grade, but we've learned it in
first grade.
And we heard our morah say it and we
moved on.
You ever thought about it?
Shelo nigle kavod zeh ba zeh. They
didn't give enough respect for one
another.
Like they didn't text their chaverusa,
"Hey, great job listening to me today."
Or they forgot to bring cupcakes
on their chaverusa's birthday.
They didn't like stand up and give a
round of applause when someone asked a
good question in class.
Like what is the adult explanation
for what they did wrong?
I believe in order to understand any of
it you have to do sort of a deep dive on
the mitzvah of v'ahavta l'rei'acha
kamocha.
To any thinking person there should be
two glaring questions about the mitzvah
of loving your fellow Jew.
Number one,
how can I possibly be commanded
to love another person? Love is an
emotion, right? We're told love just
comes to you, right? So, how could I be
commanded by the Torah to love another
person? I could be nice to them. I could
be polite to them. I could have good
manners towards them. But to love them
like to love somebody like you really
love them.
How could I be commanded to love
somebody? It's like imagine your
daughter is dating a guy.
And you think the family's great and
they're like rich and prestigious and
hush shmucka family, but your daughter
is like, "I don't love him. I don't like
him. I'm calling off I'm like I'm not
going out with him anymore." And imagine
if you would go over to your daughter
and say, "I command you to love him."
So, besides you being socially off, we
would call the police on you.
Isn't that what Hashem is doing? "I
command you to love your fellow Jew."
And not just your FELLOW JEW, BUT ALL
14.9 MILLION Jews in the world. How is
it It's not possible.
How is that possible?
>> [snorts]
>> And the second question
that might even be more obvious than the
first.
The mitzvah of v'ahavta l'rei'acha
kamocha is to love your fellow Jew the
same way you love yourself.
We
are like the rest of nature immensely
selfish. The minute we come out of our
mother's stomach, we are thinking about
ourself. It's just one long broadcast of
me, me me me, me me me me me, me me me
me me. Some people a little bit less,
some a little more. There maybe like you
come across like a tznius'd girl who's
like selfless and like on Friday goes to
visit people in the old loser TENT. BUT
LIKE THAT'S WEIRD. MOST PEOPLE LIKE IT'S
ALL ABOUT ME and why are you late
picking me up? And I don't know I have
to wait for you. And where's my Stanley?
And what is going on? And I cannot deal
with all this I'm stressed and it's
about my job and my career and my kids
and my psyche and my life.
So, comes along the Torah and says
a mitzvah, commandment,
"Love your fellow Jew to the same degree
that you love yourself."
Is this like a joke?
It's not possible.
It's not humanly possible to love
another person the same way you love
yourself. It's not possible.
So, what does it mean?
Let me explain by beginning with a
story.
When I was in eighth grade
I had a grand total
of one
boy in my grade and that was me.
For whatever reason in Rochester where I
grew up, there was one kid who moved.
There was one kid who was Lubavitch. He
went to Crown Heights to learn. I was
the only kid in my grade.
So, I had a chaverusa with myself. My
academic rival was me.
So, some classes I was in the seventh
graders with the with them.
But for other classes that I already
took, I did what they called self-study
in the office, which was their nice way
of saying, "Here's a massive Rabbeinu
Yonah history book and go write essays
about it." So, there I am in eighth
grade, which is the sort of the prime
social year of your life, basically,
where you should be going to your
friends' bar mitzvah parties and hanging
out and getting into trouble with your
friends. And there I am pathetically in
the office. There's the secretary and
the principal and then there's me. And
I'm sitting there writing essays like
I'm a retired professor.
So, I'm there. It's kind of pathetic.
But I'm sort of soaking my way through
this year.
And there was a woman, an elderly lady.
Her name was Mrs. Sandy Edison, who was
sort of a educational advisor in the
school, which is a fancy way of saying
she cared for all the people that no one
had time to care for.
And she sits down across my desk. They
gave me a little desk in the office one
day. And she says,
"I know this stinks.
But I want to tell you a perspective
that I think could change this."
She says,
"You are given an opportunity right now
that most people will never have in
their lifetime. And that is
to discover and become comfortable
with themselves.
Because most people your age, they she
she said,
are so caught up, have no mental space
for themselves. They are way too busy
fitting in to discover and become
comfortable with themselves. There's no
mental space. But you do not have peer
pressure because you don't have peers.
So, this could be an opportunity for you
to soak and get depressed or you can
learn an ancient art of discovering your
own soul, your strengths, your
weaknesses, what you like, what you're
good at. And you will have no peer
pressure
distracting you." She gets up and she
walks away.
I still think till this day that is the
greatest piece of advice I've ever
received from anyone.
We are living in a world that is
paranoid, paranoid
of themselves.
Paranoid. And I'm not talking about the
world like out there in Zimbabwe. I'm
talking about our world, this town.
We are paranoid.
We are forever thinking about, okay,
what are they doing? What are they
saying? Where are they eating? Where are
they going? What are they doing?
And we don't have space or time
for ourselves, to discover ourselves and
foster my imagination and my creativity
and my dreams and aspirations. Like
there is no time BECAUSE I AM WAY too
busy focus on everybody else.
Loving yourself
in the guyish world
means be obsessed
with the way other people look at you.
Obsessed.
You should be swimming in makeup because
that is the way other people perceive
you and that's the only important thing
that matters.
Plastic sur- You don't like your face?
Well, get rid of it and get a new one.
Because that's how other PEOPLE WE ARE
OBSESSED with the way other people
perceive us. That is what self-love in
the guyish world means. We love other
people. So, your clothing should be as
minimal as possible cuz so we want
people to see your body.
Because it's all about other people. And
we have wellness retreats. We'll spend
thousands of dollars going to Bali and
Tuscany and Costa Rica to learn
breathing techniques all so I could be
well perceived by you.
The Torah's definition of self-love
means when you see yourself, do you see
a body
or do you see a soul?
What do you see?
Are you comfortable with yourself or are
you paranoid about the external view
that other people have about you?
We live in a world where people cannot
sit 10 seconds with their own thoughts,
they become paranoid.
Podcast, music, listen to something. I
can't even be in the bathroom without
reading something. I am paranoid about
my own thoughts. Which by the way, as a
side,
a side issue that comes from this, is if
we are so scared of our own thoughts, do
you know the time of our day, at least
for boys, but a lot of girls,
where you're forced to stop what you're
doing? It's when you extra.
And suddenly all the thoughts that you
should have been thinking the rest of
the day, you know, like dreams and goals
and like you're so All those thoughts
come flooding into you when you extra
and therefore forget about the diving
for a second because now your brain can
finally do what it's been begging you to
do the whole day. Okay, but that's a
side issue. We'll leave that for the
feeler rant another time.
Self-love according to the Torah is the
ability to see through the jungle, which
is your body, your soul and to befriend
it and to become very comfortable with
it.
The more you see yourself as a soul, the
the less you see yourself as a body, the
less you see other people as bodies, the
less you're threatened by other people
because one second, she's a soul, I'm a
soul, she's a soul. Okay, so she's
prettier and skinnier and richer than
me. Who cares? That's her body. That's
irrelevant. She's a soul, I'm a soul. I
cherish the inside. She's a beautiful
soul. It doesn't bother me that you're
externally more from because you have
your struggles, I have my struggles,
we're working together. I'm a soul,
you're a soul. I could love you the same
way I love myself because it's the soul
that I love. A soul is a piece of
Hashem.
It's like when I went I once went to a
blind mu-
museum [clears throat]
in Israel.
Have you been to the blind museum in
Israel? Have you been there?
So,
it's a tour
but from a blind man
through a blind
street? I don't know what it is because
I couldn't see it. They Everything is
dark. You can't see it. You're They they
sort of mimic what it mean what it feels
like to be a blind person.
And they set up different rooms where
you can go and experience what it means
to be blind. So, I'm going through all
the different rooms. There's a bakery
and there's a grocery store and there's
a library and a post office and then the
end is a cafe where all the people in
the tour sit down and the tour guide
who's blind, he serves you drinks.
Whatever you ask, he gets it right,
which is amazing cuz you want Coke,
Sprite, Dr. Pepper, no problem. He
brings you each one even though he's
blind.
And we were able to ask him questions,
whatever we wanted. So, there were
people who asked him, you know, dumb
questions like, "You ever put salt in
your coffee by mistake?" Or "You ever
walk into the wrong house?" Cuz this was
a man who he led his life by himself as
a blind man. He was independent.
I asked him a question. I said, "Is
there anything about being blind that
you're grateful for?"
So, he said, "You know, that's a good
question.
There is.
And that is that when I meet somebody, I
could care less what they look like.
Because I can't see them.
So, I immediately care about how kind
they are, about how deep they are,
about if they're compassionate. That's
the only thing I care about. And he told
me, "Once you get past how fat, how
skinny, how rich, how good-looking, how
with it, how stylish, how not stylish
somebody is,
you realize
people are fascinating.
They're amazing. They're full of depth.
They're souls.
That is the after the maker.
No one is forcing you
to love every single person in class
room.
It's a mitzvah to look at yourself a
little bit more like a soul. And once
you do, you realize everyone's souls.
And naturally, you love souls cuz you
love Hashem. A soul is a piece of Hashem
inside of you. No one's forcing you
to tell me that were great, tell me that
I'm
But it didn't really trickle in enough
where they saw themselves as a soul,
they still viewed each other as
competitors. That's a problem.
The way you view your body is sort of
the way you view life.
You could go to a wedding and it could
be a celebration of two souls that are
now fusing together, both halves of
their body, both halves of their soul.
Or if you're a body kind of person,
it's two bodies coming together. Let's
just have a party. That's all it is. So,
it becomes sort of like a way to show
off and a way to taunt your your wealth.
It's like when I I once went to a very
fancy hotel in Canandaigua.
Canandaigua's at the lake, one of the
Finger Lakes in the in Upstate New York,
very very beautiful part of the world.
And there's a fancy hotel there called
the Can- the Canandaigua.
And I and I check in, I put my kid to
sleep and I go with my wife to explore
the hotel. Now, I'm not suggesting you
do that. better to stay with your kid.
But, that's what I did. So, I'm opening
all the doors, I'm going It's exploring.
It's a cool hotel.
And there was a big ballroom in this
hotel. They had weddings there. A lot
of, you know, fancy people made their
weddings there.
And we're in the basement and I see
there's a room called the bridal suite.
So, there's no wedding in going on. So,
I go in. I check it out. I'm curious.
I go into this bridal suite. Bride is
color, right?
And I see
a humongous room
and in the little corner there's a
mirror
and everything else is empty except
a the largest TV screen I've ever seen
in my life. This was the type of TV The
whole wall was a TV screen. It's the
type of TV screen you're not sure if
you're watching it or if it's watching
you. And then there's a couch for
right in front of it. And I'm thinking
to myself like, I Is this so pathetic?
You are so addicted to your TV that even
on your wedding day, 5 minutes before
you're about to get married, here you
are with all your friends watching TV.
But I realized,
one second.
This person has been this person's
girlfriend This person is They've been
together for 7 years. They have two
kids. They've been living in the same
house.
This is simply a party. So, if it's
simply a party, you're waiting for it to
start, you got to kill the time. So, you
watch TV. What do you want them to do?
But you walk into a color suite and a
terrace charmer chinka sprinzer.
First of all, you walk in there, it's a
tiny room. There's There's potato
smashed into a chair. It looks like
World War III and a tornado came through
the room. Okay, there's nieces and
nephews running in all over the place.
But in the middle of it all, there is a
color where
you could be I'm wrong, I think
almost 100% of the time, she is standing
there in the middle of a 45-minute extra
crying. She's fasting. It's Yom Kippur.
She's using her unique spiritual powers
as a color to dive in for her friend who
can't have kids yet, who's 27, not
married. She's diving in for her nephew
went off the
SHE'S DIVING IN FOR HER She's rivers of
tears coming down. Why? Because my mom's
getting married. I'M A SOUL ABOUT TO GET
my other half.
That is two ways of looking at the same
exact thing. You go to a bris. Okay,
it's another body coming into the world.
Let's just have breakfast. Or one
second, it's a soul. A soul came into
the world. A soul came into the world.
You go to a fire. Okay, there was a body
and it died. Sort of like sad. Like, you
know, he was having a good life and now
he's dead.
Or it's a soul that finished its task
kid
or it didn't complete its task kid, but
either way it's sad, but it's also sort
of a ceremony marking the end of a
soul's career as a soldier in Hashem's
army. Our entire outlook
on life is Do you see souls or do you
see bodies?
That is the mitzvah of you have to
to look a little bit deeper inside of
you and become comfortable with
yourself.
If you look at the history of class
room, you'll notice that almost all the
great leaders
were shepherds.
Almost all.
Abraham was a shepherd. Isaac was a
shepherd. Jacob was a shepherd. The were
shepherds. Joseph was a Rachel was a
shepherd. Moses was a shepherd. Aaron
was a shepherd. David was a shepherd.
Rabbi Akiva was a shepherd. What's up
with the shepherds?
So you're going to tell me, "Well, what
do you want them to do?" Like there's no
orthodontist, no crooked orthodontist
that they could work, you know. This is
the olden days. So I'm not sure if
that's so kosher, you know, you could be
a merchant. You could be a shoemaker.
You could be a carpenter.
What Everyone's shepherds?
So Rebbe Nachman of Breslov, he famously
says
that in order to be a leader, to attain
greatness even in your own little world,
you have to be very comfortable with
yourself. You have to be very
comfortable being alone. You're very
comfortable doing your own thing. Being
a shepherd is the perfect job
for fostering people who are happy and
comfortable with themselves.
>> [snorts]
>> These days,
it's a great time
to work on this mitzvah. But I want to
add another layer to this.
There's another layer to vihavta
l'rei'acha kamocha that I think
could
increase our understanding a little bit
more.
In 1940, in in the 1940s 1946,
there were orphanages all over Europe
filled with babies, infants. These were
war babies. They had no parents. They
were killed or died from the war.
And they were all in orphanages, and
they were all lined up, you could
imagine,
crib after crib just lined up.
And something peculiar started
happening.
They were all taken care of.
The nurse would come in. They would give
each baby what they need.
Something strange happened.
The babies started deteriorating.
And no one knew why.
There was no disease.
There was no issues. They were all
medically cared for. Nothing
could explain why they were slowly
withering away. You had babies that
stopped crying. You had babies that just
stared, didn't blink, just stared at the
ceiling. And eventually, you had babies
that started dying.
No one understood why.
So a a a psychoanalyst named René Spitz,
a Jewish person from from Vienna,
he came and took on the case.
And he explored two side-by-side
environments.
He went to prisons where there were
women who gave birth and were raising
their kids in jail.
And he observed
how they were raising their children.
And he concluded that in the year that
he studied these women, a grand total of
0% of the babies died. Zero. Again, a
jail, not exactly, you know, chop. It's
not the best hospital. It's not a
hospital. It's rats and disease. It's
not good. But then he went to the
orphanages and the hospitals with rows
and rows and rows of infants. You know
what the percentage of those that died
in the 1946? The percentage of Jewish
babies that died within the first year?
35%
died. No explanation.
And he observed the two environments,
and he concluded the reason.
True, in the prisons,
they weren't necessarily getting the
best medical care. It's dirty.
However, there was one consistent mother
who loved them day after day.
But in the orphanages, in the hospitals,
it was mechanical. You had a nurse come
in, bottle for you, bottle for you,
bottle for you, bottle for you, diaper
for you, diaper for you, diaper for you.
They would move on. There was no face
that they recognized. There was no one
who looked at them and looked at them
longer than necessary or smiled at them
or wiped away a tear. It was mechanical.
It was robotic. It was cold.
So they died.
And one of the greatest psychological
discoveries in the last 150 years, he
realized that if people are underloved,
they will die. Not they'll get
depressed.
Not they'll start dying their hair
purple.
Not they'll start putting on tattoos or
run off to India. They will die. It
might go slowly. It might lead to
anxiety and then to bad heart diseases
and then death. But it will lead to
death.
And here's the scary part.
It doesn't limit itself to babies.
It's anybody.
If people are underloved and
underappreciated and unnoticed and
rolled at and laughed at,
they will shrivel up and die.
Slowly.
It might lead to a heart attack at 40.
It might not be a infant as dramatic as
an infant dying in its crib.
But they will slowly shrivel away.
But here's the scariest part.
If this is true about people not loving
babies enough and people not loving
other people enough, this is equally
true if not more so if you don't love
yourself enough.
If you are so paranoid about other
people and we don't love ourselves, and
when I say love, I don't mean the
American version. I mean the Jewish
version. I mean loving your soul
and your dreams and your character
traits and your imagination and your
personality and the kochos that Hashem
gave you,
you could wither away.
It's not simply the talmidim of Rebbe
Akiva were not noyei'a koved zeh ba'zeh.
It's they were killing each other.
We have a deep-ingrained need to be
validated and be loved and feel
important.
True, we should expect it from other
people, and you should do it to your
kids and to your parents and to your
siblings.
But it can never start if we don't do it
to ourselves.
If we don't see the unbelievable,
unfathomable holiness inside of us, we
will slowly wither away and all our
dreams and all our aspirations gone. And
we will be at best mediocre and at
worst, I don't want to say.
We need in these times, the days where
we're sort of
getting over the chet of the talmidim of
Rebbe Akiva, to love ourselves more, to
see ourselves as souls more.
The very first halacha in all of
Shulchan Aruch, does anyone know what it
is?
The very first, not the second or third
or fourth or fifth. The first halacha in
all of Shulchan Aruch is hisgaber
ka'ari, to get up like a lion. So for
years I thought that meant, don't get up
late. But then when I was thinking to
myself, like there's no way that's what
it means. Like who who is getting up
late? Like like I mean we have kids. We
have jobs. You know what I mean? Like
what you're The entire Shulchan Aruch is
is talking to 10th grade girls? That's
The entire Shulchan Aruch is talking to?
Doesn't make sense.
And another question that you should be
asking is, do you know that lions sleep
more than every single animal in the
entire animal kingdom except two? Koalas
and bats.
Get up like a lion. You know what time
lions get up? At 5:00 in the afternoon
when the sun in Africa is setting and
it's cooler and then they could go eat a
zebra and then call it another day and
sleep for the the next 22 hours.
Get up like a lion. Makes no sense. So
obviously that's not what it means. What
it means is you should be walking down
the street with the spirit of a lion. I
don't care what you think.
I don't need to spend a thousand dollars
on a pair of shoes for you to validate
me. What?
I have a neshama worth a billion
dollars. I have a neshama my
grandparents died in Treblinka to
protect. I don't need makeup that were
the thousand dollars and take a 10-week
course on makeup. What?
It's insane. Now that they're the
parnassah is great, go for it. I'm not
You know what I'm saying.
It's insane.
We need to walk with stoltz. Stoltz
doesn't mean I'm more yeshivish than
you. I'm firmer than you. It means I am
a soul. I am working hard. I'm trying my
best. I'm discovering myself. I have my
issues the same way you have your
issues. Your issues might be a little
bit more hidden than my issues. Doesn't
make them any worse or better.
I am comfortable with my soul.
The reason the Jewish people survive
more than any other group of people on
Earth is because we have things you The
one thing we cherish is the one thing
you can't take away from us. And when
entire empires build their empire over
power and money, when the power and
money is gone, they're gone.
But we don't. We cherish the one thing
you can't take away, and that is a
neshama. The more we attach ourselves to
a neshama, the more blissful our life
can be. I don't need to to renovate my
kitchen for the fourth time in 5 years.
I don't care
cuz it's more important for me that my
kids are happy.
That my husband's happy. That I'm happy.
That's more important.
I'd rather take the money,
go on a road trip,
see nature,
see Hashem's world,
have guests with lots of gishmak food.
The way we see ourselves is the way we
see the world, the way we live this one
life that we have.
I was once, speaking about trains, I was
once on a train ride, an 11-hour train
ride from Baltimore to Rochester, where
I live.
And I'm in an empty car,
and in walks empty car.
In walks a a 450-lb man.
And he [snorts] scans all the empty
seats,
and he sits next to me.
The guy There's fat spilling into my
seat.
I'm thinking like, you are obviously a
leyonovi because why else would you sit
right here? I mean, so just No, just
tell me what I need to know in Yiddish.
So after 5 minutes, he turns to me and
he says, "You want to hear my life
story?"
So I'm thinking like, first of all,
anybody that's offering to tell you
their life story, it's probably an
interesting story. Like it's probably
not going to be like, "Yeah, I grew up
in Livingston and I went to Rutgers and
now I'm a dentist in Delaware." Right?
That's probably not what it's going to
be. It's probably going to be an story.
So, I said, "Sure. I got 11 hours."
She says, "When he was a baby,
his parents often stayed a very high-end
luxury hotels.
And at one time,
he was brought along, and by mistake, he
was dropped by his mother into a boiling
bath.
And he was taken out, but he had a lot
of burns on his body.
And they sued the hotel, and they won
millions of dollars, which were placed
in a bank account in his name.
And those millions
turned into dozens of millions by the
time he turned 18.
He looks at me, he said, "The minute I
turned 18,
I took all the money, which was in my
name,
and I left my house,
never never to see my parents again.
I just ran.
And I explored.
And I got married five times, he says. I
got divorced five times. I can't be
bogged down to any I got to do try
everything I got to go everywhere. And
he says, "You want to know how I spend
my time, my life? I travel up the
railroad.
And I stop off at every town that I
think is interesting, and I check out
the best place, and the best
restaurants, and I go meet the most
interesting people, and then I hop back
on the train, and I go again in another
town."
And as he's telling me this story of
his, he sees that we're pulling into a
station in a small little town in in
Pennsylvania somewhere. He's like, "Hey,
wait a minute. I never tried this town."
And he gets up, and he leaves. And as
he's leaving, he turns to me and he
says,
"Nice chatting with you, son.
You just met the freest man on the face
of the earth."
And he wattles off the train into his
little life.
The next day,
I'm in Rochester. Whenever I was there,
I tried to visit
certain tzaddik who was in an old age
home there. Very very difficult life.
Never had kids. Had horrible diseases
that ravaged his body his whole life.
And he was in an old age home. I walk
into the old age home. I'm sure you've
been to old age homes. Or if you
haven't, you should go.
It's not exactly the circus. You know,
it's not exactly a carnival.
They're looking at you, old people, at
like as if like how dare you take your
youthful energetic body and parade it
march it right in front of us old dying
people. Like that's the look.
I'm like, okay. Let me just go straight
to this guy's room. I asked the nurse,
"Where's his room?" I go to the fourth
floor.
Before I even get onto the floor, the
hallway where his room is, I hear coming
out of his room a song. He's singing.
Tanya Hak Tish'a S'chaneni. He is
singing.
I go into his room.
He can't move. So, he had a nurse
take a shtender and prop it up with
string from like a pole,
and there's a safer that he's a learning
from. And he's singing.
The happiest guy.
And I couldn't get over the difference
between the two people.
Here's a guy who has everything,
and he has nothing.
Because his whole life is his body,
feeding his body, pleasuring his body,
making sure his body's good.
Here's a person who his entire life is
his soul. So, you could take away
everything,
and he's happy.
I'm not saying
we should become that.
But a little bit.
Where I don't need so much.
Where it's okay. Where I have mental
space to realize I'm a soul. Why am I
wasting my time with other people's
stupid and nourishkeit and body
obsessing?
Every single person in this room
was once upon a time
sitting in shamayim
with their little family circle
when a malach
came into shamayim, opened the door,
and said,
>> [clears throat]
>> "Racheli Goldstein, your time has come
to descend onto this earth." Everyone's
looking around. Who's Racheli Goldstein?
And it's you.
And you stand up, and your whole section
stands up. They're so proud. This is
your time.
And they escort you. Your great uncles
there, great grandparents, great great
great your great great great
grandparents to the Everyone's escorting
you to the edge of shamayim.
And right before you jump,
you're handed by the malach a little
seed.
He says, "See this seed?
This is a neshama.
Plant it."
You take the seed, you put it into your
pocket, you look back, you see all your
family members the mamash cheering and
davening. They're hoping and praying
that you give nachas ruach to them and
to their grandparents and to Hashem.
And you jump into this world.
You get right to work. You know that
seed's important. So, you put that seed
into a box to protect it. You put the
box in your room. You make sure the box
has proper lighting. Then you notice,
okay, people are painting their box
interesting colors. Oh, okay. So, you
paint your box interesting colors. And
then you see, oh, people are covering
their box with like this Gucci cloth.
But you can't afford Gucci cloth. So,
you get a second job. Then you see
people started covering their box with
this like Moncler like fancy cloth. You
can't afford Moncler fancy cloth. So,
you know what you do? You
marry guy who's [snorts] like eh, but he
has a good job and has a lot of money,
but he's like eh, but whatever. And now
you can afford Moncler cloth.
And then you saw that people are not
doing metal cloth metal boxes anymore.
So, you ditch the metal box, you go with
wood like this mahogany wood. People are
really into that. Then you see Saks
Fifth has this sale a new type of boxes
with this lip. So, you get that box. And
then you see corduroy is really in
style. So, you switch it with corduroy.
Now your box is with corduroy. Then you
see people have these $900 diffusers
around their box. You're like, I got to
get one of those. So, you get one of
those around your box. And then you see
the gallery is saying that everything
you are wearing is last year's season.
It's unwearable.
So, you go into the gallery, you get all
the new cloth to cover your box. This
goes on
for 120 years.
And you're sitting in a hospital bed.
And the same malach comes back. He says,
"I'm back.
Time to go."
And you're dead.
And you go up to shamayim, and there's a
knock on the door, and the door is open,
and there's an announcement, "Racheli
Goldstein has come back." There's a
whole commotion. Your whole family
section rises to their feet. They have
such hope in their eyes. They come
rushing to the edge of shamayim. They're
escorting They're looking to see the
tree that came out of your seed.
And you're holding a seed.
And they're like,
"What?
You never
You never planted the the seed?" And
you're like,
"I took care of the of the box."
The malach looks at you like,
"You idiot."
And your great grandparents and your
great great grandparents and your great
uncle who was killed in Auschwitz and
your great nephew that was killed by a
truck and your great great uncle went
off the derech and was chazer b'tshuva
at the last minute. They're all looking
at you like,
and they return to their seats.
These are days
where we could really look at ourselves
and see,
am I just building a box,
or am I planting a seed?
And the way
we answer that question
will be the way we look at yourself,
others, and your life around you.
Some of you may know I like to travel,
and I don't know if you guys see my
video.
Either way.
Last year, I had to get a passport for
my daughter cuz we were going on a trip
to China.
I actually went today to get a passport
for my son.
An additional son.
So, we're getting a passport for my
daughter. She was 3 months old at the
time.
It's a little tricky
to hold up your daughter for the picture
because they have a camera, and they
have a white screen, but I need to hold
her up. But my hand can't be in the
picture. So, it had to be like a
specific angle, and I wasn't getting in
her eyes, and she was throwing up, and
there's 750 people
waiting.
And they're not patient.
So, I came up with an idea. I said,
"Maybe, you know what? There's a there's
a We were in a mall. This is the Ocean
County Mall or the I think it's called
that.
And right next to the passport center,
there's a dollar store. So, I said, "You
know what? Let me go next door. I'll get
a $1 tablecloth, a white tablecloth.
I'll drape it over the stroller that
she's in. I'll put her in the stroller,
and then you take a picture there." So,
that's what we did. I take my my
4-year-old son at the time. I go running
through the mall to the dollar store.
I'm looking all over for the white
sheet. I find one. I buy it. I come
hustling back. I dodge the cans of tuna
that they're throwing at me, the people
online. And I go I ran I I put it on the
the stroller. We take the picture. Good.
Valid. I turn back.
My son's gone.
Just gone.
So, at that exact minute,
every single possible headline comes
flashing into your brain.
Okay, he's kidnapped. Every single
person in the mall is a suspect. Yeah,
that guy looks stressed. Yeah, you're a
serial killer. Yeah, it's you. I
envision my son, he's inside like a
suitcase. He's being loaded onto a
truck. He's being like hauled off to
Mexico, shoved in a tunnel.
And I frantically panic. I'm looking all
over the place.
And I sort of retrace my steps and I
walk into the dollar store and there he
is.
Just casually in the toy aisle looking
at the toys.
And I was saying to myself like, how are
you so calm? Like he knew I wasn't next
to him.
The answer is
is because he had no clue the dangers of
random people seeing a four-year-old in
a mall.
He didn't know the repercussions of what
it means to kidnap and murder and
mutilation. He doesn't know.
But I know.
We might not know
what it means to get lost in the mall of
life
and to just sit there
and in the toy aisle
completely naively unaware that our soul
is dying, is murdered and kidnapped.
But Hashem knows.
And he will never give up.
And he will never give you peace, ever.
Until
you make peace with your soul.
It's not possible to be peaceful and to
live a harmonious life
if the soul is ignored. It's not
possible. I know that there are a lot of
ads and a lot of newspapers that will
try to convince you otherwise. It's not
possible.
Because Hashem loves you too much.
I want to end with a story. One last
story.
This you might know also.
There was a guy his name was George
Dantzig.
George Dantzig was a regular 22-year-old
guy in the University of
California, Berkeley.
And he was taking a class called
advanced mathematics.
And one day he walked in a late.
And he sort of tiptoes in.
He slides into his seat.
And he quickly copies the two homework
questions
that the teacher wrote on the the
blackboard. Back then it was blackboards
or the whiteboard.
Later that night, he sits down to do the
homework.
Makes himself a nice tea.
And he's looking at the homework and
it's hard.
He's like, okay. Roll up your sleeves.
Over an hour he spends on these two
pretty sophisticated problems.
The next day
he walks over to the teacher to hand in
his homework.
The teacher goes
what is this?
What do you mean what is this?
What are you handing me?
The homework from yesterday.
I didn't give homework yesterday.
So what were those two questions on the
board?
The professor
gets up
grams the paper out of George's hand and
starts looking at it over and over
again. He's reading it. He's reading it.
He's reading it. He's reading it. He's
And he jumps up. And he says, George, I
don't believe it.
George, I don't believe it. Those
weren't homework questions.
Those were two of the most famous
unsolved math problems that never been
solved. You, my friend, has just solved
two math problems that have baffled the
minds of the greatest mathematicians in
all of world history. You know?
George Dantzig, who was a regular guy,
who did not think of himself as this
uber smart math geek, but because he
came late to class, did not hear the
professor say, you can't do that. It's
an unsolvable problem. He didn't hear.
He thought it was homework. So he went
and he rolled up his sleeve and he did
it. And what was discovered was that he
actually is a real math geek. He became
one of the most famous mathematicians in
American history, which many of our
gadgets that we have today, including
lasers and computers, are because of his
wisdom.
We are all the exact same way.
We walk around thinking average,
whatever,
irrelevant.
It's a mistake.
It's a lethal mistake. If you see the
infinitely gorgeous, beautiful,
harmonious,
holy soul inside of you,
you walk like a lion.
I want to leave with one comment. I
don't know if I'm overstepping my
boundaries here.
But from what I understand about what
your seminary is, I'd like to be what
Mrs. Sandy Eisen was to me in eighth
grade
to you.
It's tempting in life to want to be
where everyone else is and have
the big class and the big grade and the
ton of friends and the wit and and the
everyone the head and everyone looks to
you and the most people and the most
looks and everyone boxes checked.
And it's tempting to get down on
yourself
or to wish
or to imagine or to do so all sorts of
psychological tricks about what could
have been if what and the other.
But perhaps the whole time
it's a gift
that Hashem is giving you
to help you discover
you.
Something that most people never
discover.
They are too busy
chasing everybody else.
Perhaps Hashem orchestrated your life to
give you the opportunity to be
comfortable with yourself, which is the
greatest gift you can get. Every single
great person by definition, whether it's
great in the business world
or in the spiritual world, greatness by
definition means you're comfortable
doing things other people aren't.
If every businessman did everything the
same, no one would become billionaires.
They'd all be the same level. If every
godol went to sleep the exact same time
as everyone else in the yeshiva, they'd
never learn more, they'd never wake up
early, they'd never work on their middos
more. Greatness by definition means you
are comfortable, not just comfortable,
proud of yourself.
So I leave you with this.
These times
take an extra minute
to appreciate
a rare opportunity you might have.
Discovering yourself.
Being okay with yourself. Being proud
about the neshama that's inside of you.
And when you do
you will spend the rest of your life