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Judaism Without Apologizing- Reb Dovid Goldwassar- Teshuvah- What It Is And What It Isn’t
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Before Yom Kippur its good to know what exactly is Teshuvah
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
This Torah class is brought to you by
Torahany anytime.com.
Welcome back to another episode of
Judaism without apologizing, an original
series brought to you by Torah anytime.
And I am your host, Hila Eisenberg, and
I am here in Brooklyn, New York, where I
had the great to sit down with Ribbove
Goldwer. Now, you may know Rabbi Goldwer
as a longtime Rev and a major speaker
who inspired hundreds of thousands of
people around the world. But what some
people do not know is that Rabbi
Goldwaser is not just a Rev and is not
just a speaker. He is a lifeline for
hundreds of thousands of people in
crisis. He specializes in helping people
struggling with addiction and eating
disorders and has been one of the more
prominent voices in the Jewish mental
health world. He's been on the front
lines for decades guiding Jews through
pain and addiction and trauma and chuva.
And in addition to speaking and
counseling, Ray Goldwaster is a
syndicated columnist as well as the
author of several very famous books
including the addicted soul and faith
among the flames and the safer something
to say. And we had a real raw and
fascinating conversation about yam
kipper about guilt about spiritual
burnout about mental health and what
real actual change looks like. If you're
looking to go into Yam Kipper with a
different mindset, more grounded, more
honest, more alive, this one's for you.
This is Judaism without apologizing. And
let's dive right in.
[Music]
Okay, Rabbi Goldwaser, thank you very
much for coming on to the Judaism
without apologizing podcast. It's a
pleasure to have you.
It is a and a pleasure to be here,
especially knowing the special way that
you have arranged for these podcasts and
your mahalik. I believe it's going to
bring Yiddish kite to greater numbers
and to bring our own people even closer.
>> Wow. Wow. Amen. So, I want to I want to
dive right in. The RV has been on the
forefront of not just spreading Torah
and Yiddish in his or speaking, but also
in the world of mental health and
addiction. Can you give a brief history
on how the RV got into that space? How
did it go from Ravves to teaching
spreading Torah to into that world?
>> My first foray into the world of mental
health was parents were having
difficulty with their daughter and they
couldn't figure out what it was. They
said, "Would you please see her and tell
us what is going on?" She came in,
I spent a little time
to me. It was in the early days. I said,
"I think this is an eating disorder."
The parents picked her up. They called
me after and I say, "I think she has an
eating disorder." Rob Goldwer, we highly
respect you. We have a lot of dares for
you, but she does not have an eating
disorder.
Okay.
Few weeks went by, she got worse. They
brought her back. I said to them,
"You're so good, but you weren't happy
the first time. Why we came back?"
"Well, we want to know what you have to
say." I said, "After I met with her, I
am pretty much sure." They said to me,
"Okay, what do we do?" I said, "You have
to go to a doctor that's specializing in
eating disorders." They said, "Can you
find this one?" I did some research. I
came up with the top.
I called them up and I said, "Here's the
number. Here's, you know, how to meet."
They said, "We're not going to go with
her." The stigma at that time with
stigma.
So, I said, "So, how's she going to get
there, Rob? I don't know. Could we ask
her? Would you take her? What shall I
tell you? I said, "Okay, you she needs
to get somewhere quick while she still
can get somewhere quick."
>> The parents didn't want to take her
because of stigma.
>> They were embarrassed. They would not
accept that this was it. And they were
embarrassed. Great parents, but
embarrassed. I called up the doctor, Dr.
Sacker,
and
I called him. They put me through to
him, and I said, "I have somebody."
said, "Okay, come 11:30 to the hospital
where he has an office." I called the
parent says, "130:30.
No, no, no. You cannot go in the middle
of the day. People are going to see
her."
I said, "Could you tell me a time?"
No, like early in the morning before
people get there, I called Dr. Sacker
back. He says, "Rabbi Gowasa, I know who
you are." It was unbelievable
for you. You can bring her in at 7 a.m.
I went to the hospital with her. She met
me 7 a.m. I met with Dr. Sacker. Two
thing the girl had her appointment. Two
things happened on that day. The girl
got her help and she got a path back to,
you know, recovery. And Dr. Sakura and I
became best friends from that. It was an
avalanche of people coming for help.
People that needed uh all kinds of help,
addictive personalities, various
addictions, eating disorders, anorexia,
bulimia,
you name it, everything. But like the
quiet uh I don't know how you say it,
like began to bring people from all
over. I had to learn more. Then Dr.
Golden from LIU said, "You have to write
a book because people are not going to
come in. At least make a book with some
Torah available."
So I wrote the first book. And that went
like crazed. The first book,
>> what was the name of it?
>> Starving to live was the first. And uh
it went like crazy because there was
nothing not that the book is any good
but it was information where nobody had
any the Torah view the idea where is it
in the Torah what's my hashka how should
I feel what should I how should I deal
with this according to Torah so I put
that out and then it just
it ricocheted more people came uh some
wonderful doctors and wonderful
nutritionists
started to get into contact with me
through it and wherever I could help
out, wherever I could give them an eight
on a patient. Crazy thing. I don't know
if this is the the subject for today,
but
>> everything is the same.
>> A crazy thing happened. I get a I got a
Shila
uh concerning one particular
uh institution.
Uh
it's an institution that deals with
various addictions including eating
disorders. I came it's a locked
facility. I went to the treatment center
in a locked facility. They let me in.
There were several Jewish patients and I
had gone in particular. One family asked
me to go. There was one young womanish.
She stood in the corner but watching
everything what was going on. Others
would come over like two or three and we
would talk and different things. She
stood the whole time. What can I do?
She's, you know, she's out of her
element. Everybody's out of their
element. I'm out of my element there. I
go to leave. The guy's ready to open the
door. He has to open it with a key to
go. She's standing by the door. She
asked me in Yiddish.
I said, "Yeah, of course. What's your
question?" She said
they gave to her cheese,
everything. However, the cheese was on
matzah. The matzah was shir, but not
handmade shura. In her life, she never
ate anything not handmade.
She asked me, "How big of an avid is
it?"
Mika.
>> Wow. Wow. So that only ignited the
passion.
>> So I did eventually it got so much
there. There were so many people that
needed help and it was so people got
involved. Uh but I've been consulted
around the world on it.
>> Wow. Wow. It's uh it's just something
that uh it needed a great deal of
attention and I happened to be in the
place to give it and there was some
wonderful doctors that that we learned
together and I learned a lot from them.
Dr. Markx from Princeton
showed me a great amount.
But we also had reciprocal uh hashbah.
When I came in one day, he says, "You're
going to love what I have on my wall." I
said, "What do you got on your wall?" He
shows me blown up Rabbi Victor Miller's
10 steps to greatness. He wasn't, you
know, he wasn't
Wow. Amazing. Amazing. So we're
approaching Yamkipper now and
there is an element of anxiety that I
think every normal person has when they
approach Yam Kipper. I mean it's the
greatest spiritual day of the year but
it's also the one time of the year or
the main time of the year where people
have to look and deal with their
uncomfortable parts of themselves.
What a could you give in the Rev's
extensive experience in dealing with
people who are struggling?
What can you give to people to transform
the day from a day of anxiety to a day
of positive transformation?
>> You know, the uh pill the question we
could probably spend the rest of the
evening on. It's it's unreal.
I would say to the individual what the
gdal mus said if we would have yum
kipper one time in our whole life in 120
years
what a privilege it would be one time
and we have yum kipper every year so the
yum kiper itself is a matana it's a
present it's a day of great amnesty I
come and I say hashem I want to do chuva
I may not even know how to do chuva but
hashem I'm relying on the
just do it for me if I can't go in the
mikvah because it's too much for me and
I can't deal with the whole thing of
going and immersing myself in it then
hashem says
I'll just I'll sprinkle the water on you
and you'll be you'll be pure it's a time
when we all no matter who on that
spectrum of
religious iosity or spirituality from
kite. Whether we're on the top, whether
we're on the bottom, whether we're in
the swamps, it doesn't matter. Hashem
says that day is a day for you the
for
city, for all of Israel.
It doesn't say, "Oh, those that did this
of they could have, but those that did
that of they can't." It's for all of us.
And it is such a beautiful day of
amnesty. It's free. It's Hashem says
come on that day. The Sultan cannot be
matri. No one's going to say anything
bad. We are all sadikim. You wearing a
kettle. I'm wearing a kit. You're
wearing sneakers. I'm wearing sneak.
We're in white. The person that did the
biggest aa maybe he also comes. Maybe
he's got a better white kit. Maybe he
even has more uh canvas shoes. just a
real old kind. So he really looks the
part.
We're both forgiven. Hashem looks at us
like malim. We're all in white. We're
ready on the I tell the people you got
to realize harness into that power, the
power of kaporipur.
On that day I am getting forgiven for
everything. We're always jealous. You go
to the wedding, you see the
[Music]
Oh boy, I wish I was them. Just for
tonight, just for now, right every year,
we're the same. We're underneath the
says forgiven. I say yum kipper
said a different son shines on the day
of yum kipper. You know how many times I
go out in the morning on Yum Kipper and
I take a look towards the sun. Rabar
said it. I can't even imagine the depth
of what that means. It's a gift. It's
like great. Don't have anxiety. Have
anxiety on purum if you'll have enough
to everybody. If the guy that comes in
with the thing, you know, and all that,
or if the bulk going to come in a little
too lemonade in the house and start
ripping, you know, that's anxiety. But
on it's a beautiful time. It's for us to
reconnect. Hashem puts his hands out to
us. No, the poin
I was push against Hashem. what I did
against Hashem
and now Hashem says, "I give you my
hand. Take my hand."
>> So, how does someone not get lost in the
the words that I don't understand and
the avoid that it looks esoteric even
with an art scroll? I don't know what
it's saying and I know it's this
momentous spiritual moment but I get so
lost in trying to catch up to the kazin
and what am I saying and am I on the
right page that I lose the magnitude of
the day. How do I take a deep breath and
take a step back and tap into what the
rub has been saying instead of getting
lost in the 100m hour sprint to finish
to say all the words.
I feel that it's here for all of us.
That yum kip is for me the scholar that
understands every about the aod the yum
kipper and the co
and the layman or the person that is not
learned and they just come in they fall
in from the street and they don't really
know that much about it. the whole
they can't wrap their head around that
right now but they do know that it's a
day of chuva a person has to say on that
day it's here for us whichever level
we're on take advantage don't get
nervous there are a couple of wonderful
books in about the ma for yum kipper one
I have a good friend Mo sorcerer wrote
two books he did a beginner's minion for
many years and he wrote two books one on
rash and yum kipper in the maker there
is um a yakipurim and also on rashash
shana there are some explanatory uh
notes about all of the different filos
and there's also a packet I don't have
it but I heard about it that you take
and you have different cards for every
part of davin and I'm right now trying
to get aold hold of it because of people
that could use it. We all like we're a
work in progress on yum kipper. We try
the most that we can and whatever we can
do is also good. Hashem said I didn't
say it's only for
is for every man. I can come. Maybe I
don't know anything but I'm going to
come on yum kipper. I'm going to follow
what I can. If I can say amen to all of
the brahas of the shots. If I could
follow along. If I could be moved. If I
could hear the hony from the and realize
that he's pleading on my behalf. If I
can realize that the malim are shaking
upstairs. Just take a look at the
English a little bit that the malim are
shaking. And then I think to myself,
wow, if I say one voy and say hashem,
I'm sorry. Sorry, I don't even know how
to say it right, but I did some bad
stuff. But I'm sorry. I'm not like I'm
not one of those people that just do
something bad and then march on. I feel
bad. I take it to my heart. Hashem,
forgive me. I'm your son. I'm your
daughter. You got to forgive me. I'm
yours. You made me.
You got to forgive me.
If we could come in like that, then we
can peel away some of the layers that
people the anxiety and the upset and
what do I do and the whole fast thing
and all of that. I think it becomes
nicer. I love
every time when we say
[Music]
your ways are ways that are pleasant.
Hashem does not want yum kipper to be
hard or tough.
Your ways are pleasant. Even the ch that
we do, it should be pleasant.
So that the the people that want to come
back so they have it easy. There are
different things
should be a little easier that they
should come back. We don't want to put
up uh you know with walls or go through
hoops for it. We want to make it easy.
Yum kipper makes it easy because the
nature of the day is the kapara. So what
would the RV say to somebody who has
made he's 45 or he's or she's a 37 year
old woman and she's made cabalas every
year about the same thing. Hashem I want
to be better. I'm going to do better.
I'm going to cuz part of chuva is not
just feeling bad but it's also a
commitment to to going forward not do
that thing or improve on that thing. But
they look back and they say my track
record is horrible. Zero. I'm 0 for 37.
How am I not supposed to be Mish? Like
is it just like a performance? I'm
performing, but I'm like fooling Hashem.
Hashem, I'm not going to do this again
even though I know I'm going to do it
again because I haven't I've said that
37 times or 45 times or 65 times. And I
hear back I am yapping away or XYZ that
I do. H how does how do I take it from a
performance sort of going through the
motions but like this is so not real to
it's really real. The truth is, I think
that is probably the question that
bothers us the most. If I'm going to do
it again, why bother? Or am I just
faking out or trying to fake out Hashem?
A few just uh comments on it. One,
if I do,
I am judged for what I am on that day.
On that day I'm at sad. On that day I
had good intentions. On that day I said
to Hashem
I want to continue in only do mitzvah. I
don't want to do the past anymore. I
want to be completely different. Now I
may not have the power to do it. Maybe
not this time. But I love
that falls down seven times and then he
gets up. So it means if the saddic
falls, if the sadus falls, I could too.
It's possible. They threw a ber out of
the closenburgsha. They threw him out.
What's he going to do in those days in
in Union City? They threw him out.
What's the book to do? That that's his
life. They threw him out.
He has nowhere that he could go.
Who could he possibly speak to after he
threw him out?
But there is one that you can talk to.
You can always talk to your rabbit. You
can always talk to your rabbitson. They
have you for life. He knocks on the door
of the closen rabbenburg
rabbi says middle east she what are you
doing? He told him I got thrown out.
Closenber said what' you do? He told
him, "Can't be ashamed. You have to say
closen
I'll take care of it." He goes to the
yeshiva himself. No pump, no ceremony,
no nothing. He walks into the Manal's
office. The Manal sees the closen rebel
walk in. You can imagine he fainted.
Okay. After they they put the smelling
salts in, he stood up. He said, "Rabbi,
how I have the great to have you?" He
said, "There was a ba that came to my
door and he said that he was thrown out
of yeshiva."
Yeah, Reb, but you have to understand
that he's done this several times and
you know, whatever. The Reb said to him,
"He told me that he's not going to do it
again."
Then says, "Reb,
do you believe that? He's told me how
many times he's not going to do it
again." The closen reb got excited,
turned red in the face and said, "You
are telling me that I have no hope. You
are telling the closenereb
that life is over for him. Do you know
how many times I promised
the basher that I wouldn't repeat
something and I did? So you're telling
me that I have no hope.
But now I've shrked.
They took in the book. He went back to
the yeshiva.
Few years passed since then and Missim
was having a shabas.
In the middle of my talk, I mentioned
that story.
The ber
that was thrown out that went to the
closenereb
came over to me a grown man
and told me certain things that I didn't
know that happened today
the shame ferris that guy
we made promise we try maybe the next
time we'll be able to do it.
>> Wow. Wow. So, what about a different
type of scenario that I think a lot of
people struggle with, which is their
issue isn't so much black and white,
which obviously everybody has that
issue, but they are they're busy working
overwhelmed taxed people working in
Manhattan running to and fro
17 and a half kids. The issue is more I
don't have time for RN. I just don't
have time. It's not that I am bad per
se. I just look at my life and I see no
time or energy and I know I should be
doing more and be more spiritual, more
into
I just don't have the time and energy.
So what's a way to go to Yamkipa with a
with a plan for the next year saying I'm
going to inject more rrook into my life
despite the hectic life that I live
phenomenal question
>> tough
>> it's very tough
I think that uh a lot of times the small
steps
are very very important. People say no,
I got to learn the whole thing. I got to
do this. It's like you know if a person
will do one little thing it will bring
them to a higher level in spirituality.
If a person says you know what I I
really can't learn you know I don't have
the time for it. I don't have the head
for it because I'm so If the person
would say I'm going to learn
a day
anything
the laws about being nice laws of what
say take it for five minutes
English Spanish Swahili I don't care
what you speak take it 5 minutes a day,
five minutes on the train.
Take a look at it. It is something
unbelievable because it will start to
inject ris
people have a issue with
prayer. It's difficult for them.
Happened to be somebody came and they
said I got a difficulty with
I have to confide in the ro. I don't
doubt.
I said, "Okay, say
just say
it's the one thing protection for the
day." Say
the three paragraphs.
I said, "Yes,
it's too much."
I said, "Okay, first paragraph just you
have to. Can you do it?"
Can
>> Why was it too much for him? emotionally
>> too much.
Could you say just Israel?
Yes. The person said I could do that. I
told the person according to some
shittas.
Beautiful.
The person called me back.
follow up couple of months later and
they said rov whatever they came in
about they wanted to report and then
they said I have some good news I added
to the schma
I was sure they were going to tell me
they did the three paragraphs
he said I'm now saying
that is great unbelievable
That's funny.
>> So,
>> so small steps basically is what you're
>> saying. Little steps. Shabas make kdish.
Beautiful.
Maked
do something.
Buy a special treat for yourself.
Something that you like. Buy it and put
it on the table. It's so difficult
sometimes to get that spirituality.
people especially now like I should be
feeling it rash kipper like I should be
on steroid spiritual steroids you know I
walk around
and they're not
so
truth get a little bit learn avort pick
up a safer that you like pick up
something in English hear a good niggan
something that's that moves you to a
higher calling Um,
I tell you the truth, I was very moved
by a niggan. Um, the great Kiviver
made a I had heard about it, but
I never heard it about
in I said, I got to hear it. Finally,
they got me a clip of the caliber
singing. The niggan went straight
through me. He's singing it. It went
straight through me. You have no idea. I
couldn't go to sleep at night because
it's unbelievable. A niggan has the
power to lift somebody up.
Dining
a braha. A
random mitzvah. person goes to hospital
see a patient any patient any anyone and
lift them up is a spirituality we begin
to think about things uh you know I do
the zeros shimsh every day and the I
give a sharim
for a few years now so uh one is on the
telephone one is on the the message I
went to visit a patient in outside a
hospital. So, uh, I'm in there. All of a
sudden, the head nurse comes in, knocks
on the door, and says, "You should
excuse me, as is confidential, but
Rob Goldwir, aren't you supposed to be
giving a share in a few minutes?" And I
said, "Yes, but I was going to give it
from here." Oh, she said, "I thought you
give it like from the studio." I said
today Mount Sinai Hospital room 972 is a
studio.
It was amazing thing. I gave the shear.
She brought in to the She asked in
advance. She brought in this year a
non-religious patient. The non-religious
patient thought that this was some
incredible I'm sitting with this guy.
Here's the the head nurse and they come
in and I'm talking on the telephone
about the the tora of the zer.
That was it.
At night I get a call from the head
nurse. She said the patient would want
to know could she get on be a part of it
or is it only for religious people?
>> Wow.
>> Wow. Wow. Amazing. So another aspect of
yum kipper is overcoming bad habits and
the rub has been at the forefront of
dealing with people who
have struggles serious serious
struggles.
Is there a common denominator that the
rub has seen from all the thousands of
people that you've dealt with that have
been struggling with addiction with
problems? The ones that succeeded versus
the ones that did not. Is there a common
denominator, tools that they use,
mentalities, perspectives that they may
have adopted or actions, things that
they've done or learned or read that
have helped them that could apply to
sort of regular people, although no
one's regular, but you know what I mean.
Regular people with their simple
struggles and and bad habits. Is there a
common denominator you saw in your
career that you could apply to regular
people that they could use in their
battles against their bad habits? Is the
power of positive thinking?
It is. Hashem says
you have to have be positive.
The way that a person wants to go so
they will be led.
And if the person has that positive
attitude and they want to get out and
they want to go and they want to become
more spiritual, they will do it. the
great.
I went into him
to the Sorra
and I went with his
who knew me. We went in together because
I wanted to really ask him some tough
questions and Rabai was open and I asked
him about addiction something.
The final question that I ask on behalf
of everybody in the world is is it
possible to get out of addiction? Is it
possible? Rebi and I have it in the
beginning of the book. Rebim said with
determination
with amuna a person can go out of
anything.
I took his words. I had the I had it
written and I put it in the front of the
the safer with a positive attitude. A
person can do it. If they come and they
don't have a positive attitude,
very difficult to make any headway. The
Torah needs a person's mind and a
person's heart. If they want to, they
can accomplish anything. The most
person that was interreligious
can become the most religious. The
person that was the most addicted can
become a person that is totally totally
clean, totally off the stop. It depends
on the positive mindset into
Hashem that Hashem helps us every step
of the way to pull us out
that
[Music]
from every type of doesn't matter what
it was Hashem saved them but only when
the person says I'm going to come. There
was a family that came from England with
one of their members and they wanted to
have help
for an individual that fell into a
certain thing. Person came in, they
flew. The whole family flew for that.
Person came in. Individual
not positive attitude. Wouldn't believe
that they would ever change. So I said
to the individual, "I'm so sorry you
made the trip. It's like Baltas.
You can't throw out that much money. I'm
sorry, but I can't help you. Maybe there
is somebody in New York. It's a great
place. A lot of good people, a lot of
good. Maybe someone else could help you.
Person left.
>> The family went crazy on me. The family.
I mean, I I didn't know I'm starting up
with the mob. The family came in. How
could you say that? What could you do?
do that.
Then they said, "This person has never
been told that in their life." I said,
"Maybe the reason they came to America
is they had to hear that one time."
>> Wow.
>> The person
changed their attitude. They they had a
little attitude adjustment.
Hashem, I dealt with them and they
became really really wonderful in past
what they were going through.
>> Wow. Wow. Is there is there someone who
you thought would not make it back? Like
they were so
drowning in their addiction
that even you were surprised that they
you were shocked that they came back or
you have a positive attitude with
everybody and everybody could come back
and nothing surprises you.
>> In general, I try to be very very
positive about everybody in the world.
There was one individual
that uh
I saw it
it looked the
prospects of them coming out of it were
very slim very slim
and uh they came out of it
after that I said that's it there's hope
for everybody don't even think that one
person is more or that person is less.
For everybody, religiously,
everybody, the person that could fight
and argue against and argue against
everything, that individual could turn
around and become a fire brand for
Torah, a fire brand for Frai.
It's uh
>> looking back at your career, do you have
more faith in the Jewish nishama now or
before you started with the ignorance of
not knowing how many troubled souls
there are and how far
steeped in sin and addiction and and mud
one could be. Do you have more faith now
in the Jewish nishama or less?
>> Much more faith. much more. I have seen
the people
who have come up so far and gone through
so many struggles. If it wasn't for aino
with the I am not sure that some of
these people would have had the power on
their own to be
to stand the challenge. It is only the
arouchia that they have that they're
able to be so strong and so good and
come through so much. It it it's it's
unbelievable. uh you know I most of the
time I deal with our
uh mainstream community with the Ben
Torah and all of the wonderful people
and the communities and uh that you're
part of and it's just it it's tremendous
occasionally when others come in and I
see the gura and the strength of what
they're willing to do of how they have
to fight so many voices inside to do the
right thing and they do. It's
unbelievable. I had a father, a father
that is taking in a son-in-law and the
son-in-law was
uh not on the level in a few different
ways than the than the father, the
future father-in-law. So he came into me
and uh he'd be what do I do if he says
this and what do I do if he says that
and should I ignore this and should I
ignore that and which should I tell my
daughter should I ever say anything
about him should I say nothing about him
and everything. He was going to meet him
the first time. So I told him
everything. I told him what I thought
how he could diplomatically deal with it
and what was proper according to Torah.
He goes to the door. He runs back over
and he says, "I want to ask you a
question. When I meet him, do I have to
take him around or not?" I said, "You
you have to take him around."
Wow. Wow. Amazing. Amazing. So, let's
say a normal person who is struggling
with addict addiction or compulsive
or bad behavior
similar to what we discussed a second
ago. They come to Yamkipper and they're
they have this issue and they can't get
out of this issue.
What should their approach be to Hashem?
I have this issue. I struggle with
internet or my phone or money has taken
over my life. My career aspiration,
lust, whatever it is, fill in the blank.
They see no way out of it. They're not
admitting it to their wife or their
husband. They're not going to therapy.
They're normal person. They're regular
normal Jew has this issue.
What avenue should they take in their
personal growth, especially in Kipper
time when they're when it's, you know,
top of mind. What a regular person, not
anorexia, not severe mental disease. A
regular person who has an addiction that
is a problem, but they're not seeking
outside help and they don't feel like
they need to. If they watch a podcast
with some intelligent wisdom, they they
might take that advice and use it to
better themselves. What would the Rev
say? I would say that the individual
should approach
Chuv in general or Yiddish kite and say
I am going to do this today. It doesn't
matter what I did yesterday, what I did
tomorrow. It doesn't matter. I'm going
to try. If I try my best and I say to
Hashem, I'm gonna be honest. I did this
a vera. I'm gonna be honest. I'm not the
best. I did a few things. However, I
want very much to be close to you. I
want to be close to you, Hashem. And I
want to open up the power of chuva. Even
the person knows that they're going to
continue. Even the person in today's
generation is crazy because you
mentioned there the internet.
M we can't even understand the harm that
it has done in the world for all people
for all ages and what it is done and
what has opened up and you know I don't
want to say it but people are always
with the chat now the GPTP whatever it
is and you can ask it all your questions
you know uh uh that you want so a young
man asked the chat should I commit
suicide.
Should I be
the chat?
AI
said yes.
He went I don't want to say the end
such riches in tuma in the world tuma
it's very difficult because a person
that has like uh that the sultan grabbed
on to already to get their grasp off is
very hard. However,
says I have it I I I copied it off like
a number of times. Any Jew
even they sunk to the place where they
sunk. There is no such a thing as yush.
There is no something Hashem.
Hashem can help them and lift them up
from any place no matter what. Even
those of that are to do chuva. Even
those that tell us
you can't do chuva. Even those you could
do chuva. I have it open for
unbelievable.
Unbelievable. It is user for a Jew to
give up to be Msiaish ever because there
is nothing there is no there is no
hopeless
state for a Jew.
die.
Every moment that a Jew can still live,
they can be Msaken. They can fix their
life. They can
get whatever rectification they might be
in need of. So I would tell the ye go
on. You did the problems, you did
different things. Go on in life. We can
be Msakin. We can find a path. We can
work on what has gone bad in the past.
It is possible no matter where a person
is. I have sometimes ya tell me no I
can't do this. I had a gaba. This was
one of the most startling things. A gaba
came in from somewhere out of town.
Anywhere out of Brooklyn is out of town.
Kitty. There's only one town. But
anyhow,
uh he comes in from out flew in to ask
me a question. He is a gaba by the safer
tora. He's a gaba in his show.
He does a certain aa
and there is
once or twice during the year he stands
by the safety and they read that a vera.
He tells me, "How could I be such a
hypocrite,
such a low life? I'm very honest. I'm
honest to a fault." And I come and I
stand there by the sacred like a gaba
and they're reading that I want to tell
the
sh that I don't want to be the gaba
anymore. Would you pasin that I
shouldn't be the gaba anymore? I said,
"I think you came to the wrong rabbi.
I pas that you should stay in your
position
120 years." He said, "But reb."
I said, "Listen, I'm sure any goba that
says in the s Torah, I'm sure there's
one that he comes across in the year
that he's not exactly perfect in. But
does every goba quit after they get to
their para?" Oh, you're mik. Oh, you're
kisa. Oh, you're over there in I know
you. No, you got to stay. If you came to
me for hat to leave, no milees,
you go more and more take more jobs in
the shared. You don't start quitting
jobs in the shaw. Who knows where the
next job you're going to quit. So
there's a there's a famous MS which says
that the focus of chuva should be
asking forgiveness for not completing my
tap. Hashem can forgive that I said I
can forgive that I ate what I shouldn't
have eaten and did what I shouldn't have
done. But this says and many others say
this, I gave you a nishama that was
supposed to bring certain lights into
the spiritual light into the world into
certain places in the world and you
didn't.
Going with that train of thought, which
you might say we don't go with that
train of thought, but going with that
train of thought, how is someone
supposed to feel like they have a like
Hashem gave me a special
Hashem has faith in me? I work in an
accounting firm with 10,000 employees.
I'm one of a million people in my shaw.
I'm not a really r I'm not like a
scholar.
Where do I find my individual connection
to Hashem to uniqueness? I'm not
spreading Torah. I could barely
concentrate on the train learning data.
Someone's in my ear. I'm holding on to
the bar of the subway.
If I have a toughkit and I've been
placed into this world to unleash
spiritual light, whatever that means,
how do I prevent myself from just
getting sucked up into the rest of
Claire's just being one of a million and
sort of hiding myself and my spiritual
problems behind the fact that I'm part
of a crew and and Clustro? What's the
balance between individuality and a
seabour basically is what I'm asking if
that makes any sense. very much sense.
I'm part of the
but I'm also I grow with the but I also
have to do my personal growth.
What was my purpose in coming? I
shouldn't feel bad that I didn't do it.
I wanted to learn through yami and babi
and I didn't do it. I shouldn't feel
bad. I still have to still have time a
lot of time. The habaka
the greatest of all reba mushenu
when he came to rebika he couldn't
believe it unreal rabi what age should
rebuka start didn't wasn't there a tina
when he was little rebika what are you
doing when are you going to fulfill your
tkid finally he's middleage and he has
to start an olive base he has to so
where' they send him they send him to
first Great. Rabik is sitting there. All
the kids are there. Some guy comes into
sit down with a beer. And the kids, hey,
look at that guy over there. Look. Can
you imagine the busha? He comes home to
his wife. I can't I can't do this. I
can't sit there with the two-year-old
kids. I can't be there anymore. They
know more than I do.
Don't ever feel bad. Ryaka.
He became the greatest of the greats. We
too
can't cry over the over the spilled
milk. There's some lost time. Okay, I
agree. But today I could become a goodby
modern day raisar
considerably one of the funniest people
in arits is one of the greatest stars. A
kab that rose high. But yet look what he
did.
He changed completely. He was M of Yen.
He was a DMA. Thousands and thousands of
people that used to watch him and be his
biggest fans as the biggest star. Now
they did char.
He's got he's growing a beard. He's
whatever.
Everybody has that chance. Everybody
could be.
Everybody could be Uri. We all have that
power. We just have to exercise it, not
give up, not look in the past. I'm gonna
do my tatkid and if I didn't accomplish
it last year, I got a new year where I
can start and I can strive and I can
become somebody great and I can try to
do whatever little thing that I know. If
I bake good, so I'm going to bake kalas
or I'll make a kala bake and we'll be
maka people to take to be mafal and
we'll sing a niggan. or if I sing nicely
so I'll be mahana or I'll go to the
hospitals and I'll help the patients and
I'll be mazakam whatever I can do if I'm
a good artist and I can draw something
I'll draw inspirational pictures I'll
try to do something that will inspire
cla whatever little gift that I have
I'll try and help if I can garden and
I'm a gardener and that's about all I do
but I love to garden I'll go to the sh
the yeshiva the bako I'll make for them
a beautiful garden. I'll beautify it
like they did in Punovich. Every person
can do something with their learning.
Every person can teach somewhere, can
gather a group together on chabas or can
gather little kids and say to them,
everyone has a world that they can
accomplish. They just have to say, you
know what, I don't look back. Forget
whatever happened in the past. I'm not
looking back. As
she had a terrible, terrible punishment.
She turns into a meal, a pillar of salt.
What did she do so bad? She looked back.
But
says the great slutrimer, Hashem said,
"Don't look back." She looked back. You
and I, all of CL, we have to know. Don't
look back. Forge ahead. Become the
biggest sadic. Become the biggest sadist
that you can be. Don't worry about the
past.
>> Wow. So, in conclusion,
what would be one
takeaway
that would can potentially help people?
Unless you have another you want to you
have a particular thing that you wanted
to No,
>> I I follow your lead. H my lead takes me
to far interesting places so I don't
know if it's the best lead to follow but
in conclusion
is there one message that you think
should be ringing in people's ears as
they start a new year to help them stay
on fire as ye not just yidden but yeden
on fire when they go into a new year
back to work back to life back into a
winter routine what would be one message
that could be drumming in their head
over and over to remind them to stay on
fire.
>> What I would say the of the
power that lies inside of us, we have no
idea how great it is. We deny our own
potential. Each of us has explosive
potential. We have
break out. break break out of those
confines of the uh line that I'm not
supposed to go over. Do it. Don't worry.
Learn it. You never learn. Don't worry
about it. Learn it. You never experience
a shabas. Go and experience shabas kabo
like it's supposed to. When they're
singing and dancing and you didn't join
it, go and sing and dance. Break that
line. Breakthrough.
Help out. Be a member of the of the
cloud. Know the potential that you have
is tremendous.
The great
said such
every generation praises you.
We praise Hashem Shabman
says a different everybody says oh this
generation
ah look what's happening look at all the
people look at the young people there
and people that are off and this and
that and look it's not like the old days
and everything
says the opposite door to door every
succeeding generation
Hashem's
our people improve more and more and
more. We have today young people that
are on fire. You have older people that
are doing chuva. Never like that before.
I just met there was a a person came in
uh from Chicago, a great Rabbi Kovali
brought in a group from Chicago. And one
person came over and he said, "I did
Chuba. I know I'm a little bit older
than uh you would expect. This is a
generation of fire. The young people are
on fire. They want even the ones that
challenge. They want more than anything.
I I got to tell you, Rebillo, the
priority one invited me one time uh to a
special shabas and I was supposed to
speak mozzy shabas. So they had a group
of guys that were off and they were
there Masoy Chabas and there was one of
these guys a tall guy that asked me
could I talk to you for a few minutes I
said yeah program wasn't starting we
went into a room there was like a stage
like auditorium when a stage be a little
private we went on top there the guy was
yelling the guy was giving me all his
tiness he was getting I I I can't tell
you. He He was getting excited and like
yelling and so forth.
I didn't say anything. I realized he's
got a big chip, you know. I didn't say
anything. I just listen. I tried to be
sympathetic to whatever he was yelling
at. Very antagonistic to Yiddish.
Finally, somebody came in and said,
"Rav, it's time for you to go on. You
have to leave." So I said, "I'm sorry. I
would like to stay here." you know, be
yelled at for a long time. Middle, but I
didn't say it. I I I'm sorry. I have to
leave now. He says, "Well, could I ask
you one thing?" I said, "Yes."
He said, "Could I have a hug?"
I said, "What?" I thought I didn't hear
him. He said, "A hug?"
I said, "Yeah."
I hugged him. He put his head he's he's
tall. Put his head down on my shoulder
and began to cry.
I thought to myself,
the kak of chuba,
even a guy that is dead set and is
yelling at a rabbi in giving all the
anger about Yiddishkai,
even that guy, he wants a hug, he wants
a hug from the
>> Wow. Wow. Thank you very much Rabbi
Goldasso for coming on and giving us
physic much
for all that you do for the club.
>> Amen. Amen. Amen. Thank you very much.
Wow.
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