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Impulsiveness - Rabbi Dovid Orlofsky
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
The topic for this evening is
impulsiveness.
Yeah?
A lot of people planned on coming
tonight and then suddenly they decide to
do something else and
the problem with the topic when you're
dealing with impulsive people.
Impulsiveness is a difficult thing. It's
a very difficult thing. They did a
famous study, a famous study,
psychological study, where they took
children
and they put a marshmallow in front of
them and they said you can eat that
marshmallow right now, but if you wait 5
minutes I'll give you another
marshmallow.
And they found that the people who
waited the 5 minutes to get the second
marshmallow, they followed them through
life. They had more stable marriages and
relationships. They were more successful
in business, successful in everything.
Because impulsiveness is unfortunately
something that tears us apart, stops us
from being successful. Now,
my Rebbe Rebbe Auerbach and a lot of
people today say my Rebbe Rebbe
Auerbach, but he was my biggest Rebbe
and Chofetz Chaim in 1975.
So, he was actually my Rebbe.
He was the one who when I had hepatitis
bullied me into using the pigeons. If
you are not familiar with this, this is
one of those great cultural experiences.
I encourage you not to get hepatitis,
but
if you can find someone who's got it to
watch them cuz it's a lot of fun. Yeah?
Um my I had very high hepatitis. Uh my
SGOTs and SGPTs, which are supposed to
be around 50, were about 2,000.
If I concentrated very hard, I could
move my head from one side of the pillow
to the other.
And I was I was a wreck, you know?
And um Rebbe Auerbach said to me,
"You're going to do the pigeons." And I
said, "Excuse me." So, he says, "Time
I'm in Hogum."
It says that if you have hepatitis, you
get male pigeons for male, female
pigeons for a female, and you
clean them out well, then place their
bottom on your belly button and it sucks
out the
poison.
And I said, "There is not a chance in
God's good earth that I'm going to do
that. This is just I I'm so many levels
that's just wrong. It's just It's not
going to happen." And Rebbe Auerbach
started screaming at me and he said,
"You know, you have a refuah and you're
not using it. You're going to be chayiv
on all the bitul Torah that you're
doing." And
I was really not in a position to fight.
I said, "Fine." I said, "Who does this?"
The pigeon man. There's
I don't know who it has it today. At the
time there was a man. I don't know, I
forgot his name, but he was known as the
pigeon man.
They sent someone to the Arab shook.
They were only able to find eight
pigeons cuz it wasn't the season. I
didn't even know there was a season for
pigeons, but
and they bring them back and uh
and uh to cover the cost I charged
admission. A lot of people came in, it
was very exciting. And uh he cleans them
out, baruch Hashem. And the first one
died in 30 seconds, you know? The last
one it took almost a minute and a half.
And he told me afterwards I could have
killed the whole flock. Anyway, it
wasn't very scientific cuz they should
have done a blood test at the beginning
at the end. They did it once a week, but
my next blood test, my SGOTs and SGPTs
went down from 2,000 to 200.
The doctor called it a remarkable
recovery.
So, I have Rebbe Auerbach to thank for
that story.
And uh which has nothing to do with what
we're talking about. But um it's such a
cool story, what do you do with that?
You know, you got to work it in somehow.
So, um
uh
So, but he said to me once, he says,
"You're not a Rabbi unless whatever you
say, you tie into the parsha."
So, before we start, I have to tie it
into the parsha. Right? Impulsiveness.
So, I'm
jumping ahead
to parshas Mattos.
Uh the truth of the matter is
it's a parsha, doesn't have to be this
parsha.
Parshas Mattos, which uh I I don't know
if I should really say I'm jumping ahead
or I'm jumping backwards, you know,
because I think it's closer behind than
it is here. Anyway,
and it tells us the following story. Uh
perek lamed beis pasuk aleph.
U'mikneh rav hayah livnei Reuven
u'livnei Gad atzum me'od, etc. etc. And
they come and they say, "Look, we got a
lot of cows and this is cow country."
Pasuk hey. Vayomru, im matzanu chein
be'einecha, "If we have found favor in
your eyes, yutan et ha'aretz hazot
la'avadecha le'achuzah, give us this
land on Ever Yarden as an inheritance.
Al ta'avirainu et ha'Yarden, we will not
pass over the Jordan."
Okay, that's that's what they say. We'll
take this.
On this, the Yalkut Shimoni says the
following. Quotes the famous pasuk.
Chanoch lana'ar al pi darko.
Teach a child when he's young and he
will never forget it even as he gets
old.
And it quotes a pasuk.
And the pasuk it quotes is from this
week's parsha.
And the story goes like this.
Bereishis perek lamed pasuk yud daled.
Vayeilech Reuven bimegzeres chitim.
And Reuven went out during the time of
the wheat harvest. Vayim Vayimtzah
dudaim basadeh, and he found mandrakes
growing in the field. Vayavo otam el
Leah imo. He brought it to Leah his
mother. Vatomer Rachel Leah, "Teni na li
midudaei vneich." Give me these dudaim
and the whole story with the dudaim
takes place.
The pasuk is it says, "Chanoch lana'ar
al pi darko."
Vayeilech Reuven bimegzeres chitim.
Da da da.
What's the connection?
Reuven goes out and picks flowers for
his mother because they were good
help you to be able to give birth.
And says the Medrash, and that's why
hundreds of years later
shevet Reuven decides to give up Eretz
Yisrael
because they have a lot of cows and stay
in Ever Yarden.
What's the connection?
So, I heard from my Rebbe, Rebbe Moshe
Cheit,
uh fascinating insight.
And one that
I mean, I heard this
over 40 years ago.
And it made made such an impression on
me.
He said,
"Reuven is going out during yemei ktsir
chitim. You're going out to harvest the
wheat.
What's your job? I want to harvest the
wheat.
And I see these mandrakes by the side of
the road.
And I say, 'You know,
this would be great for my mom.'
And I pick the mandrakes and I bring
them to my mom. Not a bad thing to do.
But you had a mission.
You were going out to harvest the wheat.
What are you doing picking flowers?
You had a job to do.
That action multiplied over the
generations to the point that when all
of shevet Reuven came to Ever Yarden,
they said, 'Yeah, this is good enough.
We'll take this.'
You haven't even seen Eretz Yisrael.
You don't even know what's there.
You gave up your cheilek in Eretz
Yisrael because you took the first thing
you saw.
When Yaakov is giving out the brachas
and these aren't what I would call
brachas.
Yeah?
Brachas
like when you go to Rebbe Chaim
Kanievsky, yeah, bracha vehatzlacha.
Bracha vehatzlacha. Be successful.
That's a good bracha.
Now, he is
getting old, got too many people. He
doesn't say it anymore. He goes, "Buah."
Bracha vehatzlacha, Rebbe Shaya gives
"Buah."
He has a lot of stuckers that he
collects for. Somebody brought him a
large sum of money.
He asked him for a bracha. So, he says,
"Buah."
So, he says,
"You know, I brought the Rebbe a lot of
money, you know, and I was looking for a
longer bracha."
So, Rebbe Chaim goes, "Buah."
Bracha vehatzlacha. Like, what what what
is he looking for? That's a bracha.
So, Yaakov gives his children brachas.
Shimon and Levi, you guys have a serious
anger problem.
Reuven, pachaz kamayim. Yeah?
Now, that's not what I would call a
bracha.
Well, but it's the best of brachas.
Cuz it's only the person who cares about
you the most who will tell you that
there's a piece of toilet paper stuck to
your foot when you're coming out of the
bathroom. You know what I'm saying?
It's only your your closest friends who
will make an intervention. It's only the
people who really care about you who are
going to who are going to tell you,
"Listen,
you know?"
People who don't care about you say,
"Yeah, it's fine. Fine, whatever you
do."
People who care about you?
Yeah?
This is something that unfortunately
many children will never get today
because I got this when I was growing
up. If you were acting like an idiot,
your Rebbe would say, "Stop acting like
an idiot." And you did.
You can't do that today because you'll
destroy someone's self-esteem. When I
was going to school, they hadn't
discovered self-esteem yet. They didn't
know it existed. So, if you act like an
idiot, they would say, "Stop acting like
an idiot." And you did. Today you can't
say that.
You could say, "You know, maybe
you'll be a little less of an idiot
tomorrow. Maybe, you know?"
It's very nice, you know, you came to
the twice this week and maybe next week
you'll come three times.
By the time you're 60, you'll come every
day and that's very good. You know, you
slowly you build up. You know what I
mean? Like you know
So, we're afraid to tell people. We're
afraid to point out when people have
shortcomings. Yeah?
It's a It's a pity because, you know, if
nobody points out when you have a
problem, there's no way for you to be
able to solve it.
I don't know if anybody This is This is
This is a problem. I have I I just told
a joke, you know,
earlier, you know, about uh Sears. I
said, "I better get these jokes in fast
cuz they won't be around anymore, you
know?" So, uh but there's uh there's uh
there used to be these um
lightbulb jokes.
You know?
How many this does it take to change a
lightbulb? How many that does it take to
change a lightbulb? Different jokes like
that, you know?
Uh they were ethnic jokes and totally
inappropriate. And when they turn off
the camera, I'll tell you. But, um
no, just as a study to appreciate the
history of humor. Anyway, so um
So,
uh they used to have these lightbulb
jokes, you know? And then eventually, of
course, they got to the Jewish
community.
You know?
How many Jewish grandmothers does it
take to change a lightbulb? None. No
sitting in the dark, you know? That kind
of thing, you know?
Um but uh but they they had one that I
thought was profound. How many
psychologists does it take to change a
lightbulb?
One.
But, only if the lightbulb wants to
change.
So, if you If somebody Nobody wants to
hear
In the old days, you used to pay someone
to give you musar.
Cuz uh I need to hear the musar. You
know, I'll grow. I'll become a better
person.
I want I want to hear it.
Yeah?
So, he says to his son, "Reuven
Pachaz kamayim.
You are unstable as water." Now,
we know that there are what are called
the four yesodot. Yeah? The four
yesodot.
The four primal forces.
Earth,
air,
fire,
and
um water.
And there are different attributes that
a person has that's coming from one of
these
primal matters. I.e., if you're angry,
that's coming from fire.
If you're lazy, that's coming from dirt.
That's because you're dirt. And certain
people are stronger in some of these
things.
You know? And you can those, you know,
who follow the zodiac. In Judaism, we
had the mazalot. We had the idea of the
zodiac. Certain signs are water signs,
fire signs. You know you have a
particular entity. So, you might know
you have a tendency towards laziness or
tendency towards anger, you know?
Those of us who are a combination,
baruch Hashem, we manage to be lazy and
angry and, you know, we get all of it
all in together, you know?
Water is what? That's the impulsiveness.
That's the That's the ability not to be
able to think.
I I act.
And I think about it later. That's
impulsiveness.
I'm not even I'm not even considering it
because pachaz kamayim. Why is mayim?
Cuz mayim has no shape. It has no, as we
say, chomer. It has no chomer. Put it in
a long, thin glass, it'll be long and
thin. Put it in a low, shallow bowl,
it'll be low and shallow. It takes on
whatever form you put it in. It doesn't
take any form of its own. It doesn't
have any permanence.
It's something that's
you know, that's unstable.
Pachaz kamayim, he says to Reuven.
Yaakov recognized this trait.
And Rebbe wanted to say that was the
That was the insight
that he got from from the
dudaim.
Right? From that midrash. You see
already that Reuven So, the real source
of this was Maaseh Billah where he got
angry and he did something without
thinking that had cosmic consequences.
But, people do things. Now, here's very
interesting.
When it comes to setting up the
machaneh.
So, you know, on the east goes Yehudah,
Yissachar, and Zevulun.
On the west go the Bnei Rachel, Ephraim,
Menashe, and Binyamin.
In the north goes Dan, Naftali, and
Asher. In the south goes Reuven, Shimon,
and Gad.
And
the Ramban, at the beginning of
Bamidbar, explains why it was set up
this way.
And it says the best exposure is south.
South will get the most sun.
Yeah? East will get it in the morning,
west will get it at night. North is the
darkest exposure and south is the best
exposure to have.
Bear this in mind when you're buying an
apartment, yeah? So, in Eretz Yisrael,
b'ezrat Hashem. So,
the south The south is the place where
it gets the most sun. And it says Reuven
goes in the south because Reuven is
middos ha-teshuvah.
He's middos ha-teshuvah.
Why?
Because middos ha-teshuvah is
the result
of somebody who's impulsive.
Yeah?
Mark Twain once said, "Keep your words
soft and sweet. It'll be easier when you
have to eat them later."
It was an amazing thing. I I I remember
reading this
decades ago
in How to Win Friends and Influence
People by Dale Carnegie.
He told the following story.
He said,
"A little history for you.
Um
the Civil War
ripped apart
the United States. Now, in 1861, the
south seceded.
And the north said, 'No, you can't
secede.' And they had a war, civil war.
And the south lost.
But, at terrible, terrible cost.
Terrible cost.
The southerners had all the good
generals.
Lee was was a master.
They just didn't have enough um
materials to keep the war going.
And
um in the Battle of the Wilderness,
basically Grant wore them down with
Battle of Attrition.
But, they they At the beginning of the
war, the Confederates were winning one
battle after another and another and
they finally reached the high water
mark,
which was in a little town called
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. And they were
actually going there to get shoes. There
was a shoe factory.
And they went to get shoes and they met
up with the Union Army who weren't
supposed to be there. And this was a
battle that wasn't supposed to take
place. Three days.
July 1st, 2nd, and 3rd.
On July 4th,
um Abraham Lincoln gave uh
the Gettysburg Address.
But, but this battle was one of the
worst battles of the whole Civil War.
50,000 casualties. People killed or
wounded. It was It was devastating.
And at the end of the war at the end of
the battle, Lee was basically beaten.
And he was taking what was left of his
army and retreating south. But, it had
rained
and the river was flooded and he
couldn't get across.
If Meade, General Meade, had pulled
together his army and chased
General Lee, he would have defeated him.
And that would have been the end of the
Civil War. As it is, it went on for
another 2 years and
tens of thousands of lives were lost.
And Abraham Lincoln was very upset and
he wrote a very angry letter to General
Meade.
"You could have ended this war. We
wouldn't have had all this bloodshed.
What a terrible thing would have
happened."
He says, "History does not record
General Meade's reaction to it because
Abraham Lincoln never sent the letter."
He had a policy whenever he wrote a
letter to put it in his drawer and wait
48 hours and look at it again. And 48
hours later, he decided, "I wasn't
there.
I don't know what Meade went through.
Look at the losses that he suffered.
Look how difficult it is. So, it's easy
for me to say, 'Grab your army and go
and chase him.' But, maybe they weren't
in a shape to go and fight."
Only after Lincoln was dead, they found
this letter in his desk.
And he never sent it.
I adopted that policy.
I was running a Jewish organization.
I would write a letter and if
particularly if it was a charif letter,
I would put it in my drawer and I would
wait 2 days before I sent it.
But, uh
I often sent it. But, you know, but at
least I stopped and thought about it,
you know?
Today, nobody stops and thinks.
If you don't believe me,
there's a man who's extremely powerful
who has a Twitter account.
And he shoots off whatever he wants.
Shoots off whatever he wants.
He's not the only one.
There are any number of people whose
careers have been destroyed by Twitter.
Because you just send it out and you
don't stop to think. It's not only
Twitter. It's email.
You type anything on email,
people don't even have time for
punctuation and and grammar.
You know?
They put the letter R and the letter U.
You know what I mean?
It's like E.E. Cummings poem, you know?
It's like And they just And they push
the send button.
And then afterwards, you're left
thinking, "Did I want to say that?
Should I have said that?"
It's the perfect
Email, Twitter, you know, these things,
they're the perfect vehicle
if you want to be impulsive.
Cuz there's no wait time. Let me tell
you something better cuz most of us
don't even appreciate this. Yeah?
Until the 1960s,
all pens were were
fountain pens. Fountain pens were
already a big step forward.
You took a quill or you took, you know,
a metal pen whatever it was, you dipped
it in an inkwell and you wrote with it.
And then you had to like blot it cuz
otherwise it would smear etc. That's how
you wrote.
You know how long it took Lincoln just
even write that letter?
And then he first put it in his drawer
for 2 days?
And we just sit down at the at the
computer, we type it out, boom, it's
done. It's out.
And it's out there. Did we mean to say
that? Do we want to say that?
But we're impulsive.
We're impulsive. We don't stop to think.
I I saw him at Reich in Eretz Yisrael,
fellow learning in Kollel.
And I saw him just standing like this.
I said to him, "What are you doing?"
He says, "I'm thinking."
I said, "About what?" He says, "That's
not important."
He says,
"I watched these two old talmidei
chachamim in my shul where I learn
Kollel.
And one of them asked the other one a
question
and they would just stop for 10 minutes,
both of them, and think."
They wouldn't even have to
They wouldn't say anything. They were
thinking.
They were thinking.
I do questions and answers, one of the
programs that I do.
And people are asking questions and
forming the question as they're talking.
And they start asking a question and
halfway through the question they
realize they don't even understand what
their question is. Forget about my
question. Forget about me answering it.
In fact, I always teach people, I teach
rabbis how to answer basic questions.
And what I tell them, "Here is the best
phrase.
What do you mean?"
Most time people have no idea what they
mean.
I was at a
Shabbat Olamit, Gavna Olamit, have what
they call Shabbat Olamit. It's Shabbos
all around the world, particularly in
college campuses. It's very big in
Europe.
The biggest one is in Leeds University.
I remember this was 1995.
Because Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks was
supposed to be the scholar in residence
at Leeds University. It was the largest
event.
And the Queen asked instead if he would
go
to the
50th anniversary of VE Day. Today was
the 100th anniversary of the end of uh,
World War I. That was the 50th
anniversary of VE Day, Victory in
Europe.
And so he canceled on Leeds University.
So at the last minute, they were
scrambling for somebody of that caliber.
Luckily, I was available.
And they called me up and they asked me,
"Will you come to Leeds University?" So
I said, "I thought the Chief Rabbi was
supposed to come." So he says he
canceled
you know, to go with the Queen.
I said, "Okay, give me a second. I have
to call the Queen and send my apologies.
I won't be able to make it and I will
come to Leeds instead."
And I went to Leeds University. I
remember by Shabbos lunch, a guy comes
over to me and says,
"You know the Chief Rabbi was supposed
to be here." And I said, "Yes, I know."
He says, "If the Chief Rabbi came, I
wouldn't have come."
And I said, "Why is that?" He says,
"Because the Chief Rabbi doesn't like
progressive Jews and I'm a progressive
Jew."
Now,
here's another thing I teach people when
it comes to answering questions.
Only answer questions, not statements.
When it's a statement, the correct
response is, "Oh."
So he says to me, "He doesn't like
progressive Jews." And I said, "Oh."
And then he said, "What do you think
about progressive Jews?"
So I said, "I don't know. I'm from
America. We don't have progressive
jewelry." "Is it like reform?" "No, it's
not like reform." "Is it like
conservative?" "No, it's not like
conservative." "What is it?"
It took us 10 minutes to come to several
conclusions.
One is he doesn't know what progressive
Judaism is.
He knows he is a progressive Jew.
He knows he doesn't like the Chief Rabbi
cuz he doesn't like progressive Judaism.
And he's going to start keeping Shabbos.
I I don't know exactly how we did that
in 10 minutes, but, you know, but he had
already decided.
Already decided. Even though he had no
idea what he was talking about.
Because people
um,
I'm a professional speaker. I know it I
do this for a living. And um,
and uh, they there's certain there is
some chochma to this. It's not just
because I'm incredibly knowledgeable and
charismatic. That too, but that's not
the only thing.
There's actually some chochma to it. And
one of the things they teach you is you
have the first 2 minutes
to be able to convince the audience,
this is fancy group dynamics talk, to
sign a social contract with you.
That we agree to be your audience and
that you will be the speaker. Because I
got 2 minutes and if in 2 minutes I
decide, "Oh, this guy is this guy's a
waste of time, you know, he's boring, he
doesn't know anything, you know, he's a
you know,
that's why many rabbis have this gift to
be able to lose an audience in the first
2 minutes. It's a gift.
They've mastered it, you know, because
they insist on telling a joke and I'm
talking about people who wouldn't know a
joke if it bit them. You know what I
mean?
This rabbi says to me, "I just told this
joke and I didn't get a laugh and I
can't figure out why."
I said, "Tell me the joke." He tells me
the joke and I said, "You told it
wrong."
He says, "Well, how is it supposed to
go?" Here's how the joke is supposed to
go. Three people are on top of a
building and one of them says to the
other one, "These two buildings are so
close together they form an air pocket
and if you were to fall off, you
wouldn't even fall because the air is so
tight it would carry you up." The second
guy says, "That's ridiculous." The first
guy says, "I'll show you." He jumps.
He's falling, he's falling and whoosh,
he comes back up.
The second guy says, "That's amazing."
He jumps, he falls, he dies.
The third guy says, "You know, you've
got a sixth sense of humor, Superman."
That's the joke.
The rabbi told the joke, "Superman is on
top of a building with two people."
You know, why? Because maybe the person
is worth listening to.
Maybe he's worth listening to. You know,
Rav Hutner, I heard this from somebody
who used to go to his shiurim.
You know, he used to give a shiur and he
gave it in a very small room
and he didn't use a microphone and it
was hard to hear him and you had to
struggle.
I heard this actually from Rabbi Meir
Fund who was the founder of Hank.
And he said, "And I said to somebody
once, one of the organizers, why don't
we move this into the auditorium? Give
him a microphone and it will be so much
easier."
He says, "Because Rav Hutner holds
beshita that you should work to hear the
person who's speaking."
It shouldn't be it shouldn't be so easy.
You have to sometimes struggle.
You know, there there were there were
people who were gedolim who had speech
impediments
who gave shiurim and you had to struggle
to understand what they were saying. It
was hard to hear.
But if you think that it's worthwhile,
I'm willing to invest in it. But that's
not how group dynamics works. You got 2
minutes for people to decide whether I
should listen to you or not. If not, eh.
Eh.
And that's how you write a news story.
The first paragraph,
you have to put in all that information
in the first paragraph.
Yeah?
Or to quote the president, you've got
one paragraph for fake news and then all
you
all the way at the bottom you might be
able to tell the truth. You know what
I'm saying?
So um,
uh, it's it's an amazing thing. You
know, people decide.
When I was going to school, I started
going to school.
They told teachers uh, they had to make
their classes in 8-minute segments.
Because kids could not concentrate for
more than 8 minutes. Why?
Cuz that was the time in between
commercials.
And people trained themselves to think
in only 8-minute intervals. And you had
to keep changing every 8 minutes.
Rabbi Dr. Gottlieb, David Gottlieb, told
me that when he used to go to South
Africa, they didn't have television.
They didn't allow in television. Yeah?
He says you could not compare a South
African student to an American student.
They were so
far ahead intellectually, able to
concentrate.
He says within a few years of
introducing television, they went back
to where they were.
That's when there was television.
That's when there was television. Now,
you know, you know that uh,
uh,
you you get a cable channel, you get a
cable, you know, 800 channels.
You don't watch anything. You flip
channels.
So you're watching three movies, two TV
shows, you know, uh, sporting event and
a Japanese cooking show and you're going
back and forth between them.
That's why most kids can't concentrate
at all. The number one answer to every
question in high school is, "What?"
Doesn't matter what you ask them. "I'm
sorry, what?"
I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm what?
And some of you try to learn Gemara with
people, you know, try to learn something
inside Chumash, whatever it is, and you
see that their mind just they can't
concentrate.
It's "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, what were
you saying? I just I I I
I'm sorry."
I'm thinking I'm I'm I'm I'm and it's
gone.
So I remember reading this in the New
York Times 20 years ago that when they
make commercials now, they have to make
it with fast cuts cuz no one has
patience to watch a whole commercial.
It's got to be fast and going here and
going there and yeah.
People can't concentrate.
We we just take the next thing.
Yeah?
One of the many things that Chazak does
is they They they make videos. But, you
know, it's an art form to make a video
to be able to catch people's attention
right away because otherwise I have to
forget it.
I'll click another click. I'll click off
someplace else. You know.
Because to be able to stop and
concentrate and think, is this what I
should do or not?
So,
the problem is clear.
What is the solution?
Now, the result is clear. The result is
chuva. Ruvein becomes me to such you.
Why?
Because if you're always messing up,
you know, then you have to keep
apologizing, you know, and you have to
make up for what you did, and you have
to fix the damage that you did, you
know, and you say something impulsively,
you do something impulsively, and then
you have to
Because I remember seeing a sign once
that was so brilliant that says, "How
come there's never enough time to do
something right, but there's always
enough time to do it over?"
So, what for example,
you want to get something in the back of
the refrigerator.
Now, what did your mom teach you?
Take out everything and put it down on
the table or the counter.
But, nobody will listen to that. So, you
take out the chicken soup and you put it
on the refrigerator door. You take the
salad and you're holding it in this
hand, you take the milk, you're holding
it like this, and you're trying to reach
for the thing and it all falls.
God help anyone who's in the room at
that time.
"Why didn't you come and help me? Didn't
you see?"
Because otherwise I have to stand up and
say, "Now, I I Why why didn't you put
everything there?" I didn't have enough
time. You have enough time now to clean
it all up.
You have enough time to fix it up.
You know, and people make impulsive
decisions and they don't realize, you
know, the consequences.
The consequences that are going to
happen.
And that's why you end up doing chuva.
You have no choice.
You just keep messing up.
So, how do we avoid this?
So, the Mesillas Yesharim has a section
that he calls Zehirus.
Now, one of the big problems with
Mesillas Yesharim is that it is so
difficult to translate.
If you have the old translation, then
Zehirus is watchfulness.
I can honestly tell you that except for
the old English translation of Mesillas
Yesharim, I have never seen the word
watchfulness ever. Not in print, not in
conversation, nobody ever told me, "I
really need to develop my sense of
watchfulness." You know, nobody says
that.
So, they came out with the new
translation and they call it vigilance.
Which is another word that nobody uses.
It's It's a unused word. The only one I
know who ever used it was Mad Eye Moody,
constant vigilance.
And it wasn't even him, it was Body
Crash. Anyway, but otherwise nobody uses
the word vigilance. Yeah?
So,
that's the problem. So, I've always been
looking for different translations of
Zehirus. And finally, baruch Hashem,
psychology caught up to us.
I have the what I believe to be the best
translation for Zehirus,
mindfulness.
Mindfulness means that you stop and
think before you do something, and that
and and you you appreciate it.
It's exactly designed to
to defeat this,
you know, tendency
to just do things without stopping to
think.
Yeah?
So, uh
He defines what that means. What is What
is Zehirus?
First,
um
don't do anything without thinking
whether or not this is right or wrong.
That's it. Figure out, is this right? Is
this wrong? Should I do it? Should I
not? That is the definition of Zehirus.
When he gets
to how to do Zehirus,
in perek gimmel, he describes it for
you.
Two steps.
With with an A and a B. Yeah?
Step number one is define true good
and this true and define true bad.
First, you have definitions.
You know how hard this is? This is the
hardest part.
People say to me, "I want to be a good
person."
The most important thing is to be a good
person. What's a good person? You know.
Someone who does good things. Like what?
Doesn't kill, doesn't steal.
That's not a good person, that's a
person in a coma. You know what I'm
saying? Doesn't kill, doesn't steal. And
And that's only a good person?
You know, what if there's somebody on
top of a building shooting down into the
crowd? The only way to stop him is to
kill him. Are you a bad person if you
kill him?
You know, if definition of a good person
is someone who doesn't kill?
It's tricky. What's a good person?
I I I I really want to have a good
marriage. What is a good marriage?
I don't know.
All right, you know.
I'll know it when I see it, like fine
art, you know.
I want my kids to turn out good. What
are good kids?
What are good kids? You know, people
don't even stop to think about it.
You know, we don't have any definitions.
So, when you sit down and you say,
"What's good and what's bad?" A person
has to sit down and
and
the devil's in the details. Or in this
case, the angels. Yeah? You have to sit
down and decide, what does that mean?
What should I do in this situation or
not? What is a good person?
I wish I could tell you it was an easy
thing to do. It's a very hard thing to
do. And it's constantly defining it.
You know, sometimes decisions are easy.
You know.
I have two things. I have a brand cookie
and I have a ridiculously fatty, high
sugar content dessert. Which one should
I eat?
Now, even though this should be an easy
decision of good or bad, it's not.
You see people at the Shabbos table and
dessert comes around thinking,
Sometimes they even say, "I'll hate
myself tomorrow."
Why would you eat something that will
fill you with self-loathing?
You know, why? Cuz I don't want to
think. I don't want to think.
I look at that.
And that piece of cake speaks to me
with a voice.
"I will make you happier
than you have ever been."
And you think to yourself, "Well,
piece of cake wouldn't lie to me, you
know."
Must be true. And you eat it. And it's
not the most delicious thing in the
world. So, you think,
"I didn't give it a chance.
I have to eat more
to really get to appreciate it."
And you see this all the time.
All the time. I am
diabetic, type two diabetic.
Type one is where you're born with it,
type two is you work very hard to
develop it. It took me years.
Took me years to develop it to its to
its state that it's at today. Hashem. In
case anybody ever says, "Did you ever
accomplish anything with your life?"
Yes, I did. Anyway,
So, I know when I'm when I'm good, and
my nutritionist always says you're not
supposed to say good or bad, you know
what I mean? But, between me and you,
either good or you're bad, yeah? When
I'm good and I'm not eating any of that
stuff I'm not supposed to eat, people
say, "Oh, would you like a piece of
cake?" You know.
And I said, "Is it worth dying for?"
I don't I don't know if it's worth dying
for. I mean, it's very good, you know.
It's like, yeah.
And sometimes they say to me, "Yes, it's
worth dying for."
I said, "Well, then I have to taste it."
And only once were they right.
I would have died for that piece of
cake. But, anyway,
actually, I I I'm sorry that it's not
around anymore for the benefit of other
people, but, you know, the reason that
they went out of business, there was a
bakery called Lowen's Bakery.
They used to make cream puffs.
This was a little bit of heaven
that came down into Earth. This was
probably what the mun originally was,
you know.
It was so soft and the cream was so
good. And you just put in your mouth and
it disappeared. You didn't even have to
chew it. It just
It was gone.
You could eat an entire box of them
without even realizing it, you know. No
question that if Lowen's was still in
business, I'd be dead today. There's no
question about it.
They were just unbelievable, you know?
But, you know, you sit down and you say,
"Is this good or is this bad? Should I
do this? Should I not do this?" You
know. And people people have to
And if you don't have any definitions,
how are you supposed to make a decision?
So, instead, we do how we feel.
I feel like doing this. I feel like
"Why did you say that?" I don't know, I
just felt like saying it.
"Did you stop to think first if I should
say it?" "Why did you do that?" I don't
know, I just felt like doing it.
You know.
And then afterwards you have to pick up
the pieces. So, it says Mesillas
Yesharim, first thing is get your
definitions, and this is for sure the
hardest part.
Or as somebody once said, "The time to
decide whether you trust a particular
hashgacha is not when you're sitting in
the restaurant."
You should check it out beforehand. I
went to a
a family simcha and I went to the
mashgiach and I said, "You know, uh
I eat only mehadrin."
He says, "Well, the bread is mehadrin."
And the dips are all mehadrin. And the
salads all mehadrin. I checked the
vegetables, they're kash ketif, you
know, and the the salads you can eat.
That's about it.
I said, "The fish?" No. "Chicken?" No.
"Okay, fine."
So, I came to the simcha and I washed,
you know, and I had dips, I had salad.
The next table I see chasidim.
They're eating the fish, they're eating
the chicken.
I said, "I should have asked their
rabbi."
I went to the wrong guy.
So, at the end I went over to them and I
said, "Wow, you know, what did the
mashgiach tell you?" He goes, "No, no,
no, we saw you eating."
I said, "I only ate the dips and the
salad cuz I spoke to the mashgiach."
They're like, "Oh, you're right."
Let's stay for dessert. But, anyway,
you know, because
I want to tell you about a scandal
history. I'm going back to the 1980s,
ancient times. Yeah, before before there
was cell phones and internet, you know?
So, there was a major scandal, one of
the big hashgachas that everybody
trusts, you know, was giving hashgacha
on vinegar that it turned out was no
good. Why? Cuz
you know, kashrus and that's for sure
and these guys don't know what from
anything. They check out everything
themselves and they found out that it
was totally unreliable. Even though
everybody was using it. So, they had the
vinegar scandal, the OU set up a
hotline, they call up, see if there's
vinegar, see what you can use, and a
whole thing.
And I remember talking to the mashgiach
at Marina Del Rey that week.
And he said, "You know why the vinegar
took place? The vinegar scandal? Cuz no
one in America is hungry. They're
starving.
They're starving." A kid comes home from
school, "Mom, I'm starving."
They throw open the the refrigerator,
it's packed, and things are falling out
as you open the door. "There's nothing
to eat."
I see one of my kids, you know, "There's
nothing to eat." I said, "Why don't you
make yourself microwave popcorn?" "Takes
too long."
I said, "You know, we used to just like
take a pan of oil and you had to put it
in and it popped all over the kitchen,
you know, and you had to get it, you
know? Jiffy Pop, that was like a major
technological advance, you know what I
mean? Cuz they had a little piece of
foil so it wouldn't bounce all over the
place, you know?
I don't tell me about cavemen, you know
what I'm saying? I don't mean about
ancient times, you know?
But that's what it is today.
Halitaneena, man, I don't know what I'm
talking about. Put it down my throat,
you know? I
I I got to have it."
There was this product I I assume it's
still around called Cracker Jacks.
Yeah?
Candy coated popcorn, peanuts, and a
prize, right?
So, they had a jingle.
You know, it says there are four types
of talmidim. One is a mishmaris.
Mishmaris is all the wine drips out and
only the dregs remain. That's for sure
me. You know, any nonsense I can
remember it forever. So, I remember the
jingle.
"What do you want when you got to eat
something
and it's got to be sweet and it's got to
be a lot and you got to have it now."
I think that sums up a whole generation.
It's got to be sweet and it's got to be
a lot and I got to have it now.
So, people don't have patience.
Don't take this the wrong way. Chas
v'shalom for me to employ anything. I'm
just bringing this as an example, right?
I know people who have finished shas
with the Artscroll Gemara and I see that
they have things underlined in the
footnotes, etc.
But when I was going, we didn't have the
Artscroll Gemara, we had the Sanhedrin.
And it was easier to learn Aramaic than
to figure out what the Sanhedrin Gemara
was saying cuz half of it was Latin, you
know what I mean?
So, then they would tell you, "Okay, get
a Jastrow dictionary." There is not one
word in the Gemara that's in Jastrow,
you know what I'm saying? Unless you
know how to conjugate Aramaic, in which
case, frankly, I don't need your
dictionary if I could conjugate it, you
know what I'm saying? So,
you know, you're you're sitting here
looking at this. It was it was very
difficult to be able to learn how to
like you know.
And I'll be perfectly honest, sometimes
there's I got to tell something, I look
it up in the Artscroll Gemara.
You can't stop.
You know, you just look up one thing and
you're turning the page, turning the
page, turning the page. I'm at base.
Turning the page, turning the page, and
it's just it's just so user-friendly,
you know? Gemara was never
user-friendly, you know?
I still resent the fact that my talmidim
have the Divrei Masco and Rashi in bold,
you know what I mean? We had to try to
search it on the page, you know? Cuz
they make things so easy because people
I don't have patience. I don't have
patience to work at it.
To do something good takes effort, takes
time.
When I went to Eretz Yisrael,
if you wanted to be in contact with your
parents, so you wrote them a letter.
Yeah? Took 2 weeks to get there, 2 weeks
to get to get an answer. When you read
the answer, you don't even remember what
they were responding to. It was a month
later, you know? Gave you a chance to
develop independence.
Now people go to Israel, they
they call or text their parents three
times a day.
And if they don't answer right away,
they write them back in capitals. That's
really bad. Why aren't you answering me?
And I was like
It was like like there's this immediacy.
I have to know now.
I know now.
You know?
In
The Fire Within,
the book about Mussar, so he tells the
story how he took his talmidim through a
brook. It was a famous baal mussar. He
gave a
sichat mussar.
And at the end he said, "Are there any
questions?" And someone asked a
question. He said, "Very good question.
Any other questions?" Two or three other
questions. And he goes, "No.
Not every question has an answer."
And they were like, "Okay, that's cute.
What's the answer?"
And he just sat there
until they realized like that was it.
And they were so upset. Why wouldn't he
answer our questions?
You know? And he realized he was trying
to teach them a lesson.
You know, there's a question there's an
answer. There's a question and an
answer. And there's no there's no time
to think about our questions.
Yeah, there's no time to to chat. I once
heard of Rabbi Gottlieb, you know, he
was in the middle of a class and someone
asked him something about the Holocaust
and he always I saw him do this more
than once. He'd say,
"I will not
abuse the memory of the 6 million Jews
who were killed by making the Holocaust
a throwaway question."
Oh, by the way,
Rabbi Shapiro used to tell the story. I
heard it from him twice. But he used to
tell it all the time.
He says, "I was walking down the block
and someone came to me and said, 'Could
I share your umbrella to the end of the
block?'" He said, "Sure."
And as we're walking, he said, "Why was
there a Holocaust?"
I said, "I don't know."
And when he told this to his wife in
shul, he says,
"I don't know. I don't know how to
explain it from here to the end of the
block.
If that's as much time as you're giving
me."
But people want the answer fast. They
want it now. Nobody wants to work at
something.
Nobody wants to to do it. So, first I
need my definitions. What's good and
what's bad?
And then it says, "In every action you
do, stop and think.
Stop and think. Does this fit into my
definitions of good or bad?"
Just stop and think. Take a moment to
think. People say to me, "Oh,
then you'll become obsessive. You got
No.
Just don't do things automatically
without thinking. I I I had a rabbi who
once said to me, 'Everyone has a purpose
in this world. Yours is to be a bad
example.'" And I've tried to live up to
that, you know? I can't speak for
anybody else, but I'll tell you that
there are mornings where I make myself a
cup of coffee and at some point I look
at the cup and it's empty and I don't
remember drinking it.
I must have drunk it at some point, but
I just don't even remember it.
Cuz I'm so mindless. Cuz people just do
things without thinking why I'm doing
it, you know? So, you do an action.
Now, I brought an example.
I went to camp in Israel.
And whenever there's a tikkun by law,
you have to have one of these enormously
large boxes of tasteless cookies. They
come in four shapes. They're all the
same. They taste like nothing. You bite
into them, they turn into powder in your
mouth. They're they're they're terrible.
The only thing known to man that can
wash it down is Petel. Yeah? So, that's
why the Israelis have the Petel. Just to
get those cookies down, you know?
Anyway, a person walks around with a big
box of cookies and says to everybody,
"Want a cookie?" Sure.
Sure. Some of them take a handful. Cuz
it's for free. You know what I mean?
They say cookies, they say cookies. The
guy comes to me, says, "You want a
cookie?" I said, "No."
He did not even have the tools to deal
with that response.
He paused and he said again, "Want a
cookie?"
And I said, "No."
And he says, "Everybody takes a cookie."
I said, "I don't like them. They're
tasteless. They turn into powder in your
mouth. I choke on them. They're
terrible." And as I'm saying this, the
people around me are nodding. Yeah, he's
right.
And the guy says, "All right." Turns to
the next person. "Want a cookie?" Sure.
And they all took cookies.
Because
I should stop and think.
It means all it's saying is before you
do something, stop and think. Should I
do this or not? Maybe the maybe it's
something, you know, simple. Maybe I
should maybe I shouldn't.
Sometimes you'll be surprised by your
own response.
It was one summer when I got up in the
morning and somebody was asking me
something and I said,
"I can't talk to you once I I can't talk
to you yet. I haven't had a coffee."
And I can't function in the morning
without a coffee.
And I and I thought about that and I
said, "I don't like the way that
sounds."
Cuz sometimes you'll find yourself in
situations in life where there are no
coffee.
There's no coffee. What are you supposed
to do now?
So, I knew this guy
used to come to my shabbatonim. He was a
rav.
He would take coffee and cold water,
spin it around with his finger, and
drink it down, you know? Cuz he had to
have coffee.
So, I said, "I don't like the way that
sounds." So, my kabbalah, I took an lol
is I'm not drinking any coffee until
after sukkos.
I actually went a little longer, you
know?
Cuz I I like the idea of saying, "If I
want a cup of coffee, I'll have it. But
I have to have a cup of coffee?
I can't function without a cup of
coffee?" But we don't even realize what
we say. We say things without even
realizing it.
Good morning. What's good about it?
We don't even stop to think.
I had a heart attack and a bypass
operation. Two Two doctors told me I was
supposed to be dead.
Ken ayin hara, they were wrong.
I I met many people. I was before years
this January. I met many people who
said, "We davened for you." I said, "It
worked." Cuz I'm still here and the
doctor said I shouldn't be, you know?
But at the end of that year, before Rosh
Hashanah, someone says to me, "So, what
do you want this year?"
I said, "Just a better year than this
past year."
And they said to me, "You ain't great.
Two doctors said you were supposed to be
dead. God miraculously kept you alive,
and all you can do is complain?
I said, "You're right. I want a year
just like this year."
We don't even stop to think.
We just We just say things and do
things, and then we suddenly find
ourselves in situations, which Is this
what I really want?
Is this who I want to be? Is this where
I want to go?
So, he says, "There's two things you
have to do.
The first one is you have to define
what's good what's bad. The second thing
is you have to decide, and that's broken
into two parts.
One is besha'as maiseh. Right now, I
have to make a decision.
Right now, I have to make a decision.
And then shelo besha'as maiseh is I look
over my entire day and I say,
"My sum total of decisions, did they get
me where I wanted to go?"
Even though I I justified why I did each
thing along the way, at the end of the
day, did I get Did I accomplish what I
wanted to accomplish?
Or did I not accomplish what I wanted to
accomplish?
So, I had something I really had to do
today, but I did this, and I did this,
and I did this, and everything led me
away.
It pulled me away.
You know, you end up you end up not
accomplishing what you wanted to do. The
sum total of your decisions didn't take
you where you want to be. Didn't make
you the person you want to be.
Means I block in the time for Torah
learning, because otherwise,
you know, when I have time, I'll learn.
Maybe I won't. Because events control
us. We let events control us. We decide.
Let's face it. Most people don't live
the life they want. They live the life
that happens.
And they make one decision, and another
decision, and another decision, and at
some point they end up someplace. But is
this where you wanted to be?
Now, most people never even thought
about it.
They don't know where they want to go.
Most people don't know what their
meaningful life would have been.
As one person said to me so painfully,
"I don't know what a meaningful life is,
but this isn't it."
Because I didn't live the life I wanted.
I lived the life that happened. I chose,
and I chose, and I chose, and I just
ended up someplace.
And to be able to sit down and think,
"Is this what I want? Should I do this?"
So, the the practice that we have to
incorporate is Before I do anything,
stop. Just for Just for a few seconds, I
think, "Do I want to do this?
Do I want to go there?
Should I go there?
Is this what I want?"
And if we think it's esoteric, you know,
it doesn't make a difference, you know,
you know, what does it matter what I
heard?
So, whatever.
You know.
So, I give the example,
you know, you you go to a wedding,
they offer you a schnitzel,
they offer you roast chicken,
and they offer you turkey,
and they offer you salmon.
So, you look at it and you say, "Well,
the turkey's in a sweet glaze.
Probably not so good cuz of the sugar.
You know, the schnitzel's fried
in oil. Probably not so good. The
chicken's not bad. It's roast chicken.
The fish is probably okay. So, I could
choose either one of those two."
Which one? I don't care which one you
choose, but at least you stopped to
think about it.
You didn't just take the first thing
that came along.
I invite this family for Shabbos.
Now, baruch Hashem, I have been
practicing this in my own life.
Because if I ate the first thing that
came along, what would I do for the next
12 things that they brought out? You
understand? More and more dishes, and
more dishes, and more dishes. You know
what I mean? And each thing
I I don't know how it works by your
communities, but Syrians are very
emotional. This is a custom. You have to
eat this. This is called something in
Arabic. This is called something in
Syrian. This is You have to eat this.
"Yes, sir," I said.
I have to do my duty to the my people.
You understand? Now that I know I'm part
of the Spanish Portuguese community. You
understand?
You know, but if I if I you just take
the first thing that comes along, you
don't stop to think what's going to come
next, what's going to happen, where's it
going to be?
You know.
We We are impulsive.
I knew a friend who was from England,
and if you England's different today,
but I remember when I first started
going there 30 years ago, it was like a
small out-of-town community. There was a
few kosher shops. There was very little
there kosher.
You know, so he says he would fly around
the country, and anytime he would find a
kosher shop, he would stop and then eat.
Because he didn't know the next time
he'd have it.
And one time his company sent him to the
Five Towns.
And he works down Central Avenue.
And he says, "Oh, a kosher shop." And he
stops and eats something.
And two stores later, he says, "Oh, a
kosher shop." And he stops and eats
something. He said, "By the end of the
block, I was sick." You know?
Because, you know, who could anticipate
this?
Who could anticipate? Who knows what's
going to happen?
You know, if we stop and think it out,
as opposed to just doing the next thing.
Just taking the next thing.
You ever see people go out to a fancy
restaurant, and they're waiting for
their steak, or they're waiting for
whatever the dish,
and they're hungry, so they fill up on
the dinner rolls,
and they can't eat anything else?
And that became your I was I'm stuffed
now. What am I supposed to do?
You know.
But you didn't stop and think. Like the
little kid with the marshmallows. You
know, maybe I'll have a better life if I
wait. Let's see what happens.
Let's anticipate a little bit.
And people don't know how to anticipate.
They don't know how to wait.
So,
impulsiveness is for sure going to make
us the person we don't want to be.
We're going to be We're going to have
the life that happens.
We're just going to do the next thing,
and the next thing, and the next thing.
And often times, it'll be the opposite
of what we want. Not only not what we
want, the exact opposite of what we
want.
That leads to teshuvah.
Because we have charatah.
We feel bad. We stopped and thought
about it.
And if it becomes part of your
personality, so you're going off to
harvest the wheat, and I see flowers for
my mother. That's nice. Harvest the
wheat. Get the flowers on the way back.
Remember where you're going. Remember
what you're supposed to be doing.
And I'm not thinking about people in my
age group.
You know, I thought I was the only one,
but I mean many people in my age group.
They walk into a room and they say, "Why
am I here?"
You open the refrigerator and you're
saying, "I know I was looking for
something."
You know, and your memory just goes.
Most of the people that you know in your
life, their name is uh uh uh uh uh
uh
um
the guy with the thing, you know,
it's great. Whenever you try to tell a
story, it turns into a game of charades.
You know what I mean? Like, you know,
cuz yeah, I'm not thinking about that.
I'm talking about where you stop and
think, "Do I want to do this or not?"
There's nothing sadder than people who
look back at a life that happened.
Yeah.
We have an opportunity to stop and
think, "Define. What's the best I can
be?"
And then it doesn't matter how much time
it takes, or how much effort it takes to
make that happen.
You're going to make that happen.
Because I don't want my life just to
happen. I'm not going to just take the
next thing that comes along. I'm going
to think, "What's the best that I can
do?"
And how do I get there?
You want to play the piano? Takes a lot
of time. You want to play a CD? Goes
very fast. Stick it in the machine,
music will come out. But if you want to
master that,
that takes a lot of effort.
It's a lot of effort. And anything good
takes a lot of effort.
You know.
And anything
I remember seeing a quote once. It said,
"Anything not worth doing is not worth
doing well."
You know, it doesn't make a difference
anyway. Who cares? You know.
But But a person who
who has the ability to stop and think
and work at it and develop,
then we can become the people we want to
be and live the lives we want to be.
Pachaz kamayim.
Unstable.
We We make decisions just just off the
off the cuff.
And then afterwards, we have to face the
consequences of those decisions.
And if we master what we call zehirus,
which I would call mindfulness,
of getting definitions of what the best
life is that you can lead, and taking
the steps to fulfilling it,
then the end we can look back and say,
"I lived the life that I wanted, and not
the life that happened."
Thank you very much.