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Rabbi Cries With People: The Power of REAL Empathy #shorts
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Discover the profound impact of being real and empathetic. A rabbi's personal stories reveal how shared vulnerability and emotion build deeper connections than words alone. #Authenticity #Empathy #PersonalGrowth #RabbiStories #Vulnerability
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the other night, there was someone who
came to talk to me about a very
preliminary um crisis that they felt
they were having, which really wasn't
such a major crisis. For them,
obviously, it was cuz it's overwhelming
to them,
but they're just starting the process of
infertility, and they're, you know,
trying to figure out what the next step
should be, and where they should go, and
who they should speak to. And it was it
was a lot for them, and I just burst out
crying like sitting with them, even
though we've seen cases that are
obviously
much more severe, and this is a couple
that just got married, and it's not It's
nothing overwhelming just yet.
But they asked me,
"Why are you so overwhelmed?"
And I I wasn't trying to hide. I I never
try to hide that I'm shaking. I think
being vulnerable and being real is
totally uh acceptable and appreciated.
And I told them, I said, "I'll be
honest, I just heard so many difficult
things today and dealt with so many
different um possibilities of
hardships that people are going through.
You happen to be the last person who was
here today. It was 11:00 at night. It It
just, you know, at some point it gets to
you, and I think showing people that
we're real, and showing people that we
really take to heart the situations that
they share with us,
to me, I think is more powerful than
anything else. I can say just I'm
talking about my father, but I've been
to so many shiva homes with my father.
He's not a big talker, not a big
schmoozer, and
I find very often that he'll go into a
shiva house, not say a word to anybody,
and I feel very awkward. Feel very
awkward being the one going with him,
and just sitting there, and obviously
I'm not going to speak if he's not
speaking. And we leave. And so many
people have told me subsequently that
"Your father just sat there and cried
with us, and that was worth more to us
than any other visitors that we had."
And I think that's an important role to
play. Just to be that person who really
feels and empathizes with other people's
situations, to understand that we really
connect to it, that we really relate to
it, that we appreciate the severity or
the overwhelming nature of what it is
for them.
That's uh
that's a very important piece of it.