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What to do when God says "WAIT"
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What if the delays in your life aren’t detours, but part of Hashem’s perfect plan? In this video, Rabbi Efrem Goldberg shares a moving real-life story from an email he received from someone suffering from loneliness. Hashem is always writing our story—even when we can’t yet see the ending. 🙏 If this video inspires you, please: 👍 Like the video 💬 Share your biggest takeaway in the comments 👉 Tap Subscribe and hit the 🔔 so you never miss a dose of Emunah! ===== #rabbiefremgoldberg #emunah #faith #prayer #jewishwisdom #torah
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
I can't tell you how often people come
with their problems and when things work
out or the good news, they forget to
tell you.
>> They left you off with we're getting our
family's falling apart. We can't stand
each other. This is probably a divorce
and end of our marriage. Don't get in
Hashem's way. He has a plan. And lean
into that process and savor the journey,
not only the destination. Because as we
go through what we learn, if only we had
the crystal ball, if only we could fast
forward, if only we could see the letter
that we're one day going to write at the
end, we'd have so much more strength to
be able to get through that journey.
Someone had emailed me, let's see the
timeline, June 2024, a year ago. You
always, and this I'm going to reread
part of an email from a year ago. You
always say amuna emails that do not have
a happy ending are your favorite ones.
And that inspired me to write today. I
don't have an inspirational story to
share. I have some very raw emotions
coming from a girl who feels hurt but
knows that Hashem is orchestrating
everything hopefully. I've been in
shukim for a number of years. Everything
gets harder and more painful. It's
torture to be in society that labels
negative stereotypes older girls. It's a
long email and it's all about the misery
and the pain and the loneliness and
sense of abandonment and where is Hashem
and I don't know why he's putting me
through this. I try to smile, hold my
head high. I know that Hashem is doing
this for my good. uh as you said in the
year today, Hashem is going to heal all
of us spiritually and so on. I hope to
write one day that Hashem is doing this
well for me and I see him in my life.
That was a year ago, last week. Dear
Rabbi Goldberg,
I want to share that Barak Hashem
I got engaged last night.
>> Wow.
>> And I became a kala. I am so so so three
so I am so so so happy and grateful to
Hashem that my is more incredible than I
ever could have imagined or dreamed.
Hashem really is awesome
and he had a master plan all along. I've
gained and grown a lot through my single
years and so much of my growth is thanks
to living with amuna sharim. Thank you
from the bottom of my heart. May I bench
you to continue have the strength to
give the amunes in the beautiful way you
do. Thank you, Rabbi Goldberg. There
must have been dust in the email because
it's very dusty in here. But
>> yeah,
>> what a I love that she wrote this email
not as a new email, but it was a reply
to our previous correspondence that
included that email from a year ago
because so badly I want to tell people
or publish this or remind everyone that
that we could write that email that I'm
alone and where is he and what's the
plan and why is he doing this to he's
amazing. Hashem is awesome and I learned
so much and I grew so much and I see why
I needed to go through it and it was
well worth it when I look back on the
payoff of where I am today. And not all
of us can and not all of us do. And
sometimes it's one year later. Sometimes
it's a decade later. Sometimes it's a
lifetime later. And sometimes there are
questions or thinks or hopes or wishes
or wants that we don't ever get to write
the second email that Barakashem now it
came through. But don't get in Hashem's
way. He has a plan. and lean into that
process and savor the journey not only
the destination because as we go through
what we learn we shared you know we put
out these daily reels of little clips
from our shirim and there was a little
clip and a micro from one of our mun
where I talked about failing forward the
Thomas Edison the light bulb that it's
not many ways that we fail but see it as
all steps in the journey towards success
and that all those dates and all that
waiting and all that longing and all
that initiative and all that world of
shuk
are not wasted time and energy and
emotion and makeup or money, but they're
all a journey to learning about oneself
and getting one step closer to where one
wants to be. And if only, if only we had
the crystal ball, if only we could fast
forward, if only we could see the letter
that we're one day going to write at the
end, we'd have so much more strength to
be able to get through that journey. So
sometimes we need to write that letter
even though it hasn't happened yet. We
have to write the followup to remind us
and give us strength and help us get
through where we need to go. But a big
mazle to the author of that email. I'm
so grateful and happy she followed up. I
tell you, as a rabbi in general, forget
living with amuna. Just as a rabbi in
general, I can't tell you how often
people come with their problems. And
when things work out or the good news,
they forget to tell you.
>> They left you off with we're getting
divor's falling apart. We can't stand
each other. This is probably a divorce
and end of our marriage. We have
fertility struggles. We can't get
pregnant. Yeah. I have no money. I can't
pay my bill. That's where they leave you
off and the name is in your sitter and
your tummik
and they forget the PS. By the way, I
won the lottery. By the way, we have the
happiest marriage ever. By the way, I
had quintuplets. By the way, they forget
that. So those emails I really mean they
mean a lot to me and I'm grateful for