0:00 / 0:00
The Softness That Endures
38 views
Glass shatters at every blow. Steel endures because it knows how to absorb the impact. @A_DifferentAngle #jewishwisdom #jewishthought #jewishinspiration #inspiration #inspirational #jewish #jewishshorts #hidabroot
Categories:
Torah
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Take a glass pane and strike it with a
sharp blow. It will shatter into pieces.
Now take a flexible material like steel
or rubber and hit it with the exact same
blow.
It will bend, [music] absorb the impact,
and return to its original shape.
The rigid glass broke.
The flexible one survived.
And this is a fundamental law in
engineering.
A rigid and stiff material stands firm
up to a certain point.
When the blow is too strong, it has
nowhere to move, so it breaks.
But a flexible material knows how to
bend, absorb [music] the energy,
disperse it, and flow with it.
It is precisely the ability to yield to
the blow, to adapt to it, that saves it.
Rigidity is the weak point.
Flexibility is the strength. Listen
closely.
Skyscrapers like Taipei 101 and massive
bridges are intentionally built [music]
to be flexible.
They sway in the wind and during
earthquakes, sometimes by several
meters.
An inexperienced engineer might have
built them [music] rigid so they would
be strong, but it is precisely that
rigidity that would have destroyed them.
Flexibility, the ability to move and
absorb, is what keeps them standing when
everything [music] is shaking. How many
of us think that being strong means
being rigid, never giving in, never
bending, responding to every attack with
an attack, to every insult with an
insult? [music]
We are convinced that gentleness is
weakness, that being flexible means
[music] breaking, and we hold on until
we shatter. But our sages taught us the
law of flexibility of the soul. In
Tractate Shabbat, it is told that two
people made a huge bet on who among them
could provoke [music] Hillel the Elder.
One of them tried again and again.
He came on Friday evening, called to him
rudely, asked insulting questions,
[music] and each time Hillel answered
him calmly and lovingly.
"My son, you have asked a great
question." The more the man tried to
break him, the more Hillel became
flexible and absorbed it. In the end,
the provocateur admitted, "Because of
you, I lost a huge sum of money. And
Hillel calmly replied, "It is worth it
for Hillel that you should lose your
money because of him." And Hillel would
not take offense.
On this, the sages said, "A person
should always be humble like [music]
Hillel and not strict like Shammai.
Hillel's gentleness absorbed every blow
and did not break.
It is the rigidity of the strict person
that breaks, [music]
just like materials. The flexible
survives, the rigid shatters. Our
strength is the
>> [music]
>> someone who knows how to bend even a
little to absorb an insult without
retaliating, to respond gently. He is
not the weak one. He is truly strong
like Hillel, just like steel that bends
and does not break. It is our softness
and patience that allow us to survive
even [music] the greatest storms without
shattering. So, next time we feel like
hardening ourselves, hitting back blow
for blow, [music] staying rigid, let's
pause and remember the glass that
shatters. Remember Hillel's [music]
humility. Let's not become so hardened
that we break because it is precisely
flexible [clears throat] softness that
keeps us standing.