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The Layer That Protects
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What looks like frozen hardness on the surface is exactly what protects the delicate life beneath it. @A@A_DifferentAngle #jewishtiktok #jewish #jewishinspiration #jewishshorts #inspiration #inspirational #aivideo #aishorts #aianimation #hidabroot
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Torah
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Almost every substance in the universe
contracts and becomes heavier as it
cools down.
Water is the big exception.
When it freezes, it actually expands and
ice floats.
A small and strange property, without
which there [music] would be no life on
Earth.
Think about a lake in winter.
If ice were to sink, the lake would
freeze from the bottom up and all the
fish would freeze to death. But because
ice floats, it stays on top and forms a
layer.
And here's the wonder. The frozen layer
of ice acts as an insulating blanket.
It blocks the deadly cold of the air and
protects the living water beneath it.
It is precisely the hard, frozen layer
on top that protects the delicate life
below.
Listen closely.
The cold first hits the upper layer. It
absorbs the blow, freezes, hardens, and
thus prevents the cold from penetrating
further inside.
What appears to be freezing hardness,
like a cold barrier, is actually a
protective layer.
The upper layer sacrifices itself,
freezing first so that the life beneath
can remain soft and warm.
Friends, sometimes we feel that
something cold stands between us and the
world. Difficulty barriers, a hard
layer, or we feel exposed and vulnerable
without any protection, convinced that
the cold and hardness are only enemies,
only something that harms us. But the
Torah teaches us the law of floating
ice.
In the song of Ha'azinu, in the book of
Deuteronomy, the creator's love for his
people is described through the metaphor
of the eagle.
Like an eagle stirs up its nest, hovers
over its young, spreads its wings, takes
them, carries them on its pinions.
Listen to this incredible precision.
Rashi explains, "All other birds carry
their young between their legs because
they are afraid of birds of prey above
them.
But the eagle carries its young
specifically on its back because it
fears nothing from above. It is higher
than all the others.
It is only afraid of the arrow that
might come from below. So, it places its
body above them and says,
"Better the arrow should strike me than
my children."
It turns itself into a shield, absorbing
the blow in their place, just like the
layer of ice.
It freezes first, absorbing the cold so
that the delicate one beneath it can
live.
The barriers and difficulties that
surround us are not always an enemy.
Sometimes, they are exactly the layer
that protects us, the shield that takes
the blow in our place. And above us,
there is always an eagle spreading its
wings and saying, "Better the arrow
should strike me than my children." We
are not exposed and alone.
So, the next time we feel cold, face a
barrier, or experience frightening
vulnerability, let's [music] pause.
Let's remember the ice that protects
life. Let's remember the eagle that
spreads its wings.
Let's not see the cold only as an enemy,
because sometimes the frozen layer above
is exactly what keeps us alive.