Friday, April 15, 2011

The miracle of a new perspective

The Talmud says that a person is only allowed to permanently dwell in Israel through hardships.[1]  And that makes sense for nothing great comes easily.  That teaching echoed over and over again on our quest to receive keys for a new apartment.  Without going into details, we- my sister, brother-in-law, mother and I- ended up in Tel Aviv in an attempt to negotiate with the opposing lawyer on why charging us interest payments for our apartment had no merit.  We sat in a small office brimming with large black files that overlooked the less than spectacular Tel Aviv skyline.  The callous lawyer was dressed casually in a black polo and jeans, and had a smooth scalp pockmarked by tiny hair implants- not a good sign.  He glibly defended his company’s actions to extort interest payments from us thereby forfeiting any trace of human decency.  But no matter, this is how these things go.  But I wondered, ‘what would it take for a person like that to change’?  Nothing short of a miracle and that is exactly what Passover is all about.[2]
             Leaving Egypt is the foundation for all of Judaism. We mention it day and night, each and every day.  It serves as the source for many of our mitzvoth and major holidays.  Even the Holy Sabbath is kept because we left Egypt.  While we may think that the major miracles were what accords importance to the exodus, but that is not our focus on a daily basis and these miracles are not what obligates us to keep Shabbat or Succot.  It is the exodus itself that forms the crux of nearly all of Judasim.  Which begs the question, what was so incredible about the exodus itself, taking one nation out from a different nation? 
            Realize that the Jewish nation was not bonded only physically, but spiritually as well.  This we see from the verse when G-d spoke to Abraham at the covenant, ‘Know surely that your children shall be a stranger in a land that is not theirs, and they will enslave them and afflict them for four hundred years.”[3]  This extra language of affliction goes beyond physical enslavement, but to spiritual torture.  The Hebrews were about to lose their heritage and their unique perspective on life as they assimilated to the Egyptian culture.  Just prior to their complete spiritual damnation, the exodus happened.  In a matter of days, the Hebrews changed their perspective, and recaptured their spiritual heritage.  To reorient ones values and to change perspectives from those that surround us is a greater miracle that splitting seas and a multitude of frogs.  Therefore, whenever we have a moment of clarity in our lives and see a new perspective, we are experiencing a miracle of the highest order and it can be the greatest source of joy and gratitude.


[1] See Berachos 5a
[2] The following is an idea from Gevuros Hashem Chapter three from the Maharal
[3] Genesis 15:13

Friday, April 8, 2011

Dealing with the Miraculous

                 It is not because my mother arrived in the middle of the night, three hours before my tiny nephew met life, in order to give him a proper welcome that this is such a miraculous time. Rather, we have entered the month of Nissan, the month whose name is ‘Nes’ or miracle.  The month’s name reflects the main event of the month, Seder night.  On this night, we will recount the miraculous plagues that befell the Egyptians and culminated in the splitting of the Sea.  But, long before Seder night, we all have to ask ourselves, do we even believe in miracles, particularly of that nature?  
            There are three groups of people that exist.  In group one are the believers.  Rooted in their strong faith, they don’t feel the need to rationalize miracles.  Since G-d’s existence is obvious, and G-d’s power is infinite, open miracles are a natural outgrowth of such a set up. Human beings are too limited to grasp the workings of the miraculous, so there is no need to delve into it beyond the knowledge that it exists. 
Group two is made up of philosophers and scientists. They believe the world is eternal and there is only nature, therefore, the mention of the miraculous is ludicrous.  Or there is a Divine force, a first cause, who set up a world of nature and no longer interferes.  Either way they are comfortable putting the Haggadah on the book shelf next to Harry Potter. 
The final group consists of the people who are open to the idea of the miraculous but need a rational foothold in order to get them over the hump. This is where many of us sit on Seder night- uncomfortable that we recount the miracles as fact, yet intrigued at the possibility that this all happened.  Now within this group, there are yet two approaches.  One approach is to couch the miracles entirely within the spectrum of nature.  Yes, they did happen, but entirely through nature.  The miracle was that all of these natural forces coincided at one time and on one nation.  The other group does not go that far in rationalizing the miracle, but has a deep interest into understanding how the miracle fit into the spiritual mechanics of the world.
For the scientist who denies a spiritual reality, there is little point to celebrating Pesach.  The main idea of the holiday is to teach us about G-d’s involvement in worldly affairs.  For them, not only is G-d not involved in our world, but who says there is a G-d?!  But, for the majority of us, who do believe in a G-d, but have been raised in a world of scientists, it pains us to let go of the natural.  However, to try and mold the plagues to our limited rationality is a mistake.  Firstly, to try and explain even the simplest of miracles naturally is impossible.  How an inert stick can transform into a live snake and then revert back is beyond any science experiment.  Therefore, we have to explain away the majority of what happened as fabrication.  Or, if we somehow do rationalize every miracle, then we create an impotent holiday.
The easiest thing to do is to realize an important point.  If we believe in a G-d, then we also believe that there exists a world that is beyond the physical.  Now, according to that world that is beyond the physical, these miracles are not miracles at all, but proceed according to the rules and regulations of that world[1].  Because the world of open spirituality has largely been sealed off since the times of the first temple, we don’t have  experience with this world.  However, subtle hints to the existence of such a world appear everywhere, from the power of consciousness to the power of my mother making it three hours before her grandchild’s birth as well as the birth itself.  With that knowledge in hand, we can be open to the idea that this spiritual world revealed itself more openly to a different generation, and we can read about the miracles comfortable with the idea that they happened. 


[1] See introduction to Gevuros Hashem, Maharal

Friday, March 25, 2011

Wrong place at the right time!



            At a few minutes before three o’clock on a blustery Wednesday afternoon, I faced a significant climb to the top of the Bayit Ve’Gan neighborhood on my bike. As I was about to cross the large intersection next to the Sha’arei Tzedek hospital and begin my ascent, two ambulances screeched past me, and they were in a hurry.  You see one ambulance and you hope it is going to bring life into the world at a labor, but you see two ambulances, especially here in Israel, and the mind starts to wander and wonder, did something happen?   Given the relative calm in recent years within the city limits, though, the wondering stopped and I began my ascent.  I was already late for my afternoon studies, as I was supposed to catch the three o’clock bus from across the bus station back to Telstone, but I still had one errand left.
            After an arduous climb, I reached for my phone to call my wife for directions, and I saw I had three missed calls.  Strange given that I had just spoken to both my wife and sister, so who could have called?  I checked, and my wife had called an uncharacteristic amount of times. My mind began to make the connection with the two ambulances I had just seen.  But it was only confirmed when I tried to call her back.  The phones were congested; there had been a terrorist attack.  When I finally got through to her and found out that the attack had occurred next to the Telstone bus stop, my heart sank, then rose, and then sank again- I had been spared, but what about others?
            From the top of Bayit Ve’gan, the panorama of Jerusalem is among the best in the city.  On a day of late winter rains, the clouds began to disperse and the sun began to pierce the dull gray.  The dichotomy of rain and terrorism, open love[1] and G
-d’s hiding.  These are two ways that G-d relates to us, and these change over time.
            It is a well known idea in Judaism that time does not pass before us, rather we pass before time.  What is the difference?  As indicated by the word time in Hebrew, zman,
זמן- time is an invitation, an appointment.[2]  Anyone who has said the after-meal blessing, it is customary to have an introduction when there are three men present to invite everyone to bless together, and this is called a ‘zimun’.  Since time is an invitation, it indicates that there is a specific event that needs to happen at that time and at no other time, and presumably, the conditions are right for that event to take place. If it is not the right time, then failure is likely. 
            Most generally, time is influenced by a spiritual flow of mercy, rachamim, or a flow of din, strict justice.  Depending on the time, we need to shape our approach to spiritual work because at certain times, things will be easier to accomplish and at other times it will be nearly impossible to grow in certain areas.  Why did G-d set up the world this way with a relationship that is constantly changing?  It is to ensure that free-will is maintained.  If we always lived at a time of mercy, then we would grow spiritually to such a degree that there would no longer be any spiritual tests.  And if G-d always hid from us, then we would all eventually lose hope.  So, there is a sensitive system in place to maintain the delicate balance of free will.[3]             
            Hard as it is emotionally when G-d hides from us, the spiritual system in place could not exist without this relationship.  And ultimately, this spiritual system is about life. 

           


[1] Rain is the life giving force that we pray for in the winter, and symbolizes loving kindness from above. Water always represents chessed.
[2] See the chapter on Time in Patterns in Time by Rabbi Mattis Weinberg

[3]These insights are from Rav Dessler Volume two Parshas Shemini  He connects it to this week’s parsha because part of the reason that the Holy son’s of Aharon, Nadav and Avihu were killed is because they performed their service at the wrong spiritual time.  

Friday, March 18, 2011

Life is a Joke!

            In the wake of the brutal tragedy that hit close to home both literally and figuratively with the despicable murder of a young Israeli family while they slept, and in the wake of the global tragedy in Japan, there is a deep voice within each of us that is waiting for the punch line- where is the world heading? And for those wondering whether there is a punch line that is what the holiday of Purim is all about. The nature of the day teaches that there is a grand punch line, a grand plan to all of this madness even if we don’t always see it. So for now, we need to learn to appreciate punch lines, and what better way than with some good jokes.
            What makes a good joke?  It works by taking a person down a specific ideological path and after a few steps down that path, a massive paradigm shift occurs.  Depending on the joke, it could change how everything has been understood until that point or simply how we understand the final scenario.  For example, ‘what is black, white, and red all over?’  The first two words intimate that we are dealing with colors, and so our brain is hurtled down that path and assumes that red is also a color. As the brain begins to cogitate through the realm of possible objects with these colors, the punch line comes- a newspaper!  Red does not mean a color, but the verb ‘read’.  With this new information, a massive shift takes place and we are freed from our current thought process and instantaneously placed in a new paradigm.  This vast intellectual movement invokes freedom, and therefore, makes us happy to the point of laughter. 
            The importance of laughter pervades Jewish thinking.  It starts with Isaac, whose name in Hebrew, Yitzchak, means ‘he will laugh’.  What exactly will be so funny?  The paradigm of nature that we adhere to so strongly will be exposed for what it is- a mask.  If we analyze Yitzchak’s life, it began at the punch line; he was literally a living joke.  Born to a nonagenarian, which if that wasn’t bad enough, didn’t even have a womb, his life began above nature.  Further, he spent his life digging wells, a physical representation of a joke.  Imagine, hundreds of miles from the nearest body of water, you pick a spot on the ground and tell a person there is water here.  The person looks around and blankly responds, ‘you must be dreaming’.  So you pick up a shovel and dig and, indeed, for the first few hours nothing but dirt come up.  After a large heap of dirt and lots of sweat, as you yourself are starting to believe in the other person’s observations, the paradigm shift comes, water! 
            The Talmud takes it a step further and says that laughter is crucial to Torah learning. Why?  Because learning is about paradigm shifts.  Often, new information is similar to dirt- a seemingly inert set of disconnected particles that is hard to fit with what you knew before.   The trick is to find the water, or understanding behind the information. Not at all coincidentally, that is why the word for explanation in Hebrew, ‘be’er’, is the same for ‘well’, because an explanation is also a paradigm shift.  A person learns a concept, and has a cursory understanding, until a competent teacher comes and shows you how the concept connects to all other concepts you’ve learned and how your cursory understanding is not really an understanding at all, it is dirt.  For this reason, it says in Peaschim 117a: Before beginning to lecture to his students Rabbah would say something humorous and the students would laugh. Aside from a good pedagogical technique, Rabbah is also prepping his students for what the process of learning is all about, finding the punch line. 
            Or in the following strange story in Shabbos 77a it says: Rav Zeira found Rav Yehuda on the doorstep of his (Rav Yehuda) father in law’s house, and he saw that (Rav Yehuda) was in a humorous mood and if he could ask him questions, even trivial ones about the world, that he would answer him.  He said to him, Why do goats walk before sheep?  He answered him just like the creation of the world.  First there was dark, and then there was light.  Why do goats have exposed reproductive organs uncovered by hair, and yet sheep have reproductive organs that are covered by hair?  These that give clothing and cover us (sheep) are covered themselves.  These (goats) that do not cover us have exposed reproductive organs… Questions here run rampant, like why do we care that Rav Yehuda was at his father in law’s house or why are we asking about sheep and goats and why are we asking about trivial things?  With one major concept we can understand everything.  There is nothing trivial!  These questions that seem trivial only seem that way if you view life as not containing a punch line.  But as soon as you see that everything has purpose, then the depth is exposed.  And the depth here is that the world works by exposing us to a system of darkness first, or what the Kabbalists call din, and then exposes us to G-d’s light of chessed.  It is no surprise that the image of the devil is a goat with his short, bristly hair because he represents the revealed world that we see, the world of din. Only after a sufficient dose of din and coarseness can we get to the sheep with the white puffy coat that represents light and chessed.[1]  A joke which is only a punch line is not funny.  You need to first go through the process of din, the goat, before you can reach the sheep and the chessed. 
            It may be an unpleasant thought that only after all is said in done will we get the joke, but in the meantime we have to suffer.  But there is one caveat.  The grand joke is for everyone ELSE to see the truth, but a Jew’s task is to anticipate the grand punch line, and therefore, see every day life as containing a punch line.  Take the tragedy in Itamar.  The terrorists initially entered a different home first, but found it empty.  Why was it empty?  The people who were supposed to stay there that Shabbat ended up in the hospital doing further tests for a sick child.  Imagine the frustration of Shabbat in a hospital-din.  But imagine what the thought was after they found out they were saved-chessed.  Granted not everything in life can always be seen so clearly, but there are enough moments that show us that nature is nothing more than a mask! 



[1] See the Afiki Yam on the Gemara in Shabbos.  Since the goats have short, unrefined hair, they go before the sheep.  Further, since what we see is an unrefined natural world, so too we are exposed to the unrefined natural parts of the Goat, while the hidden love of the world is tucked modestly under the hair of the sheep

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Time to get Happy

People think that the hardest holiday is Yom Kippur, a day of fasting and praying, or perhaps Passover, where for a week a large percentage of our normal diet is exchanged for chalky imitations, but it could be that Purim, is the most difficult of all.  And this is alluded to as the Kabbalists observe that Yom Kippur, is that day that is ‘ki-Pur’, like Purim. In other words, the day we associate with utmost holiness is trying to imitate Purim.[1]  So what is holy about Purim?  (Please keep in mind that real internal holiness comes only with tremendous internal exertion[2], therefore, if there is an aspect of Purim that is as holy as it gets, then the internal work must be as hard as it gets.)   Perhaps, it is the Talmud’s directive that we ‘increase our joy in Adar’[3]and let it reach its peak on Purim.  This is a daunting task.  I can control whether I eat or not or what I eat, but an emotion, and a positive one at that, seems to be only partly in my purview.  But that is our work, to get happy, so how can we get there?
The easiest way is to spend some time around a baby, preferably between four to 11 months, which is what the book series ‘What to Expect in the First Year’ dubs the golden age of a person’s baby.  And if we can figure out why a baby brings a smile to everyone’s face, and has the power to transform a room of adults into a room full of comic performers, singers, and ticklers, each vying to win over the baby’s fickle attention span, then we will be on the right track. 
What does a baby do to garner such undivided attention- gape and grab.  My baby’s wide eyes constantly scan the world like two searchlights and when the opportunity presents, she brings what she can close to her. Simply, the world is wonderful, because it is full of wonder. The number one joy-killer is habituation.  For a baby, nothing is habitual and the newness of everything radiates on her face and inspires adults to enter her world.  She reminds adults in the vicinity that there is yet what to discover in this world.  Incidentally, for a person without a baby nearby, a blessing is the spiritual tool we use to create joy and destroy habituation.[4]  Each time we take pleasure from the world, the blessing sends us back in time to recreate the pleasure as if it were new.
A baby not only appreciates the world in a way that radiates joy, but also reminds us about the joy of growth.  Each new feat accomplished by the baby brings waves of satisfaction to the parent.  I never thought that rolling over was such a great thing until my baby nearly accomplished the task. As she teetered on the edge, between the world of the back and the world of the belly, I looked on with rapt attention.  Watching growth is a pleasure, so why not turn that attention to ourselves and revel in all of our growth over the years, and engage in activities that are growth oriented? 
That is what we can do, but as in everything else, each holiday brings with it a spiritual flow.  Around Purim, the spiritual alignments are in our favor for the month. So much so, that the Talmud continues and recommends that if a person is embroiled in a lawsuit, that they should try and chance upon the other party as things are more apt to go in ones favor this month.  But the rest is up to us, and we need to catch the wave of joy in the air and make our lives permanently more joyful.  


[1] See Mictav Me’Eliyahu Volume II Purim
[2] Rav Yaakov Hillel in Lecture delivered in Ohr Sameach
[3] Taanis 29
[4] Or HaTzafon The Reasons for Blessing Page 84 part III

Friday, March 4, 2011

You are WHEN and WHAT you eat WITH

            Five minutes could be a matter of spiritual life and death.  What do I mean?  The clock strikes the nine o’clock hour and it is official, breakfast has begun, and after a spiritual boost of prayer and study, it is time to attend to my physical sustenance.  As the nine o’clock hour approaches, what is my response, a sense of sadness that I am going to momentarily put my spiritual pursuits on hold, or a sense of overwhelming glee at the opportunity to eat French toast, grilled cheese sandwiches, pancakes, or eggs depending on the day?  Further, am I first or last to the breakfast table, or in other words, even if the answer to question one is sheer glee to eat without an iota of sadness to leave learning, is there still a control switch that prevents me from sprinting to breakfast to ensure that the food is not eaten before getting there lest I be relegated to eating lowly cornflakes? And finally, when I do get to breakfast can I eat my eggs without the salt and pepper or the pancakes without the syrup?  So we return to our relationship with food, and will try to add layers of complexity to the subject. It appears it is not only how we eat, but also when we eat and what we eat our food with! Attuning to this interplay is an accurate indication of what how we identify ourselves- are we primarily souls riding temporarily in an earthy body, or are we primarily bodies that need to seize the moment in a short life.  We know what the advertisers think: Coke-‘do what feels good’ and Nike- ‘Just do it’, but what do we think?
            To raise the stakes, the Talmud describes the answer to this question of when we eat with what appears to be hyperbole.  It says in Trachtate Shabbos 10a: The first hour (after waking up) the cannibals eat, the second hour the thieves eat, the third hour the inheritors heat, the fourth hour the regular man eats, the fifth hour the workers eat, and the sixth hour the wise man eats…’  This does not mean that a person who wakes up and runs to breakfast is actually a cannibal, but it does mean that a person with such a strong desire to eat breakfast would be willing to injure another person if an essential physical desire were not met.  And the next level is that a person would be willing to take someone’s money if his physical needs are not met. On the other side, the worker and the wise man understand the need to prioritize the spiritual desire to create.[1]  Therefore, even in dire straits, soulful action would still win out.  Nowadays, most people are on the level of the thieves, even sadly, the Yeshiva guys.  Most people eat in the second hour of the day, and the truth is, in a dire situation where physical needs are not met adequately, it is not hard to imagine that people would not hesitate to steal. 
            Another part of the Talmud Eruvin 54a proceeds to imply that acquisition of wisdom is also dependent on our consumption habits.  How much do we care about what we eat?[2]  It says: Said Rav Huna, ‘Your flock settled in it, You prepared for the poor in Your Goodness, G-d’ If a man makes himself like this animal that crushes and eats or that spoils and eats, his wisdom  will remain with him[3]. Rashi explains that ‘crushes and eats’ means to eat quickly without worry as to fancy preparations and that ‘spoiled and eats’ means that the food is not in perfect condition.  Again, our spiritual well being is dictated by our approach to food. 
            So what can we do?  We are not at the level of waiting six hours everyday before we eat, or treating our food indifferently, but the test is can we wait five minutes or do one spiritual act before we eat to remind ourselves what we are?  From personal experience, I have found that a small reminder sets the tone for the rest of the day. 
           


[1] Maharal Nesiv Derech Eretz Nesivos Olam page 250
[2] Actually, this is a dispute among scholars whether spiritual people should take care and eat particularly good food and further their appreciation of G-d in the process or eat simple food in order to show that spirituality is more important than physicality. For now we will take the second side that simple food is best.
[3] Wisdom is held in the ‘sechel or שכל’ which is the mind.  The idea of mind in Hebrew is ‘ש’- כל’ is that it captures ‘כל’, everything.  What does that mean?  The idea of everything is the idea of the big picture.  That is why the numerical value of כל is fifty, and why the Torah was given after we left Egypt, on the fiftieth day after Passover.  It is also the Jubilee year and represents going beyond the world of parts.  Our world is made up of parts as indicated by the seven aspects of a cube, the six sides along with it gestalt.  A full expression of parts, then, is these seven aspects all multiplied by itself, which is then forty nine.  So we see that a physical world made up of parts is captured by the idea of forty-nine thereby making fifty the notion of a world that is beyond particulars, but totally unified. That world is repelled by the physical world, so if we make physicality our main priority, we lose our minds in the process, since the world of the mind is above physicality.
               


Friday, February 25, 2011

Gaddafi versus Mubarak

Power is unique in that it can be a means or an end- it is a means to money, women, or both, or it is an end for the sake of honor itself. However, there is a difference in how it manifests. If it is a means towards physical desires, then it is limited and has the possibility of satisfaction, albeit temporary in nature for physical satisfaction always needs replenishment. However, if it is an end, then there is no possibility for even temporary satisfaction. The desire for self aggrandizing is limitless because it is anchored by the soul, and just like there is no limit to how spiritual a person can get, so too there is no limit to how arrogant a person can get.[1] A cursory view of current events seems to bear out these truths. In the case of Gaddafi, we see power as an end driving his violent struggle because he is willing to forfeit his life for the sake of power.  Mubarack seems to have used power primarily as a means[2], funneling away billions of dollars before acquiescing to demands and retiring to a Sinai resort town.  His desires seem to have had a limit. Now, radically enough, the drive behind Gadaffi’s violent struggle is not a bad thing, and in fact, in a certain sense, the world may need more of it. 
One of the main issues that plague the world is addiction.  This comes in a myriad of different forms, ranging from the destructive impact of drugs to the brain deadening impact of video games or the soul deadening impact of shopping.  There are several reasons why people become addicted, but the main one is a low self esteem that results in a consistent emotional distress that begs to be alleviated in some way or another. Low self esteem is often a result of a presupposition that the world is a just and fair place, and therefore, when parents don’t act like parents or teachers don’t act like teachers, a.k.a. the world does not act fairly, it is not the teachers or parents fault, rather the child’s.[3]  So from a young age, the injustices of the world result in a low esteem because it is too frightening as a child to accept that the world is not a just place.  For the child, it is easier to accept that he is simply not adequate. 
This feeling of inadequacy is a complete negation of what it means to be a human being.  These two weeks in the Torah document the complex grandeur of the Tabernacle, the dwelling place of G-d in the world.  Prophetic artisans and super human kindness dedicate themselves to the Temple, and all the spiritual wisdom of the world is contained therein.  Yet, when all is said and done, G-d presence does not come down into the building.  Why?  Because the building needed a spiritual human touch, the building needed Moses- ‘So Moses completed the work.  The Cloud covered the Tent of meeting, and the glory of Hashem filled the Tabernacle’[4]
Imagine, Man has the power to create real holiness through his actions, and this does not only apply to Moses.  A Jewish scribe can take animal skins and through proper lettering create a Torah that is Holy and has a slew of Laws associated with its handling. Or a person can write a book of Prophets that has a lower level of sanctity and cannot be placed on top of a Book of Torah.  That is the amazing G-dliness of a human being that he is able to imbue the world with Holiness that makes a difference. If a person can understand and appreciate what power that is, then a feeling of inadequacy is absurd, and irrelevant, no matter what life circumstances surrounds a person.
However, this power of the Human soul can be taken in the wrong direction, and drastically.  The same root that can create holiness to no end can create a notion of self-entitlement that knows no limits.  Though I don’t them personally, this is what seems to plague Kim Yong Ill and Gaddafi. The path to greatness is narrow, straddled between inadequacy and narcissism, but the task is to find that path and maintain the balance.  In this day in age, probably a dose of self-worth is more crucial than its possible downside.





[1] See Rav Dessler Mictav m Eliyahu Second Volume T’ Sha B’av page 51
[2] Obviously, there were elements of both aspects to Power for each leader, but one may be more primary than the other.
[3] See 'Addictive Thinking' by Rabbi Twerski
[4] Chiddush from the Alter of Slabodka Or HaTzafon ‘Hashras Hashcina’ and See Exodus 40:34