
Living Inspired
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Living
Inspired
Tatz, Akiva
Price£16.00
Shows how an understanding of some
of the deeper ideas and patterns of Torah thought can illuminate our
everyday experiences.
Inspiration and Disappointment
(or Why a Good Time Never Lasts)
The natural pathway of all life experiences begins with inspiration and
soon fades to disappointment. Let us analyze this phenomenon and
understand it.
Human consciousness and human senses are tuned to an initial burst of
sensitivity and then rapidly decay into dullness. Sights, sounds,
smells, even tactile stimuli are felt sharply at first and then hardly
at all - a constant sound is not registered; one suddenly becomes aware
that it was present when it stops! We are incapable of maintaining the
freshness of any experience naturally - only in the dimension of
miracle is that possible: the sacrificial bread in the Beis Hamikdash,
the Temple, remained steaming fresh permanently to manifest the
constant freshness of Hashem's relationship with the Jewish people. The
natural pathway is that things which are fresh become stale.
One of the Torah sources for this idea lies in the sequence of events
surrounding the exodus from Egypt. At an extremely low point in our
history, during the intense misery of slavery in Egypt, literally at
the point of spiritual annihilation, the Jewish people were uplifted
miraculously. Ten plagues revealed Hashem's presence and might,
culminating in a night of unprecedented revelation with the tenth. This
spiritual high was amplified by many orders of magnitude at the
splitting of the sea - there the lowliest of the Jewish people
experienced more than the highest prophet subsequently. And suddenly,
once through the sea, they were deposited in a desert with many days of
work ahead of them to climb to the spiritual status of meriting the
Sinai experience, the giving of the Torah. Mystically, a desert means a
place of intense death-forces, a place of lethal ordeals. No water
means no life. (And we see later the potency of the ordeals which faced
them in the desert.)
What is the meaning of this pattern? The idea is that in order to save
the Jewish people in Egypt outside help was necessary. Hashem appeared
and elevated us spiritually although we did not deserve it
intrinsically, we had not yet earned it. But once saved, once inspired,
once made conscious of our higher reality, the price must be paid, the
experience must be earned, and in working to earn the level which was
previously given artificially, one acquires that level genuinely.
Instead of being shown a spiritual level one becomes it.
And that is the secret of life. A person is inspired artificially at
the beginning of any phase of life, but to acquire the depth of
personality which is demanded of us, Hashem removes the inspiration.
The danger is apathy and depression; the challenge is to fight back to
the point of inspiration, and in so doing to build it permanently into
one's character. The plagues in Egypt and the splitting of the sea are
dazzling beyond description, but then Hashem puts us in the desert and
challenges us to fight through to Sinai. In Egypt He demonstrates
destruction of ten levels of evil while we watch passively; in the
desert He brings ten levels of evil to bear against us and challenges
us to destroy them.
This idea recurs everywhere. Pesach occurs in Nissan - the zodiac of
this month is the sheep, an animal which is passively led. Next comes
Iyar - the ox, an animal which has its own wilful strength. And
thereafter comes Sivan - twins, perfect harmony. It is like a father
teaching his child to walk: first the father supports the child as he
takes his first step, but then the father must let go; there is no
other way to learn, and the child must take a frightened and lonely
step unaided. Only then, when he can walk independently, can he feel
his father's love in the very moment which previously felt like
desertion.
Unfortunately most people do not know this secret. We are misled into
thinking that the world is supposed to be a constant thrill and we feel
only half-alive because it is not. Let us examine some applications of
this fundamental principle.
* * *
In aggadic writings we are told that the unborn child is taught the
whole Torah in the womb. An angel teaches him all the mysteries of
Creation and all that he will ever need to know in order to reach
perfection, his own chelek (portion) in Torah. A lamp is lit above his
head, and by its light he sees from one end of the world to the other.
As the child is born, however, the angel strikes him on the mouth and
he forgets all that he has learned and is born a simple and unlearned
baby. The obvious question is: why teach a child so much and then cause
all the teaching to be forgotten?
But the answer is that it is not forgotten; it is driven deep into the
unconscious. A person may be born with no explicit knowledge, but
beneath the conscious surface, intact and rich beyond imagination, is
all that one wishes to know! A lifetime of hard work learning Torah and
working on one's personality will constantly release, bring to
consciousness, innate wisdom. Often when one hears something beautiful
and true one has the sensation, not of learning something, but of
recognizing something! A sensitive individual will feel intimations of
his or her own deep intuitive level often.
The pathway is clear - a person is born with a lifetime of work ahead,
spiritual wisdom and growth are hard-earned. But the inspiration is
within; you were once there! And that inner sense of inspiration
provides the motivation, the source of optimism and confidence that
genuine achievement is possible, even assured, if the necessary effort
is made.
A second application: a characteristic feature of childhood, and
relatively, of the teenage years, is inspired optimism and the lack of
a sense of limitation. Children believe that they can become anything.
The world is larger-than-life to a child, a child is not oppressed by a
limited sense of what is possible. A child has simply to be exposed to
almost any form of greatness (unfortunately, all too often physical and
meaningless) to begin fantasizing about becoming or achieving that same
thing.
However, later in life one is lucky to have any inspiration left at
all. Many adults wonder why life seemed so rich when they were
teenagers, why they could laugh or cry so richly, so fully, back then;
and why life seems so flat (at best) now. But the idea is as we have
described above. First comes a phase of unreal positivity, a charge of
energy. And then life challenges one to climb back to real achievement
independently.
* * *
A third application is to be found in the ba'al teshuva world (ba'al
teshuva describes a person who has discovered a Torah-oriented way of
life after living a more secular lifestyle). Many ba'alei teshuva
experience an unexpected and disturbing letdown. Often the pathway is
as follows. A young person discovers Torah, becomes inspired by a Torah
teacher, and begins to study. Every Torah experience, whether in
learning or in contact with the Orthodox world, is spectacular. Every
text studied is alive with significance, every Shabbos experience is
high, and there is a phase of euphoria. Somehow though, subtly, this
changes and growth has to be sought. Learning may be very difficult.
Often the difficulties seem to far outweigh the breakthroughs. Many are
tempted not to persevere in learning. Of course this is exactly the way
it must be, real growth in learning comes when real effort is
generated. Just as physical muscle is built only against strenuous
resistance, so too spiritual and personality growth is built only
against equivalent resistance. A person who understands this secret can
begin to enjoy the phase of work; a maturity of understanding makes
clear that the first phase was artificial, it is the second phase which
yields real development.
* * *
Perhaps the sharpest application of this idea in modern Western society
is in marriage. Marriage today is to a large extent in ruins in the
secular world. In many communities divorce is more usual than survival
of marriage, and even in those marriages which do survive it is common
to find much disharmony.
One of the prime factors in this disastrous situation is the lack of
understanding of our subject. Marriage has two distinct phases:
romance, and love. Romance is the initial, heady, illogical swirl of
emotion which characterizes a new relationship and it can be extreme.
Love, in Torah terms, is the result of much genuine giving. Love is
generated essentially not by what one receives from a partner, but by
the well-utilized opportunity to give, and to give oneself. The phase
of romance very soon fades, in fact just as soon as it is grasped it
begins to die. A spiritually sensitive person knows that this must be
so, but instead of becoming depressed and concerned that one has
married the wrong person, one should realize that the phase of work, of
giving, is just beginning. The phase of building real love can now
flourish. In fact, in Hebrew there is no word for "romance" - in its
depth it is an illusion. However, in the world of secular values, the
first flash, the "quick fix", is everything.
"Love" is translated as "romance" and when it dies, what is left?
No-one has taught young people that love and life are about giving and
building, and so the tendency is to give up and search for a "quick
fix" elsewhere. Of course, the search must fail because no new
experience will last. Understanding this well can make the difference
between marital misery or worse and a lifetime of married happiness.
Jewish marriage is carefully crafted to transition from initial
inspiration, not to disappointment but to even deeper inspiration. The
menstrual separation laws are just one example - instead of allowing
intensity to dull into tired familiarity, phases of separation generate
new inspiration and the magic never fades.
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