0:00 / 0:00
Mother Knows Best | Don Ghermezian
4,575 views
Learn more about Vayimaen and join our WhatsApp group here: https://www.vayimaen.org/ #vayimaen #shmiraseinayim
Categories:
Torah
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Baruch Hashem, after the last video,
a lot of people sort of
stopped me on the street
and one of the questions
I get all the time was,
How did you come across this
Shmirat Einayim
and what is it that makes it
so important for you and stuff?
This goes back several years.
I came home one Erev Shabbat
and I went to my wife
and a couple of my cousins,
and I said: Guys, Saturday night
there's a big gathering in the city,
and a lot of the brand CEOs of the
luxury tenants were going to be there.
It was a big gala event.
I think it's important maybe
we should go to this event.
And I left it at that.
On Shabbat Mincha,
my mom comes to me,
out of the blue.
This is the first time my mother
has ever done something like this.
She never tells me
where to go or what to do.
She said: Oh, Don, I overheard
you were speaking to your wife
and some of the boys about
a party that you need to go to.
Do you think there's going to be
people there dressed there
that might not be
appropriate for everybody?
And I'm, like: Yeah, Mom.
You know, I never really thought of that,
but yeah, you could be right.
So she said: Do you think
Hashem really needs you
to go to this kind of a place
in order for you to sign deals?
And I just remember that striking me
and thinking to myself,
She's right.
Even though it's an opportunity
to meet with all the brand CEOs
and talk about the project,
I probably don't need to be there.
Anyways, I went upstairs
to my apartment,
between Mincha and Arvit,
during Seudah Shelishit,
and...
there was this book,
sitting on the table,
the Pele Yoetz.
And so I grabbed the book,
and by the way,
I never do this stuff, ever,
and I'm like: Hmmm,
you know what, Hashem?
I'm going to open up this book,
and maybe the book will tell me
what the right thing to do is.
And so I opened up the book
and the subject is on mourning.
A person should imagine that his mother,
wearing sackcloth,
is dressed in black
and is screaming in a high, bitter voice
like the cry of a dove.
What does she say?
I have nurtured sons and exalted them,
yet they have rebelled against me.
And I'm like,
Okay, Hashem. That makes sense.
My mother's not happy about it.
I'm not going to go.
If the story ended there,
it'd be an awesome story,
but I decided to read just a little bit further,
and here's where
the story just gets crazy.
From this perspective,
one can hear how bad and awful
are the actions of some men and women
who gather together for a social party
on Motzei Shabbat or other nights,
especially during the long winter nights.
This was January.
They engage in merriment of vanity,
eating and drinking, playing music,
and singing gentile songs.
Woe unto them, woe upon them!
Without a doubt their merriment
will be transformed into grief,
Chas v’Shalom,
either in this world or the next,
unless they repent.
You know, I tell my kids all the time,
Sometimes when somebody
is doing something wrong,
they know that it's wrong,
Hashem, He loves you like a father,
and He gives you a little nudge.
Sometimes the nudge is enough.
You realize that,
Hey, I'm making mistakes.
Something's wrong.
Hashem’s not happy with it.
Sometimes even smart kids,
they don't listen to the nudge so much,
and Hashem gives them
a little bit more of a shove.
Hurts a little bit more.
Usually that should do the trick.
The one thing you don't ever want to do
is you don't ever want
to get in the position
where Hashem gives you a big right hook,
because something is so
right there in your face,
and Hashem is telling you,
Absolutely do not do that,
you don't need that,
and that's not how the world works.
And for me, Baruch Hashem,
this book was
the nudge, the shove
and the punch across the face,
without actually getting hit,
and I realized that
mothers always know best,
and obviously, we didn't go there.
And so it was a remarkable story,
it stuck with me my entire life,
and one that I'm super happy
to share with everybody else.
Guard your eyes is a very,
very important thing.
All the Bracha in the world can come
from that alone.