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[music]
You
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see your
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Shalom friends. Welcome back to our shir
here at Yan. And may our Torah be a
protection for all of Am Israel and
bring only Yeshu and blessings down to
the whole Jewish people. Um we are
continuing our adventure through the
sitter tonight. Please God, we're going
to explore
Ibraim if we have time. I think we will
and we'll see if we get have time for
Matarim Zuim
and a little niggan at the end to you
know internal and bring the Torah down
into our souls. Okay, so let's jump into
it. We are
thanking God.
We got through the fun stuff of uh
Isa and now the garra in braos
teaches us that it we would go in the
order of our um experiences we would
thank God. Okay. So after you know
hearing that turkey what's the first
thing that most people do they open
their eyes okay so the min of many is to
say
the truth is there was a ga
that used to do mishaim
and then which means you wear your
clothing and then you open up your eyes
which is a bit surprising because
usually I don't know about you guys but
I open up my eyes before I put on my
clothing. But maybe, you know, they
didn't want to touch their eyes or they
would take a a garment or maybe they
were under the curtain and and then they
put clothing on even before they opened
up their eyes. But in any case, Armenog
is bless Hashem on having eyes
and uh and then to thank Hashem for the
ability to have clothing. Again, in the
Tamura times, we would do it as we were
experiencing it. Uh nowadays, the
at the minute is to become to do it all
together in sh you know that way we
don't get confused and you know oh wait
what's the for this what's the for that
so we just do it all in one shot when
we're praying in the sitter together the
yal so let's jump into this uh the
meaning and a little bit of the deeper
meaning behind
ibraim so first off it said you are the
source of Paul blessing God, King of the
universe, who opens up the eyes of the
blind. It freezes it, in other words, in
the negative. It could have said,
"Blessed are you, God, who opens up my
eyes, that I can see. Thank you, God,
that I'm able to see." But it actually
freezes it in the negative that I am
blind,
but God opens up my eyes.
So, why does it do it in that way? What
I think the shot is that
um when we focus on the alternative on
the negative so then it makes it
stronger the positive when we focus on
the fact that we really essentially are
blind but God is opening up our eyes so
it makes us think wow really I could be
blind that that that that's the my
essence is blind but Hashem does me this
amazing gift of letting me See, and that
is why we say God opens up the eyes of
the blind. Again, to stress that at at
its core, we don't we we don't deserve
to see. We're blind every morning. We're
blind, but Hashem opens up our eyes and
allows this unbelievable system called
vision and we are able to to see. On
that note, uh the famous Mishna in asks
is
how much money do you need to be
considered a rich person and we all know
the famous answer
someone who's happy with their lot.
Actually there's another garra in Shabas
which says a rich person was someone who
couldn't afford a bathroom near their
house. That meant you were uh considered
uh you know upper class in Tamuda time.
So you know nowadays you have two
bathrooms, three bathrooms.
So
things aren't so bad. But in any case, a
rich person. We all know the stands for
meaning.
[snorts]
Who's a rich person? Someone [snorts]
who has eyes, someone who has teeth,
someone who has um you know,
>> hands,
>> hands, and someone who has feet. In
other words, just the fact that we have
a functioning body that ourselves makes
us unbelievably rich. And I'll prove it,
Larry. Let's make a deal. I'm going to
give you
$5 million right now. All I need is one
of your eyes. I don't even want two of
them. Just give me one. We have a deal.
What do you think? Anybody willing uh to
take that deal?
>> No.
>> Okay. $10 million.
>> $100 million. Now you're thinking like
surgery. You know,
>> you were my dog.
>> Yeah. Okay. But you know what? For two
eyes, I don't think there'd be any
sales. All the money in the world,
right? So that turns out that we're all
rich because we have so much brah
and our problem of course and of course
this whole she is just talking to myself
is that we don't appreciate it and
that's why we have like this to help us
appreciate it.
Uh this is my one of my favorite stories
of the malvin. One morning the malvin
wakes up his kids. He had a bunch of
kids. It's 4:30 in the morning and he
says, "My yankeala
and they're all, "Wake up. Wake up.
There's a miracle happening outside."
They say, "Oh, what's happening?" And
they all he gathers them all up to the
living room. He opens up the windows and
it's a sunrise. He says, "It's a
miracle. It's a miracle. Let's, you
know, let's thank Hashem." So that's the
story and that's that's it's it's the
truth. We don't take time to appreciate
it. And that's what on its most basic
level is reminding us to appreciate uh
the gifts of life. And um by the way,
you don't just have to do it when you're
saying the bra in the morning. You could
just be walking down the street and and
and see a beautiful tree and see ah I
saw the porcot today from my from my uh
gardenish blossoming. I say ah wow thank
you Hashem. Thank you Hashem for being
able to see such a beautiful world.
Vigor Miller used to say that if you see
a blind person walking on the street
that's a message from Hashem and he
wants you to take a moment to say thank
you Hashem that I have the ability to
see. Not everyone is that lucky.
And um
on that note,
you know,
there's a real Shila uh can a blind
person say this.
Okay, because he he is blind. So how can
he thank
if he's an E?
So what interestingly enough, what is
the how do we pass on this question?
While the Rambam would say he can't
because you need to personally benefit
from in fact he can and he should say
this. So in the simple level why because
he benefits from the fact that other
people can see. Okay? Because if
everyone was was blind, you know, he'd
be in bigger trouble.
Okay? That's on a on a basic level. But
I once asked one of my closest uh
friends is Ellie Ellie B and uh he's
blind and you know we learn a lot we
used to be he comes to an amazing guy
and uh I asked him what what's your
honestly when you say
in the morning and he you know he said
you know the truth is that there are a
lot of types of blindness
not only not being able to see which is
a type of blindness but uh there's a lot
of different ways in which we can be
blinded. I'm I'm paraphrasing him, but
this is what I understood from him. And
I thank Hashem that I'm not blind in
every way, but in many ways, he opens up
my eyes to see to see reality, to see
things as they are. The truth is
sometimes a blind person can see reality
a lot
>> better than a lot of uh people who have
two eyes. They're they're a lot less
>> perception is more enhanced,
>> right? On a simple biological level, of
course, their perception is enhanced.
They can hear things better. They can
feel things [clears throat] better.
That's true, of course. But I I mean
also in the sense of their intellectual
understanding of the universe, you know,
not every one, but sometimes at least
some of the blind people I know, they're
a lot they see a lot better than than
some other people I know with two eyes.
So um and this is actually the because
the says
before a blind person you should not put
a stumbling block the p in paras kadoshi
and kazal explained that not to be
literally uh don't put a stumbling block
before uh don't put a banana peel before
your local blind person. It's not even
clear that that would actually be an
isser if you did that. Rather they
interpret it don't give bad advice. If I
give someone bad advice, I'm blinding
them
because we're all we all can be blinded
in many different ways, right? I think
in we just insh this week's para we say
uh the the bride will blind the eyes of
a judge, right? We all get blinded at
times by things that we experience and
our pleasures and other things and we're
not able to see things straight. So
while on a simple level
and ali we just had the simple given you
know once a week we we should uh
have intention to thank Hashem for
vision on a another dimension we're also
thanking Hashem and praying to Hashem
that he should open up our intellectual
capacities to have clarity to make the
right decisions in life. I think what we
can all look back in our lives, at least
I can, and think of times when I just
didn't see things clearly and you know,
and I wasn't and other people could see
things that I I just didn't see straight
in the mirror. So, we're domining that
Hashem opens up our eyes to see the
truth,
right? In fact, this is the
that we say whenever you lose your uh
cell phone, right? Or your keys, who
comes to the rescue?
or be mayor of
everyone is considered blind
until God opens up the eyes of the
blind. This is a school uh when you're
missing something and then you say
mayor answer me. Say it three times. You
got to give and there you go. You find
your phone like like magic. It's
happened to me so many times. Millions
of really really many crazy stories. I
said it I remember a few years I many
times. I I said it and I couldn't find
my cell phone and I said in front of the
yeshiva where I teach and boom right
when I finished the somebody gives me a
call and says yo rabbi we found your
phone. It was like in the middle of the
hallway under some stairs like boom boom
crazy but uh and mamish works but uh the
concept is that we're blind. We're blind
until we recognize that Hashem is the
source of our vision. Just like Hashem
opened up the eyes of Hagar and Ishmael.
And once we have that recognition of God
as a source of our vision, so then if
God chooses, he will allow us to see to
see the truth. So it doesn't only work
for cell phones, can work for making
decisions in life. And uh and Hashem
should enlighten us to make the right
decisions.
Um
by the way uh this is also true on a
metaphysical level. Uh the Baba Sali was
known that he he could see things he
could see things that no one else could
see. So once after one of these uh
experiences where someone came up to the
Babas Ali and like Ali knew exactly
where he was at that moment. Someone
asked the Baba Ali
what's your secret rabbi? How do you
know? Why do you see things that nobody
else can see?
He says the concept is that when you
guard your eyes from seeing the wrong
things, so Hashem opens up your eyes
spiritually to see the right things.
This is a a spiritual principle in
Judaism, right? It's not a coincidence
that the baba
and
and all the sadikim were able to see
things that no one else can see. Right?
It's it's proportional to the ability
that you you guard your eyes to
dedicating them to Torah, etc., and all
of your faculties to to serving Hashem
exclusively.
in in proportion to that does Hashem
open up our eyes to see things that
other people can't see and have that
clarity of vision that's why I don't
know about you guys but sometimes after
a good est especially like a Friday
night you you dab and you have a good
boy this you're thanking you suddenly
just see things more clearly
[clears throat]
you know and and things become more
clear to a person after you kind of re
reconnect yourself and redirect yourself
with the riono shala
There's an illusion to this in uh the we
say
and you should not stray
after your harden after your eyes. So we
know there's a trap on top of every word
and the grow revealed that every trap
also has deep meaning. So the trap that
the tune of is garash [snorts]
gash ala in Hebrew means
to like divorce and go. So when a person
dedicates his eyes to not straying after
his eyes not looking in the wrong
places.
So then the that it it go it takes away
all the pains and all these troubles
that otherwise would would go in a
person. takes away all of the that
separate him from and allows him to his
eyes to be dedicated more to the to the
service of Hashem. So um
one last story and then we'll make this
practical on a on a on a tless level in
in terms of the aravana. So there's a
amazing sadic who's blind
um from Shiva University. I remember
back in MTA used to walk the dorms when
I went to Wu just got married relatively
recently big sadic and uh he used to be
and still is a tremendous Msman and he
he saw for many years and then he lost
his sight and
he should get it back soon with Mashia.
Right. Last week we read about how when
the Torah was given all the blind were
able to see. All the blind should be
able to see very soon. Mashiach. But in
any case, sometimes Raie will just go up
to a yeshiva student or a girl seminary
girl and say give her 20 bucks. Now he
has to get 30 bucks and say go buy a
safer.
And he says I can't learn from a safer
anymore but you can. So learn from me.
have me in mind. So, [snorts]
so that's so misa how do we express our
appreciation for our vision every day?
So, I think the first tip is every day
close our eyes before we say
and this is what suggests in this and
it's a tried andrude tactic to really
appreciate your vision. If you really
want to go crazy, you can close your
eyes for a minute and walk around the
show. Everyone will think you're crazy.
It'll be fun. But uh on the most basic
level, close your eyes before you open
up your eyes and then say
and have in mind that that Hashem to
appreciate the gift of vision and that
Hashem should open our our eyes to make
the right decisions in life and um
>> and to see the good in people. Oh, thank
you for reminding me. Right says that
when you look into someone else and you
look at the good in other people, so
then you actually lift them up to a
higher level, right? You see the
So every day when we say we should ask,
oh, we should only see good in other
people. And on that note, we should only
see the good init,
right?
You know the spies, they strayed after
their eyes and they were
I say very often on my tours that I'm
not a tour guide because uh you know
that's that was a the spies they were
they were
ofu we don't go after our eyes we go
after eyes of and
we go to connect to and that's why we
which is telling
Don't stray after eyes rather see see
with the eyes of
God is always looking at Israel the
famous story of he gets off the boat and
on the whole ride home he's looking at
and he never wasted a second he was
always learning so the students asked
him why are you kiling the vat tora why
aren't you you know looking at a safer
and said if hashem could look
I can also look at
I'm connecting to you should also have
eyes to see the good the good of you
for sure
>> and the good in yourself. Oh, the good
on ourselves
should enlighten us to use our eyes to
learn Torah to to see the good in each
other to look for opportunities in life
to to to make the world a better place.
Right? We can look at you can look at
the world in the eyes of a patient who's
always saying, "Oh, this is terrible.
He's bleeding and that's wrong and this
is wrong." Or you look at the world with
the eyes of a doctor who's saying, "Oh,
how can I help that person? How can I
help that patient? How can I make the
world a better place?" Especially when
we experience hardship, we must ask
ourselves, "Oh, maybe other people are
also experiencing that same hardship.
And how can I use this pain that I'm
experiencing to help others in a similar
circumstance?" You know, I remember
especially when I was single, that was
what that what I it was easier in a way
when I was single to then say, "Oh, I
need to set other people up. I need to
use this pain that I'm experiencing to
help other people who who must be going
through the similar experience." So, we
have eyes of asking ourselves, why is
Hashem giving me this message and how
can I use that to make it a better
place? You want to say something? Cut
you off.
>> Yeah. Yeah. All theium art recorded by
Helga or post it uh here at Yan. Okay.
Um
but after she we'll turn off the
recorder and if anybody has any personal
questions etc.
Okay. Um so close your eyes to say thank
you and dedicate ourselves to use our
eyes for all these beautiful things and
that we shouldn't use our eyes for the
wrong things. Right? If we've been given
the privilege of having eyes, right,
then I then then we shouldn't waste the
opportunity and use our eyes, god
forbid, on the wrong things and looking
at the wrong things. So instead, we
should express our appreciation for our
eyes by using our eyes to only uh spread
good and and blessing into the universe.
Amen. Okay. Now, let's move on to the
second brah of tonight's journey.
who clothe the naked.
Interesting way that Khazal expressed uh
our appreciation for clothing. Could
have said, "Thank you, Hashem, for
clothing. Thank you, Hashem, for the
nice warm jacket and, you know, and and
and my t-shirt and my nice polo shirt."
So what's the deeper meaning behind
again this of God clothing the naked?
So again let's start with the simple
level and then we'll go a little deeper.
So on the most simple level what should
our kavana be when we thank Hashem that
we have clothing? Nothing too fancy.
What should we think of him for?
>> Warmth.
>> Warmth. Think of New York City tonight,
right? and freezing cold outside and you
have a nice warm jacket keeping you
cool, keeping you warm. It's uh it's not
something to be taken for granted, but
indeed it is something we take for
granted, especially in our generation
when we're blessed with so much. But
nonetheless, we have to remind ourselves
to appreciate the gift that is clothing.
Um I remember
a story then of safer how they were so
poor they didn't have shoes and so all
the kids wanted to go to learn only one
pair of shoes and it was a very snowy
winter. So what did mom do? She couldn't
decide between the kids. So she took on
the clothing and she went one by one and
went back and forth to the back to this
and back the whole morning to get all
the the
to uh to learn Torah and attributed all
of his uh growth in life in Torah to his
mom. But in any case, we take it for
granted. We have clothing, we have tw
you know so many pairs of shoes and this
and that and the other thing about
Hashem. So on a simple level, just
imagine you're in a freezing cold day in
New York City, the coldest place in the
world, and Hashem gave you clothing. So
you can use that imagination trick to
make it uh more powerful, more
meaningful. Uh, nonetheless, I think
there's another dimension of what we're
really supposed to be thanking Hashem
for uh when we um when we thank him for
clothing. And that goes brings us back
to the first time when mankind was given
clothing. Okay. Um, who remembers when
was that first time in the Torah when
man was given clothing? Yeah.
>> Uh, [clears throat] Hashem made clothes
for
>> very good. Excellent. So in Genesis
3:21,
Hashem himself gives clothing to Adam
and now he doesn't just randomly give
them clothing. They didn't have clothing
off the bat. He gives them clothing in
the context after they sin after this of
right before they get kicked out of the
Garden of Eden. He gives them clothing.
What the clothing was, we don't know.
There's different opinions,
but he gives them clothing. One opinion,
by the way, interestingly enough, was he
gave them a talis, he gave them situs.
Okay? I often tell this to bar mitzvah
boys. One of my jobs when they put on
their talis, this is the first garment
that God gave uh mankind. Okay?
So, in any case, God gives him clothing.
But wait a second, why didn't he start
off with clothing? Right? So, we have to
go back in the story a little bit. How
was Adam and Eve originally created?
They were created
naked. How do I know they were created
naked? Because after Adam and Eve eat
from the fruit, God approaches them,
right? Genesis 38.
And uh sorry, I just I'm a tour guide so
I do the English. Uh I know it better.
And Hashem says,
uh, he asks Adam, you know, what's going
on, how you doing? And he says, "Oh, I'm
sorry. I was hiding from you because I'm
naked." And [clears throat] then Hashem
says, "Gotcha. I knew that you How do
you know you're naked?" Right? Which is
Mashma that he was originally naked. And
then at a certain point, he realizes
after eating the fruit that he's not,
he's naked and he's ashamed of his
nakedness. Then God gives him clothing.
So that's the story. What's the meaning
behind it? Okay. So here's my take. I
believe I got this take from Arya
Kaplan's beautiful safer that I read
years ago, but or something close to
what he the way he interprets it also
based on Schwab's interpretation. Says
Adam originally was created naked
because originally there's nothing
impure. There was nothing tainted about
being naked. It was like, you know, I
walk around with my titus. If I walk
around in the old city with wearing
millin, what do I have to be ashamed
about? So I walk around, I'm naked, you
know, it's it's an Adam and Eve purvu.
It's first mitzvah in the Torah. What's
there to be ashamed about? But then came
the sin of and the snake and it tainted
that action. It wasn't done.
It was done for it was done for the
wrong reasons. At that point, they
basically have lowered themselves to the
level of an animal.
And for a human to be on the level of an
animal, to be using sexuality just like
an animal is embarrassing. God built us
in such a way that that is
[clears throat] not natural. We really
are supposed to be better than an
animal. Okay? And so we're ashamed of
ourselves. And before God kicks us out
of the Garden of Eden, he gives us one
last gift to give us strength to to
remind you that you're not an animal,
that you're above an animal. And what is
that of course that clothing garment
that talis or whatever exactly it was
that gives.
So that's his way of telling you're not
an animal. You're higher than an animal.
You're better than an animal. Animals
don't wear clothing. Right? Except those
like cute puppy dogs and some horses.
But most of the time animals don't wear
clothing because they they're they're
animals. They don't have anything to
embarrass. But us humans are not
animals. And so at least most humans,
not not nowadays, I know not everyone's
into it, but most humans wear clothing.
Um, and that's an expression of our
our soul being in the being higher than
animals. And so when we thank Hashem,
we're not just thanking Hashem for my
sweater, but I'm thanking Hashem for my
sense of and my ability to view myself
as a soul and not simply as a body. And
that's ultimately what this braha is uh
is the morame to us. You can see this
kapan says in the word begged itself.
But what does begged remind us of the
chesh?
Bed.
means to rebel. In other words, a beed
in a way only came about because the
rebellion of mankind in in the garden of
Eden. So there's this one element of
beaded which is a little bit and in an
ideal world we want to go back to the
world of where that where you don't need
but in the world we live in we needim
for the most part. you know, most of the
time it's that's that that that is what
we need in order to remind us of our
soul. Um, it's interesting that Yaku
Katan points out that actually an embryo
is surrounded with a little uh what's it
called?
>> Embiotic.
>> Embiotic fluid, which is in a way like
its clothing garment. I guess the
alkatan holds that at least in the world
we live in, it's to be garbed. So that's
I'd say a secondary a little bit of a
deeper level of what we're we can have
when we say this of mi that God is
specifically giving me this garment
every single day when I put on that
first garment. Finally, we'll go uh to a
third. Actually, before we get to the
third level, I have a two 2B um and that
there's a special kavana that we can
have when we wear clothing on shabas.
Okay? Because there's shabas clothing
and then there's weekday clothing and
they're not the same. They have
different uh purposes. They have
different stories.
The garra tells us that every shabas
would wash himself in warm water. He
would then d clothing
and he would say that big shabbat your
shabas clothing should not be like your
clothing and he was like an angel. He
looked like an angel. That's the way the
gamarra describes
Eli.
So based on this by the way based on
this the cabalist say that you should
have completely different garments on
shabis than during the week and if you
go to your cabalistic friends invat
you'll see they have all white garments
eight garments and they don't wear
anything they have special that's like
Batman they have you know their their
cape they have their shabas garments and
they have their weekday garments and
they have one nothing to do one with
another because it's a completely
different nature shabas clothing to
weekday clothing.
>> The first for shabas is to have special
clothing. So we should all have
ourselves to have special beautiful
shabas clothing. Again on a cabalistic
idea even your underwear and your
undershirts should be different on chab
and special white gar guard clothing. On
a pushet level you should just have
something special something different uh
at least your your external layers. Um
there's discussion about do you need
special shabas shoes or not? The more
the better, the nicer, the more unique,
especially in our generation, why not
have special garb just for shabas. Um
and the idea is that on shabas, our
clothing says
reflects our inner holiness. And the
holier you are, the holier garbs are.
And your clothing actually it's not but
on shabas it's actually uplifting us.
It's sanctifying us. It's bringing our
nishama out of us when we wear that holy
shabus garb just like what is what what
does this remind us of in in the Torah
itself who wear special garben
>> the coen the co right we're going to get
up to those paras we two paras in Torah
just dedicated to the para tab. We
always read around PM time. Not a
coincidence, right? Because we talking
in perm. Everyone's already getting
their perm
brings us back to Mosherenu when he put
on a mask and the mask had him shine
this amazing light. So on shabis what
we're doing is we're taking our cotton
note or with an in and we're switching
it into kotenote or with an olive uh
garbs of light not garbs of external
physicality but garbs of light. So while
we normally just have uh you know
the first and second kabonas uh thank
god that I'm I'm more than an animal on
shabas we can have kabona that these
garb the clothing that I'm wearing is
mam is sanctifying me it's mish
uplifting me and bringing me to the high
the level of a malik to the level of uh
of a coat
so that's kavana to be Okay. Yeah.
>> Um,
is this at all tied to how Hashem
directed
us to wash our clothes before
>> Oh, very nice. I didn't make that
connection, but you're right. Last
week's para, Hashem gives us a few
instructions.
You got to sanctify yourself to receive
the Torah. And one of his most central
ways in which we prepare to receiving
the Torah, the you have to do laundry.
have to prepare ourselves physically
have beautiful clothing. Likrat Hashem
was giving the Torah at Harena
[clears throat] Shimchinkas points out
that we parallel that by going out to
greet him in Kabal Shabbat and by
wearing beautiful clothing. Ezra
actually made a specific decree of um
having special garb uh and and having
people do laundry
in in order to prepare for chabas. So
for sure it's a great pickup.
Larry beautiful. So one more kavana for
Malish arim. This one is based on the
Kabala and the holy schllo of Yeshaya
Harowitz who was the the greatest rabbi
of the generation and he comes to Shalim
from I believe Krakco and Prague and he
writes a seafair called Shara Shamay
Harowitz in this beautiful seafair he
writes that arim like means like this
that every mitzvah we do is our real
garbs, right? We're naked,
just a body. But then when we do a
mitzvah, we create a clothing garment.
You ever learn the Tanya? He talks a lot
about this.
And then our mitzvah cloak us. Okay?
He goes into depth to this. Hashem,
Hashem wears
highness, etc., etc. In any case, what
he says is the only problem is that this
spiritual mitzvot that we get, it's only
in the next world. We only get to feel
the mitzvah garments that we're wearing
when we die. So then, and every night we
go up to the next world and then we're
in trouble. There's all these kit, all
these prosecutors that can tr you know,
get in our way. So, Hashem is
Hashem kind of gives us a hug and
protects us. We go up to the heavenly
world every night when we go to bed and
we come down, Hashem is protecting us
and saving us. Or on another level, um
it's brought down that when we do a sin,
shalom, we give make dirty garments. We
create bad uh clothing. And so, Hashem
every night does the laundry. Okay. And
cleans out very nice pristine and we
wake up in the morning give up sorry and
we feel refreshed and start we start
again we get a we get a new start. So um
beautiful. So that's the second third
kana of uh malish alum
that uh we get these new beautiful
garments to start off our day. are not
our our our new soul every day gets
clean free and we're garbed by the love
of a kadesh. Okay, gorgeous. Okay, so
we're making we're doing good. I think
we can squeeze in another brah or two.
Let's move to the next
materi.
So we're going to do the same base level
and then go a little deeper and deeper.
What is it? What are we thanking God for
when we say thank you Hashem who has
unbound released the bound. What are we
referring to on a simple level?
>> Maybe taking us out of the shrine I can
for us.
>> Oh, okay. That's that's good. Actually,
I I didn't have that cabana, but you're
right. Every morning we were bound in
the mids
uh the constrictions of mitim which was
the midrash describes it as like a giant
prison. And so Hashem gets us out of it
and allows us to be free men. So that's
I like that. It's a very good kavano.
But the kumar says on the most simple
level every night when we go to bed we
are bound. We are restricted. We can't
really move because of the nature of
sleep. We we have this concept that when
we say
we said God has um tied us up in the of
sleep
we we're we can't move. We're in prison.
And so interestingly enough when we can
wake up and stretch. So they were maken
this language of materi
that he unbounds those who were tied up
okay that we can move in other words
okay that's what we're thanking Hashem
of Schwab we're not just thanking Hashem
for the ability to move but we're
thanking Hashem for our entire body
because it's all really involved in this
process of moving and it's unbelievable
if you think about it how complex is the
process that is go from my brain to my
ability to do this, right? And it
happens in a split second, in a nancond
to go for my brain. And you know, you
can look up an AI afterwards, how crazy
all the muscles involved and the tendons
and the ligaments and right. I remember
when I was studying AP bio a million
years ago, how
unbelievable how complex the human body
is. And that's worth thanking Hashem for
every morning when I'm able to stretch
and just move my body.
By the way, um Pesak Chrome recently he
got out of a a he had a what's it
called? uh heart attack, a stroke and he
realized a whole new for both this and
the next
when he after a stroke sometimes you
can't even move your your finger and you
have to do work just to be able to move
[clears throat] your finger. So if you
know he had a whole another level of
kavana to say the
if that's true for just one finger how
thankful we have to be for our whole
body. We know there are people who have
all sorts of diseases and and their
muscles don't work right or maybe
someone had a sore back once and they
recognize wow what a braha it is that we
all of our muscles are working our
ligaments are working even not 100% you
know 95% 98% it's an unbelievable braha
and something not to be taken uh for
granted so that's I'd say shot if we had
that kabana Right. But nonetheless,
let's go a little bit uh deeper. I tell
you the shot I'm not going to tell you.
That's the shaft shot. You guys know the
famous story of Sha's feet
went around saying matim and then he
would allow people to eat pig and he
would allow people to do terrible things
against the Torah. He said I am a man.
I'm being mir that which is user. Okay.
So that's not that's not our we don't we
don't have that. That doesn't work with
us.
But so we're not going to but
nonetheless what cabana in addition can
we have when we say mater
so uh the gr in his commentary on the
mish it's funny sometimes people think
of the as like the anti-assid
and he was a little bit anti-assidic to
be honest but he was a big cabalist he
was not your regular good old you know
rationalist so So the GR writes that
there's something called a gilgal of a
soul into a do into a rock for example
that could happen. That's what the vagon
says that there could be a person who
did such a terrible sin that he's stuck
in a table that he's stuck in a rock.
Okay. And we can by doing mitzvot we can
actually free the holy you know that
soul and and free him from that tree or
free him from that rock. This is a bit
of a controversial uh grow not all even
some cabalists don't hold by this
concept but that's what the grow writes
and he says that that's the inner
meaning when we say mater that god will
at times by us doing a mitzvah you know
who knows what freeing we're doing the
stories like they say that
you know the rabbi had to go to that
specific tree because he knew he needed
to do a tikun to raise the holy soul
from that tree. LA last week I have a
minion we run which is like a singing
minion on Wednesdays and the only thing
is we got locked out of the sh cuz they
they put the key in the wrong place. So
you know nobody knew what to do and I'm
like guys just come with me. So I
brought the hera. Larry's there. He can
attest. It's a true story. And we went
to a random corner on Niss Bakar Street,
you know, where the neighbors wouldn't
scream at us too much. And I was
thinking, you know, it could be that the
random pole that I wrapped my filling
on, it needed a tikun. You know, I need
Who knows? Who knows? Matias. Who knows
why Hashem sent us to that corner.
>> It's very Yeah. Well, I'm sure almost
certainly wouldn't wouldn't have uh
minded.
>> So, we made the best of this situation.
>> Do you think the rock has a
consciousness that it's tra?
>> That is an excellent question that I do
not know the answer to. Uh I don't know.
>> Got to ask a greater catalyst uh than
me. I don't know. I haven't done
>> I haven't done any research. Maybe on a
very low level it has some sort of
consciousness, but it would be my guess.
But I don't know. I don't know. Um okay.
Third level um of kavana when we say
matarim
very very relevant for our time period.
What was what was all the Israeli
policemen theim
right? They were in an they were
imprisoned
and when they went free
certainly the first thing that went
through so many people's minds was
free those who were stuck in prison. In
fact there were many people who had that
specific
that they should free
those who were imprisoned and it's a
very beautiful thing to do and it's a
beautiful kavana. I would say on a level
it's it's not it doesn't hold up that
you can't actually say with God's name
according to at least all the post that
I see uh with with that mater
um why because specifically um had
kavana for this action of waking up in
the morning they didn't have in mind
that anytime a person comes out of
prison they should say this they could
say it without God's name there's plenty
of other ways they should and can thank
Hashem they could say halal, right? They
can say as as can we. Um they can even
say uh
um they the themselves can say and
likely their family and good friends can
say
and maybe
friends which you ask a mid and you you
could even say that you know when their
families they have many beautiful videos
of the families reuniting and saying
these but they're not supposed to with
God's name um
but as a kavana for sure we can have
that in mind thank you and you can you
know put a picture of a k next to your
sitter and we'll certainly enhance our
kavana and finally
uh one last kavana let's say
interpretation number four of mater
we talked about physically going out of
our in our chains so what other element
can we thank Hashem for freeing us. What
do you think?
Psychologically or perhaps spiritually,
you know, and this is what some of the
farm break bring down that at times we
feel like we're inchained to our bad
habits. for example, you know, everyone
has got their everyone's got their stuff
that we're working on for years and
years and years and a part of us just
wants to give up and feel like I can
never change and I'm stuck, you know, I
can't quit smoking, I can't quit
speaking lash, I can't whatever it is,
quit screaming, whatever my bad habit
is. And then every day we remind
ourselves.
All right. Ultimately in order to free
ourselves of our bad habits
the first step is just recognizing that
there is there is a creator in the world
and he is free. And if we connect
ourselves to him with proper help then
we can we can grow. And plus Hashem's
given us many um many many ways of
helping ourselves. you know, we have
psychologists and and rabbis and
rebbitons and friends. Um, and all of
these are given to us by as ways of
freeing our of whatever chains that we
are struggling with. And that too is a
beautiful we can all have when we say
every uh every morning.
>> The rabbis are better than the
psychologists.
>> I have I hope so. I hope you're right.
It probably depends on the rabbi, but
you know psychology plus some of them
are nosies,
>> right? Awesome. Yeah. How if you if you
find yourself a good rabbi who is a real
friend,
we should all be or even find a rabbi
who's also psychologist. That's some
some of my buddies are rabbi
psychologist. That's good too.
Uh one last for our last five minutes of
learning together.
What does it mean? You are the source of
blessing. Hashem who straightens the
bend. Okay. So again on a simple level
the Garra is saying after you you know
stre stretch a little bit you straighten
up right and you stand straight and then
you thank Hashem for the ability to
stand straight. But this is a bit
surprising. I mean, I wouldn't have
necessarily expected to get a braha.
What's the difference really between
mati rasur kafu? You know, if I were
writing it, maybe I make a braha on
hearing, I don't know, on breathing,
standing up straight. I mean, it's nice
and got no beef, but like is that really
worthy of uh thanking Hashem? So, first
of all, obviously, yes, right? notal. So
obviously Hashem wanted us to appreciate
just the ability that we could stand
straight and not hunch back is something
and like said like I can move my finger
straight is already worth uh thanking
Hashem for that. But I believe there's
also another layer another dimension of
what this might be talking about. What
do we re really mean when we say thank
you Hashem for making me straight for
bending for making the bent straight?
Any uh ideas? Any thoughts?
>> Sorry.
Okay, that's a nice idea that sometimes
we were bent at a place, you know, where
we were doing this wrong, we're doing
that wrong, and uh then Hashem gives us
uh, you know, he gives us messages and
the question is, are we picking up on
those messages? Remember the beautiful
mus that we sometimes get and allowing
us to straighten ourselves up and go in
the ways of Hashem. Beautiful. That's a
nice cabana.
>> I was going to say we're bent over when
we're burdened with all kinds of things.
>> Yeah. Yes. So connecting to what we were
saying in Matias. Sometime we just feel
so burdened. We go to bed and we feel so
stressed out and then somehow we wake up
in the morning and Hashem makes allows
us to feel good again. Feel back to
ourselves again. And maybe that's
another covenant of
beautiful
>> about the back doesn't hurt.
>> Especially when your back doesn't hurt,
>> right?
>> We should be all be blessed. have good
chiropractors and you know help make
make sure our backs don't hurt for sure.
So two more kavanas. One, the midrash
says that in the golus all of an isel is
called
kufi bent. We're in a state of being
bent in the golus. It's like our
natural. We always have to be, you know,
wiggling around. I mean, look at Bakar.
He's always kind of like walking like
that a little bit and we're trying to
avoid make sure that the government
doesn't catch up to us and we're trying
to we're bent. We're not we're not our
true selves in the state of Gulos. But
first of all, we're domining every day
that he should bring the Msiah and uh
and that he should straighten us out
completely.
But I would add that we don't have to
wait to the future. Right now we are
thanking God that he's straightening us
out out in in our generation as we say
in that God is bringing us brought us
back to our Israel
standing tall standing strong standing
firm you know being proud Jews
especially in Israel we're able to thank
Hashem the ability to be a proud Jew and
not have to hide it and not have to you
know pretend that it's not something
which was Muan may not something we
always had and here we are
you know able to even not outside of
it's a big braha um to be able to be a
strong proud Jew. I remember I used to
feel this very strongly when I would
make my shabas meals. Uh I I generally
would do them and still often do them
outside in the open. And I remember
thinking, even in Brooklyn, the most
Jewish place in the world, I probably
wouldn't have had the guts to go in the
m center of town and just make a big
chabas meal, you know, and sing and
dance in the middle of of of flap. Yeah.
Maybe maybe in bar park. I don't know.
But not not in not in anyways. But here
in Shaim Hashem, NO PROBLEM. You know,
you you do a big chabas. You walk with
you walk around with filling.
sitra and we're standing strong and
proud and we have an army that
has blessed us with that that's that's
defending us and to me at least that's a
kavana when I say the word zoku that we
can be proud Jews once again
[clears throat]
talks about this in his essay about the
importance of yalima of the war in ' 67
and how Jews really were ashamed to be
Jews uh until the six- day war and then
Jews started being proud to be Jewish
and that was really what uh kickstarted
the chuba movement when people started
saying wow I'm Jewish I'm proud and that
got many many things uh going in a great
way so uh we have to remember that and
and and keep it and keep it going
another yeah
>> oh I just thought is it brought down I
think that Hashem sent thunder into the
bria to straighten what's bent in a
man's heart
>> yeah you're fair that's brought in and
brahos in the ninth per and it's quoted
by rabbi
>> that uh when we have these uh
events that happen outside of us to
straighten us out and bring us back to
so that's another uh very good insight a
nice kabana beautiful
um second so why do we stand tall you
know most animals don't stand tall right
most of them are on all fours
um but for some reason Hashem created us
and we can stand straight and I think
also uh polar bears sometimes but most
of of animals
>> gorillas suggest they can also stand up
>> also gorillas but they don't usually
walk when they're standing straight up
and us humans at least most of us do and
so that's a way of again like we said
before
showing that we are proud to be human
beings
finally
brought down in this safer which I often
use um from a kabad perspective that
when the reason God created us standing
tall reflects our inner natural
intuitive uh in ability to look up to
Hashem and recognize God as a source of
our life. Whereas an animal looks down
because he doesn't recognize naturally
that God is a source of blessing. We are
blessed to be able to recognize Hashem
as a source of all of our uh and so we
thank Hashem for the ability to rec to
thank Hashem. Um
and final thought to close our off and
just summarize. We say
from the streets
I call out to God from the deepest
darkest places I call out to God. He
answers me
from the and makes widens us from the
ka. What's gamatria of
15 says this the tells us is an illusion
to the 15
that when we say these brahos with
proper gratitude
not only does it bring blessing into our
lives just on the psychological and
spiritual level but it actually brings
Yeshua's into our lives when Hashem sees
that uh we're thanking him for
everything. So uh so it brings miracles
into our lives. I was reading a story
yesterday as I was walking back to the
hotel. There was a a man and he doesn't
normally do this but after dabing he
went up to the Aron and just started
thanking Hashem for his children. And
that day his kid fell from a second
story uh window shalom and um and he
fell like 14t
or more even I think 16 ft. and and he
miraculously was totally fine. They had
no no explanations but he felt it could
be that the salvation of thanking Hashem
sincerely was what ultimately brought
him that Yeshua. So uh so Hashem, thank
you Hashem that he gave me eyes to be
able to be together with such friends
and learn Torah together. And Hashem
should enlighten our eyes.
And we should appreciate the gift of
clothing, the gift of being a human
being who has buas.
We should appreciate the gift of being
able to move. And uh we should
appreciate uh zok kafu that hashem
straightens us out and the ability to
stand strong and recognize uh that
hashem is the source [snorts] of all of
our blessings. So you can sing with me a
last naked
[applause]
>> [singing]
[singing]
>> Lord
name
[applause]
[singing]
[music] I
Halleluah. [singing]
[singing]
Everyone [music]
[singing]
[music]
[singing]
[music]
[singing]
[music]
>> [singing]