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⭐ The Envelope Opener👤 By R' YY Jacobson💊 Daily Dose #2,334
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Enjoy This Torahanytime Erev Shabbat 🍞🍞 Double Dose Double the Time! Double the Impact! ⭐ The Envelope Opener 👤 By R' YY Jacobson 💊 Daily Dose #2,334 Forward this link to friends and family to have them join to receive the Daily Dose: https://chat.whatsapp.com/Lw1qDyDo7TSLAQAdNwfJ1t 💫 Thank You to the Sponsors of Today's Daily Dose: 🎯 Hatzlacha Success for Herlina and Sutras Avraham ben Ziva Zoya Full TorahAnytime Lecture 🎥 Video MyTAT.me/v363710 🎙 Audio MyTAT.me/a363710 👀 More videos by R' YY Jacobson MyTAT.me/s369
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I grew up in the Crown Heights section
of Brooklyn. One of my memories as a
child was, this is of course before the
days of computers, before the days of
fax machines, and certainly before the
days of the worldwide web and the
internet, which officially emerges in
1994. This is 20 years before that or 15
years before that. And I still remember
the mailmen coming every day besides
Sunday to 770 Eastern Parkway where the
Labavature Rebbo was delivering mail.
And it was a for a kid it was such a
sight cuz everybody you know you get 10
envelopes, 20 envelopes, 30 envelopes.
If you're really in debt, 40 envelopes
if you're bankrupt, 50 envelopes, right?
Fine. But the Reb, he would come with
sacks, literally huge sacks which I
never saw before or after. Each one had
like 200 letters and he came like with
three or four of them every single day
including Shabas and we deliver them. So
it was around I would say between three
and 600 letters. That's what it seemed
to me as a child from those sacks. And I
don't think I'm exaggerating at all.
Maybe even more or but certainly a few
hundred letters every day. Now I knew
from his secretaries that had a custom
he did not allow his secretaries or
gabayam or shamsham to open the letters
because most of them were confidential.
He didn't want they should have access.
So he opened every letter himself. Now I
don't know if you ever tried opening 600
letters a day and that's just one little
responsibility of many many other
responsibilities. He carried a world on
his shoulders and he's opening every
letter himself and answering them. So
one of his who I happen to know his name
is Khan decides to do something that
nobody thought of. What did he own? He
goes to the store and he buys an
envelope opener.
Today not many people use envelopes so
much but in those days it was very
useful. You put the envelope into the
opener opens a machine. You're not
opening it. You don't get scratched.
Your finger is not working 600 times to
open a letter and it gets stuck and it
gets scratched and you're bleeding. An
envelope opener. Zman says that the Reb
got it. He thanked him and he returned
it. He said it makes too much noise.
Made a lot of it makes too much noise.
So he went and he searched for a silent
model. He calls up the company. No, they
don't have anything. Any anything, you
know, with the right amount of money
they found was an old model that went
out of went out of stock and he found it
and he was so happy and he delivers this
lab. So have a silent envelope open. Lo
and behold, the Reb returns it. My high.
I guess the Reb felt that he had to he
owed an explanation. So he told his
secretary, his name was Rabbi Klein to
tell him and he said as follows. He
said, "When people send a letter to me,
they seal their envelope. Different
people seal their envelopes in different
ways. Some people seal their envelopes
with their saliva, with their spit. Some
people seal their envelopes with glue,
with a stapler, with scotch
[Music]
tape. There are those who seal their
envelopes with their tears.
How can I open with a machine that which
a Jew sealed with his tears? If I put
the envelope into the machine, the
machine won't pick up the tears. The
machine will just tear the envelope. I
open it with my fingers. I can absorb
the tears. And if there was a message
here, I don't start reading the letter
when I start reading the letter. I start
reading the letter when I open the
envelope. Did Drew seal this envelope
with his heart, with his nishama, with
his anguish? You don't give that to a
machine.
that ability to be able to hold space
for someone's tears. We don't always
have solutions for people's tears. I
probably we don't have solutions for
many of the tears of
people, but I can hold space for it. I
can open the envelope with my fingers. I
can absorb it. I can look at it. I don't
have to run away from it.
[Applause]
[Music]