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This this event itself is, uh,
a bit of an exercise in bitachon.
Because after such a, uh, busy Shabbos,
actually,
it's not just Shabbos Shabbos, which
was, baruch Hashem, very fruitful and
very busy, but since I arrived in
London,
we've been, uh, going from event to
event
for the past, uh, 3 days, 4 days.
And this is the last event here before I
head to the airport and head back to the
States.
And this point, you can hear my voice is
a little bit, uh,
a little bit hoarse.
So, this is like
This is the point where really
physically, probably, I don't have
anything left.
I'm pretty much done. I was pretty much
done once Shabbos
finished. So, you're saying, "Well, what
did I turn up for if I'm the guy who's
telling me
he's all done?" Like,
"I should have come yesterday before he
was all used up." But what I want to
explain to you is
I'm hearing my voice. You can really
hear it. I'm going to continue to sip
this hot coffee and hopefully it'll
loosen up my, uh,
my throat.
But what I want to assure you is that
since the success of anything
really doesn't depend
on our strength, but on Hashem's
strength. So, probably even better that
when I get to the point where I don't
think I have anything particularly left
of my own koach, that's probably
actually the best time because it means
I'm getting out of the way and we'll
just let
Hashem, uh,
deliver whatever he wants to deliver
through me and it'll be my zechus that
hopefully something I say will be
coherent. So,
And that's I'm the way, I don't say this
apologetically. I actually say this as a
way of life that you know, sometimes
it's actually good to put yourself into
an unmanageable situation where it is
clear that it's not
it's
that it's not possible that it's your
own prowess and your own strength
because your
your resources are tapped out and then
you can show up and be a vessel
and let Hashem be the one who does the
work and you just be the delivery
system, which is the healthiest way,
just to try to be a conduit. Usually ego
gets in the way
and we sort of
we think that Hashem's doing part and
we're doing part
but when you come to a point where
you've got nothing left, then you can't
make any mistake and the ego can't even
fool you to think that you're
part of the success and then that's when
you have the most success.
It actually um
reminds me of business advice
that Moshe Reichmann gave
at the end of his career, at the end of
his life. So he he built himself up from
nothing
a Holocaust survivor, built himself from
nothing to to
billions
and so they asked him what was the
secret to his success
and he said, "Well, the formula
really was
5% seichel, 95% mazel."
And they said, "And if you had to start
from scratch, from the very beginning
and do it all over again
would you do anything different?" He
said, "Yeah, the 5% seichel, I would
switch in also for mazel."
Meaning we think it's us, it's not us.
It's Hashem.
Moshe Reichmann called it mazel, you can
call it bracha, you can call it shefa,
you call it whatever you want to call
it, but the point is
we are just a delivery system.
Okay, so how do we be
a healthy delivery system
to allow
the brochos to enter
our lives.
Um
let's talk a little bit about
the perennial question that arises
when we speak about bitachon in the
context of parnassah, earning a living.
The perennial question is always
what is the proper balance
between bitachon and hishtadlus?
Bitachon meaning I rely on Hashem
and hishtadlus meaning I got to do the
work.
So, how much do you do
rely on Hashem and how much do you do
I put in the work?
So,
maybe we could just prop the door open
and it won't creak. That way people can
go and get more food. This The food is
outside by the way. So, if you haven't
had a chance to partake of the lovely uh
spread it's out there.
Okay, we'll just leave it open. It's
fine. Okay.
So,
Mhm?
Tell them come over here?
Maybe
just leave it up. Let's leave it. Put
Maybe put a chair there and just prop it
open
cuz it's it creaks every time people
come in and out. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Okay.
So, there there there's a story that is
uh
Great. There's a story that's well known
in uh Chabad circles
story about the fifth Chabad Rebbe, the
Rebbe Rashab.
There was a businessman, a Jewish
businessman back in Russia
and he he was fairly well-to-do.
And he made his living from
manufacturing. Specifically, he had a
factory
where they made rubber boots, galoshes.
And one Shabbos, he went to Lubavitch.
He spent Shabbos by the Rebbe Rashab.
And apparently, you know, like often is
the case with the owner of the business
even though it was Shabbos, he he had
his mind
on the business. Or he couldn't
completely let go of thoughts about
business.
And
when he came to the Rebbe Rashab, the
Rebbe Rashab comment comment commented
to him sort of to let him know that
he he sensed the fact that this
businessman had been preoccupied or at
least in the back of his mind had been
thinking harboring thoughts about
business even during Shabbos.
And as I mentioned, he had a galoshes
factory. So the Rebbe Rashab says to
this fellow, "This is very interesting.
I've seen many times in my life somebody
with his feet in his galoshes. It's my
first time I'm meeting somebody with his
head in his galoshes."
So what what It's it's cute. It's a
joke, but it's it's
not just a cute joke. It's very deep.
We know the concept
of Yegia Kapayich Kiseichel Asher Lo
Tayvoh Lach.
That you will eat from the toil of your
hands
and it'll be good for you. You'll be
happy.
So
what does it mean you'll eat from the
toil of your hands?
I mean, a very very literal reading of
this verse means that basically, you
should be a manual laborer. You'll eat
from the toil of your hands. You'll
literally make things with your hands.
So, you know, go out and be a a
carpenter, and that'll be good for you.
So, you know,
I don't know how many of us make our
living that way, but especially in
today's day and age when so many things
are automated and technology
and very few of us are actually in the
trades, you know, a plumber, a
carpenter, uh which are great jobs, by
the way, pay very, very well, but most
of us
probably make a living not through our
hands, but through our through our
heads. We're
thinking and we're answering questions
and we're
having to to deal with
planning and and execution. You know,
it's very cerebral. It's often very
cerebral work. So, what does it mean
that in order to really exercise
bitachon properly,
that it's supposed to be yegiya
kapayich, it's supposed to be toil of
your hands,
as opposed to toil of of of your head?
You You understand the question?
Everyone understands what we're saying?
Okay. So,
First of all, I highly recommend anybody
who hears anything today that peaks
their interest and they would like to
follow through with it,
and maybe um make a a kvius setup and
establish time for learning
a subject that will help you to have
more bitachon
in the workplace, I would highly
recommend the Maimer from Derech
Mitzvosecha. Derech Mitzvosecha is a
safer the Tzemach Tzedek, the third
Chabad Rebbe.
And specifically the maamar, if you
wouldn't know that this is about
bitachon and parnassah, you wouldn't
know to look there because the name of
the maamar is Tiglach l'Metzora, the
shaving of the the leper. And you would
never even think, "Oh, that's where it
has that subject." But I'm letting you
know that the source for a lot of these
ideas is in that maamar, and I would I
recommend that you would learn that
maamar, Tiglach l'Metzora from Derech
Mitzvosecha of the Tzemach Tzedek.
So, the Tzemach Tzedek explains
something like this.
He says
that when you want a bracha,
when you want to receive a blessing from
Hashem,
you have to have a kli. A kli means a
vessel.
Cuz the bracha can come down, but you if
you don't have anything to catch it, so
it doesn't help. So, you have to have a
a kli.
Now, what is this kli? What is this
vessel?
The bracha is spiritual energy, but you
want it to manifest down here on the
physical plane.
Correct, yeah? You want it to actually
translate as something tangible.
Show me the money, right? So, you don't
just want the bracha to remain spiritual
in in in in the higher worlds. You want
it to to come down here. All right. So,
if you want the bracha to come down
here, you have to prepare something down
here.
And that means something physical,
something tangible, something natural.
By natural, I mean not a miracle.
And that's the kli. The kli is the
hishtadlus. The kli is creating some
type of
natural means through which the
blessing can come down and be absorbed
and express itself in in the physical
plane.
So, there has to be some degree of
natural effort, non-miraculous effort.
You can't just tell Hashem,
"I want to wake up in the morning and go
davening and when I come home after
davening, I'm going to check my bank
account and there should be $100,000 in
there that I didn't even know where it's
coming. It just should should just
appear. I shouldn't have to have a
business, no plan, no deal, no nothing.
I I went to davening and come home, open
up the bank account, mysteriously
there's $100,000 there I didn't even
know about."
That's called a miracle.
What we need to do is establish some
type of a natural way, some type of a
normal way
where the
bracha can reach the world. So, that's
called the clee, that's called the
vessel.
So, you have to have some type of way of
making a living, whether it's a job,
gainful employment, or it's a
or it's a business, or or deals that
you're making, but there has to be some
natural way to make to make the money.
Or rather, there you don't make the
money with the deal, but there has to be
some natural way to explain how the
money got to you.
In other words, think about it like
this.
Since really
everything that Hashem gives us is a
miracle, but he doesn't want it to be a
miracle, has to be natural.
So, therefore, what's our job in our
histadlus?
To provide Hashem plausible deniability.
We're just giving him an alibi.
So, that if we should say, "Oh, it's all
miraculous." which we know it really is
miraculous, Hashem can always turn
around and say, "What do you mean it's
not miraculous? You see, you have a
business, that's how you made the
money." Now, we know that really that's
just the excuse, that's the smoke screen
to hide the miracle.
But that's how Hashem likes to operate,
plausible deniability. There should
always be a narrative if somebody asks,
or if you ask yourself, "How did this
money appear here?" Well, what do you
mean how did it appear? I have a
business, I did I made an investment, or
whatever. You see, there's a narrative
that's coherent, that makes sense, that
that could account for how this money
got here. But the whole thing is
plausible deniability.
So, therefore,
the Tzemach Tzedek explains,
there's a natural limit
to how much hishtadlus really is useful.
There's a natural limit. Cuz a lot of
times, it's like you're trying to you're
trying to figure it out. Where's the
balance? Where
Where's the limit? How much? Okay, he
says, it's a natural limit.
And that is
if what you're doing
on a natural level
is enough of an excuse or an explanation
of how you made this money, then that's
enough. In other words, he says, make a
budget. A lot of people don't realize
this. He says, figure out how much money
you need.
Or even how much money you want. Fine,
no problem.
You want to be rich, you can be rich. He
says, figure out how much money you want
to make. And now come up with a plan
that is
a rational plan. Meaning to say, you
can't say,
"I want to make a million dollars a
year,
and my plausible deniability, my
plea for that is going to be, I'm going
to stand at the freeway overpass and
sell oranges."
I don't know if they have an equivalent
to that in England.
In America, they have people standing at
the freeway overpass selling oranges.
You know, you pull up at the car and
then you give them cash, you give them
10 bucks, and they give you a bag of
oranges.
Yeah, they have something like that in
England?
What?
Oh, they just have a car.
They don't even sell the oranges. Okay.
Okay.
You know about the guy
who said,
"You know, if I would be Rothschild,
I'd be even richer than Rothschild."
Yeah, why would you be richer than
Rothschild?
"Cuz I would also do a little tutoring
on the side.
Make a few extra bucks. Okay.
So, if you want to make a million
dollars a year, let's say that's what
you want to make.
Be my guest, the Tzemach Tzedek says,
but you can't say that your plausible
deniability, which you're providing
Hashem, is that you're selling oranges
at the freeway overpass. It's just not
possible to make that amount of money
barring a miracle. Yeah, it could happen
miraculously. Somebody pulls up AND
SAYS, "I'LL GIVE ANYBODY A MILLION
DOLLARS FOR AN ORANGE right now."
My kingdom for a horse.
But,
that's a miracle. That's not happen. So,
the plausible deniability means
figure out a way
that
if everything goes well,
you could use this business or this
investment or this job as your excuse
so that Hashem can remain anonymous the
way he wants to remain anonymous.
So, if that's the case,
then really
the degree of hishtadlus
has a natural limit to it.
And once you reach that limit,
you're not gaining anything anymore.
The only purpose of the hishtadlus,
the the effort, it was never to generate
more money.
The effort doesn't generate more money.
It's the brachos, it's the blessings
from Hashem which generates money. And
the way that we receive those blessings
is through spiritual things.
It's by davening and learning,
mitzvahs, giving tzedakah, especially
giving tzedakah,
and especially giving tzedakah before
the money came in.
So, all of the spiritual things we do,
that's how we elicit the flow of bracha.
But, if we need a clee, we need a vessel
to
hold on to the bracha, okay. So, he's
telling us and that means some coherent
narrative that explains where this money
came from.
If that's the case,
then once you have something like that
in place,
you have a business which
theoretically, plausibly
could
make the amount of money that you're
trying to make.
So, then fine. So, then leave it alone.
But, it's not making that much yet. So,
that maybe I need to come up with a new
hop. I need to come up with a new
innovation. I have to think. I have to
plan.
That's not where you're going to
increase your income from.
So, the Tzemach Tzedek explains. He
says,
"Kaylim means vessels,
but also kaylim
in uh
in rabbinic
idiom, kaylim also means clothing.
Clothing are called kaylim. I guess cuz
like a container for your body.
So, he uses like uh sort of like uh
a metaphor or even you might even call
it a pun where he says, "Imagine a
person is wearing a suit.
Kaylim. The suit is called kaylim.
And um
he says, "You know, I really like this
suit. So, you know what I should do? I
should make it bigger.
I'll go to the tailor and I'll tell the
tailor, you know, give me the
quadruple extra large. You know,
increase it so that there's extra
there's extra fabric so that it'll be
even an even better suit."
The Tzemach Tzedek says, "Obviously that
that's not an intelligent thing to do
because it it exceeds its functionality
and it doesn't make it a better suit. It
actually Not only it doesn't make it a
better suit, it could cause it could
cause damage cuz now you have clothing
that's too big for you and you start
tripping on your robes.
So he says that's exactly the idea of
what he calls
um his chakmus yeseda.
That means putting your head in your
galoshes.
Thinking way too much, plotting,
scheming.
And by scheming by the way, I don't mean
Hashem Shalom
planning and doing anything wrong or
unethical.
Even if it's totally kosher stuff, but
it's just way too much mental energy. He
calls that excessive kaylum.
Overflowing robes that you're going to
trip on. So not only do you not gain
from it, but you lose.
You lose. You end up interfering with
the ability to receive the bracha.
And that's what it means yegia kapayim.
Yegia kapayim as opposed to yegia of the
moach or of the lev, working your mind
and your heart. It doesn't mean that you
have to be a manual laborer. It doesn't
mean you have to work in the trades. It
means you could use your mind to work. I
mean that's the way many of us work
today is that you sit behind a computer
screen and you read an email and you
think about how to answer it and you
send it and then somehow, you know,
money appears in the account at the end
of the day.
But
even when you're using your mind,
you're using your mind to execute the
basic tasks of the job.
You're not using your mind to stay awake
at night and to try to come up with new
ideas and innovations and overthinking
how you're going to create the plausible
deniability for Hashem so that the
miraculous bracha could reach you in a
way that you could always say is
natural. In other words, once you have a
system in place
that can be the vessel for receiving the
bracha,
you don't have to think anymore about
it. It's fine. Leave it alone.
Show up, do your job,
and
if you conduct yourself the way that you
need to conduct yourself, then whatever
vessel you have is sufficient
to to absorb the the brochos.
Okay.
Now,
I want to talk about something
that will help us also fine-tune the
hishtadlus,
which I think is not spoken about very
often, and actually I find
counterintuitive, or at at least I
initially found it counterintuitive.
So, I want to share this with you. When
we're talking about hishtadlus, we're
talking about the kayli, we're talking
about creating the deniable plausible
plausible deniability,
the natural means to receive the the the
blessings.
The question's like this.
Based on what I just explained,
then in theory, it absolutely does not
matter
what vessel you choose.
Because if the vessel is just plausible
deniability for Hashem, so what does it
matter? I'll I'll I'll invest in stocks,
I'll do some real estate, I'll
you know, well I'll I'll I'll I'll I'll
have a store, I'll sell stuff.
What difference does it make?
So, in theory,
if the whole concept
of having some type of job or some type
of investment or some type of business
is just to provide plausible deniability
for Hashem,
then in theory, it doesn't matter what
you choose. Just do anything. Who cares?
That's what your wife tells you, right?
Who cares? Just go, get a job,
doesn't matter.
Okay.
So, this is what I want to share with
you, which when I first learned it, it
it was it was surprising to me.
And that is in Shaar Habitachon,
Rabbeinu Bachya gives a martial
of the animal kingdom.
He says,
"Look at the animal kingdom,
and you'll see the different
creatures
are built
for different types of functioning."
He says, "Like, there's this bird, I
think it's a stork or a crane,
it's built its anatomy is designed in
such a way it's obvious that it is good
at swooping in and
grabbing fish.
So, how should it get its parnassah?
Obviously, it should swoop down and grab
fish. That's it. It's got it's got big
wings and it's got a big beak. Like,
that's what it's built for.
And then you have an animal like a like
a lion,
which clearly it's it's it's fast, it's
strong, it has these powerful claws and
sharp teeth.
So, how should it make its parnassah? It
should go catch fish and swoop in in the
lake and grab fish. No, clearly it's
built for going and jumping on a zebra.
That's what it's built for.
And so on and so forth.
So, the Shaar Habitachon says something,
like I said, it to me it was surprising.
He says, "A person should look at what
he is suited for."
Shaar Habitachon says this, and at first
to me it struck me as so like
antithetical to the idea of bitachon.
Bitachon means
the the parnassah is from Hashem, so
what does it matter? It's just all
brachas and we're just there to receive
it. But he actually says, "No, it does
matter." Why? Because if you have a
certain
if you're built a certain way. He says,
"Some people are are meant for for for
labor. Some people are meant for for
things that are more cerebral. Um,
some people are able to work these types
of hours, some people work those types
of hours, some people are good at
this skill or that skill. He says that
Hashem made you that way. And if Hashem
made you that way, then part of the
bitachon is actually going with that
flow and taking it as a sign from Hashem
that that's what you should be doing.
So, I don't think this is spoken about
very often. But you are supposed to be
aware of your natural tendencies and
your skills and play that up. Hashem
made you who you are for a reason.
So,
everybody has
things that they're good at. Everybody
does.
And if you can figure out how to use
that thing
to make a living, that's actually the
most
spiritually healthy way to go about it.
Is it surprising to you a little bit?
Cuz you would Yeah? Little bit cuz you
would think if you really have bitachon,
you shouldn't care what what way you
make your living. But he says, "No,
you should care and should do something
that you're suited for and that you like
and that's natural to you and that plays
upon your strengths."
So, you actually are allowed to say,
which again surprising to me, you're
allowed to say not only you're allowed
to say, you should say,
"No, I don't want that way of making a
living. I'm not suited for that. That's
not my thing.
Let me do something that I'm more
predisposed to."
And that actually is a bitachon
approach.
The lack of bitachon is Hashem Shalom
where the lack of bitachon comes in
is once you start doing that thing that
you're good at,
so then you start thinking that you have
to use the hishtakhlus you say that you
have to start overthinking and coming up
with new plans and new schemes and plots
when the reality is, look,
figure out what you're good at, figure
out how to monetize it, figure out how
to scale it so that
theoretically that thing can make the
amount of money that you figured out
that you need to make, and just go do
that.
And don't worry about the rest.
You following? Everyone's
Is this Is this it clear? We'll do a
little Q&A make sure that everything
made sense, but I just want to check in
with you this
so far makes sense what I'm saying.
Yeah? Okay.
Now, I want to talk about another aspect
of this which I kind of just alluded to
a moment ago,
which is scalability.
So, I said, you find the thing that
you're suited for,
go set it up, and go do it, and don't
stress about it anymore.
Don't overthink it. Just do it. Show up
for it. Provided that whatever it is,
remember I told you some dude says make
a budget, figure out how much you need
to make, provided that what you've set
up
it makes sense that that
whatever you have set up in place could
make that amount of money. Like, for
instance,
I mean I mean I made a joke when I'm
talking about a guy selling oranges by
the the freeway overpass, but let's say
you you earn a salary.
You're paid by somebody else.
And you say that you want to make a
million dollars a year.
I mean, unless you're like a CEO,
then I don't see really you're going to
make a million dollars salary a year.
Okay, so and that's fine, and you may
decide you don't need to make a million
dollars a year, but if you have a
certain amount that you feel that this
is what you would like to make, then the
claim that's put in place has to be
something that could make that amount.
Okay.
So,
this brings us to the whole question of
scale.
Scale means, okay, I'm doing it at this
level. It's making $100,000 a year, but
I would like to make a million dollars a
year. So, you got to scale it up.
Okay, so how do we scale it up?
So, here's the thing.
I want to just make sure that you
understand, first of all, that what I'm
talking to you right now,
yes, everything I'm saying is based on
my understanding of the holy texts.
So, I'm not making this up. It's not
just me telling you my uh my clever
thoughts. This is all grounded in
in in Torah and Chassidus.
But, I also do think at the same time, I
just want to like qualify myself
for whatever it's worth, cuz it may help
you to actually believe me, that I have
my own at least my own version of
personal experience in this in this
realm.
Okay? I'm not in business. I've never
been in business.
Um but, I've dealt with money. I've
dealt with
increasingly larger amounts of money.
Uh everyone knows, by the way, that
there's a charity campaign for Bais
Rivkah going on literally right now.
Yes?
Yes? Okay? And everybody gave already?
Okay?
Uh and you know, in Chicago, where I
grew up,
we're known for you know, corrupt
politics. So, the joke is
vote early, vote often.
So.
So, I just want to say, if you gave
already
to the Bais Rivkah
charity campaign,
give again. You can give again and give
again. Okay.
I'm mentioning this because
I I'm involved in fundraising. Yeah, I'm
not in business. It's a It's It's It is
a different world, business and
nonprofit, but
as far as what I'm about to talk to you
about about scalability, I think I do
have experience. Okay?
I've gone from having a budget which was
basically just my personal salary that I
needed plus a little bit extra expenses
to uh to keep a small operation running.
I've gone from that to within less than
10 years um having
a budget of
about $600,000 a year and having payroll
to meet and expenses um that I have
monthly expenses that I have to meet
where other people's salaries are
dependent on me.
And in the past 2 years alone, I've
raised I've raised I've other
uh revenue streams for the nonprofit,
but I've fundraised in the past 2 years
over a million dollars. And I've just
bought a property which uh was a big
deal for me. I'm just saying in addition
to my personal home, I bought a property
for for the organization. And so I I do
know a little bit about scalability.
Relatively speaking for a little guy
like me. So I know what it means to have
to
double and triple and quadruple and I
haven't yet 10x my original uh what I
was doing, but uh
you know, God willing.
So in 10x and 100x and 1,000x, there's
no really there's no limit because
Hashem is the one who's providing. So
you know, we scalability has no limit.
Okay.
But I want to talk about scale.
So you have the thing set in place that
you're suited for. It's and makes sense
that this is what you should be doing.
Don't do something that's not really
doesn't play to your strengths. So you
have that thing set up. It makes sense
that you should be the one doing it. Um
and now you have to figure out, okay,
how can this, on a natural level,
without any miracles, account for the
amount of money that I say I'm trying to
make?
So, that's where scale comes in.
It means I have a I have a model here,
but that model really only could explain
how $100,000 a year is showing up in my
bank. It doesn't It would not
sufficiently explain how a million
dollars is showing up in my bank. So,
how do I get this
this whatever I have in place, how do I
get that
from being a plausible deniability for
us I'm putting 100,000
in my bank to putting a million in my
bank?
And the answer is scale.
That whatever it is that you're doing,
do it more.
But, I want to explain something. When I
say do it more,
I do not mean think about it more.
To the contrary, think about it less.
You got something going, do it more.
His chakras you say to means you have
something good, but it's not enough. So,
now, even though you have something
that's working, you're staying up all
night trying to think about the next big
thing. What's the next big thing? Who
Who are you going to chase? And what's
the next opportunity? And you're
spending all that time, that precious
time in that giving away that precious
head space that really should be spent
for davening and for learning, and
you're thinking about
the tachbulas and how you how you're
going to
make the next big deal. It's not
appropriate. What is appropriate is
scale.
So,
if you can do it to this level,
double it. Do it to the Do it Do it Do
twice as much.
Now, in order to do twice as much,
it's going to you're going to you're
going to have to undertake a certain
amount of risk.
Cuz the more you're trying to make, the
more investment there is in that risk.
You know, sometimes it's actual literal
investment, so you're laying out money.
But, even if it's something where it's
buying and selling, so you have to take
on new employees. That's risk. Now I
have another salary to pay. Or maybe you
need to get a new property.
Cuz you maybe you're manufacturing. You
need a
need a new factory and you got to rent
that or you got to rent machines.
Anytime you want to scale,
there's risk because you got to put
money in in order to get more money out.
Scalability really should be the easiest
thing.
And that's why
there's a funny phenomenon which if
you'll think about it, you may observe
that it tends to be true, not always,
but people who you would least suspect
to really go to big numbers and you're
like, "How did that That guy is not
brilliant. How's he doing such big
numbers?"
That's precisely how he's doing such big
numbers.
Because scalability is about keeping it
simple and not getting
thrown off your game just because you've
added a zero.
So in a certain way, the more simple you
are,
the less of a genius you are,
the easier it's going to be.
There's an incredible
marrow
in the Gamorah in Bava Metzia.
The Gamorah in Bava Metzia says
um
that if a person
finds I'll just give you the background.
If a person finds two lost objects at
the same time
and one is his
and one is somebody else's and he can
only take one of the other,
so whose lost object should he recover?
So the Gamorah says he should recover
his own.
And he should let the other guy's lost
object go unclaimed.
Why should he do this? What's the What's
the the basis for this?
It's a possuk cuz the Torah says
"Efes ki lo yiheye ba'acha evyon." There
should not be among you, meaning among
the Jewish people, a pauper.
So, if there should not be among you a
pauper, what does that mean? It means
you should prevent a Jew from becoming
poor.
Who's the first easiest Jew for you to
prevent from becoming poor? Yourself.
So, you have only the ability to rescue
one object or the other. So, "Efes ki lo
yiheye ba'acha evyon" means make sure
you don't go broke by doing mitzvahs and
not recovering your own lost object.
But, then the Gemara continues
and says, "By the way, there's a
disclaimer here. There's a caveat."
Like everything, you know, it's true,
but then you got to read the fine print.
And it says,
"Kol hamkayem ba'atzmo kakh." Anybody
who does this, and by does this it means
somebody who like makes a habit of it,
of always looking out for himself first,
in the end it says, he's going to
actually become the evyon.
So, he was trying to prevent himself
from becoming the pauper, but through
this practice of trying to prevent
himself from becoming the evyon, from
becoming the pauper, ironically, he's
going to become the evyon. He's going to
become the pauper.
So,
how Why What's the explanation?
So, the Maggid of Mezeritch says like
this.
He says,
imagine a person
who's who's walking across a river
on a plank. He puts like a board
from one bank of the river to the other.
And he has to walk on this thin board
across this river.
So,
he may fall in because you know, it's
just this little thin board that's
crossing this river.
But if I'll take the same board, same
exact board, and put it on the ground,
and you tell him walk on it, walk along
the board on the ground,
he'll do it just fine. He's not going to
fall. He's not going to falter. He's not
going to trip. He'll just walk across
it, no problem.
So, the Talmud says,
it's all about your mental state.
That when you're afraid of falling, you
fall.
Cuz if you're going across the river,
the stakes of falling
are
are concerning. So, you're thinking
about it, and if you're thinking about,
"Oh, I don't want to fall." Then you do
fall. You put the same plank on the
ground, and there's really no stakes.
There's nothing really what if you fall?
So, big big deal. And once falling is
really no big deal, then you don't fall.
So, this is what he explains.
He says,
Taki de Gamorah says, at first, don't
allow yourself to become impoverished.
Recover your lost object.
But then the Gamorah says, "But if
you're always making sure to prevent
yourself from becoming poor, you will
become impoverished." He says, "Why is
that?" He says, "Because
somebody who's constantly trying to
prevent himself from becoming poor,
means that he's living in a state of
fear.
And the fear itself will bring the
poverty.
So, it's ironic. Like, I guess if he
does it once or twice, that it's okay.
But if it becomes a habit because he's
always insecure that he could become the
poor one.
So, then ironically, all of his efforts
to prevent himself from becoming poor
are actually a manifestation of fear,
which will then bring on the very thing
that he's trying to avoid. Just like the
person walking across the board, that
when it's on the ground, he has no
problem walking across it. When it's
across the river, all of a sudden he
starts falling because the fear causes
the falling.
So, what what
What do we understand from this?
What we understand from this
is that
when you're doing something
that doesn't feel like it's a big deal
if you fail at it
you'll actually succeed.
And when you're doing something that
feels like
if I mess this up it could wipe me out.
You know what it'll do to me? You know
how much it'll set me back if this
doesn't work?
If that's the attitude it actually
increases the chances, God forbid, that
that negative outcome is exactly what's
going to transpire.
So
bitachon
on a
on a psychological level means
that I'm able to do things that have
high stakes but I'm not afraid
because I know Hashem is the one who's
running the show and therefore
there's no there's no fear of falling.
And once there's no fear, then things
can go smoothly. Now
think about it like this.
Let's say
that you walk across the board
across the river
and you don't fear. You say, "You know
what? This is silly. It's the same board
whether it's on the ground or whether
it's across the river."
And you walk across the river.
Hooray, it works. I know how to do this.
I can do this. And now there's no more
fear. And now you actually you're pretty
proficient at it and you could
successfully do this. In other words,
what I mean in the nimshal is
there was a deal that you were afraid to
do because the stakes were high. You
were afraid of the risks. But then you
had the bitachon in Hashem and you went
and you did it without fear and it
worked.
You were like, "Oh, there's nothing to
fear." And once there's nothing to fear,
then you're able to do it again and
again and again with success.
But the problem is what happens when you
have to scale it up?
And they say, "No, hold on a second.
You're going to walk across the river
again?" "Oh, I can do that. I can walk
across" "No, no, no. We're going to take
the board and we're going to lift it
up."
And now you're walking 10 m off the
ground.
Oh, now this is scary again. This is
scary.
And what happens?
Then you because you're afraid of the
risk of falling, you actually increase
the probability of falling.
So,
scale is key
if you really want to hit the numbers
that you want to hit.
But the method for hitting those high
numbers, for adding those zeros,
is to make sure that you don't become
intimidated by those numbers.
So,
and this is something that I've
practiced in my own like I told you in
my own uh
capacity uh fundraising. And it's also
something I advised people who in the
business world who are dealing with
with uh large numbers.
My advice is always like this.
You are doing something you're suited
for. Like the stork is catching fish and
not trying to
jump on zebras. And the lion isn't
catching fish, the lion is catching
zebras, right? So, you've chosen
something you're good at. Whatever it
is.
This you're suited for this.
Don't be Don't be intimidated.
Just do it on a bigger scale.
I Doing it on a bigger scale means
there's bigger risk, there's bigger
investment, there's the higher stakes.
Who cares?
We rely on Hashem.
This thing works at this level, let it
work at this level.
It's the same principle.
And I've seen this repeatedly
as the formula for success.
Partially, I think why it's so effective
is because it does prevent a lot of his
Hakmas Yisrael. Because instead of
trying to reinvent yourself and come up
with something radically new and
different and the next big thing that
nobody thought of yet, don't be so don't
be so creative. Do the thing that
everybody thought of. Everybody knows
it. You know why? Cuz you're already
doing it. And now just scale it. Just do
more.
So it prevents these Hakmas Yisrael.
It prevents the overthinking.
Which itself makes sure that you don't
have the the oversized robes that you're
going to end up tripping on.
But but another reason
why I think that it's uh
such a life hack
is because
it respects the fact
that there is a certain
sanctity
in your line of work.
Having bitachon doesn't mean having
disdain for your line of work. And and
and and looking at it as this
necessary evil. Like, oh, if only I
could just sit and learn all day, but
never I have to go to this workplace.
It's not the proper attitude. I know
sometimes people assume that attitude
because they think it's holy.
It's not a holy attitude. Because what
it really means if you say that is that
the whole time that you're at the
workplace, you're admitting that it's
not holy. And then how do you think
you're going to behave over there? And
what do you think is going to be on your
mind over there?
So instead of saying
well, really I should be learning all
day, but never I have to go work.
All right, well, but but that the
reality is you're not learning all day.
You are working.
So, instead of looking at it as a
necessary evil or as a as a departure
from your from your connection to
Hashem,
there's a different way to look at it.
This itself is my connection to Hashem.
Hashem gave me a certain skill set. He
gave me certain opportunities, maybe
certain relationships. Whatever it is,
it's all practice. Hashem set it up. And
now by
using that
to make an honest living,
I'm actually respecting the fact that
Hashem made me a certain way and put me
in certain situations and gave me
certain opportunities.
I'm respecting the fact that I was built
for something. I'm suited for something.
And now I'm using that as my vessel to
receive a parnassah.
So, actually, when you look at what
you're already doing,
and you just scale it, you just add the
zero, and then add another zero,
what you're actually doing is you're
affirming the fact
that when you're going out and making a
living, you are expressing
a gift or you are manifesting a gift
that Hashem has given you.
There's nothing shameful about figuring
out what Hashem made you good at and
monetizing it.
Not only is it not shameful, it's it's
holy.
If Hashem didn't want you to go out and
monetize your talents, he would have
kept your soul in heaven,
and you could have just been basking in
in rays of of holiness,
and you don't have to worry about a
thing. Then in the midst of
you're getting sustained from from godly
light. You don't have to go down there
and make money and
have to be involved in the whole thing.
But the fact that you came down here,
and you were born at this time and this
place,
and this family, with these
opportunities, these challenges,
these strengths, these weaknesses, this
personality, whatever it is that you
were given, and within that, you work
with that, and you figure out, how does
one make a living with this?
That actually is a way of honoring
Hashem
and showing Hashem that you respect the
fact that he knows what he's doing when
he gave you the life that he gave you.
Now, I just want to talk about one more
uh
topic here,
which is
fear
that doing things the right way,
meaning the
Torah way,
is uh
is a handicap.
Meaning, if I didn't have the
restrictions
that Torah places on me,
maybe I could
I could do better.
So, obviously, I mean, when I say that,
you understand that that's
wrong-headed thinking.
Because if you understand that all of
our parnassah comes from Hashem, so how
could
violating Hashem's will
cause Hashem to give me more bracha?
And I you're going to say, but I see
people who violate Hashem's will, and
they've got plenty of bracha.
And uh I'll reiterate something that I
said at on Shabbos, Shabbos morning we
were learning a ma'amar,
and it was talking about how bracha, how
how blessings enter our lives. And
somebody asked a question, well, you see
people who they're not doing what
they're supposed to be doing, and it
seems like they have a lot of blessing.
And uh so, those who weren't here
learning the ma'amar on Shabbos morning,
so I'll repeat what I said, which is
that
having the money isn't necessarily
having a blessing.
A blessing means that
not just something's in your life,
but you're able to internalize it.
You know, think about like a glass of
water. If you're thirsty,
so you need to take the glass of water
and sip from it, so it goes into your
throat and it fills your cells.
And that's how you get the water.
But
if you don't put the water in your
mouth,
if you put the water you pour it on your
head.
So even if you have a whole bucket of
water, it doesn't help. Even if you have
a whole fire hose of water, and you're
being
squirted with with gallons and gallons
and gallons of water and it's all going
on around you, it's hitting you, but
it's not there's not one drop going in
your mouth, so that's not called having
water.
So there are people who have a lot of
money around them, but it's not
integrated within them. What What does
it mean it's not integrated within them?
It means it's not actually being spent
on anything that benefits them, that
enriches their lives or the or their
families' lives. The money is like sort
of like this fire hose of water that's
just all around you,
so there are the affectations of wealth,
you're surrounded by things, but it's
not in an internalized way where it's
nurturing you and bringing you greater
peace of mind.
And In fact, it could be bringing the
exact opposite, bringing more worry and
more anxiety.
So that that's just one thing to
understand about
having a lot of money in your life
doesn't necessarily mean that you've
integrated it and it's become something
that you're you're at peace with. It
doesn't mean that it's actually
improving your life, it could mean even
the opposite.
But
let's talk about the idea, okay, fine,
no problem.
I get this concept that not everybody
who has a lot of money is it necessarily
a brocha for them to have that money.
But at the by the same token
not having the money
is
don't tell me that that's the brocha. I
don't I don't have it.
I can understand someone does have it,
it's not a brocha for him, but don't
tell me not having it is a brocha for
me. I I need the money.
And I'm looking at this guy, he doesn't
play by the rules, and he has the money,
and I'm playing by the rules, I don't
have the money. Okay.
So
I'll tell you a story.
The story is like this.
There was a guy
who an Israeli guy
who grew up completely irreligious.
Um but he had one thing that he kept for
some reason. I don't know why this was
his thing.
But he never ate pork.
I mean, he would
he didn't keep kosher at all, but he
never ate pork.
And he was on a business trip to China.
And he he accidentally ate pork and he
found out about it later.
And he was very
upset about this.
So this Israeli
Jew, his name is Reb Ammi.
He
spoke to somebody about it, and they
told him to write to the Rebbe.
So he wrote to the Rebbe
and he said, "What should I do? I ate
pork." And the Rebbe gave him some type
type of a tikkun, and that's how they
established contact.
So later on
he um
he starts to become more interested in
Yiddishkeit.
I told you he was completely
unobservant, non-observant.
He had a retail store in Los Angeles, in
downtown LA.
Downtown LA has been developed a lot
since this story happened in the '80s.
But, uh
if you know if you know LA, downtown LA
was a interesting neighborhood. He had a
sporting goods store. Basically, he was
selling like sporting clothes, you know,
like tracksuits and stuff to uh
you know,
very like urban type of clientele. And
basically,
uh
99% of his business was on Saturday.
People come in and they would buy their,
you know, their sweatsuits and
that's that was his business.
So, he decided that he wants to start
keeping Shabbos,
which was a very new thing for him. It
was a big jump.
But,
he understood that if he's going to keep
Shabbos, he would close on on on
Saturday. That's 99% of his business.
So, there's really no way
that he's going to be able to to stay in
business if he makes this if he makes
this commitment.
But, at some point, it was just nagging
at him so much. He says, "You know what?
I got to do it either way. I got to
one way or another, I got to do it." The
only problem he had, he was ready to to
go under. The only problem he had
was that he had a 20-year lease on the
on the
store, which was like a a corner
property and a on a like a prominent
intersection in downtown LA. So, he had
leased out this very large retail space.
And he had a 20-year lease on it. In
fact, when he signed the 20-year lease,
the landlord said to him, "Do you know
what you're getting into? Like, don't
take a 20-year lease unless you want a
20-year lease." Obviously, it was a
better deal. The 20-year lease was a
better rate than, you know, shorter
lease, but the the landlord told him,
"Do not sign this 20-year lease unless
you really mean it because I promise
you, I'm not one to joke around. If you
ever think of breaking this lease, I
will chase you for the rest of the of
your life and make sure that you are
wiped out. And the guy, you know, was a
tough guy. He meant it. So, Reb Ammi
is sitting there with this dilemma.
I'm going to start keeping Shabbos.
That's 99% of my retail business is
Shabbos.
I'm going to go under. Okay, fine. So,
I'll go under. But, I have 20 years of a
lease. I got to pay for this huge
property with with this with this with
this enormous rent.
So, he said
he went around trying to find people who
wanted to buy the lease.
Nobody wanted it. Nobody would take it
over. He even told them, you know, I'll
continue to even pay part of it. Take
part of my lease. You know, take pay pay
a portion of it and I'll subsidize it
just so he can try to mitigate his loss.
Nobody wanted it. The people say, I we
don't need this type of, you know, this
retail property in this corner of this
intersection.
So,
he finally got to a point where he says,
you know, I'm going to write to the
Rebbe.
I'm making making the decision. I'm
writing to the Rebbe. It's very
interesting what he wrote to the Rebbe.
He wrote to the Rebbe, I'm making a
decision I'm keeping Shabbos. Store's
going to be closed on Shabbos. I'm
asking the Rebbe a brocha
I shouldn't get hurt.
That's what he wrote. I shouldn't get
hurt.
So, he wrote to the Rebbe.
The Rebbe wrote him back.
Very interesting. The Rebbe gave him
a $10 bill, a $5 bill, a $2 bill, and a
$1 bill. Total 18.
And the Rebbe told him,
"Close at shkiah, at sundown. This will
be a brocha
and you should give tzedakah."
Now,
something he didn't tell the Rebbe,
which was that when he made the
commitment he's going to close on
Saturdays, he only made a commitment to
close on Saturdays. He was not yet
thinking about Friday night. So, if it
would be the wintertime and Shabbos
comes in at 4:00,
but business hours are until 7:00, so
Friday night he would have stayed open.
It was just Saturdays he was going to be
closed. So, it was interesting that the
Rebbi wrote him back and said, "Closing
at shkiah, at sundown,
will be a bracha." So, then he
understood not only he has to be closed
on Saturday, he has to be closed on
Friday also, Friday night.
But the Rebbi told him it's going to be
a bracha.
So, after he gets the Rebbi's letter,
he marches down to the the landlord's
office. He gets himself all pumped up.
And um
he marches down there and he's ready to
give his speech. "I'm a Jew. I have to
keep Shabbos. There's nothing I can do
about it. This is So, it has to happen."
And he's all ready. He's rehearsed his
speech and he goes down to the
landlord's office. He tells the
secretary, "I need to see Mr. So-and-so.
I have to tell him something very
important."
And she says, "He's not here."
So, you know, a little anticlimactic.
He's not here. All right, so he got
himself all worked up and for nothing.
So, he goes back to his store.
Gets back to his store
and somebody comes in
and says,
"Who Who's the
Who runs this place?"
He says, "Me."
He says, "How How can I rent this
place?" He says, "What, you want to rent
this?" He says, "Yeah, I I want to rent
this property."
Wow, it's the answer to his dreams.
Yeah, he says, "Well, great. Go talk to
the landlord. The landlord will rent it
to you. Yeah."
He says, "No, no, no. I I I I was by the
landlord already
and he told me
that I have to speak to you.
He says, 'You're holding a 20-year
lease.'"
So, uh so Ami says,
"Yeah, I am holding a 20-year lease."
So, the guy says, "Well, then tell me,
how much do I have to pay you to break
it?"
So, now he's really his head is just
flying because not only a guy shows up
out of nowhere, nobody wanted this
lease. And now this guy is coming to him
saying he wants the lease, which Ami
would have paid somebody to take over
the lease. And now the guy is saying,
"How much do I have to pay you?"
So, he didn't even know a number to say.
He said he just He just stood there
dumbfounded.
Which
happened to work in his favor. If you
know the first rules of negotiation, is
don't be the first one to say a number,
right?
So, the guy says,
"Will such and such" I don't know the
number cuz Ami never publicly said the
number. I actually met him at the oil
and hadn't heard He told this story on
gem, my encounter, and then I saw him at
the oil and actually
he told me the story. He doesn't say the
number, but he says the guy says, "Will
such and such be enough?" And he said
the amount the guy was paying him just
to walk away from a building that he was
going to walk away from anyway. He said,
"I won't say the number,
but the amount of that check was enough
that I was able to then buy a factory
and to go into manufacturing, set my own
hours, be closed Shabbos, be closed Yom
Tov.
And
even after I had the factory, which gave
me parnossa for many years, I had enough
to also buy a house."
So,
I tell you the story first of all cuz
it's a great story. Second of all, like
I said, I met the guy at the oil and I
heard it from him uh from his own mouth.
When we do what Hashem wants us to do,
that's when miracles can happen.
When we're putting together
our cle,
there has to be plausible deniability.
It has to make sense in a natural way
that that could work, that could bring
in that amount of money.
But when it comes to following Hashem's
rules,
for that,
if Hashem has to make a miracle, he'll
also make a miracle. Why? Because that's
his business. He's the one who told you
that this is how you have to do
business, and now you're you're you're
following his rules, he'll have to
figure out a way. He'll have to figure
out a way to make it work. You're
putting it back in his court.
So, it's never a liability to follow
Hashem's rules. It's an asset because
what it essentially means is as much as
it was always up to Hashem all along,
now it's really up to him because
it's on you, Hashem. I I I I I I I I I I
I I
I'm doing this cuz this is what you're
telling me to do. You have to You have
to find a way that this should work for
me.
But never ever think,
and I've heard people speak this way,
that there's something
noble or holy in saying, "I'm going to
do what Hashem wants, and it's okay.
I'll take the hit. I'll suffer because I
I at least I did the right thing."
That's not the proper way to think about
it.
The proper way to think about it is like
this. Not that there's a trade-off that
by doing what Hashem wants, now I'm
going to have less success in the
material world. You only think about it
that way if you don't realize that your
success in the material world is
Hashem's success. Anytime Hashem gives
parnossa to a Yid who keeps Torah,
that's a kiddush Hashem. So, you think
you want the money? Hashem wants you to
have the money more than you want to
have the money.
So, if you realize that, then you don't
have to feel like, "Well, there's a
trade-off. I'll keep
I'll keep what Hashem wants me to keep,
whether it's Shabbos or it's choshen
mishpat or whatever it might be,
and and I'll I'll somehow suffer for
it." You don't suffer for it. What
happens is
that doing Hashem's will opens up the
tzinor. It opens up the pipeline so that
the bracha's can flow.
So, doing things the kosher way is not a
trade-off.
It actually is an asset that will allow
more miraculous bracha's into your into
your
into your life.
Okay.
So, I think what we'll do here
do a little Q&A.
And uh
Yeah, okay. So, what what do people want
to talk about?
Mhm.
In the back.
Yes.
See, what what are you asking?
Giving tzedakah when you don't yet have
the money?
And when you have it, both.
Right.
Yeah.
Give tzedakah?
Yeah, there's a charity campaign right
now.
Charity with a D, e.com/base
with an E, Gavriel.
Um that's right. And you can Which page
should we use? You don't care which
page. Just give.
Just give.
Yeah.
So, the question you're asking is is it
legitimate
if you want a lot of money,
but it's not necessarily for holy
purposes?
So, not for prohibited purposes,
but not specifically for holy purposes.
Well,
yes, but I think it's important to
define what holy purposes means.
Um
holy purposes doesn't only mean that
you're going to buy a more expensive
asset.
Like I mean, I need a million dollars so
I can buy a more Muhuda asset.
Well, that doesn't account for the
million.
Okay.
Yeah, he wants to buy a Rolls-Royce.
Okay.
So,
I remember
a guy came up to me once
and he asked me about buying a certain
car.
And I don't remember And the guy could
afford it. He He had plenty of money.
And he asked me,
"Is it okay to buy" and I forget which
car. It wasn't a Rolls-Royce, but it was
some other luxury car. He says, "Is it
okay to buy such and such?"
And I said, "Really, you know, it
depends on why do you want it?"
So, he says, "Because it's cool."
I said, "Well, I respect your honesty,
but the answer is you probably shouldn't
buy it."
And he looked like disappointed. He
didn't He didn't like my answer.
And I said to him, "By the way, you
realize there probably a hundred answers
you could have told me about why you
want to buy that luxury car, and I would
have told you you you probably should
buy it.
He says, "Oh, yeah? What are one of
those answers?" I want
There are legitimate reasons why a
person may want a luxury car.
There are legitimate reasons.
But you have to
redefine the whole way you look at life.
You know, the the
There's a story once um the Rebbe was
speaking at a farbrengen
about
one of his chassidim was on a radio
show,
and it was a call-in show, and somebody
asked the question,
"Why does Torah have prohibitions about
things that are totally your personal
business?
Like I understand things that are about
social justice, because that affects
others. But Torah has laws about like
Shabbos, like who does that hurt? You
walk into your own house, and you you
throw a twig into the oven, who does
that affect?
And that some of these things, there's
even harsh punishments for violation of
it." So they asked this guy, "Well, how
could it be there's these harsh
punishments?"
They actually they asked about the death
penalty. How could there be the death
penalty for things that doesn't even
harm anybody else? It's just something
private between you and God.
So the Rebbe said that the the chassid
answered, "Well, the truth is, they
rarely carried out the death penalty."
That's how he answered it. Once in 7
years, once in 70 years, different
opinions in the Gemara.
So the Rebbe actually said,
"He could have answered so much better.
Like instead of saying, 'Well, you're
right, but they didn't do it that
often.'
He could have said a much better
answer." And the Rebbe said he could
have based it on current events. That
week
there'd been a um,
a launch. It was actually,
um, I think it was a Soviet rocket, but
it was like a manned space launch.
And it was during the space race, you
know, during that era.
So,
the Rebbe said, "Everybody's thinking
about
astronauts.
And since I'm the forefront of people's
minds, this this this rabbi could have
answered like this.
A guy is trained by his government
to be able to go on a a flight into
space.
And he clearly he works for the
government, he has his job, he has his
mission, and he's going on a mission.
Now,
let's say he has a break, he has a
couple minutes to himself, and he's up
there in the in the space capsule,
and he says, "Oh, I got a couple minutes
break." Now, this is back in the '60s,
so
this is more normal back then. And he
says, "Oh, I want to take a cigarette
break." And he lights up a cigarette
there in the in the space capsule.
So, why not? He wasn't taking a break.
It's his 2 minutes, let him do it.
So, the Rebbe said, "Everybody will
understand that you can't light up a
cigarette in a space capsule. You're
going to jeopardize the safety of
everyone, you're going to
waste all of the resources that were put
into this mission. Not allowed to do
that."
And everyone will understand that.
So, the Rebbe said, "The same thing with
life itself.
That there's no such thing as, 'Oh, I'm
on my own time now. This is my personal
business. What does anybody care what I
do? It's just just me, it's just
private.' There's no such thing.
You're you were sent here on a mission,
and therefore, everything affects the
mission.
Everything affects the mission.
Now,
you can take this concept to explain
why Torah cares about how you spend your
personal time, and you could understand
a little bit more why we have certain
restrictions. And that's one way of
understanding the story, which is surely
correct. But I also want to point out
that this you can extrapolate from this
story or from this explanation of this
story
that it also explains to us
the sanctity of what we consider to be
our mundane lives.
That if you are on a mission
and you understand that everything you
do in this life is a mission.
Now all of a sudden everything is a
business expense, isn't it?
And who are you working for?
You're working for Hashem.
So if you truly see your life, all of
your life, not just when you come to
shul and daven.
Not just when you come to a shear and
you learn, but you see your entire life
as service of Hashem. Now everything's a
business expense, which he has to pay
for.
So there are plenty of reasons you could
tell me why in order to do your job here
in the world that your soul was sent to
a body to do, that you could do that job
better with a Rolls-Royce.
I personally don't need one.
But I could see why some people might
and maybe you're one of the people who
could make use of a Rolls-Royce. And if
there is a legitimate way that you could
make use of it in order to do your job
better
then
don't be ashamed of it.
Think factor it into the budget and and
make it make your list. This is what
this is how much money you have to net
this year.
And then go look at your
at your cle
and make sure that that cle provides
plausible deniability to have enough
money
to procure the things that that need to
be in your life in order to do your job.
It's not selfish. It's not indulgent.
It's about being a good employee.
If you needed a faster computer at work
and you have to ask the boss, could you
replace my computer? Is that being
selfish or is that being a good
employee?
So, anything you can do
to uh especially, by the way, to invest
in yourself to save time because time is
so precious.
Anything you can do
Actually, I heard
a great thought from uh
I think it was Mark Cuban who said
that, you know, he's got tons of money.
He could buy whatever he wants. So, he
says,
"When I'm spending money though, you
know, it has to have value to me." So,
he says, "What do I spend it on?"
He says, "I spend it on a private jet."
Why do I spend it on a private jet?
Because that could seem very indulgent.
Private jet, you got to fly private. He
says, "No, I fly private because
it's time.
You don't have to deal with airports.
You don't have to wait. You do it on
your schedule. You need to go 3:00 in
the morning, you go 3:00 in the
morning." So, he says, "If it frees up
my time and I have the money for it,
it's totally worth the expense."
So, anything that streamlines your day,
anything that will make your life more
efficient
or your families' lives more efficient
is is a very justifiable expense.
So, I don't know if the Rolls-Royce is
necessary if you'll be able to like
shave 5 minutes off of carpool time in
the morning by having a Rolls-Royce or
not. But, if in theory, that's what it
would have it would allow you to do,
so then, you know, you could dive into
the extra 5 minutes chakras before you
have to go home and get the kids because
now carpool takes 5 minutes less because
you have the right car for it, then
that's a very legitimate expense.
Will you stick around for a bit if
people want to have a quick chat?
Yeah, I will stick around.
One more question.
One more question. Okay.
Sorry, you you spoke mainly about the
concept of becoming
and helping people in finance and
getting wealthy.
My personal experience, which is based
on my Luna, was through myself.
And and that is not the
Yeah, so he mentions about ma'aser by
giving a tenth of your income as being
an important way of
bringing blessings into your life. Which
it most certainly is.
So, I can repeat what you said. Um, but
if you you ask me to to enhance it, I
can add something to it as well.
And that is
that there is something not only
to giving a tenth of your
earnings
in order to bring
more blessing.
But there's actually a concept of
projected ma'aser.
Um
Yitzchak Avinu is the one our forefather
Isaac is the one who started the mitzvah
of ma'aser.
He talks about his crop that he
he gathered uh he planted his crop
and he collected mea shorim. He
collected a hundred measures, hundred
times what he should have collected.
So
Rashi actually asks
how did he know it was a hundred times
what he should have collected? Like what
number was he is a hundred times what?
What number was he beginning with?
So Rashi says well, he projected
the the crop the crop that hadn't yet
come in
for the sake of ma'aser.
So that's how he knew cuz he was going
to give his tithe. So he knew how much
was supposed to come in and what came in
a hundred times what was supposed to
come in.
That's what Rashi says. That's what
Rashi in Homish.
Which every five-year-old reads.
The Rebbe says something very
interesting, which is, hold on a second,
that doesn't really make sense, because
maaser you give after the crop comes in.
So, why did he know the calculation for
the purposes of maaser before the crop
came in?
The Rebbe says this is the concept of
projected maaser.
That sometimes you give a tenth not of
what you made.
And this is not the halacha, by the way.
But this this is a an exercise of
bitachon.
That you give maaser of what you would
like to make.
And then Hashem backs you up and makes
it true.
And you can do that at
charity.com/basicverizon.
Thank you very much, Rabbi Taub.
Yeah, I'll tell you something.