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The Creature That Rebuilds Itself
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It doesn’t just heal what was broken. It rebuilds itself—as though it had never been wounded. And that same power lies within us. @A_DifferentAngle #jewishthought #jewishtiktok #jewishshorts #jewishinspiration #inspiration #inspirational #science #spirituality #sciencefacts #aivideo #aianimation #hidabroot
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Torah
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
There is a small creature, a Mexican
salamander called the axolotl, that
possesses an ability that seems like
science fiction.
If it loses an entire leg, it grows
back. No scar, no stump.
A completely new leg, perfect with
bones, muscles, and nerves.
And it doesn't stop at the leg.
The axolotl is capable of regenerating
almost any organ, tail, heart, eyes,
spinal cord, and even parts of the brain
in perfect completeness [music] without
any scar.
The secret is a structure called a
blastema. Mature cells near the wound
revert back to a stem cell state and
then rebuild exactly what was lost as if
the injury never happened.
Listen closely.
And here is where the real miracle lies.
Scientists have discovered that humans
carry almost exactly the same genes.
The difference is not that we lack the
equipment, but that this ability simply
isn't activated in us.
The potential for complete regeneration,
to rebuild what was broken, is embedded
within us. It is just waiting to [music]
be awakened.
Friends, how many of us look at what is
broken within us, a past wound, betrayed
trust, a part of the soul that was hurt,
and are convinced that it is lost
forever?
That a permanent scar will remain, a
dead area that will never function
again.
We come to terms with the break,
convinced that what is lost is lost.
But right now we are in the days of Bein
Hametzarim, and at the end of the book
of Lamentations, which is read during
these days, there appears a stirring
request.
Return us to you, oh Lord, and we shall
return.
Renew our days as of old.
Listen to the precision here.
Not fix us, not patch up the break, but
[music] renew.
Build us completely anew.
And as of old, like we were originally
in the initial wholeness, like Adam in
the Garden of Eden.
The sages explain that repentance is not
repairing an old vessel, it is
rebuilding a new as if we were just now
created, clean, whole, without a scar,
exactly like the axolotl.
We don't just cover the wound. We
rebuild the organ in its entirety as if
[music] it was never injured.
Nothing that is broken within us is lost
forever.
The potential to rebuild ourselves in
complete wholeness is embedded within
us, just like in the axolotl.
What has been damaged can grow back.
What has been broken can be rebuilt
whole.
We are not doomed to live with eternal
scars. [music]
We have the ability to renew our days as
of old, to return to our original
wholeness as if we were just now
created.
So, the next time we look at what is
broken within us and think it is lost
forever, let's pause. [music] Let's
remember the axolotl.
Let's remember to renew our days as of
old.
Let's not settle for the scars because
within us lies the ability to rebuild
ourselves in wholeness.