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Stop Trying So Hard To Be Normal- Its Killing Your Greatness - The Parshah On Fire- Ki Savo
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The United States Navy Seals considered
by many to be the most elite group of
soldiers on Earth. They have a quote
that they brand on the bottom of all
their maps and all their stationary. And
it's a quote that's entirely
encapsulates who they are. The quote is,
"The only thing necessary for the
triumph of evil is for good people to do
nothing." Meaning to say that the only
thing that will allow evil to fill the
world is for good, well-meaning people
to sit around and just do nothing. I
believe the following quote is equally
true. The only thing necessary for the
triumph of mediocrity is humanity's
obsession with normaly. The only thing
that's really preventing most people
from becoming great is their obsession
with just being normal. The difference
between a soldier who remains sort of on
the bottom rung and a soldier who
becomes a Navy Seal is often not their
physical strength or their size, but
their ability to dream and remain
determined to rise in the ranks. He
doesn't allow setbacks or challenges or
failures or peer pressure to dull the
fire of the dreams burning inside of
him. What separates people who achieve
greatness in their lives and the people
that don't typically is the strength of
their motivation more often than not
success is achieved by the people not
blessed with unusual talents or unusual
abilities. It's achieved by regular
people who really really really want it
and refuse to let the status quo and
complacency of the rest of the world
prevent them from getting it. The same
is true with spiritual greatness paraso.
contains the brahos and the clalos given
to the Jewish people on the mountain of
griem and a e a half the Jewish people
ascended harism and the other half
ascended har evil and one group heard
the curses that would be given out to
the bad bad behavior and on the other
hand the blessings that we'll get if we
act in accordance with hashem's will was
given on the other mountain now if you
were to look at these two mountains you
would notice that there's something
pretty geographically odd about these
two mountains. Hargreim and Harl were
basically a mere few feet from another.
And yet Hargreim, the mountain of
blessings of Brah was lush and
beautiful. And Harvil, the mountain of
curses, was barren and desolate. So how
did that come to be? These two
mountains, which can still be visited
today, are less than approximately 200
feet from each other. And yet they share
the exact same ecosystem. They receive
the exact same amount of rain. They have
the exact same amount of sunlight. They
have the exact same air quality. Why is
one lush and vibrant and alive and the
other one is hard and rocky and dead? So
he explains that the only difference
between these two mountains is that one
has resistance
and one is receptive. Har griezm had
these little small holes in it allowing
the nutrients and the rain and the
sunlight to penetrate while Harval was
closed off and it was impenetrable and
although both mountains were exposed to
the exact same climate only one allowed
that climate to seep inside of it and
rep goes on to say that it was not a
coincidence that Hashem chose to issue
the blessings and the curses on those
two mountains. It was on purpose for by
doing so he was essentially telling us
the recipe for spiritual greatness which
is to forever open ourselves up to the
spiritual bounty that permeates all
around us. All of us had dreams once
upon a time of being spiritually great.
Whether it was in third grade when we
learned the story of Rahmenu or when we
heard the story of
whether it was when we first went off to
yeshiva or when we were hugely inspired
in seminary or perhaps it was something
we heard we heard in a speech or on
tishov or when we experienced our first
real rash shana all of us had those
flashing moments in our nishamas when we
told ourselves you know what I'm going
to be great so what happened what went
wrong why Are most of us regular?
The answer is that most most of us don't
allow the spiritual nutrients that are
whizzing all around us to penetrate into
our very essence. We stop sort of
aspiring for greatness and become far
more interested in just fitting in. We
tell ourselves that normaly is better
than standing out. Even if normaly comes
at the expense of greatness, we become
so shackled to the status quo that all
our dreams and all our hopes and all our
aspirations just get replaced with an
obsession to just fit in. We let the
level of spirituality in our homes be
dictated by the neighborhood around us.
And the very moment one of our spiritual
dreams goes up against what the current
definition of quoteunquote normal is, we
run we run right back to the safe haven
of normaly. In no era could this motto
be truer. The only thing necessary for
the triumph of mediocrity is humanity's
obsession with normaly. By giving the
brahas and a mountain that opened itself
up to the nutrients around it, Hashem
was telling us that the key to spiritual
greatness is to allow the inspiration we
have all around us to penetrate our
souls and to let those spiritual
nutrients blossom inside of us. to allow
the spiritual ingredients floating in
the air to help bring our dreams and our
aspirations to fruition, elevating us to
greater spiritual heights, far higher
than those in the peanut gallery below
us. Now, listen to this one. One day,
3,000 years ago, the Jewish people woke
up and they heard a bos coming from
heaven making the following declaration.
The next leader of the entire Jewish
people will be named Shuel. He hasn't
been born yet, but his birth is coming.
And this unsurprisingly led to a whole
great excitement and a buzz erupted. I
mean, who would be the one to give birth
to the next leader of the Jewish people?
So with dreams of being the parents of
the future leader of Kalisro, as you can
expect, people began naming their sons
Shuel in the hope that their son would
become the one. 40 years go by and not
one of the boys named Shuel was
appointed leader. Not until Hana came
along who after years of being barren,
she finally had a son and she gave birth
and she named him. And we all know the
story. He was the one who became the
leader of the Jewish people.
What happened
to all the others? There's a part of the
story that a lot of people don't know.
What happened to the all the other kids?
All the hundreds of children whose
parents with hopes and dreams named
their kid Shu hoping that their kid
would be the one to grow into a sadic
and another the leader of Kalisro. What
happened to all of those kids?
So the writes that despite not becoming
the leader of the Jewish people, each
and every one of those children named
Schmool nevertheless became a ni each
and every one of them. Because each and
every one of them grew up with a vivid
dream. A dream that they might lead the
Jewish people. A dream that they could
be the most important man in the
spiritual universe. A dream that they
could reach the loftiest spiritual
heights. And that dream was so vivid to
them. It was so deeply permeated in
their soul that the dream carried them
on its wings and allowed them to soar to
the level of nvua, a level of
spirituality attained only by the most
elite members of our nation.
If we clutch close to our dreams and
never let go, greatness can be attained.
But if we let ourselves do what most
people do, because that's what most
people do, our dreams of greatness will
slowly drift away. The difference
between a major league baseball player
who is making $23 million a year and has
his name plastered on every newspaper in
America and a minor league baseball
player who makes $76,000 a year and
who's someone you've never heard of, is
that the major leager has a betting
average of around 280 or 250. While the
minor leaguer has a batting average of
around 230, meaning that when the major
leaguer steps up to the plate, he hits
the ball 2.8 times out of 10. The minor
leaguer only hits the ball 2.3 times out
of 10. Not a very big difference. Yet,
one is a famous millionaire and the
other some regular guy who shops at the
same Walmart you do. What led to the
drastic difference? Both dreamed about
becoming a baseball superstar. Both
aspired for baseball greatness.
The answer is that the major league
refused to let his dreams go. He woke up
a little earlier. He stayed in the gym a
little later. He ate a little healthier.
He focused a little more. He was in the
bed in cages when the rest of his
friends were eating ice cream. He
studied films of his swing while his
friends called him a fanatic. He read
books. He listened to tapes. He left no
stone unturned in his quest for baseball
knowledge and greatness. And despite
being called crazy by his peers, he
refused to let the temptation to just be
regular hold him back from achieving
greatness. And sure enough, greatness he
achieved.
We should all be the same. We should
aspire to live a life with no lush har
and never let go of that dream. To dream
of a house buzzing with and then see to
it that it happens. to dream of being
really sneez and then doing so despite
the sneers and the social pressures, to
dream of finishing shots, and then to
never stop dreaming. To take the dreams
we all had when we were young and close
our eyes and accomplish them. The only
person who gets in the way of your
spiritual dreams is you. Don't shrink
your dreams to fit your life. Stretch
your life to fit your dreams. Now,
here's an interesting historical tidbit.
Socrates, considered by many historians
to be one of the single most brilliant
and accomplished minds of all time, the
man who was the personal tutor of Plato,
who eventually taught Aristotle, who
eventually taught and tutored Alexander
the Great. He is quoted as saying that
all I am is simply smart enough to know
that I don't know anything. Here's
another quote. One of the single
greatest minds of the last 300 years,
Albert Einstein, he is quoted as saying,
"I'm not particularly smart. All I am is
ferociously curious." On the tombstone
of Andrew Carnegie, one of the single
most successful and influential
businessmen of all time, it's written on
his tombstone, "Here lies a man smart
enough to surround himself with people
smarter than he." One of the single
greatest painters in modern history,
Pablo Picasso. He responded when he was
asked what his favorite painting is. By
saying, "My favorite painting is
whichever painting is coming up next."
The common denominator between all these
people is that great people are forever
yearning to grow and to improve, to
enhance themselves, to forever ascend
the ladder of greatness. That is the key
to success. Now listen to this. There's
a strange found in the which is in
it says that whenever you're about to
say you must first remove all the knives
from the table and only after the knives
are removed from the table is someone
allowed to start benching. So let's ask
a pretty obvious question. What exactly
is wrong with having knives on our
table? Why do the spoons and the forks
get to stay but the knives got to go? So
the Taz writes that the reason he says
is that we remove the knives before we
bench because there was once a man who
mourned and thought of the BA mikdash to
such an unbelievable extent that one day
while benching when he reached the part
about Hashem rebuilding the B mikdash he
got so distraught about its current
state of destruction that he took a
knife from the table and he stabbed
himself. Therefore, we have the minog to
remove the knives from our table while
we bench in order to prevent that from
happening again. Okay, let's ask an
obvious question. The person was
certainly a very holy man, but such an
individual is an extreme outlier. Do the
authorities really think that there is a
practical need for this? This guy was a
one in a million, maybe one in 10
million. Why institute this for the
entire Israel? So I heard a beautiful
explanation from Revavid Rev the Rebra
in Los Angeles, California. He said that
of course Kazal were well aware of the
unlikeliness of someone actually
stabbing themselves while they're
benching. Kazal never instituted it for
that reason. They instituted the
requirement to remove the knives as a
reminder to us that there once upon a
time was a man who dreamed so much about
the B mikdash that when he read about
its destruction, he was so distraught.
He was in so much pain that he stabbed
himself. We are instilling in ourselves
that there was a time when men dreamed
about the B mikdash to such an extent
that its absence caused so much pain and
anguish that they couldn't refrain from
stabbing themselves. Not that we're on
that level, but that we should at the
very least know that that level exists
and that level existed and we should
aspire to reach it. We cover our knives
as a small reminder to keep on dreaming.
To never let greatness get away from us,
to never let the conveniences of normaly
and mediocrity take precedence over the
glory of greatness.
Every few years, the world becomes
transfixed by the World Cup, an event
that takes over the global stage. Every
country in the world trots out its best
soccer team in the hopes of climbing to
the top of the soccer world and claiming
the trophy. From Russia to China,
Argentina, United States, France,
Australia, the whole world shows up. But
what fascinates me the most about the
entire event are the smaller countries
that managed to succeed. countries like
Costa Rica and Sagal and the Netherlands
and Morocco, Croatia, Panama, tiny
little countries that often take down
countries 500 times their size. When you
think about it, it almost makes no
sense. America with a pool of around 400
million people from which to select its
soccer team from losses to the
Netherlands, a tiny country that has 17
million people. countries with every
technological advancement and with
access to every form of medical
equipment are losing to Sagal, a third
world country in Africa that doesn't
have running water. That doesn't make
any sense. How do you explain this?
The answer is that America might like
soccer. These countries live soccer.
These countries breathe soccer. These
countries go to sleep thinking about
soccer and wake up thinking about
soccer. Every thought that crosses their
mind is soccer. Every dream they dream
is soccer. And not only that, but they
are children and grandchildren and
greatgrandchildren of people who were
obsessed with soccer. Soccer runs
through their blood. It is infused into
their very DNA. And therefore, despite
being 1% of the size, despite having no
medical technology whatsoever, despite
living in a thirdworld warridden,
dilapitated, dysfunctional country, they
often come out victorious because for
them, soccer is everything.
We are a nation obsessed with spiritual
greatness. We are a nation obsessed with
godliness. We think and speak and dream
about Hashem. Godliness runs through our
veins. It's part of our DNA. Our dreams
don't care about the people who say we
can't. Our dreams don't care about the
people who say we're wrong. Our dreams
don't care about the people who call us
old and archaic and outdated. The Jewish
people clutch close to their dreams,
stronger and with more passion than any
other dreamers out there. That's why
we're still here dreaming while the
nations of the world have all taken
their dreams and have vanished long ago.
And we dream about spiritual greatness
and no one will ever convince us not to.
The difference between the people who
achieve greatness in life and the ones
who don't has little to do with their
talents or their upbringing or their
exposure or their environment. Many
great people are brilliant. Most aren't.
Many great people could sit and focus
for hours on end. Most can't. Many great
people are born leaders and they're born
thinkers and they're born artors. But
most great people aren't. The common
denator denominator among all great
people is that no matter what and no
matter when, they never stop dreaming.
They take their hopes and their dreams
and their aspirations and their goals
and never let go of them as long as they
live. We are a people who dream. Lucky
are the people who never let go of their
dreams. Lucky are the people who don't
let mediocrity and normaly and the
pressure to be regular rip those dreams
of greatness from them. We are a nation
of dreamers. Lucky are those who know
how to keep on dreaming.