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The manifestation of the ten sefirot (tree of life) in your daily life
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In this class we talk about how you are broken in some aspects of the sefirot in your daily life. Join the Yom Tov Media club for exclusive releases https://www.yomtovmediaclub.com/ More information on the Possible You seminar: http://www.thepossibleyou.org/ Follow me at: https://www.facebook.com/Imaseaoflove https://open.spotify.com/artist/5H8cmsWdWYuOTffFvlU9vH
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Shalom and welcome to Practical
Spirituality here in ancient turn, the
old city of Jerusalem, overlooking the
Temple Mount.
You know,
people are
people are basically messed up.
You know,
all of us are wounded a little bit in
various places, so we all got certain
things messed up.
Um
some people are messed up in
just in broad strokes. Like some people
are messed up in their ability to
uh create structure and and order in
their lives.
And there's some people are
messed up in that they they don't know
how to they don't know how to move to
the flow of life. Meaning they're too
structured.
And their ability to flow in life got
messed up.
Some people their ability to solve
intellectual intellectually complex
problems is messed up.
And so they find themselves constantly
relegated to
simpler equations in life.
And there's other people are
um
who are messed up in their way and how
they interact. They they they they get
uncomfortable around people. They have
social anxiety. They're they're um
trying to figure out what they're going
to say next in a conversation rather
than just to
be in the experience of
of interaction with another person. And
And some people are messed up in their
uh
their their instincts are off. You know,
they just
they can't trust themselves. And you
know, they don't they can't even trust
their own intuition.
And so there's various ways that people
are messed up. And what I'd like to do
is go through
um I don't know if we'll we'll have time
for all of it, but I'd like to go
through
uh nine ways that people get messed up.
And talk about how we can heal those
various
ways.
So
um so the
the way those nine ways are going to be
um
based on the
on the 10 spheres that God created the
world with.
And we're made up of all of those.
We're created literally in in them. Uh
God created the world in 10 ways. In
Hebrew they're called Midot.
It's top three, and then there's the
seven or Tiferet and Netzach Hod Yesod
Malchut.
Um the the world's made in those ways.
Now, it also says in the Torah in last
in Genesis that God created us in his
image. In fact, he mentioned it three
times and then a fourth mention in last
week's parsha
uh by Noah when they left the the ark
after the flood, God kind of
you'll notice it's a whole new creation
story. Talks about being fruitful and
multiply, and talks about the the uh
the
man's uh prowess over the creation, like
he's in charge of it. And and it even
mentions it once again that we're
created in the image of God uh when they
brought up the the
the uh punishment or the the hate
heinous crime called murder. It says and
it brings up why? Because why is murder
so bad? Because God created human beings
in his image. But when you learn the 13
uh articles of faith in the Rambam, it
mentions that God has no image.
So we have a Torah
we have a Torah
with
Okay.
We have a Torah with with that says
we're made in God's image, yet we learn
that God doesn't have an image.
So
you ever thought about that? Is that
ever Did ever Raise your hand if that
ever bothered you?
That the Torah says we're made in the
image of a thing that has no image. Did
that ever bother you? Have you ever
think about that before? Does it bother
you now? So the there's an answer to it
obviously. I mean, you can't have a
contradiction that strong without an
obvious answer. And and the answer is is
that human beings were created in the
image
of the ways that God creates the world.
We're not created in his image. He
doesn't have his an image. We're created
in the ways
of how God created the world.
Got that?
Created in the image of the ways that
God created the world. I realize people
are going to keep coming in here late,
so let's make it less of an interruption
next time.
Uh you love your seat or you'd be
willing to sit
You're leaving early?
Okay.
Uh
hey Chaim.
Yeah, grab that seat. That's a good
seat. Uh
can you come sit here and give these
ladies a table for two, please? If you
come and sit here and
Ladies, table for two.
And um
what else we got? We're out of seats
officially. We've got one last seat.
So
whatever.
We'll figure it out when the time comes.
Anyway, but I'm really happy you people
are here.
Um
especially the last ones who the last
five, six people who came because these
classes come out of me for you. They're
not if if it's something I know already,
I I would be bored teaching it.
Cuz I'm here to learn. And the way I
learn best is by teaching what people
need, cuz then stuff comes out of me
that I never really knew.
And that's why I'm always going into
uncharted territory. Like yesterday's
class was
a lot of it was uncharted. I'd never I'd
never been there before.
And so I now I'm venturing into a realm
I've never been before as well.
By taking a new angle on something. And
what is that something?
The image of God. And again, there for
those who are fresh in the class, we
were talking about the contradiction of
it saying that man's created in God's
image, yet God doesn't have an image. So
what is that supposed to mean? And the
answer is I gave the answer to everyone
else. What was the answer? You guys
remember? Let's see how good you are.
What's What does it mean then? What does
it mean that we're created in the image?
Good student. One.
One good student. Yes, say it again. You
almost got it right, but it was pretty
close.
Excellent. We're created in the image of
the way God created the world. In other
words, the way God
This is a world. It was made somehow.
The This world was made somehow.
And the way it was made, we're made of
that.
It's everything this world's made of.
We're We're We're made of that.
Which makes a lot of sense, too, because
we are made out of whatever God made the
world out of.
I mean, what else could we be made of
except for what God made the world out
of?
Now,
so now we have a new question, which is
kind of a bigger question, is why is
that called the image of God?
So maybe we have to add a word. We're
made in the in the chosen image of God.
God's chosen image. What is an image?
Think about it. Like if you click on
Google Images, what do you get?
You get pictures. Well, what's a
picture? A picture is when you take
light
and filter it out
in such a way that on the other side you
get an image. Like in the old days they
had slide shows. Well, what was the
slide? The slide or in movies used to be
shot film, you know, it used to actually
be film, you know, before digitation
digitization. And And the And that what
would happen is the film would block the
light, and that would create an image
just like the image on the board here.
When I block the light, you know, you
see an image of the shadow there.
And so when it says the image of God, it
doesn't mean that God has an image, cuz
obviously God doesn't have an image.
Rather, it's it's
it's the
the how God filtered himself out, so to
speak. How God filtered himself out of
creation is how there's a creation.
Just like the shadow on the board was
only
based on the filter.
As I filtered out light.
And so we're the We are the last of that
whole thing between minerals and then
fish and fowl and animals, then there
was humans.
We're made of that whole thing. We're
made of the image of the
of this
slide projection.
God's obviously the projector of the
light, but but he's also but he's
everything, too, cuz there's nothing but
God in this digital simulation. There's
really only God.
And so we're made in the image of this
whole entire creation.
Which is pretty cool.
Because that means that you're like
you're made up of all of the whole
creation.
And what's interesting about it is those
different ways that God created the
world, you you literally are made of
them. Meaning Chochmah is
for when God creates the world, he
creates it with Chochmah. And what's
Chochmah? Chochmah is the sum total of
all possibility. That's the word
Chochmah.
Well, think about it. You have a right
brain.
That's called your associative mind.
Well, what's an associative mind? It's
your brainstorm mind. Well, what's a
brainstorm mind? It's all possibilities.
I'm allowing all possibilities.
There's no rules in the brainstorm mind.
It's just total possibility in the
brainstorm mind.
And then there's Bina, the the second of
the 10, it's called Bina.
And what is Bina? Bina is when you
actually break down those possibilities
into their, you know, potentialities.
Cuz when you have all possibility, well,
that's not going to be very helpful. You
know, like like there are people who
have this kind of associative thinking
who work for Google.
But that's not going to be very helpful.
They have to send it to the R&D
department, research and development,
and marketing. Can they market this
thing? Can they make it in a way that
people buy it without sending the
company into bankruptcy for the price of
manufacturing it?
Cuz all the possibilities is not going
to be helpful. You must have Bina, which
now breaks it down into its parts to see
if it's something marketable.
And when it comes to God, God has to
break down all possibility into
this world, which is not all
possibility. This world is is highly
limited into a a a an inhabitable globe
and solar system
and galaxy,
which is very limited. It's not all
possibility.
It is certainly not all possibility.
If it were all possibility, it would
never been created. It would nothing
would have happened. It would have just
remained in all possibility.
But we also got a third brain, which is
called Das,
which is the third part of our brain,
and that's one that's very rare, no
offense, is called the decisive brain.
You know, cuz even in the You know, you
have all possibility, that's the
associative brain, and then you have the
breaking up all ideas into their parts.
Like
Now you got all the parts, how are you
going to make a choice?
And that's where that's and that's why
it's a very rare brain because there's
only How many CEOs are there of Google?
Of Microsoft, of Apple,
of uh all of of uh
You know, how many how many CEOs are
there in each big corporation? How many?
One, cuz it's very rare type of person.
And you'll see when they lose their CEO,
and who wouldn't want to be a CEO? When
they lose a CEO, it stays empty for a
really long time because it's very hard
to find someone
who's got that level of decisiveness
with that details of parts
in thought.
It's hard to be decisive.
And and and then and there's still no
there's we still haven't left thought.
But we're made in this image, aren't we?
Aren't we all made in this?
Aren't we all made in the image of all
this? Oh, you got it right in your
brain.
And then there's the next one, which is
Hesed. Hesed means to flow.
Well, I think all of you sitting in this
classroom or those who are watching this
on video,
I think all of you had to move your body
to get to this moment, right? You had to
eventually take yourself out of where
you live and you know, somehow pry
yourself out of there and get moving
to be able to get to here.
Well, there was a flow to that, wasn't
there?
You got yourself going. I myself before
I did yoga today,
my yoga starts with like heavy abdo- I
mean, it's kind of it's kind of ADHD
yoga. It's it's filled with all kinds of
different things including sit-ups and
push-ups and
a lot of rough muscle building stuff,
and
I just found myself procrastinating.
And like, maybe there was one more
WhatsApp I missed, you know, from last
night where I got it like a I woke up to
a lot of WhatsApp messages, and maybe
there was one I missed, and I found
myself about 40 minutes later still
pushing off
getting into doing my my abs, and I
finally realized, oh my gosh, I got to
like stop, and I I I realized, what am I
missing? I'm missing a Jordan Peterson
podcast. And so and I was right. I put
on Jordan Peterson on a podcast. Next
thing I know, yoga mat's out, and there
I am doing my sit-ups and stuff, and and
I I nailed it. Thank God. But the but I
had to get moving. That's flow. You got
to get moving in life. That's flow.
And then there's but you can get moving
in life, but you wind up in a lot of
trouble if you just start moving. You
know, that's why, for example, in
mountain biking, that's my my sport, so
when I'm doing mountain biking, you
could get moving, you wind up covered in
blood and medevac'd out by a helicopter.
Cuz you can't just move. You have these
brakes, and you're doing these little
micro-adjustments on those brakes, not
to mention your steering and leaning
such that you miss trees. It's important
to miss trees when you're flowing.
When you're doing Hesed, it's flow.
And so I'm flowing down the trail,
otherwise you're not riding.
But boy, am I limiting it with Gevurah.
Gevurah is the brakes,
and Gevurah is my steering.
And that's the limitation that keep me
out of harm's way,
which is the whole thrill of mountain
biking is you got the flow, but you got
the structure, which is the trail
and all the obstacles around it. But
isn't that wasn't your day? You You
didn't just cross streets, did you?
Did you guys cross some streets to get
here? No. You didn't You did, but you
didn't just cross. You looked both ways.
Took a look.
Listened for maybe the the whiz of an
electric bike, which is seems to be the
latest worst hazard,
you know, that could possibly be, not to
mention electric skateboards and Segways
and every other silent thing whizzing by
these days
with people who have no riding skills.
Anyway,
but you looked both ways. You limited it
a little bit. Maybe the train's coming
by.
You know, like like you got limitations.
You want to make sure you avoided the
obstacles as you flowed your way here.
Now, let's go to associative brain. You
were like, what could I do today? Well,
I could go to the beach. I could go to
Asia. I could go to go to hang out with
friends. I had a lot of things I could
do.
Sorry.
What could I do today? That was the left
brain. I could go to Asia. I could go to
the beach. It's all the details.
But nothing's been done. And then you
all of you people said, I'm coming to
Asia. Coming to class in Asia. That's
which brain?
Hochma, Bina, or
Das, which is the decisive brain. You
said, I'm going to Asia.
And then you began the flow in the real
world, which is Hesed. You started
going.
Hey, Asia, how did you get here?
And if maybe someone else was driving,
and they were in charge of missing the
the branches and the potholes and the
and the rocks and stuff.
But the but that's that's Hesed as you
started flowing your way to here.
Gevurah is you you were careful how you
came here, watching out for danger.
And
and then Tiferet is the third one of
those, Hesed, Gevurah, Tiferet. Tiferet
is that you
you
kept in mind the whole time you kept in
your mind the whole time sitting here
listening to this,
being in this room. You kept that in
mind.
Now, raise your hand if you had a couple
potential distractions on your way here,
whether it be a store,
restaurant,
couple distractions, maybe some phone
stuff. Anyone Raise your hand if you got
a distraction. Anyone got a distraction?
Okay. And did you let it stop you?
Partially, maybe.
And then what happened? You you stayed
on task, and you got here.
Now, getting here is the 10th of all of
these. I'm skipping to the 10th.
Okay, so I went I went Hochma, Bina,
Das. I'm coming to study here.
Hesed, I started moving my way to the
building.
Gevurah, I avoided all the pitfalls.
Tiferet, Tiferet, the third one, is I
kept in mind the point. The point is
that I should be sitting in the room. I
kept in mind the goal.
What was the goal?
To come to this class. I kept it in
mind. I didn't let myself
get
get distracted or anything else again,
or get injured, or get anything or
anything get in the way of this, which
is all which attributes? Sorry, it's
tough quiz.
What what was keep- What part of you was
keeping
keeping you on track?
Gevurah, excellent. Make sure you didn't
get hurt or walk into a street in full
flow without looking both ways first.
Okay. Good job. Now, the um so that's
staying in Tiferet.
Now, I'm going to give you the
definition for those who are taking
notes. Tiferet looks at Malchut to
inform how much Gevurah to employ.
Tiferet, which we can call beauty, looks
at Malchut, which we'll call the
recipient or goal,
how much Gevurah to employ.
So, let's say, for example,
um
uh I'll meet somebody. Watch this. Hi,
what's your name?
Moshe. Hi, Moshe. Nice to meet you.
Where are you from, Holy Bella? Monsey,
New York. Monsey, New York, right on.
I'll be there in 2 weeks.
What? I won't.
Okay, good for you.
Very nice. And uh
uh now we'll try uh this lady cuz she
already spoke up. Hi, what's your name?
Miriam.
Shalom, Miriam. Nice to meet you.
Now,
what did he get?
Got a handshake. What did she get?
What?
A bow. She got a bow. I moved my whole
body.
Nice to meet you, Miriam.
He got a handshake. He got a bow. They
both got something.
Now, who was the recipient?
The first time was Moshe. The second
time was Miriam. That's Malchut. That's
number 10. They were the recipient of
some kind of flow.
And what happened was I examined this
guy and said this is handshake time.
Now, had he been wearing beads and a
tie-dye and everything, I probably would
have given him a hug.
Cuz he's letting me know something. He's
signaling that that that that love, you
know, love is, you know, is all you
need.
Love is all you need, you know, and so
appropriate could even be a hug on first
meeting.
Give Moshiach a hug on first meeting.
Hmm. I'm good at I might Tiferes is very
strong. Well, it's actually my Metzius
is very strong. So, I might have even
hugged this guy cuz I see he's got some
muscles. Which means he's a bit physical
and physical people's language of love
is more touch. They like more touch.
Handshakes are cool. They don't mind
hugging either. And I would have sized
all that up in microseconds.
And which is another attribute we'll be
talking about in a minute.
And anyway, but staying in Tiferes and
not risking anything,
I shook his hand.
With Miriam, she's a female. In the
Jewish world, thank God, we protect
Tiferes. We keep beauty always around.
Tiferes is beauty and long-lasting
beauty and and to keep that
long-lasting, to be in Tiferes when it's
a female,
Now, I didn't have to bow either. I
could have said nice to meet you, but I
went a little further
and bowed. Why did I do that?
Why did I bow?
Well, maybe because it's Essentials and
this is supposed to be a nice portal of
Judaism as opposed to the more mean
version that is the regular black hat
attitude in relationships between
people. This is a Shiur in Essentials.
It's supposed to be a friendly place to
learn.
And so I was that's part of the whole
equation cuz equations are usually
complicated. And so, that's part of the
equation. She gets a bow. And that keeps
me in Tiferes. She felt there was some
kind of flow towards her besides asking
her name. And whereas Moshiach got got
touched.
With Moshiach, there was touch.
And now we've got
just
three more attributes to discuss.
And one is Netzach is Notice you all
kept going until you got here. Did
anyone get tired on their way here?
No, it was pretty easy to get here.
Okay, but imagine it was a hot summer
day and you walked from like Har Nof or
something.
So, you if you just kept going and going
and going for an hour walk from Har Nof.
Let's say it was Shavuot. Anyone walk
here on Shavuot?
Anyone No, no one walked here on
Shavuot.
Okay, but Shavuot, people walk long
distances to get to the Western Wall for
sunrise
on Shavuot. They'll walk from way the
opposite side of the city, over an hour
walk for many of them.
Just to make it here for sunrise for the
sunrise prayers at the Western Wall,
which is right behind us.
And
that attribute is called Netzach.
And that's now we're in the leg Now
we're down below the belt. So, that's
the right leg is Netzach.
And that's to be able to keep going.
So,
um
Anyone here
started something that takes many years
to finish?
Did you finish?
So, those who finished have a good
strong meat of Netzach. Those who
didn't,
not so strong.
Then there's the left leg, which is
called Hod.
And Hod Oh, by the way, I'm going to go
back to creation. God's constantly
keeping it things in check and we're the
recipient, the physical world is the
recipient. God's flowing creation into
existence via an eternal light. He's
limiting it. That's Gevurah.
With these parallel worlds that filter
the light. Those are the called the
Olamot.
And the exact ratio of light to worlds
that filter
is always kept perfectly in Tiferes for
us, Malchus, the recipient,
to not get blown out by the light or
frozen by too much filter.
Certain places are highly filtered. Los
Angeles is highly filtered.
Yeah, people go to LA like they go to LA
with all the best intentions and you
find them a couple weeks later they
they don't even smell Jewish anymore.
Las Vegas has that same type of thing.
And I've actually noticed, I mean, maybe
I'm crazy, but I've noticed that when I
when I fly from LA to New York, I sense
less filters.
When I fly from New York to to Europe, I
sense even less filters.
And then I get to Israel and it's like
the filters are gone.
And it and it's I feel this natural
progression towards God
when I'm here.
Seems just natural to me.
Which kind of explains why a lot of my
secular friends are so unnatural.
You know, I I had a these great people
in class yesterday. There was a couple
sitting right behind these cameras and
and uh
and that the
the guy was like the There was a couple
and the the guy was
you know, had really developed his mind
quite a bit because of the his
contentions with God.
While his partner, this woman there, was
just kind of nodding away. She was so
receptive the entire time.
She's a smart girl and we were talking
on pretty high level yesterday and she
was smart. And she was getting it and
she was receptive.
And I said to them afterwards I said to
them I see, you know, that you're not
Jewish.
She said, "How did you know?" And I
said, "Because you're so receptive."
You don't have anything to lose
by by this by God being real. You had
nothing to lose. You had only to gain.
Whereas your boyfriend,
you know,
for for
for me to be right about that discussion
had major implications for him.
And so, what happens if you live in a
country where God is the default mode,
you know, Israel, where God's the
default mode, but you're hell-bent on
staying secular.
So, then
your your whole your whole life's going
to be a little weird cuz you're going to
you're going to be this reaction to the
very environment you're in.
It's a little different than See, when I
meet a secular New Yorker,
he doesn't spend time here. Yeah, he's
some kid grew up in Manhattan, yeah.
He's different. He's developed way more
of an ontology.
You know, ontology mean like the study
of God. Like he's it's way developed.
Why is it way developed? Cuz he's got to
deal with his guilt. He's got to deal
with his feelings regarding God and Jew
being a Jew.
So, you have to have a very developed
perspective, quite philosophical if
you're Ashkenazi,
on how you somehow philosophize God a
little bit out of the picture.
Whereas if you live in the land of
Israel, you're just going to be
altogether different
because it's God land.
You know, this is God land. You've heard
of Disneyland? Yeah, this is God land.
And and if you want to live in God land
without God,
you're going to be a funky dude
or dudette if you're female.
Now,
um
That's Netzach. Netzach is your ability
to keep going. So, I have a very strong
meat of Netzach. That that attribute for
me is is undamaged at all. It's it's
super strong. So, so like for example,
um I'm in contact with students of mine
from 20 years ago and more
regularly because I never ever because
I'm careful with Tiferes. I'm I'm very
careful with my relationships that I I
stay in relationships for If I'm in a
relationship, it never ever goes away.
Ever.
The same relationships I've had all my
life are still there. I can I can
WhatsApp people from 40 years ago
plus.
I sent a Facebook message to my
skateboard partner. We used to skate
together when we were
uh
13.
And so, he got a Facebook message this
week. I was just thinking about him. I
was watching some of the more radical
surf maneuvers in the pro tour today.
And he when I transitioned from skating
to surfing, he he said it wasn't radical
enough for him cuz he was really
radical.
You know, he he had a half pipe in his
backyard that didn't even have a
transition. Half pipes are, you know,
it's a the steep wall and then it's a
transition and then the other steep
wall. His had no transition. It was just
it was just a circle
or a semicircle. Which means you have no
time to set up your maneuver maneuvers,
but he would he somehow had them set up.
He was amazing.
But he said surfing wasn't radical
enough. So, so I I have not sent a
message to I haven't had one
communication with this guy
in uh in 38 years.
But I remembered his name and I sent him
a what's a Facebook message saying that
whenever I see someone now doing aerials
on surfboards, you know, really getting
radical maneuvers, I said I think of you
each time. I should check my messages.
Maybe he messaged me back.
I don't use Facebook messaging much. So,
I'll I'll take a look. Remind me to see
if Brendan Murdock's in my
Facebook messages.
Anyway, um
Sorry if I'm getting a little off. Well,
that's the thing is is that I'm really
good at Netzach. But what's its partner?
Anyone know Netzach's partner or or
counterpart?
It's called Hod. And Hod is focus, laser
beam focus.
And I've got very little of that.
I'm damaged on Hod.
That's where I'm where I'm damaged
goods. I got a lifetime of work of
staying focused.
That's Hod.
And what do I mean by focus? So, Netzach
just keeps going. If you shine a
flashlight into the night air, like a
regular flashlight into the night air,
does it keep going?
Of course it keeps going, but it also
what?
Scatters.
So, you can see the beam for a little
while, but it's gone pretty quick soon.
What's another kind of flashlight where
you see the beam is the limit's only
your eyes, not the beam. What is
laser beams.
Laser beams are this thing that's just
kind of focusing in on itself as it
goes.
And the limitation of its be is not you,
it's not it, it's you being able to
still see it as it continues into space.
And so, there's certain people who have
laser beam focus.
And they really stay on task.
And what's interesting about those
people is they don't necessarily have
Netzach. So, they'll stay on task, but
the task may change.
They They may go from task to task. They
could go from job to job. Someone who
who um
Someone who goes job to job,
or they're observant today and they're
not observant tomorrow, and then they're
observant the next day, and then they're
not observant the next day after that,
their midos of Netzach is pretty lousy.
They don't stick with things.
You know, they I get people's commenting
to me, why am I still surfing and
mountain biking?
You know, as a rabbi I'm a Chassidic and
I'm also
decades later, and why am I still
totally invested in these things?
And the answer is this is I'm not. I I
just have a very strong midos of
Netzach. So, I loved it then, I still
love it, and I still do it. I When I
take something, I start it, and I don't
stop.
My wife and I just had our Last week we
had our 25th wedding anniversary.
But it's really 28 years because I
noticed her
when I was a yeshiva bachur.
And I noticed her as someone who really
I would share my life with that person.
And
And so, of course I was a good yeshiva
boy and didn't have a lot of contact
with her. But
But I
But you know, when I studied in yeshiva,
when the rabbi said it's time to date, I
said, "Okay, I'm ready to date. If you
say I'm ready, I'm ready. So, I'll date.
But I'd like to start with this
particular person."
And
And I never dated anyone. I was like,
dated her and married her. And And so,
so that's cuz my midos of Netzach is
super strong.
But the fact that I could come home late
perpetually
is a lack of which attribute?
Hod. Just staying focused.
Cuz I'll get some SOS, the phone rings.
I'm like literally walking up the street
to my door.
And I'm I'm there, you know, I'm going
to be on time and everything.
And phone rings, and it's someone in
some serious situation,
and it's time sensitive, and it's got to
get dealt with now.
I'll deal with it.
And
And you know, I'll and I'll deal with
the consequences later for walking in
the house at 7:00 or 7:15 or 8:00
instead of 6:30 when dinner is. So.
Cuz my midos of my midos of Hod is not
great. But my midos of Netzach is very
strong. But someone who's in and out of
relationships, in and out of their
Judaism, in and out of jobs, in and out
of this, in and out of that,
could have laser beam focus, but their
Netzach's not strong.
And the last one that we've got to deal
with is called Yesod.
And Yesod is by no coincidence the the
genital part of the body and as far as
cuz all of these are right brain, left
brain, decisive the center brain. Right
arm's flow, left arm's gevurah, limit.
Chest is tiferes, staying in connect
staying in um
meaning looking at the recipient and
making sure gevurah is putting the right
amount. With Moshe, less gevurah is
necessary. With Miriam, more gevurah is
necessary.
You understand? That's tiferes.
But Netzach is Once you're going, keep
going. God didn't just create the world,
cuz then the world would create and then
disappear. He created the world in such
a way it perpetuates. What attribute is
that perpetuating?
Netzach, very good. And but at the same
time, he's got this place
in the same exact focus at all times,
which is Hod.
And then And that's by the way the the
kohein. He Each of our shepherds, right?
The Who are the shepherds? Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob.
Moses, Aaron. Aaron's Hod because he had
to do the the work in the
Holy of Holies.
He had to go in to do a major,
you know, seriously sensitive military
operation. Not military, he's not there
to kill anybody. In fact, he's the one
who could get killed mostly, but the
details of a Hodnik who could handle a
military operation is the attribute of
Aaron the kohein.
Who can go into the Holy of Holies and
keep his head together in highly
stressful situations.
Cuz I mean, imagine going into the Holy
of Holies, you're having Your mind is
being blown over and over again by the
experience there. Yet you have this
extremely detailed task while your
mind's being blown.
And you have to let go of all
sense of self. You know, the part of you
that just wants to say, "Whoa."
Cuz the second you say, "Whoa."
You you have a cardiac arrest. Like
literally, you cannot be in there with a
sense of self.
Which is interesting, cuz the word Hod
also means to give thanks. And what's
giving thanks? It's letting go of the
self to recognize someone else was the
benefactor.
It's a letting go of self, Hod, giving
thanks.
Having gratitude is
you're not the source of everything.
Someone else gave this to you.
And so, you say toda.
Hod.
Anyways, the last one we got to deal
with is called Yesod. And Yesod is the
actual USB cable interface between you
and the world.
Which is very similar to tiferes, but
notice it's in the middle. Tiferes is
the heart, and Yesod's in the middle,
too.
And so, and so is decisiveness.
And so, and Yesod is how do you interact
in the end?
So, let's say for example, I was going
to play y'all a song.
Yeah, with a guitar.
And so, uh maybe uh you mind grabbing a
guitar for me in the behind the front
desk over there is There's a closet, I
think, with a guitar.
And yeah.
Right behind the front desk is a closet.
There should be a guitar right in there.
So,
if I Well, I'll show you that example in
a second, but let's just stay on the USB
cable interface.
So, I interfaced with you, right?
That was an interface.
And I interfaced with Miriam. That was
an interface.
These are interfaces going on at all
times.
And as I teach this class,
I'm interfacing with all of you, and I'm
not doing a great job. I'll tell you the
truth.
Because
you notice that once in a while I'll ask
you guys a question,
and no one knows the answer except for
like one or two people. And it And why
am I asking? Cuz I just said it, like
probably within the last 2 minutes.
And meanwhile, you you ain't got nothing
to say.
Cuz you don't even know what the hell
I'm talking about.
And
meanwhile, I've been explaining
everything what I think it You've been
I've been explaining thing what I feels
perfectly.
Yet you don't know what in the world's
going on in here.
And so,
And so, you're all looking at me right
now like, are you calling me a dummy?
The answer is no, I'm calling myself a
dummy.
Cuz I did not manage to USB interface
in this information in such a way that
it made the long trip
from the wall, which is me, you know,
the plug, which was me, the power
source, to your smartphone, meaning your
brain.
It didn't make the trip.
For those of you who didn't know how to
answer me.
Didn't make the trip. Well, that makes
sense it didn't make the trip because
some people are more intellectual, and
this is information, and information
comes intellectually.
And so, certain people are chesed
gevurah tiferes people, and so they do
know the answer in a class.
Well, there's certain people who are
interpersonal people.
And they keep They like when I keep
bringing up how I interacted with Miriam
and Moshe. They like that part of the
class. Cuz they're interpersonal people.
They're not so intellectual, and they
don't know the answer when I ask for the
answer, even though I said it 2 minutes
ago.
They don't know the answer, but they
like this discussion about They liked
when I talked about my wife and I
not just being married 25 years,
but that I had already with my attribute
of Netzach,
I really am with her 28 years, cuz in my
heart I'm with her 28 years.
Even though we're only married 25 of
them, and I never dated her during those
3 years.
But my midos of Netzach is so strong
that
that I was I was quite faithful to her,
even though I only knew who she was,
nothing more.
So, during those 3 years.
Now,
You understand what's going on here?
And And that's why you didn't know the
answers, cuz you're you're a chesed
gevurah tiferes person, which is called
chagas. Okay? Chochma binah Daas
intellectuals are called Chabad.
Chesed Gevurah Tiferet are called
Chagas.
And I'm not expecting you to know the
answer.
And the last people forget knowing any
answers from,
you know, unless it's super technical or
physical or, you know, it has something
to do with aerobics or
other kinds of like
military science or something, is
is that they're the Nehi people. Nehi is
Netzach Hod Yesod.
Netzach the right leg, Hod the left leg,
Yesod is the genital region, and those
are people who are instinctual people.
They live by their instincts.
And
no one's expecting any answers out of
them,
you know, regarding
intellectual property.
It's just not their thing.
But let me show you this on a guitar cuz
this will hit the intellectuals and the
interpersonals and the instinctuals.
Cuz it's going to hit your eardrum,
which is your, you know, your physical
body.
Does this guitar have none of a pickup?
It does.
Anyway, if I just play the guitar with
open strings. Now, don't forget
everything I was just doing was being
run by here.
Flow totally. Like I had no idea where I
was going to go with that.
But enough structure that I decided to
do some kind of funky rhythm and blues
type thing, which was
you know, my there was a decision made.
But I but my right brain is very strong,
just like my flow is very strong, which
like my Chesed is strong. You're
generally strong on one side or the
other.
Everyone's stronger on one side or the
other. So so I'm stronger on the
on the right side. Associative.
Flow.
Uh
Netzach meaning perseverance. I I I like
something, I'll do it forever.
Okay? Which is part of the reason why
I'm playing guitar.
Cuz I picked up the guitar as a kid.
Mostly out of a fear of rejection.
And uh
everyone likes a guitar player.
Who's going to reject a guitarist?
So, um
anyway,
but watch what happens now.
I make the strings flow. Tell me, how
does this sound?
Nice or not nice?
It doesn't sound nice. That sound like
it's beautiful?
It's not beautiful. It's out of what?
Tiferet. Remember we said beauty is
Everyone's Let's make start You guys get
look alive, okay? Everyone say Tiferet.
Is this in or out of
Tiferet?
In or out?
Say Yeah, say your Rabbi, you're out of
Tiferet. Try that.
Rabbi, you're out of Tiferet. Now, what
it What did I do by letting all the
strings flow?
You can even see them moving.
That is flowing, man. That That's 440
oscillations per second there. Full
flow.
That's I don't even know what that one
is.
It's
300 or something.
Oscillations per second. Now, what are
they flowing between? This bridge, you
see that white piece thing? That bridge
and that bridge.
Full flow.
And it sounds horrible, and that's why
flow, the attribute of Chesed, is is
generally destructive.
Like a tsunami, for example. By the way,
when you're when you're studying
Kabbalah, get rid of your regular
definitions. Chesed doesn't mean you're
delivering cookies to the neighbor,
okay? In Kabbalah, Chesed means full
flow, and it sounds terrible.
And a tsunami is full flow.
See, the seashore is normally what
attribute?
The seashore.
That's the relationship between the sea
and the city
is the seashore is, you know, that's
Tiferet. But the seashore is usually
Chesed or
what is it?
No, it's Gevurah. Seashore keeps the
water back so people don't die.
That's the job of the seashore.
It stops the sea from coming in.
But when there's a tsunami, what
attribute is that?
That's Chesed. Full flow, just like the
strings.
That's Chesed.
Now, this is one bridge, that's the
other bridge. But what if I use my
fingers
and make an artificial human a human
artificial bridge,
skip the E string,
hit the A string, and do this?
How's that sound?
And notice the power that I hit it with
was very gentle cuz it's a soft chord.
It's
it's a kind chord.
Artificial bridge
based on Let's say I was leading a
meditation.
You know, if I'm playing a rock song,
that's one thing. But if I'm leading a
meditation,
might as well burn some incense since
we're
if we really want to be in Tiferet,
we could burn a little incense. Not how
much I have left of this stuff. I have
some more.
Okay, you're in charge of incense. Just
press that button once in a while.
What?
That's my little uh
my little livona burner.
I carry around a uh
an incense burner. Jews are very into
incense. I mean, we had 11 spices, you
know.
So, this is one of the more popular
spices from the Temple Mount, the
Temple.
You can press the blue button till
they'll smell it in the back after a
while.
Just once.
Just enough.
Yeah, just let it go on. You can see
it's burning.
Smell it yet?
It'll move its way back.
You're in charge of the livona, okay?
All of Jerusalem smell like this, but
plus many other smells.
So, by me What am I doing though? This
my fingers here are Gevurah cuz they're
limiting flow.
But they're limiting flow based on the
recipient, which is you. That's Malchut.
That's the 10th.
And I'm choosing what to play
by making sure what I play is relevant
to you, which is the USB cable. That's
Yesod.
So, what I would play would be based on
you. The one of the greatest Yesod bands
in history was called the Grateful Dead.
And the Grateful Dead was was a band
that's their their USB cable was so
strong that people in the audience,
which could be 30,000 people strong,
would actually write down a song and
then pass it around to get to get enough
people
conscious of that song so that the band
would start to play it.
And when they played it, the crowd would
go bananas
that the band got it. They got the
message. That's how That's how in Yesod.
Today bands, they have their own set
list. They're they're connected to some
light system all on a computer. It's
like they can't even they can't even
play the guitar solo can't
double his guitar solo cuz it would mess
up the whole lighting for the your your
little digital show. But, you know, back
when music concerts were actually just a
band playing music with a a light guy,
you know, just doing his best over
there, the um
you know, the the band would actually
play the song that the crowd wanted
when enough of the crowd started
thinking about the song.
And that was Yesod.
And that in a way for many of us is
love. Like, wouldn't you wish that your
spouse could guess what you need before
you ask for it?
Wouldn't that be cool?
A lot of females want that.
And you should know what I want before I
request it.
And which is cruel and unusual to
husbands
cuz we don't know what you want before
you want it. You must ask.
And and just ask
and you will get.
But uh sitting there just shooting
yourself in the foot all day trying to
hope that he knows what you want,
you know, when poor guys, you know,
he's just a guy, you know, like give him
a break.
You know, like that doesn't make it more
romantic. It would be sweet if it
happens sometimes. It's a bonus.
But that's not where romance is. It's
extremely romantic to have someone guess
what you need. But it's a great way to
ruin your life.
Because you'll just sit there going, he
doesn't get me.
And you'll it'll be a perfect way to
never have love and to always want it.
See, most people prefer to want love
than have it.
I'm not going to go there now for a
while, but most people prefer to want it
than have it. And when they have it,
they have to shoot themselves in the
foot. So, one of the common ways women
shoot themselves in the foot is, why
didn't he know?
Why couldn't he have figured that out?
And whereas a a woman who truly has good
marriage would say, the advice is,
always tell your husband what you need.
Straight out. Not in hints, not in
poems,
not in you know, not in
passive-aggressive text messages.
But just be really straight with what
you want and especially with what you
need.
Just tell him straight.
And then you'll have a beautiful life.
You'll have an amazing marriage.
And you'll stop shooting yourself in the
foot and playing dramatic games
to make yourself miserable so that you
can want love instead of have it.
Now, um
So, now to go through it all is I have
to make decisions before I strum this
thing.
That's the head.
And I can be in a kind of flow with that
or I can be very structured with a
setlist.
Or sorry, just that's uh
I can be
I can play anything. That's Hochma.
But there's a list of things I know and
there's stuff I don't know and that's
Bina. I have to know that list.
And then I can make my decisions. That's
that's Daas.
Okay, everyone say Hochma.
Together, everybody. Hochma.
It's the associative mind.
Okay?
Everyone say Bina.
And that's the analytical mind. And I've
got details. I got to analyze which one
to play here. Okay, everyone say Daas.
Daas, that's the decisive mind, okay?
Chesed is I'm going to play. I'm going
to I'm going to strum that baby.
Okay, everyone say Chesed.
Gevurah, I'm going to limit the I'm
going to limit the I'm limiting the
oscillation of the strings. That's
Gevurah. Everyone say Gevurah.
Everyone say Tiferes.
Say Tiferes.
Why? Cuz I'm going to look at the
recipient, get a sense of them,
and know what song to play
based on who's going to be listening.
That's
the recipient is Malchus. Everyone say
Malchus.
And Tiferes
is going to inform Gevurah
where to put the fingers, how hard to
strum,
meaning limiting this hand, too.
So that it sounds beautiful to the
recipient, to the listener.
Netzach is the strings don't just go on
and off. They can ring
and keep going. Netzach.
It's called sustain. To have something
sustainable is Netzach.
God created a sustainable earth, but we
don't sustain it well with all our
pollution and
disposables and fossil fuels
and sustenance.
Sustain.
And and then there's
Hod, which is focus. Cuz I could play a
solo.
There I'm like I'm soloing. I'm very
pinpointed. I'm laser-beamed
onto specific strings.
You know, that's that's a very Hod move
to make is to play a solo.
And Yesod is
is that
is that I really get you guys. Now,
that'd be very hard cuz I got like the
seminary girls and then I got
like this dude back there, Bryce. Like
Bryce probably just wants to hear like
Lynyrd Skynyrd.
Sweet home Jerusalem
where the skies are so blue.
Sweet home Jerusalem
Lord, I'm coming home to you.
So, I it's really hard to be in Tiferes
with a group like this cuz we got
there's a lot of recipients.
And to be in Yesod properly
would be you know, it'd be difficult
to to play the right concert for a group
as diverse as you sitting here would be
next to impossible.
Now, what's interesting is that there's
a Hasidic world
that that used to have its leaders being
the masters of Yesod.
The master called Yesod. In fact, to
this day we still give leaders of
of Jewish groups, like Hasidic groups,
we give the leaders of those groups the
sixth aliyah
at the Torah. Like they come up to the
Torah at the sixth aliyah.
Cuz that's Yesod. And you know, they
they have the best interface
and with the people.
It's Yesod.
And um
and you see that
that it's the sixth. It's right? Chesed,
Gevurah, Netzach, Hod, Yesod. Netzach,
Gevurah, Tiferes.
Chesed, Gevurah, Tiferes, Netzach, Hod,
Yesod. It's the sixth attribute.
And what's what letter in the Hebrew
alphabet is is the sixth?
It's the Vav, right? Aleph, Bet, Gimel,
Dalet, Hey. Vav. What's a Vav?
Well, Vav is really just a Yud,
which is Hochma's, that original
brainstorm,
which is the Yud,
it just connects an idea to earth. It
draws it It's just It's just a an
extended Yud. A Yud A Vav is an extended
Yud.
It takes things from above and draws
them into the world. It's It's a um
executor. It executes the mission.
It's an implementer. Vav's implement.
And think of what the What is the
definition? Cuz Vav is actually a word.
It's a one-letter root word. We don't
have a lot of one-letter root words.
What's Vav mean in Hebrew?
And, right?
What's Well, what is an and What is and
doing in a sentence?
Connects. It's a USB cable.
Ze ve ze. It connects things.
And it's by no coincidence that the
shape of that part of a man's body,
which is which is the connector that
creates life,
and and true true physical expression of
interconnection.
That's all the Vav. That's all the
attribute of Yesod. So, traditionally
Hasidic leaders were always
the masters of that
that particular attribute.
I met a Rebbe like that recently. There
was a Rebbe in Ashdod, which is a beach
community in Israel. He's still there.
He's Should be well. His name is the
Pittsburgher Rebbe. Here in Israel. The
Pittsburgher Rebbe. You guys ever met
the Pittsburgher Rebbe?
So, you met him?
At our wedding, right? Yeah. Did you
meet him?
You saw him. So, I went to the Shabbat
cuz of my daughter married a
Pittsburgher chassan. So, I went to the
Shabbat before.
And
we're sitting at the tish. Tish is the
the Friday night event where the Rebbe
sits with all the Hasidim.
And I literally watched this one Rebbe
love
every person in that room. There was no
one in that room.
And there were a lot of people in that
room. There were hundreds of people
lining bleachers at this event, Shabbat
night. It's called the tish.
Every single person left and went to bed
that night knowing that they have a
relationship with this man.
They have a relation with this great
man.
Every person went to bed knowing that.
And and and this goes on every week. No
matter how many people they develop, you
know, cuz there's a lot of babies being
had and they're growing up. I mean, even
little kids got their time with him.
Everybody No one left the room. Not even
the little little
you know, perenter rats down there, you
know, like in between the bleachers, you
know, playing you know, playing games
with their friends under there. They all
had their moment with him.
He was the ultimate example of Yesod.
But today
there's many many Rebbes today are have
no relationship whatsoever with the sin.
Now, you sometimes that's just a
function of how many people there are.
There's 80,000 of them.
You know, and they can throw an event on
Friday night that could have as many as
How many people could be at one of those
things? How many How many people could
you see at such a thing?
Usually a thousand. But like a yom tov
person?
Few thousand people. And if it's bells
in that giant place,
could be 10,000 maybe.
So, good luck with that. Yeah.
But anyway, that that is the job of of
the Rebbe is is that level of connection
with the people.
To be a person who can look someone in
the eyes and and know
know what to say, know what to
what what advice to give and
and how to carry that person's load for
them or with them for a moment.
Give them a sense that they're they're
not alone with this and that it's part
of a plan and
it's not it's not all bad.
It's part of a
bigger and better picture that they just
got to get through to see it. To be able
to see it, you know, sometimes we're
standing so close to you know, sometimes
we're standing so close to the wallpaper
that you know, we're just kind of
staring at it like
like this.
You know, and we're just like
why does my life suck?
And then you go you go speak to someone
who's standing like more like here.
And sometimes it takes you to speak to
that person so they grab you by the back
of your collar and they're just like
pull you away from it a bit.
So you're just like
you're just like
Oh.
Yeah.
There's some there's some there's some
bigger picture.
And that's that's a Yesod kind of thing
to do for somebody. Is to connect to
them like that.
Help them see that.
Okay, shall I play you guys a little
song?
Before we do the song, which I have no
idea what song I'm going to do, but
before we do for y'all song
cuz we do have a guitar here.
Can't have a guitar without a song.
Is um
I promise that we talked about where
we're broken.
So
everything we just did
I promise you you're broken in one of
them if not many of them. For example,
if you're stronger on the right, you're
probably broken in
in Bina, Gevurah and
Hod. If you're stronger on the left
side, if you're more of a structured
type person, you're probably a little
broken on your
going with the flow
you know, meaning being able to think
out of the box and being able to deal
with God throwing curveballs cuz God
does throw curveballs all the time. You
Meaning what you We have a saying, we
make plans and God laughs.
And then the and also perseverance, to
be able to stick with one thing for a
long period of time. That's probably
where you're broken.
And um
and some people are
are not too many people are broken in
the middle. Most people aren't anywhere
near the middle. I told you it's very
rare individuals who are going to be
either Das, Tiferet
Yesod. You know, there's only one rebbe
for thousands of Hasidim and he's really
got that attribute. And then Malchus
is not really an attribute. It's the
goal. It's the recipient. Now um
what your goal in life is as you grow is
to celebrate who you are, meaning
celebrate the attributes you're good at.
For example, how you make a living
should be in the attribute that you're
good at.
Cuz you don't want to be stretching all
day.
You want to be doing the attribute
you're good at.
And then you want to stretch to the
other side.
So for me to make sure I get home for
dinner, I have to stretch over to Hod
and keep myself focused.
Cuz I can distract my way all the way
past dinner, way past dinner.
And so I've got to stretch. So you
celebrate who you are and you stretch to
the opposite stuff and especially stuff
where you're broken. Things are broken
and some people are really broken.
Some people, you know, they
their flow got messed up cuz they were
trusting people who weren't trustworthy.
Sometimes they were in their own house,
it was their parents.
An uncle, a grandparent uh
could be there untrustworthy people. And
they broke our attribute of Hesed, which
is flow.
And now whenever it's time to flow, we
just can't.
So that requires more intensive work.
And then there's uh people who are
um
people who are the opposite, they were
given too strict a situation and
and they they just they only know things
when it's overly structured, but they
don't know how to deal with free time,
for example.
They just they can have anxiety attacks
just by having an empty
period of time with to
figure out what to do with and
you know, they're just they're overly
structured and and things got broken
there or their boundaries were broken by
people who didn't honor their
boundaries. Messed them up there.
So there there's a lot of different
places where things can go wrong with
any of these attributes and there and
there's certain
very specific therapies to heal those
things and that's really our life's work
is to is to heal those things.
And it's an interesting discussion
whether you were born with it or whether
it's some of us I mean it's clearly I
was born It's clear to me that I was
born with a lot of my stuff, but there's
also, you know, I grew up in a ruleless
house.
And
that didn't do so much for my ability to
be structured.
You know, cuz I wasn't trained as a
structured person. Any structure I have
I had to learn on my own. Not wasn't It
certainly didn't come from my household.
So
and those of you listening to this in uh
the USA, I'll be in the USA, feel free
to fly in to uh the East Coast. I'll be
running a men's seminar for the Possible
You, my personal growth program. I'm
running it for now uh
I keep saying 18 years, but I think I've
been saying that for a few years
already. I've been running that for 18
years and I've
over 8,000 graduates, which I've also
been saying for a while.
Um over 8,000 graduates and that's going
to be going on in
Brooklyn
uh November 10th
this
this Sunday.
Um that's for men in Brooklyn. So you
can go on the possibleyou.org and I have
men's and women's in Monsey starting the
week of the 17th of
Um so anyone in the tri-state area can
get over there and if you're not from
the tri-state area, you can fly into New
York.
Get yourself a hotel room and
have the ride of your life cuz it is
just one of the most amazing experiences
ever.
So that's going on next week.
Um okay, here we go. What are we going
to do?
Um let's do
I'm going to do one of my brother's
songs.
Okay.
Spreading the feeling all over the earth
waiting for the day
when brothers can walk
hand in hand
no one feels afraid.
We're holding the future in our hands.
We can be the light.
If only we'd stand as one, it would be
so right.
Oseh shalom
bimromav
hu yaaseh shalom
aleinu
ve'al kol Yisrael
Yisrael
ve'imru
amen.
Tell all the people that share your life
let your love shine through
make sure to mention from time to time
how much they mean to you.
With all of our hearts we call to you
knowing you're here somehow.
Like never before we need you here right
now.
Oseh shalom
bimromav
hu yaaseh shalom
aleinu
ve'al kol Yisrael
Yisrael
ve'imru
amen.
You guys want to sing?
Yeah.
It's enough of that, I think.
Uh
another song?
Anyone like that?
It's my brother Sam. He did another nice
one called Kol Ha'Olam Kulo.
It's also short and
to the point.
Uh
How's it go?
It's a bridge.
It's a bridge
that is long and narrow
that we cross
each day and every year.
It's a bridge
that is long and narrow.
When we cross
there is no need to fear.
It's a dream
that we are fulfilling
every time
we take another step.
Though our feet
sometimes are unwilling
we press on
knowing you are near.
Just remember
not to be afraid at all.
Not afraid
at all.
Want to sing? It's a bridge that is long
and narrow. Try it. It's a bridge. Come
on, everybody.
That is long and narrow
that we cross each day and every year.
That we cross, come on, breathe.
Each day and every year. It's a bridge
that is long and narrow. Come on, sing
out.
It's a bridge. Cross that bridge.
That is long and narrow.
When we cross there is no need to fear.
When we cross
there is no need to fear.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Try it. Come on, try it.
Shalom, everyone. Shalom, if you enjoyed
watching this, well, watch some more.
Send it, click it, forward it, join it,
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