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I was at a staff meeting a few years ago
and we had a real problem in our school
which was strongly affecting our
teachers and it was a real problem and
it was my fault and the meeting was
called the two teachers were there
myself and the two other administrators
my bosses and uh the meeting was
progressing and it took two hours and we
literally went through every single time
that this problem reared its ugly head
and the effect that it had and we said
okay we're going to give it a one month
trial and then we're going and meet back
and see if it makes a difference. And
one teacher says, "Thank you." And the
other one says, "Thank you." But
>> hey guys, thank you for tuning in to our
new podcast, Permission to Believe.
We'll explore the real transformative
power of believing in people. I had a
conversation with Rabbi Zmi Kudan, a
world-class educator, and we explored
what it really means to believe in other
people, even when it's difficult, and
the real power that lies within our own
transformation, our own perspective
shift in how we view people. And I'm
super excited to share this with you.
Quick idea on the para that pertains to
the idea of believing in people. Mosha
Rabenu is rebuking the Jewish people.
Rashi tells us that he's rebuking the
people covertly. It's quiet. It's not
public.
These are the things that Moshe spoke. A
curious statement because when Hashem
had first called upon Moshe in to lead
the Jewish people, Moshe was hesitant.
And Mosha said,
"I'm not a man of words." And now it
says these are the words that he had
spoke. The explains that at first Mosa
didn't believe that his words would
resonate with the people that what he
would say to them would actually make a
difference. Would they actually listen
to them? Was he the type of person that
would be respected by people? Were these
the type of people that would respect
him? Moshe had his doubts, his
reservations, his hesitations. Yet at
the end he says
these are the words in the context of
his critique and the at some point 40
years later Moshe finally believed that
his words would actually resonate with
the people. What changed perhaps those
40 years of getting to know the Jewish
people? Not just diving right in and
sharing critique, but getting to know
them, getting to understand them,
earning their trust, truly believing in
them. And now that you truly believe in
them and care about them, and Mosha
demonstrated his care deeply for them.
Now that he truly cares about them and
truly believes in them, his words will
truly resonate.
Sometimes we have to share things that
are uncomfortable like moeru. Sometimes
we have to speak truth and truth isn't
always popular. But let's get to know
who we're talking to. Not just the truth
we're trying to propagate. The truth
that we're trying to share, but let's
get to know who we're sharing it with.
As the old saying goes, nobody cares how
much you know until they know how much
you care. Okay, enjoy the show.
>> Rabbi Kdan, thank you for joining us.
pleasure and a privilege and an honor.
>> Yeah. I I really appreciate you carving
time out of your busy camp day today.
Rabbi Kudan, you wear a lot of hats. At
least it seems like you wear a lot of
hats.
>> Yes.
>> One of your hats is camp. Another hat
that you wear that I'm personally
familiar with. Maybe we'll get into that
soon. Is your camp your your camp guru
hat. Besides being a camp director
locally, you're you're a I don't know,
is that the right word? I I trained
about 2,000 staff this summer. So, yeah.
>> Wow. At the same time or or
>> But you went you ran around you you were
where were you?
>> Well, we we have a lot of staff who take
online on ours.com platform. We have
staff that took live trainings uh over
Zoom and I went to a lot of camps as
well. I still have a few more that I'm
on the way to.
>> Okay. So, I'm I'm just trying to figure
out, at least for our listeners, who you
are. You have your camp hat, you have
your camp training, camp guru hat. Um,
>> I'm a principal of a school, Lamp
Plato's Jewish Academy in Oxnard.
>> Okay.
>> That's what I spend most of my time
during the year.
>> Okay.
>> And um
>> and you're a in Santa Barbara and Santa
Barbara.
>> I like that.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
>> The reason why I mentioned this is
because I remember calling you several
years ago when I was running a summer
camp. Uh I don't know if you remember
this call. I was trying to navigate a
certain situation I had with some uh
head counselors.
And you know, it's incredible what we do
in in the Kabad world and even beyond
the Kabad world. We take lazy young
girls or young boys and empower them in
situations that require a lot of
responsibility, a lot of faith, a lot of
trust and a lot of skill
>> and a lot of skill, right? And there was
something where I felt I don't know I
felt I felt stuck and maybe it was in my
head whatever it was. because I don't
want to give too many details online
here and I asked you for advice and you
said
something which really stuck with me
till now like and it's been several
years you said if you don't believe in
them you have no business hiring them
and if you do believe in them you have
every business trusting them
and I'm like whoa that is wild it it ch
it shifted everything right and I at the
time I was calling you or texting you,
whatever it was, and I'm thinking, "This
guy, how do you have the headsp space to
believe in people with everything that
you do?" I mean, you're wearing all
these hats. You're the principal of a
school. You're training counselors
worldwide. You're a schlak locally to a
to a and and community. And you're
running your own camp. And I had this
kind of epiphany and I I think you'll
agree with me that you're not wearing
all that many different hats. You're
really wearing one hat and using them
many different ways.
I think that as a of the Reb, we have
these
to amplify and to communicate and to be
the channel through which the Reb's
belief in every individual comes
through.
And I think that if you just watch
videos of the Reb interacting with
people at the dollar's line, every
person, the Reb believes in them more
than they believe in themselves. Like to
to to a fault almost. Like there's this
reformed rabbi out there's this this
clip of this reformed rabbi who walks in
and to the Reb and the Reb and he tells
the Reb like, "I'm a reformed rabbi."
Like he's trying to like, you know,
>> he's trying he's trying to let him know,
don't believe in me.
>> Right. Right. And the Reb without
missing a beat says, "And how are you
going to influence your congregation in
more and mitzvah?"
>> That is and it's it's incredible. In
other words, there this guy's trying to
say, "I'm not on your team." And the Reb
is like, "Well, how can you be more on
my team than you ever thought you could
be?" Because I believe that you could
have an impact in doing what I know is
important for the world and for you. And
I think that as it doesn't matter
exactly which role we're in, whether
we're the director of a staff member,
you know, a teenager who's came to
dedicate her summer or his summer to a,
you know, to be part of that mission and
that vision or if we're talking about a
camper or talking about a camp parent or
a school parent or a child in a school
or my own children, right? If I am the
Reb's
vehicle and ultimately Hashem's vehicle
to helping this child, then I have to
come with Hashem's belief in this child.
Hashem created this child. Hashem chose
me as their parent. Hashem chose me as
their principal. Hashem chose me as
their camp, whatever. And
and if Hashem believes in us, who am I
to get in the way?
Mhm. That
>> I remember the the ro saying to us in
yeshiva years ago, you think you can't,
God says you can. Who do you want me to
believe?
>> Exactly. Yeah.
>> So when you're watching that clip of the
reb and there's many more clips and
everything. I'm just using that as an
example. It's empowering, it's
inspiring, but then you have to go back
to your day and life gets busy and
there's a lot going on. Um, you wake up
in the morning and you, you know, you
got to hit the ground, you got to hit
the ground running with all of your
responsibilities as to your own family,
to your community, to the staff that you
train and everything.
>> How do you keep that inspiration with
you? Um, even, you know, when we're not
sitting at a podcast where it's
>> conducive to share that idea, but but
when all the pressures are hitting, how
do you keep that inspiration of my job
is to channel the Reb's faith in people?
So,
um I'm a big believer in exercise.
>> What type of exercise?
>> All types of exercise. Uh practicing.
And
>> okay,
>> you I if let's just use physical
exercise. If you do 20 push-ups once a
month, you're going to see very little
progress. And by the time you get past
the 10th push-up, you're going to be
struggling. But if you do five push-ups
a day, your strength, endurance, and
overall health is going to improve way
more than right because of the regular
and consistent progress. And I think
that's where in life we have to we we
need to lean into the
daily and consistent and neverending
commitment to keep practicing these
skills. And even if I mess up, which I
will because I'm a human being and I
forgot to eat breakfast or I didn't
drink enough water or my body's
deregulated or whatever it is, I didn't
get enough sleep. Even if I'm going to
mess up, I still need to pick myself up
and keep practicing. And like I always
tell people, there's only one way to
learn how to ride a bike,
>> riding a bike.
>> You we we could you could watch a 100
podcasts on how to ride a bike. You will
not get any better at it. So,
>> so I think that's what it's about, you
know, practicing the the tools that
allow you to express belief and
curiosity instead of expectation and
judgment. I think that's what it boils
down to.
>> And where do you personally derive these
tools from to practice? Like if I had
these tools and I'm willing to I'm
committed to practicing these tools, but
but where where do you I mean you gave
that example of that clip, which I think
is is a very clear example, but where I
don't think there's any right or wrong
answer necessarily. There could be
plenty of wrong answers, but but I'm
curious where where your go-to is.
>> Well, I I think over time, um I I' I've
always been fascinated since I was a
young child.
Uh, I've always been fascinated by how
people work and how I could better
service people and how I could better
communicate to children. I think we need
to
in our pursuit of excellence, we have to
find those simple tools that help us get
better at what our goals are. And I, you
know, as I was looking to and I was
preparing for the year after year of
being a counselor in camp and then as a
director and a head counselor and trying
to train my staff, I read a lot, I
learned a lot, I watched a lot, I
observed a lot. And even as a small
child, you know, I remember my ch my
father pointing out things to me as a
small child. Uh, you know, once there
was two people arguing in Schol and he's
like, "Listen to those two people
arguing." And I'm like I'm like okay.
And I'm like he's like which one is
listening to the other one? I'm like
neither. He's like aha.
I must have been nine 10 years old you
know. So I I've always been fascinated
by this. And you know I've learned that
number one if you have to
we have to exercise our muscle. We have
to believe in ourselves. We have to be
able to see the positive in ourselves.
We have to be able not only be able to,
but we have to consistently force
ourselves to look and acknowledge where
we're getting it right. Also, you know,
we talk about doing a
nephing
to process things. We do a great job
beating ourselves up and saying what we
did wrong every day. But we got to do a
much better job of also building those
mental pathways that allow us to see
ourselves in a positive light. Because
if I don't believe in myself, I'm going
to have a really hard time believing in
other people. Right? That's what the
Torah says. You love other people like
you love yourself. Well, if your
baseline is, I don't really trust
myself. I I usually mess up and I'm not
so good at this. Well, then how am I
ever going to reflect to other people a
belief in other people? So, I think
that's really an important tool. like
that's one space
>> that that resonates very deeply with me
personally as one of the big things I do
now is marriage counseling and one of
the questions I like to ask couples is
is because the first thing couples they
come in and their focus is on where
we're getting it wrong what's not
working which is what compelled them to
come in the first place and I I want to
figure out what is working and if I if I
say explicitly hey what's working
they're going to say nothing they're
frustrated at least at that moment um
but I always like to ask them. How did
you meet?
Because they decided to actually get
married. They decided to keep this going
and there is something that was working
at some point. Uh it may have been
decades ago or years ago, but it's still
there. And like you said, it's it's
neurology. It's path brains pathways to
the brain and it's you know the
spirituality
is is timeless.
Um if somebody is to take this challenge
and highlight the
to figure out what is working,
where would you say the first place they
should look is?
>> Uh so my daily exercise for my kam
muscle, my daily five push-ups is I
write down three things that I did well
every day.
>> Wow. So it's really concrete
>> and who else was helped. And I do it in
a log with a date on it. And even if I
miss a few days, it's okay. I try to be
as consistent as possible and what you
see is your brain starts to follow that
pathway. You could do it on a Google doc
or whatever or a list on your phone. But
your brain starts to see day 1, day 2,
day three, day 55, day 65, right? And
your brain, it really that is a daily
exercise that really helps me and I know
many others that do it as well. It
really helps to start over time. Again,
it's not you're not doing 50 push-ups
one day and then you're going to lose 30
pounds. That's not how it works. But
over time we start to build that other
option in the brain. There's not only
the highway that I mess up. There's also
a new road being formed where I do do I
do the right thing as well.
>> When you strengthen that kamaya muscle,
I love how you call it a muscle. Um I
don't know it it I connect with that.
But when you work on strengthening that
kam muscle, let's say over time getting
three things down that are that are
working. You write it down. It's
concrete.
What shift do you see in the outside of
yourself and other people as you're as
you're progressing internally?
>> Okay. And you know,
I don't know if we could ever point at
oh because I wrote down three things
yesterday. That's why I was able to see
the positive reason.
>> It's hard to quantify that. However, I
know that when I'm feeling good, I have
a lot more patience for other people.
Let's use a physical example. If I'm
hydrated, well, let's say if I'm
dehydrated, right, and someone steps on
my foot, I'm very likely to overreact,
right? Because my brain, my hypothalamus
thinks I'm dying, god forbid, because I
don't have enough water. Someone steps
on my foot, I think it's a lethal
attack. Get off my foot, you right? And
and right, I'm in that zone. But if I'm
hydrated and I'm calm and I slept well
and I ate breakfast and I'm doing good
and someone steps to my foot, I say
ouch. They say I'm sorry and I say it's
okay, right? And we keep going on life.
So I think it's the same thing with
interactions with other people. If I see
someone, you know, doing say someone
says something to me which I could find
obnoxious, annoying, frustrating,
angering, whatever. And I'm in a
If if someone says something to me which
I could find frustrating or annoying and
I am in a good place then I might choose
to
you know to you know to say tell me more
or what made you say that and and and
have that curiosity um which is one of
the tools that we want to have is that
the way to express belief in a person is
curiosity.
That that's how you know you believe in
someone is if you're being curious when
you see something's off, right? as
opposed to what what would the interest
>> so so expect well let's let's back up a
little bit then good
>> so if I expect you to come on time and
you come 12 minutes late what does that
say about you
>> about me that I'm late
>> yeah you're late and therefore you are
>> therefore I am irresponsible
>> irresponsible
>> or whatever label we put to it right
>> right so so if I expect something and
you miss that expectation you're a
failure whatever that that you failed
that expectation and therefore or
there's a judgment that comes along with
that.
So expectations lead to judgments.
Belief, if I believe you can come on
time because I know you you haven't
missed too many flights in your life,
you know,
>> you'd be
joking.
>> You can come on time. I I know you can
come on time. And then you're 12 minutes
late. Do I still believe you can come on
time? Of course I do. So instead of
judging you, I now become curious as to
what happened this morning.
[Music]
>> That that kind of softens the
confrontation as well.
>> Well, it's not a confrontation,
>> right?
>> So So I I I teach in my trainings three
curiosity openers, right? I could ask,
I'm wondering I'm wondering about this
morning, right? And I'm always allowed
to wonder. Uh, and so you might say, "Or
tell me about this morning." Oh, yeah.
It was terrible. My car broke and my
babysitter didn't show up and my kids
carpool uh cancelled and right. Okay.
So, you know, I'm going to come at that
conversation very differently then. You
know, I was playing solitire and I
really couldn't finish the game. You
know, I had to finish the game, right?
So, okay. And then, um, and the third
one is I need your help.
>> I need I need your help with something.
um I need your help with something which
is you know I need help with something
you know it's my responsibility to make
sure every kid is supervised in school
and when there's no teacher in the
morning and I don't even get a
notification about it I I you know I
didn't even know that there was a whole
classroom of kids not being supervised
um I need your help to make sure this
doesn't happen again and so then we're
on the same team right I need your help
so so those three openers are a way
great ways of expressing curiosity I'm
wondering tell me and I need your help
So we have practical tools of forcing
our brain to go into belief mode. It's
much easier to
believe that you to believe in the other
person when you have experience
believing in yourself.
>> In other words, once you've believed in
yourself, you know that belief is
possible.
>> Correct?
>> Right. You start to believe that people
people are capable. And we have you do
we we do mirror our relationship with
other people you know we do off of
ourselves
>> like the famous teaching of the BMP of
what what you say somebody else is in
mirror
>> um it it sounds like it takes a lot of
humility to apply that to somebody else
it because usually when it comes to
somebody else it it there's an
inconvenience attached to it
>> right or an offense attached to it.
Sometimes it's an emotion and maybe it's
not even a practical inconvenience.
Sometimes it's just an emotion attached
to it and to drop that and to be
curious.
>> So I I always ask my I always ask my
counselors in camp to raise their hand
if they know whose job it is to make the
kids quiet during davining.
And inevitably a bunch of first-time
counselors will raise their hand and
think that it's their job. And then I
asked them, I said, 'Well, are you able
to make them quiet?
And the answer is that even with duct
tape, you can't make them quiet.
I can make a lot of noise with duct tape
on my mouth, right? So,
you can't give responsibility without
authority, right? You can't I It can't
be my job to make a kid quiet if I can't
even do it. So, it has I think this can
be applied to everything. I don't have
the ability to make someone else upset.
>> I'm not in control of that that person's
feelings. This was a huge epiphany for
me when I learned that nobody else can
make me upset. That nobody else can make
me frustrated. And every time I'm
getting frustrated, it's my choice.
Even if it's a subconscious choice, even
if it was my choice to not drink enough
water that day,
>> right? Yeah. But but but but in that
truly I have the choice. And and I
always ask myself like if if a one if a
two-year-old would would have done the
same thing, would I have gotten upset?
If a 2-year-old would call me fat,
>> right?
>> Would I be offended?
>> Oh, you're such a kitty.
>> Which which you're saying to your point
that we can use discretion when to be
offended, when to not making it a
choice.
So, so your comment was that it takes a
lot of humility
to not get offended by other people. So,
what I learned is is that I actually am
never being offended by other people.
I'm always choosing to be offended
myself. That makes it a lot easier cuz
I'm in control,
>> right? And and now you have the autonomy
to choose believing in the person or
choose whatever it is.
>> I'll tell you a story. Okay, here's a
story. I was at a staff meeting a few
years ago and we had a real problem in
our school which was strongly affecting
two of our teachers and it was a real
problem and it was my fault or under my
responsibility to that that problem
happened and it was my job to make
changes to make sure it corrected and uh
the meeting was called. The two teachers
were there, myself and the two other
administrators, my bosses
uh were there as well and uh the meeting
was progressing and it took two hours
and we literally went through every
single example, every single time that
this problem reared its ugly head and
the effect that it had. And then the the
the teachers proposed solutions and we
wrote down the solutions and and we we
we we problem solved. We went through
all the problems and saw if every
problem had a solution and they did. And
we had this all written down, written
up. And we said, "Okay, we're going to
give it a one-mon trial and then we're
going to meet back and see if it makes a
difference." And one teacher says,
"Thank you." And the other one says,
"Thank you, but" and he stands up as
he's about to leave. He says, "But I
don't believe that you're actually this
is actually going to change anything. It
all sounds nice in theory, but I don't
actually believe you guys are actually
going to do this."
>> He didn't believe in the teacher or he
didn't believe in the sol. He didn't
believe in the staff or the solution.
me. This was well this was directed
towards me. Now
I have been practicing this skill of
curiosity instead of judgment, of belief
instead of expectation, of uh of being
able to look at everybody as a friend.
Imagine your best friend would say that
to you. Why would he do that? There's
obviously he's my friend, right? The Reb
says to live as if Msiah came already.
When Msiah comes, there's no conflict.
There's no there's no jealousy. There's
no strife. This is a this is a friend of
mine and he's saying something for me.
He's trying to help me. And what came
out of my mouth after lots of practice
was, "Thank you. I know you're only
saying that because you believe in our
relationship and you are trying to
challenge me and it worked. You have
just lit a fire under me. I'm going to
fight so hard to prove you wrong and to
make sure that this happens. Thank you."
>> Wow. And and my boss almost had a heart
attack.
>> He thought you were Did he take Did your
boss think you were serious?
>> Oh, I was serious.
>> No, I know. I know you were serious. I'm
just curious how
>> serious.
>> No, my boss
>> because most people wouldn't react that
way.
>> I mean, you sat down for a two or three
hour meeting and you tried to figure
>> and everybody would have been fine with
me getting offended. Everybody would
have understand why I would have been,
>> right? Everybody But okay. But but I
believe in people. I if I again let's
ask ourselves the question if was in the
room and somebody said that would he let
him would he would he let himself get
away with that. No, he would not allow
himself to be offended by that.
>> You You are on my team no matter what.
>> I believe in you and I do believe in
him. I really do believe in this and the
proof is in the pudding. Barakashem, the
next months and years have proven that
change did happen. Real change. And
the the the point is is that we choose
that's my point. We choose
He offended me. He didn't.
>> It It sounds like it's not just blocking
out the offense and trying to put your
guard up so you don't get offended. It
It's more than that. It's It's not even
relevant. Offend, not offend. There's a
challenge here. You're accepting it.
Like, it's it's not even a mechanism to
get offended, to not It sounds like the
way you're treating it, which I love, is
that the offend or not offend is not
even a relevant part of the equation.
It's because I get to choose that. So, I
would never choose that,
>> right?
>> I don't want to be offended.
>> You, in other words, you're not even
choosing to block out or tune out an
offense. The offense is not even there
because you wouldn't choose it. You're
not the type of person who would
internalize that.
>> Well, it's not coming from there,
>> right?
>> You can't block it out if it's not
coming
>> internally, right?
At that split second, you you made a
decision that you're going to
internalize that comment as a challenge,
as a motivation.
What is the what is the switch there in
terms of that interpretation or was it
just natural out of so much practice?
>> It's practice. So, so um friendship
mindset. Okay. And this is a lot of this
comes from Izzy Calman in his book
Bullies to Buddies, which if any of our
listeners uh want to order that, they
should get the Torah edition because
it's definitely has important stuff in
there. But um
that that idea that if I choose to treat
myself as a friend, the muscle, I also
can choose to treat other people like a
friend. And if everybody's my friend, no
one is can hurt me. So if you punch me
and I punch you back, we have a fight,
right? But if you punch me and I say,
"Wow, you are strong. That hurt."
And I give you a compliment. Is there a
fight?
>> No.
>> No. So
>> there's value there's strength, right?
>> Here's the here's the trick question.
Who starts the fight?
>> Right?
>> So we have always been taught as kids
that the first punch starts the fight.
>> But it's not true. The first punch is
awful. It's evil. Right? even lifting up
your hand against someone is called
evil. It's a terrible thing to do. Don't
do it. Don't punch people. But if
someone pudges you, you're the one who
gets to choose. Is this going to be a
fight or am I going to compliment this
guy and walk away?
And that power that we have is something
that I have really enjoyed getting to
use again and again and again. And I I
just It's so powerful. If someone You
can't And it works the other way also.
You can't chase me if I don't run away.
>> Wow. C Can you share with me? I I love
this. This is like No, this is real gold
because this is life-changing. It's
radical faith in people, which I I think
this world needs more of.
Um, I want to ask you for some stories,
but before we get there, before I
forget, what I'm curious about is you
mentioned the friendship mindset, and
I'm curious how that works for somebody
who's in a position of authority. And I
I know authority is a strong word, but
at least
at least uh at least on paper that but
your job is to be in a position of
authority to make decisions and to have
people follow those decisions as a camp
director, as a school principal, and you
could be friendly with people
and maybe you're going to end up being
friends with people, but at the end of
the day, you are the you are the final
call. You are the authority figure. And
for those of our listeners who are the
authority figure, how do you balance
having the friendship mindset while
being in the authority figure?
>> I think your Let me just clarify. I
think your question is, is there a risk
if I'm always treating my employees as a
friend that there's going to be some
blurred lines in our business
relationship?
>> Yeah.
>> Okay. So, it's a good question. Um I I
think the the friendship mindset is not
about becoming friends. It's about
choosing
to respond as a friend.
>> Okay. So it's an even not a not a not a
position
>> and and there is a specific response
that I respond. So if if my if my friend
comes into my office, if if if an
employee comes to office and says Rap,
you're not supporting me. You're not
doing your job. You're supposed to be
the principal here. I never see you. You
never observed my classroom. You're a
total loser. I hate you. You're you're
you're terrible. Right? So,
I'm not asking if they're my best friend
or not. I am asking, are they saying to
this in a friendly way, meaning that
they're trying to make the school
better, or are they saying to this to me
in order to create strife and division
amongst our staff?
>> And you're going to the former. I'm
going to choose the former because I
want to believe and I do believe that
every teacher in my school wants to have
the best school.
And I will actually respond with what I
call the five-step conversation,
which is I believe you want the best for
the school. I'm hearing you say
a problem and I'm also hearing you talk
about my role and the things that seem
to have really bothered you about the
way I'm behaving. Tell me more and I'll
listen more. I'll listen more when once
usually I state the belief they're able
to lean into that more themselves. They
talk about it. Yeah, but you're you're
not really coming. You you told me you
were to come last week. You didn't come.
And then I could say, well, imagine
imagine imagine I wasn't here for two
weeks
and you needed more support from me.
What would be your next step? I would
WhatsApp you. Okay. Right. Uh I would
Okay, great. So the first step is to
state the belief I have in the person.
The second step is to state without
emotion what I observed or heard. The
third step is to say tell me and listen.
The fourth step is to imagine Msiah is
already here
and it's a perfect world. And the fifth
step is to ask them for a solution. So,
um, can I tell another story?
>> Yeah. Yeah, please.
>> I first of all, before you tell your
story, I I just want to point out I I
love the application of that Msiah
mindset because it's it's literally
living Mashiach. If Mashiach was here,
things would be peaceful
and our conversation would be different.
I'd be pulling something different out
of you. You'd be pulling something
different out of me. You know, I saw
from the the Reb about we often see a as
a mechanism loving your fellow Jew as a
mechanism of fixing the past because the
basis was destroyed because of that. And
the Reb says it's also a mechanism of
living in the future because these
relationships are going to be the
obvious is going to be in the air and we
start living that reality now
>> and and the Reb is most recent right the
Reb says in little brackets in the 11th
chapter there that having this Msiah
mindset this frustration over Gulos and
this just being sick that Hashem is not
where he wants to be the way he wants to
be that brings out such a core
connection that we can actually have a
havoc even on a physical plane which in
Tanya it says that the only way to
really have true unity is to focus on
the soul but the Reb says that now now
as we are getting into the Msiah mindset
we can even do it in a physical way we
can even see someone's insult of my size
as a friendship unifying idea
>> so so you would say ju just so I
understand that that the reb His
intention
in obviously certainly in a physical way
from the from the perspective of the
body means in the context of not just
spiritual things but in the context of
of let's say a working relationship
>> the Reb spells it out. The Reb says that
>> yeah look in the it's a little bracket
says there
that yeah
the Reb says clearly that nowadays the
rules have changed. I mean it's
fascinating that the Reba after Tanya
was going for seven generations the Reb
changed the rule the for now for us now
for us now this is the best time to be
alive because we're bringing Msiah right
so this is an unbelievable opportunity
we have to be able to connect
>> going back to the exercises you were
talking about that's I mean that's
consistent with the Reb's idea of
opening up our eyes to the gula
>> of training ourselves to see something
that's already there
>> which is aka believing in
Yeah. I mean, wow. Without his belief.
Without his belief.
>> I mean, channeling Yeah. Channeling that
channeling that faith. What was that
story you were going to share?
>> So, kid comes over to me, says, "My
counselor hates me." Right. So,
uh, you know, my
staff members as a kid would have said,
"No, he doesn't. He just took you guys
out on a late night last night." Right.
Okay. So, right, but again, we we we've
been practicing, right? So, I said, tell
me more,
>> right? Curiosity.
>> In other words, you're not just
dismissing him and saying, you know, you
you're taking him seriously.
>> I'm curious. I'm curious. I believe that
this kid is a soldier of Hashem. He has
a piece of God within him. If he's
saying that his counselor hates him,
there's got to be something good that's
got to come out of this. So, I'm not
going to get into a fight with him, God
willing. That's the plan. So, tell me
more. So he says, he says, 'Well, it's
not my fault.
Everybody was doing it. It's not my
fault I have good aim. I said, ' Tell me
more about that.' He's like, 'Yeah,
everybody was spitting spitballs and
mine hit the counselor in the face. I
said, oh, okay. So, all right, now we
got the story, right? Curiosity pays off
a lot. So, uh, so I said, I, you know, I
believe that you have a lot of
self-control.
In fact, being able to shoot a spitball
across the room and hit someone in the
face, that itself takes a tremendous
amount of body awareness and
self-control.
I believe you could even control
yourself when everybody else isn't.
But I'm hearing that today you were
shooting spitballs.
Tell me more. Say, "Yeah, well, I could
control myself, but why should I?" I
said, "Well, you have great aim. You're
going to be speaking to me every day if
you shoot spitballs at the counselor,
right?" And and imagine that you're a
person that everybody knows, right? This
is the fifth the fourth step of that
five. Imagine you're the guy that
everybody knows that even when there's
chaos, even when everybody else is
losing it, you're a person who always
does the right thing. Imagine what type
of businessman, Shuliaak, counselor,
father you're going to be if you're
always if you're able to control
yourself and people know that about you.
I said, "I want to challenge you to come
over to me before the supper time
tonight and tell me a time that you
controlled yourself when other people
weren't."
Fine. Anyways, he marches off. Seven
minutes later comes running to me. Okay.
Everybody was making fun of and I
didn't. Okay. Bye. I got to go. And and
uh it's amazing what people will do when
someone believes in you.
>> Wow.
>> It's amazing. I I think one of the
incredible things about this story is
because you believed in him, what was
his motivation to exercise self-control
in contrast to a classical approach of
don't do that, you know, that's not
allowed. And you crack down and sirens
go off and hand out the citations or
else, right? That motivation is Rabbi
Zami is watching. Rabbi Kdan is watching
me. I better not do this. And the moment
you're not watching,
there's no longevity. There's there's no
over here. It sounds like you tapped
into his real interest and exercising
something you actually believed he
hadn't and got him to see it.
>> Yeah. And I mean, you know, if you want
a resource for that, uh,
Michael Brandwine
has an amazing book called Growing Great
Qualities in Kids, which is the basic
premise is is that as young children,
we're very good about teaching them
nouns. you know, we point, you know, you
know that Patty's phone, right? That's
how we teach them words. Um, and the
words that we often hear, or at least we
heard as young people when they were
teaching us words like respect, was,
"Hey, that's not respectful."
But they weren't actually pointing at
the respect. So he has a beautiful way
of educating us as parents and adults to
find children's
good midas, good attributes, good
behavior and point at it and say, "Hey,
I heard a thank you." That's respectful.
>> Interesting. So almost turning the verb
into a noun to make it more real.
>> Yeah.
>> More concrete.
>> And and and to be able to point at it.
Can Can we? And the more you do that,
the more the child sees themselves as
being
that thing. So, if you the more times
you you show a kid, hey, you just
cleaned up that puzzle. That was
helpful. Hey, you just uh brought the
napkin to the table. That was helpful.
Hey, you just did this. That was
helpful. They're going to start seeing
themselves as helpful. They have
evidence.
>> Wow.
Have you ever
>> No, that sounds incredible. Um
my my question is for those who are
listening to this and haven't reached
the levels that you've gone got to in
terms of having this language of faith
down so clearly. In other words, it's
not like you've memorized it's just
natural for you because it's the way
you're seeing things. Um for some of the
people watching this, they may, you
know, they're inspired by this and they
want to begin adapting this point of
view.
And I'm curious what advice you have for
them while they're still kind of in this
work in progress working on themselves
and trying to be able to believe in
people and be more curious and all that.
But again,
you have dec one might have decades and
decades of looking for problems and
trying to solve them or trying to cut
them down and trying to smash them down
instead of believing in the person
carrying the problem. What advice would
you have for that type of person?
>> Okay, three things. Number one, life's a
process, not a switch. You're not going
to get off of this podcast a changed
person and suddenly be great at this.
This is something that you will always
emit Hashem and myself included.
Hopefully, I will get better and better
at believing in people and at leaning
into that belief and bringing it out in
the other people. I want to continue to
grow in this area myself as that's
number one. Number two, write down three
things you did or said well every single
day and who else was helped in a log
with a date. And don't just think about
it, write it down. Because when you
write it down, your brain gets triple
the amount of process. It sees it, it
writes it, and it thinks it.
>> Interesting.
>> You're getting you're getting a lot of
input there. So do it. And it works with
your thumbs, too. And uh so
>> yes, it has the same impact.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Does it scientifically?
>> Well, yeah. You're you're doing
different.
I mean the fact that you have to confine
something to words you know I was
reading in
where he says in order for his in order
for meditation or contemplation to have
an emotional impact he says it has to be
his buis
doesn't have the same impact
>> right
>> and writing it down makes it concrete
you have to put it into very specific
words
>> yes absolutely so so that so first thing
is it's a process not a switch
>> okay I like that I like that uh
>> notice
Notice when you notice when you mess up
and say, "Okay, that's that's good. I'm
on this process. I I noticed it." That's
also good.
>> And then also noticing the times you
didn't mess up just because you did mess
up.
>> Yeah, of course. Of course. But even
when you mess up, you could write it
down as one of the time one of the
things you did well today is I realized
that I messed up so that I can use that
in the future. Okay. All right. Fine. So
that's that's number one. Number two is
to actually do the exercise of writing
down the three things you do well every
single day for the rest of your life so
that you can continue to always build
that self belief and self- loveve so
that you can reflect that on others. And
number three would be to practice saying
I'm wondering before you ask any child
or your spouse or
>> just the word I'm wondering.
>> Add the words I'm wondering before you
start. So instead of get out of my seat,
I'm wondering if you knew that was my
seat. Instead of can I have my seat
back, I'm wondering if I could have my
seat back. Just that one thing allows
for an open conversation. So the
so the other person could say the other
person could say, "Hey, I um I was
actually I was actually in that seat
first."
>> Wow.
>> Right.
So, so being able to um
being able to just that that one tool
I'm wondering just start saying
>> it's powerful. I mean it's it's simple
but
>> first time the first time I came up with
this I'm wondering thing was when I was
a head counselor in our overnight camp
our overnight camp the first year we did
it in our kabad house here and um and
our uh
our
staff and everybody was inside the tent
and we had gone from 10 campers to 35
campers like a week before camp. We were
not ready for it at all. I was the head
counselor by default. I get up there and
I'm about to give the three rules of
camp. Respect, listen the first time,
and be where you're meant to be. And as
I'm about to say the speech, I'm like,
not everybody knows how to say get out
of my seat respectfully.
>> People don't know what respect means.
>> They don't know how to do it. Like, how
do you say, I don't want to play this
stupid game respectfully or this game is
stupid? Like, how do you do that? And it
just hit me. I'm like, I'm wondering I'm
wondering if you could play something
else. I'm wondering if Right. I'm
wondering if if I could if if you could
sit somewhere else. That's my right.
>> So curiosity is almost code word for
respect.
>> Well, it's one of one of the ways of
being
>> I mean it's one of the ways to to to
express respect. Yeah. Interesting.
>> Right. Is to be curious instead of
judgmental, right? We would we would all
agree that judgmental is not respectful.
So what's the alternative? The
alternative is curiosive. So
as I said this out loud, we had four
older Bakarim who were amazing amazing
amazing guys. And they literally started
making fun of me the entire camp
experience. Rabbi Zi, I'm wondering when
the supper is going to be ready. Rabbi
Zi, I'm wondering if we can have extra
Laffy Taffies. Rabbi Zi, I'm wondering.
And it became this thing. And guess what
happened? The kids started doing it,
too. And it was so nice,
>> right? It's just more peaceful. I mean,
you saw it as ch they thought they were
making fun of you. You took it as
challenge. Accept it. Right.
>> Not even a challenge. It was so nice. It
was so nice. It was so nice to hear
people saying Rabbi Zi I'm wondering
where the lasagna is instead of Rabbi Zi
then five hours late for supper.
>> Wow that's powerful powerful.
>> So so yeah so that those are the three
things. It's a process. Write down three
things you do well every day and
practice I'm wondering that tool is is a
great a great intro to being curious.
>> That that is very helpful and very
concrete. If you were to attribute
your
I I don't want to say unique ability
because it's something everybody has,
but it's something that you really
practice and and empower others, but if
you were to attribute your ability to
believe in people in this concrete way
that you do, if you were to attribute it
to one thing, and maybe it isn't just
one thing, but if you were to attribute
it to one thing, if you were to choose
one, what would it be?
Well, I mean,
there are so many people who keep
believing in me even though I mess up.
Um,
you know, I know that the Reb believes
in me because I learned the Rebikas and
I, you know, that that's a knowledge
that I have, but you know, my parents,
my co-workers, uh, you know, my wife,
right? I so having someone believe in
you makes it very obvious how important
it is to believe in other people and I
don't know if everybody's lucky enough
to have people who believe in them but I
sure hope that the people that we
interact with at least have us.
>> I love that. I love that. Be be the
person uh you could be that person you
were missing. Um, I I got to believe
that there are a good amount of people
that have people believing in them, but
don't necessarily notice it or interpret
it that way. You have a lot of people
that believe in you. You've listed
several examples and you also interpret
it that way. Um, not everybody does. And
I'm curious what you might do and this
might benefit our listeners to be able
to notice the belief that people have in
you. But belief can come in different
languages and sometimes we don't
interpret it as a belief always. Uh but
you do.
>> Yeah. I I do think it goes back to the
same idea of if I'm self if I'm full of
self-doubt and you know self uh bashing
and I'm continuously looking at what I
did wrong and guilt and all that stuff
which is appropriate in its context. But
if that's all I'm doing is thinking
about all the mistakes I made, I think
that it is hard for me to
um
to look at other people as being also on
my side. Um I think that's really what
it boils down to. And I that we can
learn to love to to see ourselves
differently and you know obviously if
you need help mash therapist etc.
getting over guilt and getting self
forgiveness and learning self uh you
know worth and all that stuff is a skill
and it takes practice and it takes
practice and it takes practice and it
takes practice. It does not happen
automatically. It's not going to happen
in a minute. It's not going to happen in
a conversation or in a letter to
yourself, right? It's it's something
that you need to cultivate over time and
life is a process. I think I hope
everybody including myself will take an
extra step today.
>> Amazing. Amazing. It sounds like it all
boils down to knowing that that reality
is there and kind of training ourselves
to open our eyes a little bit more.
>> Similar to the Reb's idea of opening our
eyes to Msiah. It's it's there. It's
just
>> developing and it's developing the
muscle like you said.
>> I love it.
>> Yeah. Building the muscle. Yeah.
>> Amazing. Amazing. Well, Rabbi Kudan,
thank you so much for your time and for
your insight.
>> Absolutely.
>> And a privilege and an honor.
>> Thank you. We appreciate this.