Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
people have done the most horrific
crimes.
And I was shocked to see that they're
just an innocent child so broken. And it
really, really spoke to me. Don't just
invest in building more prisons, invest
in educating children. Imagine a world
where like crying was never shamed, was
never told boys don't cry or, you know,
stop being a wuss or whatever. Just
imagine that wasn't there, then the body
would continue doing what it knows how
to do, which is to grieve pain. When it
hurts, it's actually an invitation for
you to go deeper and create more
connection with self.
>> If you're fixated on fixing, it's
probably projection. Which is it's too
hard to see my own problems. So, if I
fix other people's problems, it saves me
from fixing my problems.
>> Not a lot of people actually experience
life. And they're waiting for Messiah to
come so they'll they'll finally be able
to live, not realizing that you can come
into
Messiah instead of Messiah coming.
>> What is your deepest lesson that you
learned in your practice
from people that the
overtook you?
Most people think that a sober living is
just a place where you stay clean. It's
not. A sober living is about building
yourself after the noise stops. It's
when you meet yourself.
That's why I created something
meaningful, a home for people who suffer
from addictions
named Cove 76.
If you know somebody who suffers or you
suffer, please check out this website.
Cove 76. Cove 76 is not just a house.
Cove 76 is about taking your life back.
Check out cove76.com.
Okay.
Today,
we have a great guest. His name is
Schneier Hayes.
Um he is a therapist who is using IFS
type of treatment, somatic work, and all
of the above. Now, IFS is standing is
stands for internal family systems.
That's what it is. Um, he helps people
listen to their hidden voices.
You make sure that people listen to
themselves.
You have addicts of all kinds.
He's not only talking about healing,
he's guiding people
he's guiding people into healing.
Um, his work includes mind, body, and
soul. Include everything. Um, Shnayer,
welcome to the struggle.
>> Thank you for having me.
>> Excellent. Thank you so much for coming
in.
Before we start,
I just want you to explain the audience
what is IFS and what is somatic work,
what are the stuff that you're dabbling
in.
>> Sure. So, um, without going into the
actual modality of IFS
>> Right.
>> the basic idea as it comes into the
healing work is that
the way we operate
and the things that we do and the
behaviors we have are usually
things that we that our subconscious
mind have produced for us to protect us
from
experiencing things that we've went
through in the past. So, in IFS it's
called like exiles.
And those are the experiences we had in
childhood that we weren't able to
process, that nobody helped us get
regulated with. And so,
the subconscious mind develops ways of
like creating a lifestyle for ourselves
where we don't have to face those
things. An example of that can be
you know, if let's just say that
somebody in their childhood experienced
public shame. So, they were shamed in
public. So,
>> [snorts]
>> they can develop internally a like a
social anxiety or a fear of like being
seen.
And what's really going on is that the
mind's trying to protect you from
feeling that pain.
So in that modality, the pain becomes
the guiding force of how you live. And
until you
show up for it and learn how to process
it, you're basically just working for
it.
>> So IFS
compartmentalizes
IFS puts things in place so you make
sense.
>> Yeah, so really what I mean IFS internal
family systems which was put together
the science put together by Richard
Schwartz.
Um
The it it's what he found in his work. A
lot of it's taken from modalities from
from you know
previous modalities, but it's basically
flipping the way traditional therapy
looked like 180. So instead of somebody
coming and saying I'm I'm struggling
with anxiety or depression or social
anxiety or whatever it is and then try
to give them tools for that. It looks at
it from a more holistic approach like
what's really going on here and where
can you show up for yourself and create
safety for yourself inside?
>> Right. And what is somatic work?
>> So I I would consider IFS under the
umbrella of somatic work because somatic
is soma means body
and it really means going into the body,
right? And
in the body is stored, you know, your
your story from when you were born. And
so somatic work
there's there's different modalities.
The most
you know, known one is somatic
experience from Peter Levine.
And uh it's also it's got its own
structure and and its techniques of how
it works, but the it's the same idea
which is that we're holding within our
bodies, within our
subconscious mind and and stored in our
body everything that we haven't been
able to hold, process and find safety
with. So it comes with us wherever we
go.
>> Yeah, so so the question is why um
because we know that
everything is rooted in childhood.
Why are we so connected to this
childhood? Like every therapy and every
uh
is talking about we got to go back to
your childhood and rewire or unwire what
what What Why can't we just move on from
childhood? Like, you know, it's like,
"Okay, this is what happened in
childhood." But everything goes back to
childhood and we're so connected to it.
>> That's an interesting question. There's
actually um
uh Bowlby's attachment science actually
brings everything from the first 24
months. It's even earlier than than than
other childhood modalities. And look, I
mean
look at children. They're so vulnerable,
so sensitive, so open, so curious. And
so, the nervous system of the child
>> Right.
>> which is learning what's safe and what's
not safe
is developing a story of how do you need
to live in order to not experience
suffering in the world, right? So, from
from the basic idea of a child sticking
their finger into a candle and into a
flame and and and learning, "Okay,
that's not something I want to do."
They get yelled at or or embarrassed or
told off or experience emotional pain,
the the nervous system also creates,
"Oh, that's not something that I would
ever want to do." And so, you're
basically developing a story that I'm
not safe, right? So, if you create
healthy attachment for children
as they grow up, they learn that they
can handle they can process and the
nervous system doesn't store, right?
That's called coregulation or being
regulated.
When that doesn't happen, which is
common, you know, pretty much most
children don't have perfect parents.
>> Right.
>> So, the nervous system develops a lot of
stories of like how I need to I need to
be safe, I need to protect myself, I'm
not safe, and there's a lot of pain and
I don't know what to do with it. And if
you don't know what to do with the pain,
right? If the if the body doesn't know
what to do with the pain, it can't move
it out, it can't be held.
Then it gets stored. It gets stuck,
right? So, if we're just giving an
example.
When a child is when a young child is um
dysregulated
nobody teaches them what to do, right?
Nobody ever tells a child like, "Okay,
when you're disregulated, like throw a
tantrum or scream or yell." That's just
a natural
>> Right.
>> It's you know
a biological response.
What can happen though is that a child
does their natural response and then
somebody says like, "Shh, be quiet. Stop
crying." Or even to the positive, a
child's expressing, processing,
grieving, right, crying and you give
them a candy to stop it, right? So, it's
also a message of like that's not the
appropriate way to to deal with pain.
So, what ends up happening is is you
have this story that a lot of people
relate to which is that crying is
embarrassing. Like I like you know,
people they kind of want to hide if
they're crying. It's like a shame like
and that's learned in childhood. When
you're when you're basically shamed for
crying, right?
>> Because everyone would tell them shh
>> Yeah, yeah, don't cry. Yeah, like be
quiet. Yeah, in public, exactly. Imagine
a world where that didn't happen. Where
like crying was never shamed or never or
was never told like you know, you know,
boys don't cry or you know, stop being a
wuss or whatever. So, imagine that
wasn't there then
the body would continue doing what it
knows how to do which is the grieve
pain. Pain comes up
and it moves through the body and
there's a lot of science also, another
um chapter about the healing that is
provided for the body through tears,
oxytocin and different chemical
responses
>> It's very very healing, yeah.
>> Right, so the body knows how to made our
bodies and it to be able to help us get
through life and losses, right?
It's stories
that can override that that natural
process
>> We fight it is what you're saying.
>> over we're stopping our own natural
process and a lot of things I teach
people is
you don't need to learn how to do any of
these things. You were born knowing how
to. What you need to do is to learn how
to take off the stories that you
acquired along the way.
>> In the
IFS, the the word protectors
>> Right.
>> it flies around a lot. Yeah. So, give me
an example of protectors, let's say
an adult would have protectors.
>> Sure. So, um
I I some of the examples I said before
protectors and managers are kind of I
stories that you tell yourself like I am
not smart enough to be able to do this
or
I'm not capable of keeping a job or I'm
not capable of being successful or even
a story of like like
I don't I can't move into the frequency
of abundance because like, you know, I
it's it's dangerous, you know, I saw
other people who have money and and they
they they failed or they messed up or
they
Any any story
>> good as the other person.
>> as them or or I witnessed somebody else
crash from wealth or suffer from wealth
or do terrible things with wealth. So,
these become stories and managers that
are like, I don't want to experience
those things. So, but they don't say to
you or these and managers they don't
tell you, you know, because you saw that
I don't want you to do it. They just
become stories that you that you
>> Right. So, we protect ourselves from
even go there. Like the protectors is we
protect ourselves not to go to the
wealth or like we're not taking this
risk.
>> Yeah, and I'll I'll just tell you
ironically one of the most common
managers, we can call them, one of the
most common inner protectors that I find
with people is actually not
um
you know, so much negative thinking,
which is very common, but the fear of
being successful, the fear of the fear
of
of seeing your good because and I and
and one of the reasons is again going
back to childhood, if you've ever
believed in yourself and took risks and
then were shamed or were hurt by it,
then the manager comes up with a story
that it's not worth it. Yeah, it's not
worth it to take a risk.
>> Wow.
>> It hurts too much. And but but I want to
go deeper. What's really happening
is the fear of the future, so the things
that you're afraid of happening in the
future are actually projections of what
you haven't been able to process from
the past.
So, anytime when we're when we're when
I'm working together with someone and we
are able to articulate and communicate
the fears of the future, they're
actually just screaming what is not yet
processed from the past.
>> Right.
>> So, for an example,
let's just say that a child loses a
loved one, loses and and didn't have the
ability to properly grieve and and
process.
They can develop fear of love.
Fear of loving
>> connection because they they don't want
to connect because they're afraid that
this thing is going to cost them too
much. They don't want to go back to that
pain that they had. So, they put up this
this facade, this this fortress of not
letting another person in.
>> And and so, what I've learned is that
the only real solution to that
is to go is to go within the system, to
go within
the inner child work and allow the
grieving to happen.
And there's a
IFS and other modalities allow have
given us the tools to be able to bring
people in their bodies
to actually allow the emotional energy,
which is actual frequency, it's actually
still there, to to let it process.
>> So, you'll have So, you go back and you
heal that that was not healed years ago.
>> the concept of chuva. There's no time.
You can really go back and and you and
you flip it that it never happened to
begin with. Like there's no it's not
there anymore.
>> Now, let me ask you, codependency.
Is this the root of codependency? How
does codependency develop?
Um is it from childhood? Is it from
these kind of managers?
>> That's a good question. The way I kind
of like to explain codependency, if we
take a step back, so we didn't talk
about it yet, but when a child is
experiencing overwhelm, right? Something
that is too much for them, too much
pain.
So, part of our survival that we've been
gifted with is the ability to
disassociate.
>> Mhm.
>> Basically, to
move ourselves out of our own story, to
stop living in our own body, to create
and that can happen for everyone in a
different way.
Um
what I like to call that is you jump
into the avatar version of yourself.
You're moving into um the person that
you need to live because you can't
afford to live in your true body and
your true self. And that avatar version
is basically living on fear. It's right?
If you you need
to
be safe, so you need to people please,
right? And the And there's um four
levels of dysregulation, four levels of
uh fight fight flight freeze or fawn,
depending on each person's uh
temperament and how they develop their
um their sympathetic nervous response.
But in that avatar, you're basically
living your life
in need of oxytocin,
which is love from other people. That's
codependency.
You need dopamine from the outside. You
need something to stimulate you because
you're not producing it cuz you're
disassociated from your body, right?
These things are all in the body.
And you need oxytocin and serotonin,
right? And so
what's codependency really? It's the
living in the avatar,
right? You're like living in this
You know, I I Let's give an example.
Imagine your your car doesn't have a gas
tank,
but your friend has a gas tank.
So, every time you drive, you ask him if
he could drive with you and you put a
hose that that pumps gas into you
I don't you know, you have a little
little little tank. It can't hold gas,
but it could receive.
You're dependent on him coming with you
everywhere you want to go. And if he
says he can't, then you're stuck, right?
This is the avatar self. You need other
people to see you, appreciate you, give
you value to have it. You need other
people You need other experiences to
make you feel safe, right? But if the
secret is
you need to go back into your body.
You have to come back home, right?
>> This is the whole story of of the Adam
and Eve, you know, this the sin is that
he was removed from the garden. We're
all just trying to get back.
So,
a lot of the work that I do is to help
people
uh
come back home into their bodies. And
awaiting them there the whole time is
just so much love and pleasure and uh
safety that it's there cuz it's the body
Hashem made our body to produce these
chemicals. So, codependency is basically
if you're not living in your body, then
you're going to need to get all that
from somebody else. And then it becomes
very, very hard because if those people
don't give it to you, you it's like a
death.
>> Yeah.
>> It's like it starves
>> You're hungry.
>> Well, you're hungry.
>> But the But the codependent lives a fake
life or no? They're just living an empty
life.
>> I I like to look at it that codependency
is a byproduct of avatar living. So, if
you're not living in your body, then
you're you're codependent. It's just
reality. The avatar body, which is the
version of ourselves that we fabricate,
that who we have to be cuz we can't be
ourselves, it's it's impossible to be
It's It's not sustainable. You need to
have
constantly other people telling you that
you're okay, other people giving you
everything. And so,
if you're not If you're there, you're
going to you're going to have
codependency. If you're back in your
body, you're back in your you're able to
be in your body, you're able to be in
your story, you're able to carry the
pain, you're able to hold space for
reality, you're able to properly grieve
the five stages of grief through the
things that you've been through,
you see automatically like codependency
just fades away.
>> Mhm.
But let me ask you the other side of
codependency, which is narcissism
Um let's say a person uh who has
narcissism
or a person who shut their feelings off
completely.
Can a person like this survive for 70
years without a problem? Like, I'm
comfortable. I'm not thinking. I am
frozen. I am cold. I just do my thing. I
come and go. And I want to live like
that. Detached from every emotion, from
every feeling.
And you know,
you're creative, you make your life, you
know, you you you wreak havoc left and
right to the You wreak havoc on the
people around you. But this particular
narcissist himself
says, "You know what? I I live a pretty
decent life closed off. I don't want to
feel. How about that?"
>> Okay, so I
I try not to see narcissism like the
typical DSM-5 like the
explanation of it. I I'll tell you
something that I learned working for
many years in in the
residential rehab.
Obviously, you can throw diagnosis all
day at at people who are in really
severe and I'm sure there were
people who can be diagnosed as
narcissists, but what I found is that
literally no matter what. So, we're
talking about
murderers, scam artists,
people who have destroyed everybody in
their lives.
>> These are psychopaths?
>> So, sociopath or psychopath is the is
the is the deep
blockage of emotional connection to
self. So, an inability to have empathy.
>> So, you would say that every narcissist
has a touch of psychopathy?
>> No, what I'm what I am saying is that
every single person that I've been able
to work with in thousands of people over
7 years
in in in the rehab setting
I found the same exact thing in every
single one of them is that when we went
through this work to their child, there
was just a wounded child, literally.
There's not There has not been one
person from the most severe
>> Yeah.
>> Again, I don't you I don't look at the
diagnosis. I don't I don't kind of
approach it that way. But, the most
severe damaging version of self, if you
go down to the bottom, it's just
brokenness and detachment, really.
That's really at the source of
everything. So,
what I try to do when I work with people
is to show them
their
moment of detachment and provide them
with the ability through the tools that
we have to come back home.
>> Correct, but
isn't that a problem for because they
have no introspect? Let's say the psycho
the sociopath or the the narcissist
is comfortable the way he is.
He's not hurting. I mean, he's hurting
emotionally, but he's mainly hurting
other people who have the complaints,
the codependents. But, um
if he is
comfortable in his in his shoes the way
he is, you can talk to him about coming
home a million times, but he's he's has
no interest back.
>> All right. So, two things. First of all,
when somebody's coming to me,
so they're at least at that level that
they're reaching out. Of course, there
are plenty of people that will never
make a phone call to a therapist. So,
that that's one thing. Also, the people
who are in the rehab, at least I could
say, "Look, you're here."
>> Right.
>> So, you're here. Whether you want to
blame it on anyone else is and else is
you are.
I don't work with people on that level
who are saying, "I'm fine. I don't need
anything." It's unfortunate, but you
can't force somebody. But, when someone
shows up and says, "Look, I don't think
I have hope."
>> They have hope.
>> Right. Right. That's what it is. Now,
IFS is called family, has the word
family in it. Does it deal with family
issues?
>> So, that's not Yeah, so a lot of people
have that question. It's
Richard Schwartz was a was a family
systems therapist.
And what he found is that just like
there are different roles and different
members of a family that play into the
challenge, he found that within each
person there's an internal family.
>> Uh-huh. That's what he meant.
>> It's not Yeah, it's not really like
family systems. And so, a lot Yeah, a
lot of times people see the word family
and they they think it's
>> Right.
>> family systems. And it's he use he fit
he shows that inside of yourself you
have a kind of a family of parts.
>> Right. So, you're mainly dealing with
people who want to help themselves. They
reach out to you and they say, "You know
what? I'm not in a good place. I don't
like where I am." And of course, there
is a lot of help. But, what if those
people deal with toxic people
and you know, of course, they will work
on themselves and they trying to come
home and all the somatic, the body work.
But, what happens if they're entangled
with There's a business or it's family
and they're entangled with people with
with toxicity and
usually the way it works that toxic
people are taking advantage of the
people who are sane
because you're the sane one. So, you're
the one who's doing all the work and
they just keep on doing what they're
doing. How is it How do How can you help
a person who is on the right track,
wants to come back home.
He feels that, you know what, maybe
there's a little bit codependency there
and stuff like that. But, on the other
hand, you're dealing with a person that
doesn't
doesn't work with you.
>> Right. So,
usually
This is touching upon boundaries.
>> Yeah, right.
>> It comes back to everything I said
before, is that when you are home, which
is another way of saying that is when
you're self energy,
you're not as afraid to create the
boundaries that you need to live a life
you want. Usually, if someone's living
in a toxic relationship where
um they're experiencing
uh suffering from that relationship. So,
again, first of all, I want to
differentiate between
toxic relationships that are,
you know, unhealthy and not safe. So,
that's one category. In that case,
often times, unless the other person can
get help, you really do need to remove
yourself from that person. But, let's
move to the
toxic relationships that the reason that
they that they fester and that they
exist is because the boundaries aren't
being made by
by the side that needs to say, "I'm not
tolerating this." And sometimes that can
just be enough to be able But, in order
to do that, you have to really feel safe
with yourself. Cuz if you feel you need
somebody else,
then you're afraid to make boundaries
with them.
>> never do it.
>> Yeah, like if you if I need my boss to
pay my paycheck, then I can never stand
up for myself and say, "It's not okay
what you're doing to me." But, if I can
be trusted in myself
that I will figure it out, then I'm safe
enough to do that. So, it really all
comes back to the same exact concept of
self energy.
>> is that if a person finds themselves
entangled with toxicity,
uh he has to take a good look at himself
and see, "Where do you let this happen?
And where do you not stand up for
yourself?" And And And if you have
difficulties, uh go come home.
>> Exactly. In other words,
it's avatar living.
>> Right.
>> If somebody if you're letting somebody
al- um cause you to live a life you
don't want to live, then you're not
living in your self energy. You're
living your avatar. And then, so the
only way out is back home back home.
It's all the same.
>> Right.
And how does a person who wants to come
home and is doing the work and he's
doing his thing
and he is building himself up to a point
that he can put down healthy boundaries.
Um
the doubt that comes into your head that
maybe
it's my ego, maybe it's Where's the the
fine line between doubting yourself that
that you're not, you know, doing this
for personal reasons, you know?
>> So it's interesting you're saying that
because in IFS the self, right? The
capital S self has eight C's and
basically, I'm not going to go through
them right now, but one of them is
clarity.
Usually, if you're not clear, you're not
in self energy. So
that's also an invitation to come to
your self. Yeah, because when you're
with yourself, you just you have this
knowing, right? You're inside yourself.
Hashem gave us intuition. Hashem gave us
a lot of
deep, deep ability to be non to
understand what our truth is and
the story of I don't know what's true or
not is often times
a byproduct of detachment from self. But
again, the like it's it's really
beautiful to watch. A lot, almost all
challenges that people have emotionally
and psychologically
go away the closer you come to yourself.
>> It's unbelievable. It's unbelievable
stuff. Um I want to talk about respect,
about disrespect.
And people take it very personal.
And what does that do to the nervous
system?
That if someone is disrespecting you and
you're reacting or you're taking it to
to the next level.
With this kind of a model that you're
displaying here with coming back home
and and and finding yourself,
how can someone handle a disrespect
uh situation?
>> I think again, I maybe I sound like I'm
just saying the same thing, but it
really is the same thing.
>> we need to know this because it's it's
the foundation.
>> So, let's look at it. Let The example
that's coming to mind is like
anti-Semitism, right? So, let's say
you're walking down the street and
someone says,
you know, um
whatever, kill the Jews, Heil Hitler,
you know.
>> Yeah.
>> Do you get offended?
Do you get triggered? Or are you like
like you're obviously like really
must be a loser if that's that's what
you like you do with your energy. You
have to go put other people down, right?
The safer you are with yourself,
the closer you are to yourself,
the more you feel your truth,
somebody else putting you down, you
shift from being triggered and offended
to just being like
like it's almost sad. It's like it's
really sad.
It saddens me that you have to be in
such a toxic place, a negative place,
but it doesn't hurt as much.
And here's an interesting thing. When it
hurts, it's actually an invitation for
you to go deeper and create more
connection with self. Instead of
attacking the other person for hurting
you, they're actually gifting you,
right?
They're bringing you a gift, which is
they're showing you
you're not enough.
>> are away from this type of behavior, how
distance you're supposed to be, it
almost becomes a role model of not how
not to behave.
>> Yeah. Well, let me ask you a question.
If you if you like to cook something,
right? And you're and you think you're
good and you create, let's say out of
whatever it is, a a pizza. And you're
eating it, it's delicious. You love you
you put your effort in and you made
homemade pizza. You someone else comes
and says, "This is disgusting." You're
offended?
You start questioning yourself, "Wait, I
just tasted it and it was good. Maybe
maybe now that they said it's not good,
maybe I was wrong." So, now I'm hurt.
Are you like
well, sad you don't get to appreciate
what I'm appreciating because it's
delicious.
>> I enjoy it.
>> Yeah, that's what it's when you when
you're in your own self energy, you're
not in the avatar. When you're in the
avatar,
you need
other people to validate. So, when
people criticize, it's a death. And it's
it's like you know, unfortunately, there
have been stories of
teenagers committing suicide when they
were bullied online. Someone told them
there's was wrong with them. That's
avatar, right? That's because when
you're in your self energy,
>> it shouldn't make a difference.
>> Yeah, doesn't.
>> You you're describing an I
>> That's so we live in a world where
you're either disconnected and you're in
Gehenna.
>> Yeah.
>> And I I shared you know that um the
Zohar and the Midrash Rabbah, right?
That Avraham Avinu asked David to share
that
we should have Gehenna in our lifetime.
And it says he said, "Okay." And it's
through the the detachment that we
experience the Gehenna and it it it puts
us in a situation where if we make the
right choice and we stay in that and we
don't run away from ourselves, it's
painful.
But then you find self energy, which
is what you call the Gan Eden, but I
just want to clarify cuz I don't want to
make it sound like it's so easy.
>> Yeah.
>> What usually separates the avatar self
and the true self is a hell of a lot of
pain.
And and the story in childhood is I
can't handle this pain. It's too much.
It's too overwhelming, right? The pain
of losing losing a parent or losing a
loved one or parents getting divorced or
being bullied or being
what you know, abuse in any type of way.
It's just unbearable, right? And so you
your system blocks it off to protect you
and that's a that's a gift. Then you
grow up and you're and you're stuck
outside of yourself cuz the pain's in
your body. You can't come back home. So
you're in the avatar self. You try to
make it work.
And every time you look out back at
yourself, you see this
you know, river of pain that you the
story you have of that pain is the last
time I felt it was too much. So it's a
death.
So
you basically choose to stay in the
avatar and suffer the Gehenna.
Because you're looking at the pain and
you're like, "It's too much." The secret
is
you're not the child anymore.
Right? I'll give you another example.
If a person doesn't know how to swim and
they go into deep end of a pool and they
start drowning,
someone pulls them out and teaches them
how to swim and they take them back into
the same pool,
it's not a problem anymore.
>> Yeah.
>> The pool's the same pool.
>> Yeah.
>> Didn't change. It's not like, "Oh, I
can't go back into that pool because I
was drowning in it." Yeah, but you were
drowning cuz you didn't know how to
swim, but now you know how to swim, so
you could actually go in the same pool.
You don't need a different pool.
We can go back into the same pain
and the same body once we realize that
we've developed and we've grown and now
we have the ability to have a therapist
or a friend or support core regulation
to help support you and hold you and and
so therefore you could cross that river,
you could come back home and then you
could live the life you're meant to live
in this world. You're not meant to be an
avatar self.
>> Wow. Now, what about people who would
say, you know what? I want to keep the
peace.
>> Keep the peace?
>> Keep the peace. So, if there's a
manipulator or a
an abuser and the person, you know, the
person knows the truth.
>> the war, not keeping the peace.
>> Yeah, correct.
>> Yeah. It's it's a it's a
I I don't want to talk. I'm sure it's
challenging. I want to be sensitive to
that, but you're not keeping the peace.
You're keeping the pieces.
>> [laughter]
>> You're keeping the separation, right?
>> So true.
>> When you when you Actually, it's
interesting, you know, boundaries are
powerful. When a person sets boundaries
you know, not in a hateful way, it often
times invites respect.
>> Of course.
>> connection. So, keeping the peace by
shutting yourself down
>> is doing it has an opposite effect.
>> Yeah, you're you're you're not you're
enabling the other person to stay toxic.
You're also shutting yourself down,
which is which is not allowing yourself
to live your life. Everybody loses.
It's the easier way.
>> I have a funny question to you. People
have um
you know, um
arguments and people have uh you know,
problems in all aspects of life.
And sometimes you hear people say,
there's two sides to every story.
>> Mhm.
>> Now, you're living you're living your
life and you're like
I know the emphasis is with me.
I know I'm doing the right thing. My
heart is in the right place.
And that other person is doing whatever
they're doing and you're doing the work
to whatever that work is to to become
better person or to remove yourself if
if that's necessary. Whatever the case
is, but
how does that person that person who
really does the work, who really is open
for ideas, who knows like you said
before with clarity, how does he know
he's in the right?
And and and you you know, does he have
to prove it to somebody or does he have
to prove it for himself? How does he
know that, you know what? I know what I
know.
>> It's a very good question. Um
I think
understanding that
it's okay
that somebody else can think that you're
wrong.
And that meant to be safe with that and
not to try and live a life where
everybody has to agree with me for me to
feel safe. I think it's
Just know
>> it's it's a it's a concept of echad hu
yachid v'rom
>> Maybe. Sometimes. And it depends it
depends what you're doing. It's like if
you want to venture to
try and do things differently, you're
probably going to going to get, you
know,
pushed away and and and excommunicated.
I'll give you Victor Frankl as the best
example. I mean, he was a student of
Sigmund Freud. He he spoke out to say,
"No, it's not, you know, it's not about
pleasure seeking, it's about meaning."
And he was excommunicated. And there's a
story with the Lubavitcher Rebbe who
sent somebody to him and saying, "Don't
give up." He was going to move to
Australia.
>> Right, I saw the letter.
>> Yeah. Don't give up and be be
be loyal to your truth.
>> Right.
>> And he did. And wow, did he affect the
world, right? So,
um we all have, I guess, like you said,
an echad hu yachid v'rom moment in our
life.
>> Right.
>> Um and again, I think it really comes
down to looking within yourself.
Is the person that's against you
triggering pain inside of you? Then
they're gifting you with the ability to
become more whole and and and more true
to yourself to hold space for whatever
it is they're bringing up. So, then it's
a win.
And if it doesn't, so then what's the
problem?
So, it's a win-win.
>> Right.
Right. Unbelievable stuff. Um
Now, you mentioned Victor Frankl and
meaning and purpose
in your work that you're doing
and you see people in pain and they're
coming out on the other side,
what is the meaning that these people
put to their lives just by becoming a
different person
and and
how do how do they put meaning and
purpose into their pain?
>> Right. So,
um that's a great question. Victor
Frankl, you know, he has a lot that he
that he shares. It's very very deep and
um
he I think that one of the things we
could take away from Victor Frankl is
that he
really tried to show people that no
matter what they're going through,
they're
able to see some kind of purpose in it.
Whether that's, you know, the example
that he told
a a grieving uh I think it was a
grieving husband that after the
holocaust that you know, if one of you
or your wife had to pass, the other one
would have to grieve. So, look at your
grief as you're doing it for her. Shoot.
And then he found meaning in it. That's
the story.
Um
I think it's the idea of the truth that
the world we live in, we go through
experiences.
I I think everybody goes through painful
experiences whether in childhood or in
their adult life.
And when you allow yourself to be in the
pain
and to not run from it,
you often times find that the pain
itself
gives you the ability to taste the
beautiful things in life. The pain
itself gave you that gift. You could
have been a very superficial person
living, you know, in in in in very
external levels of what a human is and
the pain has this this way again, nobody
should suffer. I mean, you shouldn't
have to go through pain, but anyone who
already went through suffering or pain,
you I always say if you already went
through the pain, cash it in.
>> Yeah.
>> Don't don't ask for it, but if you
already went through it, well, how do
you What does that mean to cash it in?
Means feel it.
Because pain
is a very emotional pain and grieving is
a very powerful force that helps
dissolve the ego and this What is ego?
It's sense of
disconnect. Sense of fragmentation,
right? So, we're basically suffering
because we're fragmented from our truth.
>> Right.
>> And then there's this potion that's in
the world called emotional suffering. It
it takes away layers of that
fragmentation and that thereby invites
you into
a life of unity. Connecting with people
more, connecting with Hashem more,
whatever it is, but being in a frequency
of connection,
you find something called post-traumatic
growth. It's a science. And in that
science, there's basically it was
figured out. There was all these people
that went through all these tragedies
and they became happier after and they
were like, "What's going on here?"
The joy of being invited into the secret
of this world that it that there's this
vibration of connection.
Sometimes people only get invited in
through the pain that they're in. So,
Victor Frankl was touching upon
something. He's like, "There's meaning
and purpose. Everything's there for a
reason and you can go deeper and deeper
into that."
>> Mhm.
Amazing stuff. Um so, what I'm hearing
from you is that the reason why people
are stuck in toxic relationships
and why people will shrink themselves in
order to please somebody else is always
the answer that they are not home.
>> They're not home?
>> They're not home because uh it's it's in
plain English is this called low
self-esteem?
>> Yeah, low self-esteem.
Low self-esteem of self, right? You're
not You're not being steamed by
yourself. Low self-esteem. Yeah, it's
You're not
Because look, we we we we we we have the
Torah, right? And and we're we're we
know that we have a neshama. We have a
soul, right?
The soul is in us. It's We have access
to it. It's connected to everything.
It's infinite.
So,
if we're connected to it, if we're
really in touch with our true self,
then we're not
we're not How can you have low
self-esteem? That you're not identifying
as your true self. But when you're in
the avatar self,
>> Right.
>> which is basically Well, yeah.
>> Then there you have an open door to
anything.
>> you're basically translating yourself in
the in the version that other people
said you are. So, if it be somebody else
was angry and said you stupid kid or or
or you know, whatever. And then you take
on that identity and you carry that,
you're going to suffer your whole life
because you're constantly going to be
looking for somebody that to just
validate that you can be okay, that you
even are allowed to exist, that you have
some value, right? It's another thing a
lot of people struggle with, which is
the And I want to just mention it. That
there human equity, the value is
attached to accomplishment, right? This
is something that the old model of
pushing, you know, pushing for academic
success without also explaining to the
child that you have value without it,
often times creates this disconnect
between human equity and and and
accomplishment. So, that means if you
don't accomplish, you don't have any
value. People stress themselves out and
freak out. What if I fail? What if I
don't make it? What if I take a job and
I don't make it? And they And the fear
is then I don't have any value, right?
And a lot of the healing is it's also
avatar self. The healing is to realize,
no, you actually were born with value.
And your value is valueless.
>> Right.
>> These accomplishments are ways of
actualizing and offering the world
something from your value. But that can
get The message can get skewed.
>> Sure.
Now, what's the psychology of shame and
blame? Why would a Why would a person
uh as a child
um
blame themselves?
>> I'll give you an example. It's very
deep. This I discovered from working on
this for for a long time.
As a child,
um
you're only safe if the people that are
keeping you safe are safe.
That means if your parents are safe
people at home then you're safe. But
what if they're not safe? What if
they're hurting you?
>> Right.
>> So for a child
let's just give an example of a a parent
who beats a child like but not in a
healthy way at all abusive.
So now the child has a choice.
Either tell a story that it's that he
deserves it that it's his fault that
he's damaged that he doesn't deserve
love.
Why would you do that? Because what's
the alternative? I'm not my father's
crazy.
>> Right.
>> That's too scary.
>> It's even more scary than than to blame
yourself.
>> Yeah. So blaming yourself I right it's a
manager that develops and comes up in
your mind it's like well let's flip the
script quickly because otherwise it's
petrifying to live in this house and
you're a kid you can't just like walk
outside and then and and rent an
apartment. So a lot of blaming self is a
way of protecting yourself from a
reality that's too scary. And then we
hold that on but the thing is when you
grow up you can let go of that because
now you're safe. This is a lot of the
work we have to do.
>> Wow. So it's it's basically 20 years of
growing up and then for the rest of your
life you have to
undo
>> undo what you do.
>> What yeah because the
I it seems to be that the first 20 years
of what the brain
developing is having a major impact on a
person's life.
>> Yeah.
>> No we sometimes don't even get how how
dangerous or crucial schooling parenting
I mean it's it's all rooted in
childhood.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
I'm
not a believer that we're in a failed
world. I think that this is the
Kabbalah. I try and believe that that
we're kind of
>> This is the
>> messed up by design in order that we
have to find ourselves. Like you know
one of the one of the So I want to touch
upon that.
The biggest gift you can have
in this world
is you.
Because you are
a version of of Hashem that is you.
You're You're You're the creation as
you. Every person's unique.
Now, if you just
And I believe this very deeply, every
person has a unique spark, unique light,
and and, you know,
um
we're born very pure, very powerful. And
it's very clear that very quickly most
children get get uh
damaged, broken.
So, you could say it's an accident. But,
it's the same concept in the Kabbalah is
the Shvirat HaKeilim is the breaking of
the vessels in order for us to fix it
back. I think it's b'kavana. I think
that we're in a world where
we are being offered to find ourselves,
but instead of it being given to us, we
have to build it ourselves. The When
people Ask anyone who's done any real
healing work, you get to experience
yourself
the gift of being yourself.
>> Yeah.
>> It's the most incredible feeling, but
you got to know that I built I built put
this back together. I didn't just get
given it as a gift, which is bread of
shame. It's like I really had to figure
out, like you said, my first decade or
or two decades of my life I was being
torn apart, and I had to take all the
pieces and sit and put them back
together, and I get to appreciate who I
am and that I put the effort into to
being who I am.
>> So, let's say a child who went through a
very hard time.
Mhm, the blame and the shame, and
unfortunately they didn't ask for it,
but it happened.
And the child shut down.
You know, this is their mechanism. This
is what they did.
And they never go for help.
Now,
and, you know, to survive in society,
they know how to get around,
but um the people around them suffer
immensely.
>> Yeah.
>> And
so, this is a huge the again, the the
the the they start using certain
mechanisms to survive.
>> Right.
>> It's survival mechanism, coping
mechanisms.
So, one of them is silent treatment.
Let's say.
>> Sure.
>> And they're using this on other people.
>> Mhm.
>> Now,
what you're saying is that any um
obstacle or any challenge that you have
with a person,
it's not that person.
>> If it hurts.
>> You're It can only hurt if it's pain in
you.
>> Right.
>> Nobody can put pain into your body.
>> Right. So, if you're affected by silent
treatment,
or you're affected by anything else,
that means you have a lot of work to do.
>> Yeah, and I want to just clarify you
could be affected by it. I don't think
you should be not affected by it, but
depends on how you're affected by it. If
it hurts so much, it means that you're
longing
for external connection. But, if you
have safety within yourself, you could
just have rahma and be like, "It's so
sad that you are in so much pain that
you have to shut yourself down." You
could see through it.
>> That is a beautiful level to be on.
You know, it's it's it's uh it's to to
differentiate the moves and the actions
that you shouldn't get affected.
[clears throat]
>> Right, it doesn't happen overnight. It
happens by recognizing that the pain you
have in your body, the emotional pain
that you carry, if you feel it, if you
allow yourself to go through it, then
you could be safe with yourself, and all
these things, they kind of fade away.
>> Right. Now, [clears throat] according to
the modalities that you're using, is
there ever a time that you can remove
yourself from a situation or from
people?
>> You mean, are you ever allowed to do
that? Is it mutar?
>> Yeah.
>> Um
I'm sure, yeah. I mean, you can just be
like, I you know, sometimes
some I I I won't say that showing up is
the right thing to do always. Sometimes
people who are really unhealthy
will actually use you as a crutch and
and and take you away. I mean, I I'll
I'll use myself as an example. I cannot
always show up 24 hours a day for the
people that I I show up to help with.
>> Right.
>> So, I'm I'm I am creating boundaries.
And when they're in desperate need for
help, I'm not a tala 24-hour hotline.
Now, I will be honest, the first few
years of my career I was so passionate
about saving the world and helping
everybody, I didn't notice myself going
down in the process.
Right? And so, I did lack boundaries,
but you learn to have boundaries. People
have to learn like
you have to also show up for yourself.
So, I think there's definitely times
that you can remove yourself, but
um
I think in the context of what you're
talking about, yeah, creating
boundaries,
saying I'm not available is healthy.
>> Cuz sometimes you're dealing with people
who don't want to change. They don't
want to learn. It's not like change for
you, they don't want to change for them.
They don't want to grow.
>> Yeah, part of the the the the byproduct
of us being in a world of bekhira is
that there will be a the bekhira to
choose not to grow.
>> Correct.
>> And if someone's in that place, it's
like, look,
I [snorts] can't I can't I can't
get brought down with you. If that's
your choice, then I can't, you know, I
cannot help you in that space. You have
to make a decision.
>> Right. Now,
um sometimes you hear people saying
after, you know, coming out of hard
relationships or stuff like that. And
also, I'm sure it's it's a safety
mechanism. They have no expectations.
I'm like, I don't expect anything
anymore. Not from this person, not from
that. Zero expectations.
>> mechanism for not experiencing failure.
>> Right. So, the question is, where is is
is that mean throwing in the towel? No
expectations means
>> Um again, it depends on the exact
context, but often times when people are
in that I don't expect anything anymore,
it's really
that they don't want to feel
disappointment. They just gave up trying
to believe, trying to
um you know, hope.
>> It's one of those protectors and
managers that says, you know what, I'm
not expecting anything. But, it's it's
more to the negative side. This is not
something that you should expect,
correct? Is it healthy to expect? Let's
say if you're in a relationship with
somebody or whatever. Parents and
children and relationships that you put
in a lot of years, you shouldn't expect
anything.
>> You should You should expect
that if everybody shows up for
themselves
and if you can create the safety within
yourself
then you can expect everyone to change
because if you understand the way the
nervous system works
the nervous system works by modeling, by
copying
the nervous systems around it.
>> Wow.
>> So, basically the parasympathetic
sympathetic state.
When a person who is in the who is in a
position of providing [snorts]
is in a place of safe nervous system,
automatically the nervous systems that
are receiving
>> Right.
>> go into their safety.
When the nervous system of someone who's
providing is in dysregulation, which is
the the sympathetic state, the nervous
systems around, right? So, that's why
this is this is hard to hear, but
parents who are dysregulated and try and
put on a show by pretending to be okay
the nervous systems of their children
are directly getting the read from the
nervous system. So, there's no there's
no um there's no bypassing that. So,
therefore
if you can create safety in yourself,
then yes, you can have an expectation
that everybody's going to grow around
you and it does work that way. It's a
frequency. But if you don't do that,
don't expect. It's just false
expectations.
>> Now, in relationships, um why do people
smart people intelligent people
um
choose partners that they know they're
not good for them?
>> I don't believe that people choose
partners that are not good for them. I
think steeper than that, subconsciously
we choose partners that we know will
trigger us and push us to our own
growth.
>> Unconsciously?
>> Subconsciously, yeah.
>> Because what's happening is that while
this is going on, they're like, "I'm in
pain. I can't deal with this."
>> Well, like I said before, right? So
if you have unprocessed pain from your
childhood
and you marry somebody who
enables you to stay unhealthy, it feels
so much better. You have your pain, but
you're not full, you're not whole.
The Ezer Kenegdo model, right? Which
Richard Schwartz has a book where he
talks about the tormentors, that's what
he calls it. The
a mentor is someone who's mentoring you,
a tormentor is someone who's tormenting
you, but he calls it tormentor.
Which is the same idea as Ezer Kenegdo,
it's like if you can
do work on yourself
and you can show up for yourself and you
can really heal
then you'll notice that the often times
that when a
wife, when a woman
is fighting a war against you, she's
fighting a war against the version of
you
that is not your ultimate version.
>> It's not the real version.
>> She sees, right? Bnei Yisrael, the woman
sees who you could be. They they have
this gift to be able to see
true masculinity, the power.
And they see it and they see you not
showing up to yourself. So they're
fighting a war
against the failed version of you.
It's a gift. They're not allowing you to
stay a failed version of you. If you can
see that, then you see the gift that
they're offering you every day, that
every time you show up and you're
complaining or you're you're acting in
your in your lower self and they're
fighting a war against that
they're actually
cornering you to grow up and to show up.
Then you don't have to feel so uh you
know, hurt by it.
>> And why do some of us want to be fixers?
We think that we'll fix the fix
everything. We'll take care of it.
Again
if you're if you're fixated on fixing,
it's probably projection. Which is uh
it's too hard to see my own problems, so
if I fix other people's problems, it
saves me from fixing my problems.
Um but that's not the only case where
men are but have a problem solvers and
we're we're we have that have
but um
learning to use it on ourself is a big
gift before others.
>> Yeah.
How can a person see a difference
from someone who is controlling
and dominant
to
strength and leadership? There's a fine
line between the two.
Because a man is supposed to have
strength and he's a leader
and he gives himself off this way. But
where is that fine line?
>> It's a good question.
Um
you know, they say in the polarity work
that when
a husband wants to
you know, take his wife out to dinner,
the masculine way is not to say, "Where
do you want to go?" but to say, "I
booked us a table at this restaurant.
Get your dress on. We're going." right?
So that's that's like a healthy version
of it. But I guess you can say the
controlling version of it would be like
the wife says, "I want to get pizza." Or
you know, let's say chicken and and the
guy's like, "No, no, no, we always do it
your way. Let's do it my way." Like
that's more like pushing. So
in these kind of situations, you're
asking a great question. It's really the
energy.
It's not about what the words are. It's
like, are you are you
trying to show up for somebody else or
are you trying to
stop somebody else from doing things cuz
you're afraid that if they do it,
they're going to do it the wrong way and
that's control cuz control's fear.
It's just fear.
>> The guy who controls has fear.
>> Fear.
>> Fear of?
>> Fear of his world falling apart if he
doesn't control. It starts from
childhood that when things fall apart,
the manager says, "Well, if you can stay
in control, you can protect yourself
from all of this from happening." So you
live a life of controlling everything
around you. It's just fear.
You're just afraid that something's
going to go wrong.
>> Right. So all these manipulators and all
these people, they isolate, they all the
tools that they have that they do
Um, to to do it's it's fear.
>> Fear.
>> It's fear.
>> Because you know why? There is only two
frequencies in the world.
>> Mhm.
>> The Torah says [clears throat] "Ahavny
Re'echa." There is nothing else other
than fear or love. Love is expansion.
>> Mhm.
>> Love is creation, and fear is death, and
fear is the shrinking of energy.
You can't be in in between. So,
if you're in love frequency, you're safe
and you're providing. And you're giving,
and you're producing, and you're being.
If you're in fear, you're trying to
survive,
which is a lack of bitachon. Right?
You're trying to
>> Right.
>> play God. You're trying to protect
yourself, and so you're living in in
fear energy, which just creates all the
things you said.
It's fear.
>> What can If someone is in fear mode,
can it look like love?
Yeah, as far as control.
>> Sure, it could look like love. Yeah,
absolutely.
Yeah, so for example, in a in a
in a relationship, you can be afraid of
losing it, so you just give love, give
love, give love, but you're really just
afraid, and then ends up not working out
because you end up controlling. You end
up pushing yourself, right? So, yeah,
that's what that way.
>> So, what is love? Explain love.
>> Love is life.
Life is love.
>> Yeah.
>> It's not a thing you have to get. It is
the the frequency, the reality.
>> But what is it? It says it's some sort
of a
a peace, some something something that
you can't describe. What what word would
you use?
Uh
>> Flow.
>> Yeah.
>> Flow, movement, like just is. What is is
love.
>> Yeah.
What is a peace? Is it Hashem first?
What is it?
>> Yeah, it's it's anything when you're
in truth, then you're in love frequency.
And when you're in fear, you're in
sinah. You're in you're in
>> Shechinah.
>> You're in Shechinah. You're in sinah.
You're in death. You're in Yeah.
>> So, with all you're saying that um you
have the key
for healing.
>> I don't know if I have the key for you.
>> No, but I mean to say you're practicing
um these things.
>> I I'll just say I learned
when I when I had to face my own avatar
self. When you know, you get married,
you have children, and you see like oh
all these things this version of
yourself that you thought can take you
to the end is it's it doesn't work.
>> work.
>> And you start to you know, you either go
into addiction and dissociation and
really unhealthy behaviors or you face
the music. You really
>> Right.
>> you really go into your body and thank
God I was blessed with
my own people that I found to help me
heal, to to guide me back in my body,
and to feel the pain and it's it's it's
it's it is it does seem to be
unbearable, but it is bearable.
And it it it's the pathway back into
self and um
beautiful things happen afterwards.
You're living like you call it again and
you're living in yourself. You're
flowing with love energy. You're safe.
You're not looking for anything outside
of yourself. You're just being. You're
trusting that Hashem put you in Hashem
in this world and you're allowing that
channel and that talent and that flow to
come into the world. You feel the the
pleasure of being a conduit for truth
and you're no longer living in all the
things that we we just spoke about. I
was able to
you know, I'm in the I'm still in the
process. So I think I never ending
process was able to get through that
like big big period of of sitting in the
pain. I try to just offer that to other
people, really, to invite them back into
to reality.
>> Now explain us how this healing looks
like. Like
what is
Give us a little glimpse of therapy what
it looks
where you can take a What does it mean
coming home?
>> So the nervous system kind of has this
lock
where it locks you out of yourself,
right? And when you try and come back
in, it throws like panic often times
panic attack to try and like kind of
block you from getting into the pain.
When people do real transformative
somatic healing, energy healing, it
often times looks like
a
like shaking and screaming and crying
and sweating and and
tremors and and sometimes, you know,
people fall on the floor and you know,
you hold them. It's it's real deep
energy moving through the body. It's
real stuff. It's not
>> it's because you speak to them? You
speak to their subconscious mind or
>> What what I try and do what I try and do
is create the safety in the nervous
system. So basically the sympathetic
state is like fear, threat, you're
you're feel that the pain inside of you
is threatening. The parasympathetic is
safe. So if you can get people into
their parasympathetic state during
healing, that they feel safe enough to
hold the pain and carry the pain. And
you also create the safety with them.
And um get it's like um
and Peter Levine talks about the the
animals that that they were they were
observed that when they go into trauma,
right afterwards, immediately after the
the danger goes away, when there's a
dangerous experience, they shake it off.
They literally they like you watch them
they do the shake and then they just go
back to like calm.
And he explains that humans don't do
that because we get
we get locked in the story that's still
happening.
So the work that we're doing, I call it
Gole healing. Right? That we now have in
the world. It's Gole healing. Right?
It's something that we now have that we
didn't have before. Moving from talk
therapy to body work, to body therapy.
This is
um
shaking off the trauma, shaking it out
of your body. And and we know that and
the Torah talks about Hasidus talks
about the body being very holy and the
body being like a base of mikdash and
the body being iker less of the love of
it. And so we're seeing that the work's
moving to the body to really clear it
out. And it holds and stores a lot of
trauma, but you can move it through.
>> Wow, it's it's amazing stuff. And how
does a person identify uh which parts
he's avoiding? So let's say you're in
the middle of working with that person
and and the person is on the floor.
What am I avoiding?
>> So
it's a great question. So IFS has its
own way of like finding parts and and
identifying parts and that works a lot
of times. But also a lot of times just
getting to that safety, going into your
body and just waiting and just inviting
and just saying, "Where does it hurt?"
Sometimes people will say my shoulders
are hurting me. Go deeper. What's What
do you feel? And it's like oh I'm I feel
this and you follow the energy of your
body and kind of just get in touch with
it. A lot of times it tells you.
The body's telling you it's own story.
It's like this is what I'm carrying and
I never let go of it.
>> Do you put him into some kind of
surrender first because the person is so
frozen bottled up? How does he surrender
to that mush? That he can
>> This is the beauty of understanding the
nervous system, neuroscience, polyvagal
theory, you know, understanding how the
nervous system works. You create safety
by me being safe in my own nervous
system first.
Go into that energy flow and we we kind
of mirror nervous systems and that
softens the body's protector
and then we go in. It doesn't always
work. People sometimes people need
uh breath work or other types of
modalities that are out there to to to
help them break through the walls, but
often times you don't even need that.
>> But it's surrender has a lot to do with
it because if a person is not used to
this
>> It's
scary. Scary stuff.
People are petrified to surrender
because you've told yourself for so many
years that if you stay hyper vigilant
and stay in control you're going to be
safe and now someone's saying let go.
Just go into just let go. You let go of
all that.
It's It's like
you know, I It's like walking off a
cliff and trusting that someone's going
to come catch you in a minute.
>> Yeah.
And um
how does it feel when a person comes
back and meets himself the first time?
>> I mean, I'll just tell you I had in the
rehab a story where a guy wasn't eating
and it was like a few days and he was so
nervous because uh
like the anniversary of of someone he
lost was coming up and he was just going
into panic and and trigger because he
he's he's afraid of feeling the pain
again.
And um
we did some real deep work and somatic
release and he came back. I went outside
into the cafeteria and he was just
eating. Like his appetite went
right back online. A lot of times the
things that people suffer with lack of
appetite, lack of lack of um
you know, libido, a lot a lot of these
lacks that our bodies have are really
trauma responses of basically being
dissociated. When you come back home,
everything comes back online. It's cool
to living. You're coming back alive. You
take You can hear a sound outside
something like, "Oh, the birds. I never
heard the birds before." Or you taste
food you're like, "I never tasted food
where I didn't realize I didn't see
you." A spouse can literally see their
spouse for the first time when they're
really like, "I never I really noticed
you were there I you were. I was only
living in my head, you know?"
>> So, people can live their lives for
years and and and and I don't know where
they live, but not here.
>> They live in the place they needed to
live in order not to live in their body.
And they'll stay there until they get
invited back in.
>> But, it's not It's not life. It's It's a
Life is a gift that uh not a lot of
people uh experience.
>> Yeah. Yeah. It's It's a not a lot of
You're not so
Yeah. Not a lot of people actually
experience life. And they're waiting for
Mashiach to come, so they'll they'll
finally be able to not realizing that
you can come into
Mashiach instead of Mashiach coming.
>> That is amazing. That is amazing. You
know, people always say, "I'm a human
being. I'm just a human."
What is a human being?
>> Okay, so now that's another whole talk,
but a human being is
is a nice story.
It's a story, you know.
>> We tell ourselves stories.
>> A human being is is the story that you
collected over from when your
consciousness went online of what your
limitations are. You create something
that's called a human being. It's all
lies.
I mean, I I shouldn't say it's all lies.
There are I mean, you you got to like
follow certain laws of nature to
survive, right?
But, those are just
to keep your body intact, but you're
You're a body. You're an infinite being
operating in a body, and you're both.
And as soon as you operate only as one
or the other, you're not a human being.
>> Right. Now, all these things that you're
describing over here is affecting every
part of your life.
Which means it will affect your
marriage.
>> Oh, yeah.
>> affect you in the business.
>> Yep.
>> It will affect your relationship with
the kids.
You know what's interesting is that they
say marriage
is not about, you know, receiving. It's
not about investigating what you want.
It is about
what are you willing to give in?
Does that make any sense?
>> It does, but I want to go even deeper. I
think marriage is about experiencing.
>> But the expectations that people have
from the other person.
>> Right. So, if you're experiencing
somebody else, then you get to
experience them. If you're trying to
take something from them to fill a void
in you,
>> That's where the problem begins.
>> then then then now that's back to the
Avatar codependency, and that's where
all the problems come from. But to
celebrate and experience someone's
existence is the most pleasurable thing.
>> Right. Because a person would ask, why
do I need to give in? Why do I need to
change to go against my grain? Because
this is what marriage is all about. Why
can't I just two people come together
and just like live life?
>> You can.
And it's not by giving in.
It's by each person
>> knowing who they are.
>> Knowing who they are, and and I hate to
say it. Apologize to all the men, but it
the masculine, the man creates that
safety for the woman to go into her
feminine.
And to be received.
And to receive and be received, and to
have that intimate experience.
>> Right.
>> It's the same thing with you and your
and your life.
>> Right.
>> To experience your life.
>> Right.
>> You have to be able to be present with
it.
Same concept.
>> What about the concept that people
personalities that people are saying,
this guy is a sensitive person.
The other one is not so sensitive.
Is there some truth to it, or everyone
has feelings and emotions? It's just
some people are not home.
>> I don't know if I have any proof for
what I'm about to say, but I do believe
that some children are born with more
sensitivity than they're more, you know,
they they do they do soak things in
more. They're more empathetic. They're,
you know, and maybe that's the way
Hashem created certain people to be able
to become healers and then different
things. But yeah, I think there's
um
but the fact that you're sensitive, I
think you could flip it. It's not so
much that therefore you need to be able
to have everyone around you treat you
better. I think it's that you're you're
you should look at that as a gift Hashem
gave you to be able to show up for
people because you were able to feel
more and that's your mission in this
world.
>> Use what Hashem gave you.
>> Yeah, you're sensitive, you're more in
touch versus when you're more rough, you
probably should become a general in the
army, you know, not necessarily a
therapist.
>> Do whatever you want to do with your
calling. Yeah, you're you're you look at
yourself like Hashem made me this way,
so
>> like I was very very sensitive. I always
felt everybody. I always felt that and I
used it I'm moving it to use it in the
career. If I was more, you know,
aggressive, I'd probably be in a more
aggressive uh
job.
>> Now, let me ask you something. If a
person is not home
and the person is is is, you know,
living in a in a in a freezer box, does
that um disconnect you spiritually
spiritually from Hashem?
>> There Yeah.
You your soul is Hashem.
>> Right.
>> So, when you're disconnected from
yourself and you your avatar self,
Hashem is this made up thing
because it's disconnected from you and
that's not truth.
>> Right.
>> As you as he calls in the Peter Levine
calls, as you thaw,
right? Take out you take your your
you're out of the freezer, you take
something out of the freezer and you
leave it, it starts to thaw. As you thaw
and your nervous system softens up and
you come back into your body, you become
one with your truth and usually that's
your spiritual truth and you feel it.
It's not something anymore you're
looking for people to convince you or
anything like that.
>> What is your deepest lesson that you
learned in your practice
from people
that that uh
overtook you?
>> I think the deepest lesson I learned,
especially in the rehab, when I would be
working with people that were like
uh you know, the the the most horrific
people done the most horrific crimes.
And I was shocked to see that they're
just an innocent child so broken.
And it really really spoke to me. It was
just like That doesn't mean
that that they don't need to
make good choices and they shouldn't be
charged for their crimes and maybe they
need to sit in prison for the rest of
their life and maybe even they need a
death sentence. I don't know, but either
way, it's it you see that really
everyone starts off
pure and innocent and a lot of times
pain
and horrible things that child children
go through can create a monster.
So so so like the Barbara Trevino always
said, don't just invest in building more
prisons, invest in educating children.
Don't just invest in how to
to to to take down criminals, which is
important, but go deeper. If we can if
we can get to the children and create
safety, we automatically get rid of all
those problems.
>> And that makes your work even more
important. What you saw over there that
you saw a child, you saw a person, a
human being
can stoop [snorts] so low and then on
the other hand how high
a person can be, you know, how you how
you can better yourself to a point that
you come to a certain level that makes
your your your your work so meaningful.
>> Yeah, it does. And um
yeah, I mean, the message I think
everyone
don't judge yourself so harshly.
Have compassion for yourself. And
instead of focusing all your energy on
on looking at your bad, look at your
innocence, look at your beauty.
And remember that you you you you have
purity and and go back and and hold
space for that.
And uh and move in that direction
instead of
feeling so terrible about the things you
did wrong and then that just creates
toxic energy with you and other people
and it doesn't really reward anybody in
the end.
>> Now, final question.
>> Mhm.
>> Who is your role model?
>> The Lubavitcher Rebbe.
>> Wow. How did he impact your life?
>> Um
I grew up uh in Canada. My parents were
sent on shlichus by the Rebbe and we
would go uh from when I was born a
couple times a year.
And uh I I didn't know it till many
times later, but he just
it it
you know, I I obviously didn't
understand as a child, but just the
Rebbe was a real tzaddik.
>> And how was his school? How was his
school?
>> did something to me. I don't know. Just
his energy transmitted his nervous
system. I don't know what it is. He just
He really left an imprint in me that
that um
that went so deep that even though after
his Gimel Tammuz, after he passed and I
was there
that day and my father walked me by his
body wrapped in a tallis on the floor
and I had the I remember that. I'll
never forget that. Just seeing the death
of of Superman. The death of everything
I believed to be true.
The death of of
>> [snorts]
>> of my savior, of someone who was going
to make my life okay and it just
shattered. Soon after that I um
I slowly like went off the derech and
like I I
I I went into avatar living from a lot
of other things, too.
But his impression upon me was so strong
that eventually just felt pulled back in
with the love. And eventually I studied.
I wanted to see and and as a therapist
and as a healer I'm shocked and blown
away at how everything that I'm
discovering it was already there. It's
all there, you know. And and and and
yeah, I'm a very open about being like a
crazy fan of the Rebbe.
>> Wow.
>> And and I'm open and people my clients
know. I bring him I I
>> You You bring in the
>> I share the Rebbe to everybody, you
know, the the the the energy that that
beautiful energy, that love energy, that
I like to say that Hashem sent the Rebbe
to this world
to give us
a hug.
>> Right.
>> Hashem's hug.
Hashem wanted to hug us, so he gave us a
physical hug. It's not like Hashem can't
come and hug us.
>> Right.
>> And the Rebbe came to give us all a hug
at the end of this long long journey of
golus, just unconditional love and hug.
>> In your work, in the somatic work or in
the other work with you doing, is do you
speak to your clients about Hashem? Are
you bringing in Hashem into
equation?
>> I I do sometimes. I I try not to look at
it in like a dogmatic way, like Hashem.
I try and bring them into I try and use
pesukim and different things. If they're
open to it, and if they're not, I
respect them, but
I I I ask, and oftentimes people are
like, "Yeah, please."
You know, or I'll share I'll share
chassidus and different things, yeah. If
they want it, but I'm not I don't
>> Because you were saying there was a time
that you were disconnected. Right.
Right. Right. But you were saying there
was a time that you were disconnected.
And at that time you didn't want to
hear, right? Um I didn't know what I was
trying to figure out
>> what I was trying to figure out
how everything that I mean, there's
another whole podcast, but I was try
I was trying to figure out I like how
all the hate and all the judgment, how
does that align with a loving source?
And so, I had this confusion, but I had
to find it on my own.
>> Yeah.
Wow, amazing amazing stuff you share
with us today, Shneur.
Uh you remind us that each
and every one of us has a story.
Everybody has a history.
Everybody
um has something in our lives that
shapes us. I hope you know that the
message
that you're taking away today is that
you're not alone.
There is help out there.
>> Yeah.
>> This is the most important thing, and
the human mind is not your enemy.
We have to know this.
Don't fight Don't fight your own your
own mind.
I want to thank you for your wisdom.
>> Thank you for having me.
>> I want to thank you for coming in and
sharing and the willingness to guide
people into into courage.
>> Yeah.
>> Thank you. Thank you so much for coming.
>> No problem.
>> Thank you.
>> Okay.