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Okay, shavua tov to everyone. So excited
to be learning Torah together. Be shame
kol Yisrael. We always try to learn.
Thank you so much. Tod. Not just for the
sake of us individually, but right, for
the sake of the whole Jewish people. Um,
and that's actually not just true for
learning Torah, but for every mitzvah we
do, if we remember, we can think be
shame kol Yisrael. In particular during
this time period of um
of the Omer.
What is up with the Omer? Of course, why
are we not shaving
on the Omer? No live music in the Omer
because the students of Rabbi Akiva lo
na hagu kavod zeh lazeh. They weren't
weren't respectful one to another.
Right? They were so Maybe the the Shem
Mishmuel explains they had so much loved
each other that they didn't respect each
other. It's like the thumb doesn't
necessarily say, "Oh, sorry." to the
pinky. They felt so connected that they
weren't respectful. That's one the Shem
Mishmuel's explanation. And so this is a
time we have to work on our Ahavat
Yisrael. And we can do that obviously in
the way we talk with one another and
interact with one another. But even in
the mitzvot we do bein adam l'makom, we
can do it be shame kol Yisrael. So when
wake up in the morning and I'm davening
be shame kol Yisrael. I'm putting on my
tefillin be shame kol Yisrael. I'm
saying Shema be shame kol Yisrael. Um, I
don't know. There's so many
opportunities.
Dozens and dozens of opportunities.
Birkat Kohanim, be shame kol Yisrael.
Whatever we're doing, be shame kol
Yisrael. And in that way, we're getting
our we're spreading that love uh
throughout the whole universe. So be
shame kol Yisrael. Baruch atah Adonai
Eloheinu Melech ha'olam shehakol nihyah
bidvaro.
All right.
Thank you so much. It's been quite a
while, but I'm excited. Let's get back
into the siddur.
Um, and we are continuing with Birkhot
Hashachar. Okay? We're at the final
frontier of Birkhot Hashachar. We've
made it to the last brakha of
Hama'avir sheina me'einai. Okay? So, I
need you guys to be in this with me. I
It's not one of those shiurs where I'm
just going to tell you a speech
which was prepared beforehand. We're
learning it together. And just reading
the words really and translating is
already
awesome. Cuz how often do we just run
through the words of tfillah without
thinking about it twice? So, just even
go through it and understand the simple
meaning is already a great madreiga. And
hopefully, if we can, we'll bring a
little bit more color,
a little bit more light to the words of
tfillah.
Be'ezrat Hashem. All right? Last week we
spoke about the importance of hakhana
for mitzvot. So, right now we're being
We're learning, but also preparing for
the holy mitzvah of tfillah. Even
tfillah is a double double whammy
mitzvah. Learning and preparing for
tfillah.
So, let's do it. Be'ezrat Hashem. Barukh
Ata Hashem. Elokeinu Melekh Ha'olam,
Hama'avir sheina me'einai utnuma
me'af'apei. Okay? This
brakha is also from the Gemara in
Brakhot daf sameekh. That famous brakha
which most of Birkhot Hashachar is based
in.
And interestingly enough, the final
closing blessing is about It starts off
saying, "Thank you Hashem. You You are
the source You are the source of all
blessing. Hama'avir sheina me'einai."
That you take sleep from my eyes. Okay?
I see For some of us, it still hasn't
happened yet. But in general, he wakes
us up in the morning. Hama'avir sheina
me'einai utnuma me'af'apei. And slumber
from my eyelids. So, we're thanking God
that we woke up
in the morning. and
then we have this double language of and
he took away the slumber.
So,
first of all, what's the difference
between sleep and slumber?
Why do we need the double language?
I think slumber is deep deeper. So, that
could be you could explain it like that.
Some explain it the opposite that she
now is deep sleep.
That's like when you wake up in the
morning and you're up, but sometimes
you're still kind of
slumbering. You're nim nim the Gamara
says, which means if they called your
name, you would say, "Yeah, hey."
But, you're still not 100% conscious.
So, sometimes that takes a little while
for people to get out of that slumber
state. They may not be sleeping anymore,
but they're still uh you know, not 100%
uh there. So, we thank Hashem for
hopefully by the end of uh this whole
process of waking up, we're we're really
awake. Right? I'm sure many of us have
wondered, why didn't Hazal convey a
bracha on coffee? On our morning coffee.
You know, we love our morning coffee.
Who doesn't? Or maybe some people don't.
But, you know, a lot of people love
their morning coffee. Shouldn't Hazal
have given us a special bracha to thank
him for our morning coffee? Before cups
of
Four cups of coffee. Some people. So,
the Gamara says, maybe maybe this is it.
Slumber, you know, you're still awake.
But, anyway, you have your coffee,
you're finally up really up in the
morning. So, you can add that kavana
when you say
you could think about your morning
coffee and thank Hashem for your morning
coffee. There we go, right? For that
alone, it's worth coming tonight. Okay.
So, we thank Hashem for getting us out
of our sleep and waking us up. Now,
we're going to try as always to go a
little bit deeper. But, on a most basic
level, wow, I can sleep
at least many of us and I can wake up in
the morning, right? Some people better
than others, but
um
that's an amazing thing.
Right? And sometimes it even happens
naturally without an alarm clock.
Wow, right? I just went to sleep and
somehow my body knows it has this
built-in clock that knows when I'm
supposed to wake up, and then the
hormone switch, and suddenly my brain
knows to you know to to to start waking
up, and then
more hormones come through me and I'm
actually able to come alive in this
amazing wonderful system. We take it for
granted. We never really think about
that. Well, what a bracha that Hashem
allows us to sleep, to wake up, and to
really wake up. So, that alone is
amazing. Okay?
By the way, in Rav Kook's beautiful
safer Ein Ayah, which is deep deep
teachings on tefillah, he says, you
know, people don't really appreciate
sleep. They appreciate it, yeah, we I'm
tired, so I'm I need to go to sleep,
right? But it's not just that. Rav Kook
says that on a spiritual level,
you're
you we need to take breaks, not just as
a rest in order to then change the world
again,
but spiritually we need we need to
process.
And what we can accomplish in our
breaks, in our sleep, actually might be
the main thing of taking all of what we
experience and somehow processing it in
our brain and making sense of it all,
and it it goes that whole amazing system
is is sleep. And it's a really spiritual
amazing exercise. So, if Kook talks
about how we should appreciate we should
appreciate the fact that we can sleep
and and we should not only look at a
break as a as a tool of I have to I wish
I could go 24/7, but I'm going to take a
break. No, the break itself, sometimes
has value.
Yeah, you with me?
Okay, very good.
So,
good. But, it still is strange. Why are
we ending off this bracha, all these 15
brachas, with thanking God for sleep?
It's a bit out of order. You know the
right? We said, "Baruch atah Adonai
pokeach ivrim." He woke us up, right?
And then, we started talking about
wearing our clothing,
and putting our shoes on, and taking a
walk, and then at the very end of it, we
say, "Oh, by the way, thank you Hashem
for letting me wake up."
Like, wouldn't that have been made more
sense to come earlier? It seems like out
of order.
That's the question which Rav Schwab and
others
ask. So, it could be,
maybe,
sleep here represents something. What do
Chazal say? What's sleep? It's 1/60
of death.
So, every time we go to sleep, we're
really giving our soul to Hashem.
And so, every time we wake up, really,
what are we kind of
symbolizing?
Chiyas hameisim.
You know, there are people out there
that don't wake up in the morning. So,
the fact that I woke up in the morning,
that itself is a miracle,
and it symbolizes not just
um my personal waking up in the morning,
but I'm thanking Hashem, maybe we could
say for the end of the story, the chiyas
hameisim, when all of the world, when
all of Am Yisrael will have this
awakening from its slumber.
Right? Rav Schwab
talks
about this mahalach. He says, he brings
us back to the first tardema, the first
slumber.
Who was the first being who slumbered?
Who was actually put into a slumber.
Adam
Very good.
Adam Harishon
is up and then Hashem slumbered him
and then took a rib from him
and then gave that rib to
to
Hava.
He made Hava
from him.
And so
the Schwab says we were on one level of
connection to Hashem and when we went to
sleep God we we we we lost that level of
consciousness.
And all of world history is one giant
reawakening
getting back to consciousness. And the
top of the top was when we got the
Torah. Atarita, you showed us you opened
up the seven heavens and we were mamesh
understood God and we were awake, we
were alive and we knew the purpose of
life.
But then what happens? You have these
high moments, you're inspired, you went
to that awesome kumzitz and you're going
to change your life you have your kipper
your What happens?
We fall asleep again. Life life happens.
And and we go back to sleep. And
we're praying that Hashem should get us
back to that state of consciousness, of
awareness, of inspiration that we're all
really yearning for. So yes, like always
there's a simple level of we're just
thinking Hashem that we're alive and
we're not sleeping anymore, but also
we're asking for the higher level of
not sleepiness, which is consciousness,
which is awareness of our purpose in
life, which is d'veikus with Hashem.
And maybe if that's true we're going to
understand the rest of the t'filah
because at first glance
it seems like there's just kind of two
random parts of this
of this bracha which don't have much to
do with each other. We started saying
thank you Hashem for waking me up and
then we say "And may be with your will
that I do the mitzvahs and that we're
going to go into it and that we don't
sin and we won't be embarrassed, and we
have good friends, and
it's like, okay, what does sleeping have
to do What does one
one thing have to do with the other?
But according to this Mahalach of Reb
Shwab it's not really only about sleep.
It's about being awakened to our purpose
in life, to our true existence in life.
And so the two really are connected.
Okay, they're connected broches to the
extent that if you hear someone saying
this brocha, the first part of the
brocha, you don't say amen.
Cuz it's all one brocha.
Yeah?
Beautiful. So that's part one. Let's
jump in
with your permission
um to the Yichud Ratzon. Do the Yichud
Ratzon. Let's go through it. Just one
introductory uh word. I was reading
Rebbi Nachman, Rebbi Nachman of Torth,
the main student of of Nachman of
Breslov, and he has a sitter that is his
commentary, which I love.
And basically what he says is we see
this is really the first time when we
start having personalized prayers
in our in our davening. It's a little
where we sometimes feel a little
disconnected. Why don't we feel so
connected? Because we're just reading
what some other rabbi said in his
personal prayers.
The Yichud Ratzon. And so we're copying
him.
But it's meant to be a sign where
Chazal, when they were cover this
brocha, are saying, "Hey Kalman,
you should also do this."
It's Obviously we should also
after this year, tomorrow when we say
this prayer, we're going to have amazing
kavana for the rest of our lives, we'll
always be so connected. But
sometimes, you know, life happens, we're
in a rush in the morning, and we just
rush through it.
So that might happen. But Rebbi Nachman
says, "But don't forget the iker. The
iker is that we're supposed to learn
from this that we have to make our own
personal prayers." And that just like
the rabbis had their own personal
prayers, they're reminding us that we
also have to have personal prayers, and
ask says Rebbe Nachman for everything.
Some people are afraid to daven for the
little things. Maybe you guys have
heard of this, maybe you've experienced
this, I don't know. You ever felt like I
don't want to bother Hashem with that
little thing?
Because like I don't know, I don't want
to lose my merits, I want to save my
questions for the big things. And I
don't you know, God's a busy guy, I'm
not going to ask him for
my parking spot, I'm not going to ask
him that the coffee taste good. Like I
you know, I'm going to save my request
for the big things. Some people have
that perspective. Rebbe Nachman says the
opposite. He says no.
The more details the better.
Why?
First of all cuz you never bother God.
God's not He doesn't He doesn't get
bothered. He wants us to be connected to
him. The whole purpose of life is to be
connected. The prayer's goal is to be
connected to him.
It's not to get the prayer, it's to be
connected to Hashem.
So the goal is to get connected to
Hashem,
as
many prayers as possible. What does the
Gemara say? A person should daven the
whole day.
That's the ideal. Every You're walking
down the street, please Hashem let the
let the light turn green. Please Hashem
let the It turned green.
hallelujah.
There is a God. Unbelievable. As much as
you can,
daven daven daven. And says Rebbe
Nachman, we learn this
from this prayer.
Right? That brings me back to a big
question of davening.
Why do we daven in the first place?
Rav Kook famously asked this question.
Doesn't Hashem know
that I need
health and I need
to find my soulmate and I need children.
I mean, he knows.
So why do I need to go through the
motions of praying? He already He can
read my mind.
Right? That's the famous question Rebbe
Nachman
and Rav Kook and all the great rabbis
asked. And what's Rav Kook's
answer?
Whose prayer ultimately for according to
Rav Cook? For us.
For us.
It's to change us.
Right? The simple answer is no, God
created a system in order to change him,
you need to pray. That's the system he
put into place. But the deeper answer of
Cook says is no, the reason Hashem put
that system into place is because by us
praying, if we really pray, if we pray
per-
correctly, we become different people.
If we really think about what the words
mean, really
go in into the words and let it
penetrate our consciousness. And
therefore we're a different prayer about
person by the end of the prayer, and so
we've transformed ourselves and now
we're a vessel that's ra'ui to receive
the blessing from Hashem.
So prayer is for us.
Yeah. So if that's true,
So this is That's what Rav Natan Natan
is telling us. Yes, we should really say
this. But the goal is that it should
remind ourselves at the at the end end
of davening that I should go and beg
Hashem for everything, just like we're
about to start begging Hashem for
everything.
So let's start. Okay. Vihi ratzon, and
it should be your will. Mil fanecha,
before you.
Psh, just that alone. It should be your
will and we're in the presence
standing for Hashem. Hashem Elokeinu
v'Elokei avoteinu, Hashem our God and
the God of our forefathers.
Shetargileinu b'Toratecha. Ah, what
beautiful language. What What does it
mean shetargileinu b'Toratecha? What's
the root of the word shetargileinu?
Ragil.
Ragil. Or
hergel.
Very good. So it's not just that
we should do the Torah.
We don't want to just do it.
We want the Torah to become our ragil,
our norm.
We want our essence, our just the way we
flow to be a total way of life.
And our
natural way of being to flow with words
of Torah.
And like all the stories about Rav Kook
and all the tzaddikim that after they
had a little wine on Purim,
they would just flow with Torah and
mitzvahs and halakha like it was just
their natural way of being. Right? How
could we do a shear and not mention
Purim? So, that's the whole year we're
preparing ourselves to get to that place
where it just flows out of us. And
that's the goal. That our natural way of
being should be a total way of being. We
shouldn't have to force ourselves into
being a Torah way of being. But the
truth is, we're not always there.
So, we need a little help. And we call
out to Hashem. Because we have this
concept that in the way that a man wants
to go,
that's the way that Hashem is going to
lead them. Right? The Gemara in Makkos.
So, if a person wants to go down the
good path,
that's the way Hashem's going to open up
all the gates. And if a person wants to
go down the bad path,
it's not going to go.
But
it should be our
go-to. Our go-to should be in the ways
of Torah and mitzvahs. That's the goal.
Easy to say, right? But it's
I think this consciousness of
targilenu means to change our habits.
That our natural habit should be a Torah
habit.
And we have to be realize that as we're
going to say in the rest of the prayer,
it's not always like that. Sometimes we
have bad habits.
And there's a great book. It's called uh
Atomic Habits.
There's another also good TED Talk
called The Power of Habit.
And I I'm a big I used to be back in the
when they were popular into all these
TED Talks.
And the basic thesis of the book and the
TED Talk
is that don't try to change
your thoughts. You could try, but it's
hard.
In any given moment. Rather, try to
go through your life and develop good
habits.
And when you just start developing,
choose these habits to focus on and just
push yourself to do it and do it and do
it and then it will just be natural. And
just one it will be a domino effect. One
thing will lead to another thing will
lead to another thing. So, just one
habit at a time, work on transforming
yourselves.
So, for example, person wants to, I
don't know, start wants to exercise more
cuz he's going to feel good and be with
him to do mitzvahs. So, a person can
write every Yom Kippur,
be exercising more, you know, run. Very
good. But, they the goal is to think how
am I going to create this habit? When am
I going to do this habit? When am I
going to run every day? And
literally map out from this time to this
time from to walk to shul, to walk to
the shear, and force myself one time,
two times, three times until eventually
it just becomes who I am.
All right. And when we're in the moment
and flowing through life, it's easy to
get caught in with our bad habits.
All right. That's just natural. This guy
is
Whatever whatever our bad habits are.
So, the goal is when you're in a calm
state, when you're not
in that taiva moment. All right. So,
then map out how can I map my life so I
don't get tempted to get into the bad
habits and so that I can flow myself
into the good habits.
And then once we've mapped it out, all
we got to do is just follow through.
Easier said than done, right? And
hopefully we have good friends or maybe
life coach or therapist that can push us
through to help give us that chizuk to
actually follow through on our
commitments. But, the first thing is
just think about how do I develop good
habits, All right? And he talks in his
book
what his name but the author of Atomic
Habits about if you want to let's say
take you want to start learning guitar.
So, you put the guitar in very visibly
right next to you next to your couch.
Don't leave it in your room.
Cuz then you see it and you're going to
be get into the habit of playing every
day. If you want to cut out the
the sweets and the extra sugar stuff.
So, you got to get it out of your house,
okay? Cuz if it's in your house, you're
going to go back to your bad habits when
you're in a bad mood, right? And you
know, go for the Ben and the tub of Ben
and Jerry's. All right, but if you don't
have the Ben and Jerry's in the house in
the first place, so then when you think
ahead, then you can get yourself out of
that little bad habit. So, it's about
planning ahead to get into the Torah
habits, to get into the holy good
habits. Okay, so but it all really
starts with all these nice the
psychological tips. At the end of the
day, we need Hashem. We need help from
Hashem and we need when we dive in every
day, we're we're developing the ratzone,
the desire to go in the ways of Torah
habits.
The Torah techa.
Torah techa not just Torah. Your Torah.
To recognize when learning Torah because
right now when we're learning Torah, you
think I'm speaking. Hashem is speaking
through me, I hope. Hope I'm saying, you
know, holy things that I'm a vessel. And
we have to be aware that it's his Torah.
When we're opening up a safer, it's his
Torah. He's talking to us. We're in
relationship with Hashem with Torah
techa. Your Torah, Hashem. Not just
Torah.
Yeah?
Should I go in with Torah techa? The daf
keenu mitzvah techa.
And what does it mean? Okay, we do
mitzvahs, but what does it mean to say
the daf keenu mitzvah techa?
Do the mitzvahs with
dveikus. To attach.
Attachment. So, what does that mean?
Let's break that down. It's a nice word.
Practically speaking, what's the
difference between
uh wrapping fill in stam or wrapping
fill in with attachment, with the vakus?
What does that mean?
>> More kazak, more stronger.
More kazak, okay, more intention, is
what I'm hearing. What else comes to
mind?
So, the amazing safer which I mentioned
a lot, it's called Bilvavi Mishkan
Evneh. And the whole book is one big
mussar shmooze about dvekut. Every
action in your mind, in your life,
always be in a state of attachment.
But, what does that mean? What is
attachment?
So, long story short, right? It
basically means your thoughts. You are
where your thoughts are. If I'm thinking
when I'm putting on that fill in, and
that thought is going to lead to
emotion,
and then it will be a much more powerful
mitzvah. But, if I'm not thinking about
it,
that's not dvekut, right? Because I'm
not I'm just spacing out. I'm not
connected. So, on a very simple level,
we're begging Hashem. Hashem, our whole
day is full of mitzvahs. I hope. Right?
We we were zocheh to live in Eretz
Yisrael. The Magain Avraham writes,
every four amos in Eretz Yisrael is a
mitzvah.
It's like a kinyan in Eretz Yisrael.
We actually live in Yerushalayim.
But, are we aware of it? When we walk
down the street, do we really How often
do we think, "I'm walking in Eretz
Yisrael after 2,000 years of exile to
fulfill the mitzvah of living in Eretz
Yisrael."
Right? I mean, first time when you get
off the Ben Gurion, you you're aware of
it, but then life happens. So, dvekut is
nothing uh esoteric. Nothing uh in the
moon. People throw around these words.
It's simply thinking
of what we're doing.
All right? I'm wearing tzitzit. Why am I
wearing I'm wearing tzitzit. It's one of
the cool things about being a tour
guide. I just finished my tour. Have
some Christians from Alabama and they're
like, "What are those tassels?"
And I'm like, "It's in the Bible. Fourth
book of the Bible."
And but, you know, the truth is I wasn't
thinking about my tassels cuz I just
wear my tassels, you know?
But but I get to explain the tassels or
the Western Wall
or prayer. So, then it it's it's
amazing. It gets me to excited about it,
right?
So, we should all be blessed have good
friends from Alabama to remind us of
what we're doing. But in the meantime,
let's remind ourselves that we pray to
Hashem that we should simply think about
it. Think about it, which brings
emotion, which brings the joy, which
brings the energy in the mitzvahs. Okay?
Let's keep going.
Please God, don't bring me to sin.
Don't bring me to aveira and don't bring
me to avon.
Again, we're recognizing that we can
want, but at the end of the day, Hashem
runs the world. Even when it comes to
our sins and our mitzvahs, while we have
free will, we need his help.
We can't do it without him.
So,
don't
bring us It's It's strong language.
God would bring us to a sin?
Don't
bring us to sin.
Would God have us sin?
Maybe what it's saying is don't
It's almost like if God's not helping us
to resist
our temptations, it's almost like he's
bringing us there. It's almost like we
have no shot. We need his help so much
to resist sin. So, don't It's like It's
like he's bringing us there he's not
helping us. Don't don't bring us to that
situation again. Maybe we could say
that. Don't bring us to sin.
Now, what's the difference between chet,
avera, and avon?
So, there's a lot of interpretations.
Let's throw some ideas out there. Maybe
we could say
chet
doesn't mean don't bring me to sin.
It means
don't bring me even to be around
sin.
Avera is actually a sin.
And avon is a purposeful sin.
A sin that we made it.
But, I don't even want to witness
sin.
Right?
Maybe you've experienced it. I've
experienced this when I don't know, I've
seen people being mechalel shabbos in
front of me. And it just hurts.
Right? Just
It's like a a yucky yucky feeling to see
that. Especially when they're
God-fearing, they're from Jews, and they
mess up. And actually it happened to me
this shabbos. We just walked out with a
with a negative feeling.
And we don't want to be in that
situation. We don't want to even be
around a place where sin is happening.
So, that's don't bring me to a sinful
place.
Maybe that's the intention. Another
shot. Chet
mistake.
Don't bring me to a mistake.
Like to miss the mark. Sometimes
the language of chet is to miss the
mark. And don't bring me to an avera.
Avera is language of lavoir. Or in
English, transgression.
That's maybe you could say
a low taseh.
And don't bring me to an avon. Don't God
forbid
don't bring me to I do something
purposefully. Cuz what's the What does
the Gemara say? Avera goreret avera.
One sin leads to the next sin.
And the Gemara points out, the first
time you do a sin,
it feels horrible, right? But then you
get used to it. second time, the third
time, the fourth time. After a while,
you do a sin, it no longer feel you
The way we're built is we just get used
to it.
And uh it's no longer a big deal.
Right? So, chet leads to aveira, which
leads to avon.
And so, Hashem, don't put us in a
situation where we're surrounded by
sinners. Put us in a holy environment.
And hopefully that won't
go down that domino path.
Okay? That's what we're davening for. No
aveira, no avon, and no
and no aveira and no avon.
V'lo aleinu nisayon.
Don't lead us take us to a test.
Wait a second.
Doesn't the Mesillas Yesharim write
that the whole purpose of life is
a test?
Hashem put us here
to lift ourselves up. Nes is a language
of
left up, like a banner. In In In
Chumash, there's a nes.
Through the test, when we overcome the
test, we become better.
The Yoisel ben Tzaddik, when he overcame
the test, that's what made him who he
was.
And the Mesillas Yesharim writes all of
life Hashem puts us into our particular
situations
so that we can overcome the challenges.
There's even a book, it's called Life Is
a Test.
Right?
So, if so, if all of life is just, you
know, a video game, so to speak, where
our goal is to overcome the hurdles of
sadness and sin and negativity and stick
to positivity and mitzvahs and grab all
those bonus point mitzvahs. It's all a
big test, right?
So, why would we say we don't want a
test?
Wouldn't we want the challenge, right?
It's no fun Michael Jordan playing
basketball against a 5-year-old. We want
the test. We want a challenge, right? We
want to grow. So, why we davening every
day, "V'lo aleinu nisayon." Don't don't
give a test.
You hear my uh
my my kasha?
It's not my kasha. I'm I'm getting it
from the muforshim that I I learned
beforehand.
What do you any any thoughts?
There's no test, there's no growth.
There's no test, there's no growth. So,
my question stands.
Why are we davening not to have a test?
We should daven for a test, yeah? What
do you think, Hanokh? I'm not so
comfortable with the idea of testing.
Mhm. But I am comfortable with the idea
of having an insight into something, a
new awareness that I didn't have before.
Mhm.
I don't look at it as a test, I look at
it as something I have to improve in uh
either way I'm learning or what I'm
learning.
But the insight
So, we want insights. We want to grow,
we want to learn.
But you're saying we don't want the
test, if I'm hearing you correct.
>> what I'm what I'm comfortable Okay, good
good. I hear.
>> So, and and the word um today we have
tiferet sheva
um
netzach.
Yeah, okay. Tiferet is the word.
It's I think it's the most confused
word. I think we're going on a little
bit of a tangent. We'll we'll we'll save
that for after shiyur.
>> about it at the end. Okay, great,
perfect. We should talk about it later.
But I want to stick cuz there's a lot to
cover.
Um perhaps we could say on a simple
level
there's tests and then there's tests.
Okay?
There's a natural test that Hashem gives
every one of us
who you are, who your family is, what
your life situation is, and we can't
really control it. And therefore, that
is obviously that's our test. Right?
I- I- I- I- if I'm in this situation in
life, that's what Hashem wants for me to
do. That's that's my challenge. Right?
But then And tests which we put
ourselves in.
Okay? And that's the type of test that
we don't want to get ourselves in.
Something Sorry, that that is a natural
level of test. That's what
it came with the territory of being who
I am.
Right?
But
I don't There's a famous Gamara which
says David wanted a test cuz he wanted
that that to that growth and it didn't
work out well. That's when the whole
story of Bat Sheva happened. So, we
never want to put ourselves into a test
of situation. But honest, often times we
do.
We bring the the problems upon
ourselves. We we can't blame it on
Hashem. And so, we're And And that
doesn't mean that we can't overcome the
test. Cuz we have a principle in life,
it's Siyata Dishmaya.
Right? God helps us. God helps us with
all of our challenges. But
uh we're praying to God that he
uh he shouldn't put us through a a
challenge which is which is very very
challenging and he shouldn't let us put
ourselves into these types of uh
situations. But as long as we're just
going through life and doing what we got
to do, we we we know that Hashem's with
us and those types of test Hashem will
help us handle.
Perhaps we could
I read a story, interesting uh
story. There's a There's a woman who was
a alcoholic.
She came from a family of alcoholics.
And uh she was uh always battling uh to
be sober.
And her way of getting over it was AA.
She would go every single day
to these uh beautiful Alcoholics Anonym-
Anonymous meetings.
And that's what gave her the strength.
And um
at a certain point she realized it was
her stepmother had actually basically
raised her.
And then moved away some very far away
and she never thanked her properly.
And uh she knew deep inside that she had
to go visit this woman and thank her and
spend some time with her.
But she was afraid. What was she afraid
of? She'd go to a place without an AA
meeting in somewhere in the middle of, I
don't know, Wyoming and she would go
back to her
bad or her ways that she didn't want to
go down that path.
So she asked her friend and her friend
said, "Listen, if this is the right
thing to do, God will be on your side
and he will guide you."
Um and uh so she took the flight and she
was struggling the whole time. It was
very hard. She was very nervous. How's
she going to spend a whole all these
weeks without her meetings to support
her? She meets her old uh you know,
nanny
and her nanny, what does she see? That
her nanny happens to be hosting that
particular month AA meetings. That they
they needed the space. So in this random
place
uh they uh Hashem sent this woman that
she should have the support she needed.
She would have the strength to overcome
her challenges. So as long as you're
going in the way of Hashem and your
ratzon is to do the right thing, God
will do
God will do what he needs to do to give
you the support that you need. But it's
not our job to put ourselves into test.
It's our It's our job to limit the test
as much as possible.
You know.
Sometimes it's it's life, you know. So
so we we find ways to over to to
strengthen ourselves to overcome those
tests. Okay.
Below you do vizayon.
We don't want to be embarrassed.
Sometimes when we fail a test, we feel
embarrassed.
Right? It's a natural. I imagine you had
an urge, you were going to buy
a beggar a coffee.
You just wanted to do a good deed. And
then you're like, "Nah, that guy I'd
rather get myself a double latte. I'm
going to get myself a double coffee."
And then you see the other guy comes up
and buys the uh buys him a coffee.
You're going to feel embarrassed.
Here I am you know just trying to serve
myself and this guy is a tzaddik. We
have a natural
feeling of embarrassment when we see
others doing great things and we feel
like we could do that and we want to do
that. So when we fail our test, we feel
embarrassed. So they maybe they go
together.
Now after the fact as I think we've
spoken about before, once we've been
embarrassed, what do we say? Baruch
Hashem.
It's amazing to be embarrassed. Right?
The Sforno Kadosh writes that if we knew
how much getting embarrassed in this
world saves us from being embarrassed in
the next world from the pain of the next
world, we would beg for busha's for
embarrassments. Right? Because
uh that's how God gets rid of our
afflictions without physical pain. So
after the fact
we're thankful that we're we were
embarrassed. But we don't want to
purposefully put ourselves in a
situation where we're going to be
embarrassed and so we're asking God
don't let me be embarrassed. I want to
if I I'm going to overcome my challenges
and therefore not be embarrassed, be
proud of myself. Okay. Lo yehi bizayon.
Ve'al tashlitenu yetzer hara.
It's very interesting language. And God,
don't let our yetzer hara
reign over us. Don't even don't you make
our evil desires reign over us.
Like you God are going to make our
yetzer hara reign over us.
Very strong language.
Again, I think it goes back to that
concept of makos.
In the way that a person wants to go,
that's the way that Hashem's going to
send him. So if you really want to do
good and holy, he's going to open up the
gates. He's going to lift up everything
to allow you to uh to to do and to give
and to
to to to it achieve. But, if you want to
go down the path of sin, he's literally
going to open up the door for you. And
he's going to help push the yetzer hara
to allow you to do what you got to do.
As a or you what Not what you want to
do. Not what you got to do.
And um
so, we're praying, "God, don't let my
yetzer hara
reign over us."
Yetzer means I have a push.
Let me direct my desires for good. Let
me
direct my koachus.
I have a lot of energy. I can get get it
off in learning Torah. I can get it off
in cooking. I can get it off in playing
basketball. Or I can get it off in
robbing stores and making fun All sorts
of bad things. So,
direct our yetzer, our desires for the
good.
Okay.
The
Very
interesting.
We pray every single day
that get me back far from a bad person
and from a bad friend.
What's worse, a bad person
being in contact with a bad person or
being in contact with a bad friend? What
do you guys think?
Why? Why bad friend?
Because it's more closeness. The friend
is just some stranger. Right. I agree.
In fact, that's what the mission in
Pirkei Avot says. We're learning Pirkei
Avot in there. He says one of the
Mishnayot in the second perek, I believe
it's Rabbi Shimon, I'm not sure, says,
"What's the worst the midah that a
person should avoid?"
An evil friend or a bad friend.
He also
says that. He says be make yourself bad
from a neighbor, a bad neighbor.
But, then I want to be a Russia. Don't
even associate with a Russia.
If you know someone's
a Russia,
don't have anything to do with it.
Right?
Don't listen to Pink Floyd.
Even though they have great music.
I think one of the guys is pro-Israel,
but what can you do? Most of them
you don't want to associate with that.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm maybe in the oven.
Anyways, the point is
that
I hope I don't get sued now. By uh
by Roger Waters. In any case,
um the point is don't associate don't be
in the presence. Don't listen to the
YouTube videos. Don't look at pictures
of bad people. You don't want to connect
it to the ruach of tumah. That's what
Rebbe Nachman says. But all the more so,
a friend. Truth is, sometimes it's a
friend. He's not a bad guy.
But together,
it's not a good shidduch.
It's not good chibur.
So, Hashem, make me you know, if make me
that I should connect to the people to
the right people. Al titkaber. And uh
like we were almost saying, when
someone's a friend, they can be mashpia
a tremendous amount.
Right? When bad you when you have
friends who are doing
bad things, it's very natural to get
pulled into that. So, we're davening
every day, Hashem, give me the right
friends. Give me the right people in my
life.
And like we started off saying, we're
really reminding ourselves, Hashem, come
and go to make the right friends, you
know.
Pushing myself to do the right thing.
All right.
Uh few more minutes. Let's finish up
strong.
Dov ben Chanoch ben Yitzchak ben Meis
ben Tuvia.
By the way, interesting question. Why do
we pray that we should have
not no bad friends, and we don't pray
that we should have good friends.
Wouldn't that be nice? Please, Hashem,
give me good friends.
Right? What we say, k'neged
chaver tov.
Aseh lecha rav u'kneh lecha chaver.
Why don't we insert in the prayer a
prayer that we should have good friends?
I don't know.
We can think about that.
Maybe that it's as strong as having a
good friend is, having a bad friend is
is really dangerous. It's even worse. So
So
I don't know.
I don't know. If we do the right things,
well, it doesn't matter if we don't
pray. Oh, we'll naturally make those
friends. We don't need to pray for it.
We don't need to pray for it. It'll
happen.
Where it's up it's up to us.
Very good. Okay. Um the the keynote
of
and like Vegas we should want we should
think about doing good. Think good and
do good.
Over my son told him.
What's it mean told?
Told literally means
good.
But says the Ramban, you know what it
really means?
It means
first of all, complete.
Why? Because every day God says by your
local in the word key tofu. And God saw
the first day it was told. The third day
was told. The fourth day was told. Fifth
day was told. The second day was not
told because it was incomplete.
It still was not finished. So we want my
son told him.
We want to finish the job.
We don't want to start a mitzvah and
then not finish it.
Right?
In politics it seems like some
I don't want to get too involved but
there's some leaders they know how to
start the job and begin a lot of good
holy projects but they don't know how to
finish the job. Right? Show him a lick.
Show him a lick. He started the job of
wiping out the Amalekites.
He didn't finish the job. He didn't know
he wasn't the king. A king is someone
who knows how to
finish the job.
He was out to tell me she will come.
He'll be someone who knows how to finish
the job.
So, we want to be most inviting. We want
to do it all the way with all our heart
and we don't want to start mitzvah. I I
myself have made this mistake. So, you
can learn from my mistakes.
Someone asked you
Remember, I was going I was walking home
from the hotel a few weeks ago and
someone asked me advice, "How do I get
to my friend Dave?" I got He got lost
and
he wanted to go to Dave Mason's house.
And it happens to be a practice. I know
Dave Mason. Like I know exactly who that
is of all the people.
So, I was in a little bit of a rush cuz
I didn't want to come home too late for
my wife and and guests and etc.
And I told him go this way and that way
and this way and that way.
And then I'm like two I'm like halfway
through my house. I'm like, "What did I
do? Hashem gave me an opportunity to do
a mitzvah, to be a good person the whole
way. It would have taken five extra
minutes.
Why didn't I finish the job?" You know,
Hashem gives you an opportunity, finish
the job obviously within reason. But
hopefully I'll have a chance to do
chuvah. But when Hashem gives us a
mitzvah,
don't let somebody else finish the job
for you.
Go all the way.
Good
The second shot of good
is what's not good. It's not good to be
alone.
So, what is good?
When you're not alone, when you're
connected. Connected with a Thank you.
When you're doing a mitzvah with
awareness, good.
Okay, great.
We
have these
and and we want to do we want to do this
and we want to do we say Hashem force
me. Straddle me in, you know.
Literally force me to do the right
thing. We're begging Hashem to put us in
our place.
That we should be subjugated
to do
to focus on the soul and not go off
their our titus.
And give me today and every day.
Right, what does Rashi famously say?
What does it say? Hayom.
Hayom. Why does it Why does the Shema
Dafka say today?
Cuz every day we have to be like the
first day.
And we have to believe Hayom in the kol
today the Messiah will come if we lift
into our voice.
Maybe we're davening. Hayom.
I don't care about tomorrow. I don't
care about yesterday.
I only care about right now. Today I
have one day. I have a couple of hours
to be the best Jew I can. Hashem give me
Hayom. Today.
And every single day. We don't just care
about today. We also want every day.
We want to find favor in your eyes. We
want Hashem to love us.
What does the Ramam say?
That what is How does a person express
love of God?
When he tells other people about Hashem.
He does kiruv. That's how we express our
love of God.
Why?
Cuz when you truly love something
you don't want to just keep it to
yourself. You want to tell the whole
world how beautiful this is.
That's love.
When you And you care about that person
you really really
want to spread that everyone should love
and it hurts you that someone can hate
someone that you love.
That's love.
So, in the same way that that's our
expression of love is that we want
everybody
that that to love Hashem. We're I'm
We're hoping that Hashem loves us.
We're
praying Hashem, because you love us so
much, everyone should love us.
Since you love us,
everyone we meet should be like, "Ah,
he's got go. That guy's got him. That
guy's got I don't know what it is.
Something about him. He just he just
shines the light of Hashem. He walks
into the room, the whole place changes.
So, we're davening, "Give me Give me
him, that everyone who sees me should
love me."
Him, him, him, him, him, him, him, him,
him, him, him, him.
I can't hear. I'm saying it worked.
Worked? It worked.
Oh, it worked.
Good.
Okay, what's the difference between
What's the difference between him, him,
him, and him, him, my friends?
Him means grace, him means kindness, and
him means mercy. They seem kind of like
the same thing.
What's What's the difference between a
him
and a him and a him?
Any thoughts?
Him is definitely grace. It's
undeserved. Oh, like a lotion of him.
Him means for free. No, I I don't know
why I love that guy. I don't know why I
love a little cute kid.
I just love him. He's just cute. He's
just Me and that guy,
I just I just vibe with him. I can't
break it down to any specific, you know,
thing. So, that maybe that's him.
Although, Rebbe Nachman in his thick
beautiful Torah and Likutei Moharan
tries to explain there's a way to get
him in Hashem's eyes. By learning Torah
in
at night and read the sixth Torah, you
know, Ein Sham.
There's a way to get him, but like like
like Esther when she found favor in the
eyes of of the king. But at the end of
the day, we can try to get but it's
indescribable. So we want to be that
Hashem should just love us.
So that's one level.
Chesed, building on that
way of looking at it, is a person who
does deserve it.
Meaning a little bit. We can never
really say we deserve that God should
love us, but we do things, so that's
chesed. He does chesed, but we don't
fully deserve it. And rachamim,
what is what's the shoresh of the word
rachamim?
Rechem.
Like a baby.
Why do you love a little baby? Not
because he deserves it,
but out of mercy. You know, you see a
poor kid and lying on the street, you
have mercy upon them. So even though we
don't deserve Hashem's rachamim, in the
end of the way he's our father.
So he hopefully
rachamim, he has mercy. We're praying
have mercy, even if I don't deserve it,
have rachamim.
You with me?
Beautiful. Okay. Chen v'rachamim
in your eyes
everyone who sees us should just think,
"Ah,
I love being in that guy's presence."
V'tikanenu chasadim tovim. Like we said,
tovim, lasting chesed.
Right? We don't want just Hashem to give
us
You know, what's the difference between
um
an apple
and a lollipop?
A lollipop, it's good, but it's not
I wouldn't call it chasadim tovim.
It's good in the short term,
but in the long term,
it's not so good.
Right? Sugar's going to drop, and also
diabetes, whatever. You don't have to
give you the spiel. But apples,
an apple a day, it's great, tastes good,
healthy, good fiber.
So it's real. So
tovim means it's something that lasts.
So Hashem, don't just give us something
that's good for today. I want something
that's really going to last in the long
term.
Okay?
Baruch tiglin Hashem Baruch Ata Hashem
You are the source of all blessing
Hashem.
Hasadim tovim Yisrael
Amazing what we've done here. We started
off I was just talking about waking up
in the morning. God thank God for that
coffee.
And somehow by the end of this feel I'm
not just worrying about me. Now who am I
diving for?
All of Yisrael
Lashon rabim gomel Hasadim tovim Yisrael
Right isn't that amazing? Ever notice
that?
We start off very self-centered but it's
through the act of gratitude you
actually learn to connect to the cloud
and by the end of it you're not just
diving for yourself. You're diving for
all of Yisrael.
And this by the way is exactly what
happened. I'm sure many people who've
done his his voided dues have
experienced this. You just start off
thanking Hashem and then you start
talking about what you need and by the
end of that smooth conversation you're
diving for all your friends and that guy
needs a shidduch and this guy needs this
and this and you're diving for all of
Yisrael.
And if you haven't experienced that
tonight at Mariv Hashem you should
should experience that. Just just you
know have that conversation and you'll
see that your godly soul will naturally
manifest itself from the
the private the cloud. It will naturally
if you're having a real conversation
with the Baruch go and
expand to praying for all of Yisrael. So
maybe that's what's happening in this
prayer. We start as a Yachid
and then we go to the rabim.
And we say and we're
blessing Hashem for all the good
kindnesses for all of the Jewish people.
Starting just with the fact that I could
wake up in the morning that meaning
Hashem
and then that's launching on us
to to ask for all the little details in
our life. And then
recognizing that all of our lives are
to be.
So that I shall We should
tomorrow morning in our showers have a
little bit more
and take if I would be very happy if
even one sentence of our feel tomorrow
is
we say it with real real connection and
should grant all of our prayers for us
and all of Israel.
Niggun
please let him give us the right niggun.
Shabbat
>> Hey,
bye.
Hey, na na na na na na na na na na na na
na na na na.
Hey,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.