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PIC 2024 R' Chanan Gordon 5 Actions that will Change Your Life Forever
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Okay, folks, welcome
to Project Inspire 2000 and
24.
And as President Joe Biden has been
known to say, it's great to be back in
Cleveland.
So, we
So, Rabbi Samson tells me I'm been I
have this invidious position of opening
a Project Inspire every year.
And the excuse that I've been given is
Hazal say that everything goes off at
the beginning, right? So, we're going to
try and set a tone for this year's
Project Inspire, which is not only about
inspiration, it's not only about
hisoris, but real practical advice. So,
when the sun sets on Sunday
lunchtime, and we go our separate ways,
that you'll be able to take some pearls
of wisdom as you navigate this journey
called life, because every year I come
back to Project Inspire, the world gets
more and more mashuga.
And needless to say, the world is coming
off, it seems. We're going to talk about
this over the whole weekend, what that
means, and of course within the context
of achdus, what's our role?
So, I'm going to try and make this as
practical as possible, so that it's not
only something that we can go into
Shabbos with a smile, but really some
ideas that we can take with us for the
rest of our life.
In my many years of speaking, what I've
tried to do is cull things things down
to what I think the topic is
is that five actions
that will change your life forever.
Every single one of every one of these
five
are literally tried and tested, not only
by myself, but by other speakers, and I
think that if you are preparing braces,
one or two,
my promise to you is that you will
definitely be a different person come
Sunday lunchtime.
The first thing, ladies and gentlemen,
is from now on,
I want you to change the way you think
about time.
So, most of people uh think about time
in a secular form, like a watch.
If you really want to be smart, if you
really want to achieve your goals in
life, you'll think about time as a
compass. It's not a watch, it's a
compass. It's all about the direction,
and as opposed to what every single
every single day runner talks about
about prioritizing your schedule,
prioritizing your schedule, I'm going to
focus on something which the Torah talks
about, which is scheduling your
priorities. So, no longer we're going to
think of time in a secular way, we're
going to think of time as a compass,
which direction your life's going.
And we instead of thinking about time,
about checking things off, we're going
to thinking about scheduling your
priorities instead instead of
prioritizing your schedule. So,
obviously we need to talk about the
concept of priorities. Let's just talk
about quickly the concept of time from a
Torah perspective. How important is the
concept of time?
Suppose I were to give each and every
one of you
$701,280
in United States dollars right now.
But that's basically what a room costs
here for Project Inspire. $701,280.
You're pretty pretty pretty pleased,
right?
Think about how you would spend that
money.
Now, what if I were to tell you
uh that
if you don't use it, you lose it.
If you don't use the $701,280,
you're going to lose it.
So, I want you to hold that thought.
According to the Pew report, the average
American today lives for 80 years.
That's 701,280
hours.
So, we're going to figure out how we use
those 701,280
hours in the most judicious way, because
when you come to the end of this journey
called life,
you're going to get an open book exam.
Hakadosh Baruch Hu is going to ask you
six questions, and it's all about
whether you became the greatest you.
And there's one of the commodities
that's one of the most important
commodities that Hakadosh Baruch Hu
gives us, and if you don't use it, you
lose it, and that's time.
So important is, my friends, the concept
of time, that it's in fact the first
fourth letter of the Torah.
Bereishis, bara Elohim, es, the aleph
and the tav, the beginning and the end
of the alphabet, according to the
meforshim, is Hakadosh Baruch Hu
creating this concept of time.
What's the first mitzvah? What's the
first mitzvah we learn about in the
Torah? Just to underscore how important
this concept is called time.
Very good. Rosh Chodesh. It's all about
time. How even when we see each other,
right, on on on somebody's birthday,
what's our salutation?
Ad meah v'esrim, right?
Of course, unless they're turning 120,
in which case we say,
have a nice day. So, the
there's no question, my friends, the
concept of time is vitally important.
It's something Hakadosh Baruch Hu
created in the beginning of this world,
and hopefully by the end of our
discussion, you're going to change the
way you use this sacrosanct commodity.
We said the average American
lives for 80 years. We said that breaks
down into which is
28,835
days. Let's break
down, according to the Pew report, how
the average American uses their 80
years. sleeping. 1,635 days is spent
eating. Actually, here it's probably
2,000.
Working 3,202,
entertainment 2,000. Fast forward,
you're in the bathroom, ladies and
gentlemen, for 671 days of your life,
which means if you live to the age of 80
years old, you have 7,363
days in order to achieve your potential.
How important is the concept of
achieving your potential? Who was the
first Jew?
Who was the first Jew?
Very good. Avraham had how many tests?
Very good. At the end of the 10th test,
the proverbial binding of Isaac,
what happened? When he was on that bunny
sawyer, when he managed to surmount the
final test, what happened?
A bas kol came out and said what?
Avraham, Avraham. Why twice?
It's a lesson for all of us, and that is
the Avraham down there in this world had
reached the potential that he could have
actualized up there.
That's why, my friends, we're in this
world. The delta between who you land up
being and who you are at Project Inspire
2024 is called Gehennom.
That's the concept of Gehennom. It's the
disparity between who you are supposed
to be and who you land up being.
One of the most important things is the
way we're going to use our time.
So,
I want you to start thinking again, time
in terms of compass, time in terms of
priorities. I'll take you back to 1954.
Professor at the school the Professor in
Paris walks into a classroom, and he
puts in the classroom the following.
He had a bowl of water,
and and next to the bowl of water there
was large rocks,
and there were slightly smaller pebbles,
there was a cup of sand,
and all he asked 15 of the biggest CEOs
in the world at the time is whether you
can take these objects and put it into
this vase of water without displacing
the water.
It's one of the biggest mussar haskals
that you'll learn this entire Project
Inspire.
What do you think What do you think the
only way you can get rocks,
the sli- slightly smaller pebbles, sand
into this vase of water without
displacing the water?
You have to put the big rocks in first,
and then the pebbles, then the sand.
What's the lesson for all of us?
In life, you have to figure out your big
rocks.
You have to put the big rocks in first.
So, I have made copies which I will
disseminate to you guys after this
unbelievable lecture of a slightly
modified version of Steve Covey's four
quadrants.
If you want to reach your potential in
this journey called life,
you want to spend 80% of your time in
what we call the northeast quadrant.
Now, let me explain to you how this
works in terms of horizontal and
vertical. On the vertical side is
important and not important, and
horizontally it's urgent and not urgent.
You want to spend most of your time in
things that are not urgent,
but important.
For example, your important
relationships, exercise, all of the
things that ultimately are going to be
the core, and all of the things, those
who've got a landmark or any other
similar type self-help programs, that's
what Those are the things that are going
to be on your mitzvah.
It's not going to be whether you drove a
Lexus or a Ferrari,
and it's not
The most important things, the big
rocks, that's where the action is. You
should spend 80% of your time doing
things that are important, but not
urgent.
So, I've spoken about it many times,
because I work a lot with Gen Z, that
unfortunately, because of social media,
people are reacting. They're not being
proactive. They're reacting to to to a
text, they're reacting to likes and
schmikes, and you land up come to the
end of the day exhausted, and you've
done two things. Again,
if you want to use your time
judiciously, spend most of your time
doing things that are important, uh but
not urgent. So, point number one is
the way we're going to spend our time
judiciously is we're going to put the
big rocks in first, which means as
opposed to time management in the
Western paradigm which says prioritize
your schedule, we're going to schedule
our priorities.
We're going to figure out what our big
rocks are.
For example, if you have a business
meeting and your 7-year-old child or
your 6-year-old grandchild says, "Zaidy,
Tati, please come with me to my school
play." What do you do?
Why? Because that's the big rock and
time and time again people will make the
knee-jerk reaction and you will find
that people ascend up the ladder of life
and they find that it's leaning against
the wrong wall.
Focus on scheduling your priorities.
I want to come to a subsection of time
management and that's what's in your
head.
Okay, I happen to I guess during time we
can say this cryptically. I happen to
represent the biggest content creator in
the world.
The biggest YouTuber in the world. So, I
think
working with this person I got a sense
of how the algorithm works and how
social media works.
It's all about making you sticky,
latched on to these little screens,
okay? It's also about owning your mind.
I'm talking I think on the last day or
Shabbos about being a South African
Jewish Harvard person, the worst
possible combination. How did Harvard
brainwash a generation?
Who owns our minds?
Being in the present is one of the the
most difficult things with the
proliferation of technology and the
advent of social media.
There's three major for our purposes
there's three major tenses, right?
Being in the past. I'm going to show I'm
going to give you an emotion. You tell
me if it's present, past, or future.
Guilt.
Past.
Um anxiety, freaking out.
Usually the future.
How many people rent space in their head
and thinking about anything but being in
this room area of Shabbos a project
smart listen to the most unbelievable
lecture.
So, you should know
you should know that the Malachim others
there's a country on the tricks of the
eight Sahara. That's one of the tricks
of the eight Sahara is to make sure that
you're not in the moment. Because if
you're not in the moment, you're not
living. If you're thinking about
what's going to be on Shabbos and then
we've got to got to come back, we've got
to pay the mortgage.
You're not here. This moment is never
going to happen again in your life. Why
are you in this room? I'll show you very
clearly the Gamoran Sanhedrin says,
"Every single person in this room, for
the camera, 32,811
people in this room are all meant to be
here."
I have no clue what I'm going to say,
but I promise you I'm going to say
something that some way is going to
resonate and has the potential to change
your life.
Very
Hazal 101, okay? If you're not in the
moment, you may miss something that is
potentially going to be change your
life. So, point number one in the five
things that you need to think about to
change your life, I want you to start
start thinking about time in a very
different way. We spoke about instead of
scheduling
instead of prioritizing our our
schedule, scheduling our priorities. We
said about the big rocks. We spoke about
being in the moment in terms of what
your what you're thinking about. Let's
come to number two.
In order to achieve greatness, you need
to get rid of the following. It's a
concept that pop culture talks about.
It's completely erroneous. It's not a
Torah concept. Get it out of your head
today and that's the concept of concept
of you can have it all.
You can have it all is not a Torah
concept.
The way Hakadosh Baruch Hu works is
there is nobody in this room.
There is nobody in this room. The reason
why I can say this is because it's very
clearly in my Machzor, I can show you
inside. There is nobody in this room.
I hope there's no one in this room and
I'll tell you why, that doesn't have a
pekel.
There's nobody in this room that doesn't
have pain.
The Gemara says very clearly, "If you go
40 days without pain, it ain't a good
sign."
It's a sign of a symptom which Hakadosh
Baruch Hu is saying,
"You I'm indifferent to you. God
gesundheit, live your life."
Pain, by the way, according to the
Gemara can mean putting your hand in
your pocket and taking out a quarter and
not a dollar. So, pain doesn't have to
be, you know, being uh
a car collision on the New Jersey
Turnpike. But any kind of knitch,
anything that's happened to you right
now, it's a very good sign if you've got
some Torahs in your life. Okay.
The same Gemara says the following,
okay? Hold on to your shaitels for this.
You cannot have Hakadosh Baruch Hu
doesn't create a situation where at the
same time a person's getting complete
nachas from all their children, their
bank account is beautiful, they have
shalom bayis, and everything's
pure equanimity.
I've been doing this for a long time. I
speak to a lot of people.
There's always one leg of the stool.
Hakadosh Baruch Hu in his infinite love
for us and I'll explain why
will not will be a slightly not in
equilibrium.
Okay. So, then get out of your head the
concept of having it all. There's enough
community The difference between two
concepts, shalva and menucha.
Shalva means that a person saying
they're not missing anything in life.
My friends, shalva is a negative trait.
Why?
Because if you feel that everything must
be perfect,
it's very very dangerous. I'm going to
talk I think on the second day about
people who want everything perfect.
I've been involved in many many many
shidduchim and that's a very big problem
where
especially with the guys, the women have
this right. But the guy is waiting for
Christie Brinkley to walk around the
corner with a shaitel on. Are you guys
nuts?
There's no such a thing as perfection.
Hakadosh Baruch Hu created fallible
human beings, okay? Shalva as opposed to
menucha. What's menucha mean? Menucha
means that
you don't need anything.
As opposed to you've got everything.
Let's just drill down a little bit more
about this concept of you
that you can have it all.
So, I used to do many many of these
programs
with Dennis Prager. I'm not saying
Dennis is is I certainly
do not want to quote Dennis
as a Torah as a Torah
uh sage.
But he's got some wisdom and I want to
quote from you a a very good piece that
he wrote
in uh
it's called missing it's called the
missing tile syndrome and it says it
all.
Quote.
One of human nature's most effective
ways of sabotaging happiness
is to look at a beautiful scene
and fixate on whatever is flawed
or missing no matter how small.
The tendency is easily demonstrated.
Imagine looking up
at a tiled ceiling
from which one tile is missing.
You'll most likely concentrate on that
missing tile.
In fact, the more beautiful the ceiling,
the more you're likely to concentrate on
the missing tile
and permit it to affect your enjoyment
of the rest of the ceiling. By the way,
my Rosh Yeshiva would never ever ever
allow us to respond where people say,
"Chanan, how's How things going?" A
well-known Americanism is
it could be better.
My friends, that's pure mumsh. The
Chofetz Chaim speaks about it. If it
could be better, it would be better.
Exactly what's supposed to happen right
now is happening. You're sitting at
whatever time it is erev Shabbos with a
stomach ache and you're worrying about
THAT'S WHAT'S SUPPOSED TO HAPPEN. If you
were God, you would create this exact
matzah. So, it could be better it would
be better. The proclivity of the human
being to see the missing tile is based
on an erroneous is that you can have it
all.
You can have it all in Hollywood. That's
not the way
uh the way Hakadosh Baruch Hu created
the world.
Next.
I want to start I want you to start
recalibrating your definition
of success.
I've spoken I think in every continent
in the world. In America, if I say the
word success, let's be honest. Okay,
we're friends. If I say the word
success, what am I talking about?
It's gelt, right?
Now, in the Torah,
there is someone who is described as an
ish matzliach.
Who is that?
Yosef Hatzadik is an ish matzliach. A
successful person. This is Hakadosh
Baruch Hu's definition of a successful
person. By the way, when the Torah says
that Yosef was an ish matzliach, was it
at the time that he was the viceroy
sitting like a big shvitzer in the
When does the Torah say that he was It
says it three times. When does it When
are the times that Hakadosh Baruch Hu
says in the Torah that Yosef Hatzadik
was an ish matzliach?
One time when he was in jail.
When he's in the bor, excellent. And the
third?
Excellent. Two for two.
Give this woman a free shaitel.
Unbelievable. Three for three.
Okay, what but there's something about
all of those things, right? Those were
big tests. So, therefore
So, therefore what's the definition of
success? To make the Forbes list or to
be able to have the intestinal fortitude
to overcome, to use your stumbling
blocks as stepping stones?
That's what success is in the world of
Torah. And I I the concept of how
success has crept into our lives, let me
tell you about the American notion of
success.
And that is as follows.
69%. This is according to the Wall
Street Journal poll which is March 2
2020 which is March 2023. It's pretty
recent.
69% of Gen Z's believe that money can
buy happiness.
Hold on. The Wall Street Journal poll
which is very telling
is
points to a trend that is tragic that I
see every single day with the people
that we work with
that what's going out the window is
religion, community, family, and
unfortunately it's all being superseded
by material things.
The most authoritative research ever
done on happiness
ever It was a longevity study was done
by Harvard. Harvard used to be a good
school. Harvard study of adult
development.
Sorry, 1938. It's a long long study.
Here's what the the mask here's the sure
here's the mask kind of the study.
Money can never buy happiness. The
bottom line of the research is
once you reach certain basics in terms
of certain necessities,
anything above that is not going to have
a bearing on happiness. And therefore,
unlike the secular world, the things
that make you the most happy
are not things, they're people.
It's all about relationships. Sam
Walton.
Sam Walton one of the one of the richest
person ever to live in this country. He
started small grocery store called
Walmart. What was Sam Walton's last
words?
You can check anything I'll say snoop
snoop whatever you want to check. Every
word I've double checked. Thanks to
Pastor Crone who promised that I check
and recheck anything I'll say. What's
what are the last words of Sam Walton
before his demise?
I blew it.
He looked at his wife
who was completely estranged from him,
his kids who hardly said a word for and
at the time when with I don't know how
many billions he knew that he had
absolutely missed the purpose of life.
So number one we said if you really want
to have a successful life, you got to
start thinking about time in a very
different way. And number two we said
that if you want to have a successful
life, we're going to have to
we we said we're going to have to you
have to spend most of your time in the
northeast quadrant. We then said in
order to have a successful life, we're
going to have a different definition of
success.
There's another concept within the
within the subcategory of success is
people conflate success and happiness.
They're very very different. If you take
the Torah concept of success, let me
explain to you the difference between
success and happiness.
Success is getting what you want.
Happiness is wanting what you get.
Success is having all the money in the
world and happiness is having family and
friends to spend it on.
Success is a fancy car.
Happiness is a joyous journey.
Success is having everyone know your
name.
Happiness is knowing everyone's name.
Success is money in the bank.
Happiness cannot be deposited.
Success is private jets.
Happiness is flying high.
Success
is second homes.
Happiness is always being home.
Success is praise. Happiness is never
needing it.
Success is reaching the top. Happiness
has no ceiling.
Success is envied.
Happiness is shared.
One of the things that I've seen in in
speaking on many many many campuses and
and
in different
different different audiences with a big
secular audience is people get confused
between success and happiness and
between fun and happiness.
There is no word my friends, there is no
word in the Torah. If there's no word in
the Torah, I
am telling you that the phenomenon the
concept doesn't exist.
There is no word in the Torah for
retirement.
I
am saying I don't want you to go
be set out into the fields like cattle
and sit in Florida or the rocking chair
with your feet with your teeth in a
glass.
The amount of the exponential
degradation and deterioration of people
when they retire is unbelievable.
There are there's a disproportionate
amount of
get any form of
mental problems because they're sitting
in the and they're using their gray
matter. Retirement I am saying we don't
go off to the pasture like cattle.
There's also no word in the Torah
called fun.
Because fun is something that's attached
to the
happiness is attached to the in the
shower.
If I say to you after this the this talk
is going to be about a 20 minute
standing ovation.
We're going to after showers I'm going
to take you to the Six Flags and we're
going
on a Torah concept.
Who was the greatest human being ever to
the world? There will never be another
person even close.
What
did
make mistakes?
Right. If I was the author of the Torah,
I would I would redact that cut and
paste. Why does the whole world have to
but that's the that is the integrity of
the author of the Torah. This is the
greatest person that ever
the planet and he's fallible.
And he made more than one mistake.
So the idea that we're supposed to be
perfect or you're not supposed to fail
wrong being. That's a
that's not a human being. A doesn't have
you have freedom of volition. That's why
this
that's why there's a concept of reward
and punishment because you have a
struggle. A
doesn't have a struggle. Okay?
We've spoken about this before in
in the secular world
the concept of failure.
Person who lived in Europe until the age
of four couldn't read. Till the age of
seven couldn't write. Was expelled from
elementary school at the age of 11 was
told you are slightly So you
folks know this person today as Albert
Einstein.
Or how about a person who was
a cartoonist who wanted so badly to
write and draft cartoons for a
newspaper. Went from one paper to the
next paper couldn't get a gig.
Finally so financially indigent didn't
have a penny to this is the person's
name knocked on the front door of their
local church and said to the priest I I
mentioned I have a roof over my head.
And the priest said you can go to the
farm barn at the back of the church. And
that night
a little mouse crept out of the farm
barn in its corner and he this person
sketched that mouse. You know that mouse
that is Mickey Mouse. And that person is
Walt Disney.
People don't understand what it says in
falling is seven times. It's not that
they have they fall and they get it's
but for falling they wouldn't be who
they are.
My whole family is in the medical
profession. So I made sure I was
speaking to my brother before this who's
a nuclear radiologist that the following
fact is true.
Life breaks all of us.
Everyone life will break all of us.
But you are strongest in the broken
parts.
How do we know that is a is a fact? I
create in the physical world a
pedagogical example of things that
happen in the spiritual world. When you
break a bone at the point that the
that bone meets and grows together, you
are strongest in that part. My brother
was explaining and he's been through
many many obviously he's a radiologist
that it's highly unlikely that you're
going to break on that same there's a
certain chemical that I created so the
bone knits in a way that it's strongest
in that part. That's a good lesson for
all of us. Is that if you
if you really want to get a good
understanding of why you're in this
world.
And I do this often in
why we're in this world? Rabbi I'm here
to do the
Rabbi I'm here.
There's a reason why every single person
in this room
it came into this world and it's not the
same for anyone else here.
I don't know if any of you seen a person
lining and suddenly they stop. The ball
carrier stops.
Often the reason is because he's got two
two of the two of the letters are
touching.
You can never have two letters touching.
Every
is a separate letter in the Torah. You
can never ever be the same as somebody
else.
Your is not the same as somebody else's.
The place where you're broken, the place
that keeps coming up in your life, the
that you that you look heaven down and
say
just get rid of that's how you know what
your your is in this world.
It says in many many places
many many places the test that keeps
repeating in your life, the area that
somehow keeps being that knowing
Achilles heel is a tremendous tremendous
indicator of why your
has been sent into this world. So
failure very clearly is something that
is part and parcel of the journey of
life.
Next, there is one thing
there is one thing
that every single one of you number five
can have completely own and it's up to
you.
There's one thing that do you choose
your parents?
You choose your IQ?
You choose the color of your eyes?
This is something you can choose.
This is something you can choose. And I
know what you're going to ask me and
this is something I talk about a lot.
What can each and every one of us choose
in the journey called life?
You're on the right track.
Okay, that you're on the right track.
We cannot control what happens to us,
but we can control how we respond to
what happens to us. Say it in one word.
It's a word starting with A.
Very good. Give that man a shaitel.
Attitude. Are you you
The best example is Victor Frankl.
Man's search for meaning.
What Does anyone know when did Victor
Frankl pen this book in his head?
He was in Auschwitz.
He was in Auschwitz and he was
pretending to give lectures to a
And he realized the Nazis you must
remember can take everything but they
can never take away your attitude.
I want to say tell you something else
and this is according to the Torah and
according to all psychological research
is that there are people that are
naturally wired their disposition is
more
is more prone to see the the glass half
full and there's some you can have a
different predisposition but that can be
worked on and that can be changed.
Your attitude is something that you can
work on and that you can change. Okay, I
want to quickly summarize this and then
I want to give you the 10 Commandments
that I want you to take with you for the
rest of your life. We said the following
the topic is five actions that will
change your life forever. We said in
terms of time
I no longer want you to think of time in
a circular fashion. I want you to think
of it in terms of a compass the
direction of your life instead of
thinking of
prioritize your schedule we get a
schedule out
which means we have to know what our
priorities are. What did I say about how
do you figure out what your priorities
are? You got to put the big rocks in
first. The chances are are the big rocks
your relationship your spouse your kids
or whether you can afford to go to KMR?
Very good. Putting the big rocks in
first is the way you will come to this
end of this journey. Hazal have promised
us one thing
claw. Nobody comes to the end of this
journey called life and checks all the
boxes. Nobody.
You want to make sure you just check the
column that says the big rocks.
You don't want to leave your neshama
like Sam Walton say I blew it. Next.
We said that we're going to rethink
the
concept of success. I left that one I'm
going to come back to it. We said that
if I say the word success in the Western
paradigm in culture we think of
But we said the who is an ish matzliach
three times in the Torah?
Yosef.
And you pointed out there were three
times that the Torah says ish matzliach.
Every one of the context where it says
ish matzliach Yosef was going through a
gehennam and therefore success is a
person who uses the stumbling blocks as
stepping stones and is a person who goes
who might have a whole bunch of things
hitting the fan but they still have the
ability that if you change the way you
look at things the things that you look
at change. Next. We said that there is
no such a the notion of you can have it
all is completely erroneous. It doesn't
exist from a Torah perspective. Every
single person I sit in this room bezras
Hashem has pain.
Every one of you has a pekel. It's very
clear that if you go 40 days without
some kind of pain the Rambam says very
clearly the highest form of pain
is indifference.
The high the most According to the
Rambam the most benign form is money.
The next form up is health problems chas
v'shalom. The third form of pain is
vicarious pain. That's a pain a parent
feels for a child. The most the zenith
of pain and suffering according to
Rambam is indifference.
That's the nachash. The nachash was able
to slither and slip and he didn't have
to ever look heaven bound because he had
his food he had everything. When
everything is going your way the chances
are you're riding on the wrong side of
the road. It's not supposed to be like
that.
We said then number four we said change
success we said you can't have it all we
said failure and the final point we said
was
your attitude.
Okay, I I want to tell you in my journey
in my life if I had to call this down
into the 10 things that I want you to
take with you for the rest of your life
certain things that I want you to let go
of from now on to have an unbelievably
happy successful life they would be the
following 10 things. If I can't find
them I will have to do them but I'll
pay. Number one.
One second.
And then we're going to open it up
for I want to take a few questions
before the standing ovation. Okay, the
10 things that you need to let go of in
order to have a successful happy
wholesome life. Number one.
You got to let go of the opinions of
others controlling your life.
What other people think of you is none
of your business.
I work with a lot of Gen Z's. Their
entire decision making is based on FOMO.
I won't go into details there's certain
there's a certain subsect of a certain
culture
in America
many of these kids land up going into
professions because their parents told
them they'll be good at that.
Insanity.
Next.
You need to let go as we alluded to the
shame of past failures.
About seven or eight years ago more
about 10 years ago I was speaking at KMR
a woman comes up to the podium
afterwards
and she starts crying
and that's very awkward I'm trying to be
mechazek her I'm trying to get a word in
two minutes three minutes she's pouring
out all I could hear is he did this
rabbi and he did this.
It took about three and a half minutes
for me to figure out she was talking
about her ex-husband that she divorced
21 years ago.
So this is a person who's been going
through life with a handbrake on for 21
years.
You've got to let go of the shame of
past failures and I'm not saying a
marriage that goes through a sechter
gitten is a failure. Number three.
You've got to get get get get rid of
being indecisive
about what you want.
My friends the road of life is filled
with flat squirrels that couldn't make a
decision.
It's unbelievable. I saw
I see people at all these gigs at
Project Inspire Gateways
it's just it breaks my heart when I sit
down with someone and we go through
something and three years later they
still haven't made a decision.
It's a very very good trick of the
yetzer hara. The yetzer hara just wants
you to be
perseverate. Number four.
You got to let go of procrastinating on
the goals that matter.
You You got to let go of procrastinating
on the goals that matter. Let me tell
you what this means from a deep Torah
perspective. How many times do I hear
rabbi
it sounds amazing what you're saying but
you don't understand rabbi
I I've got the storm in my life. I mean
my my shalom bayis is a
Rabbi the idea of taking a few starting
a new learning seder it's out but you
don't understand I've got a storm in my
business. So I'm here to tell you
every person in this room
has a storm in their life.
It's an optical illusion
to think that you're going to wake up
the storm's going to subside the
rainbow's going to come up you're going
to live in a white picket fence with a
labrador in Greenwich. That's not why
we're in this world. We're not here to
wait for the storm to subside we're here
to dance in the rain.
Next.
You need to let go of choosing to do
nothing.
Another trick of the yetzer hara.
There's such a thing as I said
everything in the physical world has a
functional equivalent to teach us in the
spiritual world. There's something
called gravity. If you do nothing
you're going to go the other way. Why do
you think in Yiddish when I see a friend
what is the salutation I say vos macht a
yid? What are you making of yourself?
What are the biggest tragedies is
someone says to you
someone said to me a few at my Harvard
reunion some said someone said to me
you're the exact same guy that left the
exact same guy that left law school X
years ago. That's the biggest insult you
can give a person.
I'm a walking cadaver that's right.
Number six.
You need to let go of being right.
This will come up all the time in a
marriage situation.
And let me tell you and I've been
through this many times with many
couples. You can either be right or you
can be married.
There are very very few times I'm not a
posek but there are very very few times
in halacha where we have what's called a
pshara a happy medium right? What's the
halacha of a mezuzah?
One money I'm going to say it should be
horizontal the other vertical. When you
look at the doorpost when you go home
after on Sunday after you tip Rabbi
Gordon and the other rabbis what do you
see? It's at 45 degrees.
You got to meet each other halfway. And
what's the first thing you kiss before
you walk into a Jewish home?
Because Hakadosh Baruch Hu is in that
home. It's not about being right
Hakadosh Baruch Hu doesn't care about
being right
it's about understanding the other the
understanding of the other person and
being machshiv the other person and ego
which is a men's problem not a woman's
is edge God out.
As soon as you got ego the shechinah
leaves. Number seven. You need to let go
of running from problem to problem that
should be fixed.
It's a very very very very wonderful
thing that you run from problem to
problem. Let me tell you ladies and
gentlemen
the carpet is getting extremely lumpy
with what we're brushing under the
carpet.
The way successful people and I'm saying
this from a Torah perspective handle
life is when something comes up face
face it face on deal with it. Don't say
in three months in six months because it
may not happen. Number seven. Number
eight. You need to let go of making
excuses rather than decisions.
Successful people don't make excuses.
They make decisions.
It's very very easy to make excuses. It
doesn't get help you to get to where you
want to go. Number nine. You need to let
go of overlooking the positive points in
your life.
The positive points in your life ladies
and gentlemen
8.7 billion people on this planet.
Out of 8.7 billion people, 0.02%
are Jews.
The whole world is going absolutely
meshuga. You would swear that our
country is the size of Australia and
America together. We're not even the
size of New Jersey.
Okay? The idea of
Hakadosh Baruch Hu,
life is very rough. It's getting a lot
more. But every person in this room is a
diamond in the rough.
You got to understand that not only are
you part of the 0.2,
but the fact that you're at a Project
Inspire convention listening to this
unbelievable lecture means that you are
10% of the 0.02, which are the people
that understand why we're in this world.
You people are the people Hakadosh
Baruch Hu is giving the torch. You
people, the people in this room, are the
people Hakadosh Baruch Hu is going to be
relying on. I'm talking about
the only way to fight anti-Semitism is
not by running around Harvard with
It's bringing a light to a very, very
dark world.
And it's by doing what you people are
doing, giving up a
Shabbos weekend to try and
bring his orders and actus. That's
exactly what's going to refute
anti-Semitism. Number 10,
you need to give up
the notion of not appreciating this
moment.
It's a very big yetzer hara when people
say,
"You know, I'm sitting here. I could be
This is exactly where you're supposed to
be.
Exactly where you're supposed to be." I
can from doing this for many, many
years. I have no clue who lands up what
lecture.
But many times, not once or twice,
this is too many It's It's almost
empirical. I've spoken to people that
say, "Rabbi Goodman, I don't I I
blundered into your lecture." And if
you're here, you're meant to be here,
and you're meant to hear something that
hopefully can change your life.
Hopefully you'll take these things to
heart.
It's
The passion that I have is because
not only this is what I do, but I I have
such a contrast. My Your Your Your Your
day job is working with some of the
biggest people in the world of
entertainment, sport.
I don't say this with
with any joy. I wish good on on
everyone.
But the people that the the Gen Z and
pop culture are putting on a pedestal
are living dysfunctional lives. I know
these people. I'm their rebbe. It's
ridiculous.
You people in this room,
the Jewish people were handpicked. The
people Nachman that are in this room,
they're not only handpicked, they
understand that you have a GPS for life.
We all know
what the very final destination is.
Everyone is not No one in this room is
going to avoid the Chevra Kadisha.
But the idea of taking some of the rule
the rules that we discussed today and
over the Shabbos together is just to
make sure
that you recalculate a lot less.
You don't have to go through 27
marriages to figure out about
relationships.
You don't have to You don't have to And
I get this all the time, but Rabbi,
Plainy has got this, this, and this. And
I know Plainy. Okay? Plainy's also got
Tourette's syndrome.
Every single thing that is happening in
your life is supposed to be happening. I
said to my wife, one of the most
beautiful things that I I mean this from
the bottom of my heart, of being a
speaker on the speaking circuit, is you
get to meet so many people.
And when people say, "But Rabbi, I wish
I could be like that person."
I know that person with the blonde
sheitel. You don't want to be that
person with the blonde sheitel.
That's the reason why when you got off
the plane, those of you who don't live
in New York, and you went to the
turnstile, and you and you went through
that conveyor belt to pick up your
suitcase, you pick up your luggage. Why
don't you pick up the
suitcase, the baggage of the guy next to
you?
Everything Because it belongs to you.
Your pekel, your matzav, your wife, your
children, that's your baggage. And
that's exactly what's tailor-made for
you to have a life of of bracha and
simcha, which I wish for each and every
one of you.
Welcome to Project Inspire. Take any
questions, and thank you for listening.