Transcript
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One of the most powerful and beautiful
ideas in Judaism is that at every moment
the entire world is trying to teach you
something. Most people walk through life
and they're half asleep. They look at
the world and see objects, buildings,
cars, phones, traffic, noise, people,
random events. But a wise person doesn't
just see life. He reads life.
Who's wise? the one who learns from
every person. Not just from rabbis, not
just from everything. Hashem puts in
front of him things and he learns from
them. Because Hashem doesn't just create
a world to live in. He created a world
to decode. The wise person doesn't just
see a phone. He sees how quickly
attention gets stolen from us and asks
himself what's he going to do with his
own mind. He doesn't just see traffic.
He sees thousands of people all rushing
somewhere and wonders if any of them
actually know where they're going. He
doesn't just see a supermarket. He sees
overflowing shown and realizes how easy
it is to forget gratitude when
everything is always available. He
doesn't just see an ocean. He sees
something that looks calm on the
surface, but has depths that you can't
see and remembers that people are the
same way. He doesn't just see fire. He
sees how something can build and also
destroy and realizes how careful power
has to be handled to thinking people.
Nothing is random. Nothing is just
scenery. Everything is a message. The
only question is, are you awake enough
to hear it? Well, recently I went on a
submarine and most people would walk
onto a submarine and just think, okay,
cool or interesting or claustrophobic.
But if your eyes are open, if your mind
is open, if your soul is awake, even a
submarine can teach you how to live. I
walked in there curious. And I walked
out of there with some fabulous life
lessons and mashalam and perspectives
and reminders about what it means to
survive pressure and to navigate
darkness and to stay hidden when
necessary and to move through dangerous
waters without losing direction. The
world is talking all the time. The
question is whether we're listening. So
climb aboard the submarine with me and
let's hear what it has to say.
Submarines are one of the most powerful
weapons ever created. But here's the
fascinating part. When a submarine is
doing its job properly, you can't see
it. It just disappears beneath the
surface, it doesn't show off. It doesn't
parade around. In fact, if a submarine
is visible, that means that something
went wrong. And yet, from beneath the
surface, it can protect entire fleets of
ships. In Judaism, the same thing is
often true. Some of the most powerful
spiritual people in the world are the
ones nobody sees. The quiet learner, the
person doing kassid privately, the
person fighting their own battles with
their own yateshara, the askin that
nobody knows about. Judaism doesn't only
value loud greenness. Sometimes the
greatest people are the ones doing their
work below the surface. We are living in
a world where many many people feel the
need to be seen. where every good deed
needs a post or a picture or a headline.
We live in a culture obsessed with being
loud and taking credit. But real power,
real change, real greatness does not
wave a flag. It's the force quietly
running beneath the surface. So ask
yourself in life, do you want applause
or do you want impact? Because the world
doesn't need more clout chasers. The
world needs more submarines. People who
don't get credit, people who get
results. Ever wonder where submarines
refuel? Think about it. If you're in the
middle of an ocean, thousands of miles
from land, and the whole point of a
submarine is that it stays underwater
and hidden, where exactly are you
pulling over to refuel? There's no gas
stations in the middle of the Pacific
Ocean. So, what do they do? Here's the
wild part that most people don't know.
Modern submarines don't refuel. You
heard that? Not every few weeks, not
every few months, ever. They don't
refuel ever. A modern submarine can run
for years and decades without refueling
a single time. Now, how in the world is
that possible? Great question. The
answer is nuclear energy. Inside the
submarine is a tiny reactor with uranium
fuel. The scientists take these uranium
atoms and they split them apart. It's
called nuclear fision, which when the
atoms split, they release an
unbelievable amount of energy. And when
I say unbelievable, I mean a tiny amount
of uranium, literally a piece you could
hold in your hand, can produce the same
energy as millions and millions of
gallons of gasoline. So, while most
machines are constantly scrambling to
refuel cars, trains, boats, a nuclear
submarine just keeps going. Now look at
Jewish history. Physically speaking, we
were never the strongest nation. We were
the smallest, the most scattered. We
lived on the edge of cities. We were the
ones exiled, enslaved, expelled, mocked,
crushed. And yet, civilizations that
were bigger, richer, stronger, and more
powerful than us are gone. Empires that
once ruled the entire world are now
museum exhibits. And yet somehow the
Jewish people are still sailing forward
through history while so many other
nations are shipwrecked at the bottom of
the ocean. How? What exactly is our
secret? The secret is that most of the
world runs on gasoline. Power, money,
gold, pressure, fame. But gasoline runs
out. And sooner or later, every empire
running on that fuel has to scramble to
refuel. And when the fuel runs out, the
engine stops. But the Jewish people
don't run on gasoline. The Jewish people
run on Tyra. And Tyra isn't gasoline.
Tyra is nuclear energy. And a nuclear
engine doesn't need to refuel. We are a
tiny nation. But we're plugged into an
infinite power source. So while the rest
of the world keeps stopping to refill
their tanks, stockpiling gold and
chasing diamonds and rebuilding power,
we go back to our reactor. We open a
garum. We learn a puk. We live a
mitzvah. We say to Helen. And that
energy has been fueling the Jewish
people for over 3,000 years. So while
the rest of the world keeps stopping to
refuel like gas stations, we just glide
on past silent, unstoppable, humming
along with an engine that never runs
out. All right, I'm standing inside a
submarine. I have a question. Ever think
about it? Submarines can stand
underwater for months at a time. Now
think about it. You play hideandsek in a
closet for 2 minutes and suddenly it
gets stuff in. You're like, "Okay, I
need air." How in the world do these
sailors sitting underwater for months
without fresh air? How do they survive?
Here's the wild part. Submarines make
oxygen from salt water. I'm not kidding.
Inside the submarine, they take
seawater, run electricity through it,
and it splits the water molecules apart.
Water is H2O, which is two hydrogen
atoms and one oxygen atom. The
electricity breaks them apart. The
submarine keeps the oxygen for the crew
to breathe and the hydrogen gets vented
out back into the ocean. Which means
when you're in a submarine, the very
thing that could drown you becomes the
thing that keeps you alive. And that's
exactly how life works. The world can
feel like endless water closing in.
Pressure everywhere, temptations,
distractions, deadlines, bad news,
social media, friends pulling you
sideways. It's overwhelming. You look
around you and you think, "I cannot
breathe here. I can't survive." But
here's the thing. Just like a submarine,
you can make oxygen from the water
around you. You take your world, the
very thing that could drag you down, and
then you turn them into fuel for your
soul. How that annoying coworker learn
patience, humility, how to influence
them positively. So instead of drowning
you, now they're giving you oxygen in
life. That boring schol that long dafish
maybe it's giving you time to actually
think about the words you're saying or
actually understand the suga that tidal
wave of social pressure consumerism
filter it through Torah values decide
what's holy what builds you and ignore
the rest learn how to take on the oxygen
that mundane task washing dishes walking
to work paying bills do it with the
right intention with a focus on serving
hashem and suddenly all of it becomes
oxygen some people see water in life and
drown but others like a submarine crew
figure out how to breathe inside of it.
They don't just survive, they live. They
turn pressure into growth and
distractions into the very fuel that
propels them. That is the secret. That's
how you take a world that seems designed
to pull you under and make it fuel for
your soul. And once you learn that art,
it doesn't matter how flooded your world
gets because you know how to live and
breathe underneath. A submarine can
withstand enormous amounts of pressure
from the ocean. There's thousands of
tons of water pushing on it from every
direction. But there's one thing a
submarine can't survive, and that's a
tiny leak. Not a torpedo, not a giant
explosion, one small little hole, and
slowly the water can come in, and
eventually the entire sub is lost.
Sometimes people think that spiritual
collapse comes from one huge mistake.
But often it's the opposite. Often what
sinks the ship is the small little leap,
the bad habit, the one toxic influence,
the one area of life where a person
says, "This doesn't matter." And slowly
the water starts coming in. Maybe it was
the one night you decided to take that
job that was more pay but not as kosher
as the other one. Maybe it was choosing
that small little sh that felt a little
more relaxed and suddenly hanging around
friends who didn't push you to grow.
Maybe it was that one small decision at
30 that seemed tiny and insignificant
and harmless. It was just a small almost
microscopic crack. But now decades
later, it's led to spiritual mediocrity,
missed opportunities, and regrets that
weigh on you. The strongest people
aren't the ones who survive giant
explosions or public crisis. The
strongest people are the ones who guard
the small cracks. The ones who notice
the little choices. Every conversation,
every friendship, every habit, and
refuse to let even a tiny leak
compromise their soul. Because more
often than not, it's the tiny leaks, not
the giant waves, that sink the ship.