2021-12-31

Coaching vs. Mentoring

A therapist will explore what is stopping you driving your car.

A counsellor will listen to your anxieties about the car.

A mentor will share tips from his or her own experience of driving cars. [Emphasis mine - TS]

A consultant will advise you on how to drive the car.

A coach will encourage and support you in driving the car. [Emphasis mine - TS]

- From Excellence in Coaching edited by Jonathan Passmore

I don't remember how the idea to complement my new private business of coaching with mentoring occurred to me for the first time. Unlike coaching, which I studied systematically in three coach training programs, I've never studied mentoring in any formal setting. Actually, I'm not sure if mentoring is a skill one can learn formally unlike coaching. So after reading a few professional books on the theory and practice of mentoring I decided to jump into water. I spent the last four weeks mentoring three volunteers as an experiment. We had agreed to set as the goal finding their respective life missions on the basis of Hasidis life wisdom.

One of the major difficulties I've been experiencing as a new life coach is to resist the temptation of sharing my life experiences with my clients. In mentoring this is not only permissible but even desirable. Of course, this doesn't mean that I don't believe in the power of coaching, but having coached several people, I've also realized that there is a limit to what clients can attain through questions from the coach - they can't make a quantum leap from their present level of consciousness that has produced their problems to a much higher level of consciousness to solve them. In such a situation all they have to do in mentoring is to receive advice from their mentor who has experienced the same or similar problems and solved them.

To make a long story short, I seem to enjoy mentoring much more than coaching. I feel that the shift from teaching to mentoring is much smoother than that from teaching to coaching. After all, I had spent almost 30 years though in academic settings. I also feel that mentoring is more in tune with my personality than coaching.

But just as coaching has its limit, mentoring has its limit, too, though a different one. In order to benefit from mentoring clients must be prepared to understand and absorb what their mentor shares with them. Coaching, or at least the kind of coaching I offer, which is based on the teachings of Hasidism, is an excellent way to prepare them for the kind of mentoring I offer - to make them become aware, probably for the first time in their life, that they are not what they think they are and their life has been controlled by this illusion about themselves.

2021-12-17

Realization through Contrast

"The words are no more than signposts. That to which they point is not to be found within the realm of thought but a dimension within yourself that is deeper, and infinitely vaster than thought. A vibrantly alive peace is one of the characteristics of that dimension." - Eckhart Tolle

If we lived in light or darkness exclusively, we wouldn't be able to fully realize light and darkness respectively. Some say this is the very reason why our soul descends to this "coarse" physical world (so that it may fully appreciate the Divine light).

Last week I experienced such contrast when I started to share with someone who isn't familiar with Chassidus what little knowledge (and hopefully wisdom, too) I seem to have learned since I was exposed to Chabad Chassidus about four years ago. Then I realized that I'm already deeply immersed in the world of these profound teachings.

This week I experienced another contrast when I started to read a book on the educational philosophy of the Lubavitcher Rebbe which turned out to be an academic book. In spite of this fascinating topic I couldn't continue reading this book past the first chapter. Then I realized that I've already developed some mental allergy to academic books on Judaism, which are generally concerned with intellectual knowledge about Judaism, while sforim are concerned with life wisdom of Judaism.

I wanted to know if this allergy of mine is specific to this particular book or to academic writings on Judaism in general, so I checked presentation summaries of several academic associations of Jewish studies. I was totally amazed to discover what I felt. I also checked similar summaries of a few academic societies of linguistics and had the same discovery.

When I was still in these two worlds until rather recently, I didn't know at all what I didn't know until I started learning Chabad Chassidus. Researchers of Judaism in particular have left me with a very strong impression that they might be confusing a "map" with a "territory". Again through this contrast I've realized that I'm not interested to occupy myself exclusively with such Jewish "maps"; I'd prefer directly experiencing a "territory" however tiny its part I can visit may be.

2021-12-03

Unknown Unknowns

"There are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns - the ones we don't know we don't know. And... it is the latter category that tend to be the difficult ones." - Donald Rumsfeld

Probably the most important (meta-)discovery through my exposure to the teachings of Chabad Hasidism, which I encountered through my totally unexpected transformation through my no less unexpected turmoil, is a whole world of things I didn't know I didn't know. This newly discovered "light" has made me realize so clearly that I was in the "darkness" and I wasn't aware of this very fact.

Since I made this discovery I've decided to share this "light" with other individuals and collectives I've come in touch with. The reactions I get from them are not especially encouraging; I have the impression that many of them don't understand what I mean, that is, they seem to remain unaware of what they don't know.

One of my main "battlefields" is Facebook, which is a kind of huge collective virtual mental prison. I'm giving up my hope, though I should never do so, of making at least my Facebook "friends" realize that what they think they are and what they think reality are actually illusions. It's even so painful to me to read what most of them post personally.

When I resumed my personal use of Facebook in order to start using it for business purposes three and a half years ago, I was naive enough to expect that I would be able to experience meaningful dialogs with at least several people. But I was totally wrong. Facebook has even worsened as a collective virtual mental prison in comparison with what it used to be when I first used it several years ago for a short period of time.

In spite of all these frustrations I continue to share public posts on Facebook though they receive few or now responses for a very simple reason. I write for what must be a small number of like-minded people so that they may not feel lonely. Such people seem to be exceptions even among what few "friends" I have on Facebook.

2021-11-26

Love of Books and Learning

The very first thing I do whenever I visit someone's house for the first time is to check his personal library if it's located in his living room. I already know at least from my own experience that I belong to the minority. I've noticed that many of the people who have visited my apartment paid little or no attention to my personal library, the active part of which (in the living room) are composed mostly of Hasidic books (as well as dictionaries).

I still don't know if these people are not interested in books in general or the kind of books I keep in particular. But I'm already quite sure that many people I know are not so enthusiastic at least about books for life wisdom, including teachings of Chabad rabbis and non-Jewish non-dual masters.

I have always loved books since I was a small child. For more than 30 years until I stopped my academic activities about three years ago and officially left academia about one year ago, most of the books I read on weekdays were on languages and linguistics; only on Sabbaths I could allow myself to read books in other areas for life wisdom.

I've never read so many books for life wisdom as in the past three years. During this period I've also built a quite respectable library of print books on Chabad Hasidism (in Hebrew, English and Russian) and electronic books on various teachings of non-duality (mostly in English).

As I became more and more absorbed in and enthusiastic about these books, the less people I've come to have to talk with about these books and the teachings they represent.

I wish I were wrong, but many people, including my frum Jewish friends and even some rabbis who are busy with their respective communities, may not be reading (enough) books as a way of life-long learning for the soul.

When I took some online test for checking my core values, I was surprised to discover through this test that my most important core value is learning. But this makes perfect sense to me. I realize now more clearly that I've always loved books since my childhood simply because I've always loved learning. And since I was a child, I've always sensed that learning, especially for the soul, is and must be a life-long process.

2021-11-12

Dynalist - An Ultimate Outliner

"The list is the origin of culture. It's part of the history of art and literature. What does culture want? To make infinity comprehensible. It also wants to create order - not always, but often. And how, as a human being, does one face infinity? How does one attempt to grasp the incomprehensible? Through lists, through catalogs, through collections in museums and through encyclopedias and dictionaries." - Umberto Eco

If you are one of those many people who use a word processor, especially Word, exclusively for all text-related tasks, you may not be aware that there are other types of tools that can process different specific types of texts far more efficiently. One such tool is an outliner, which helps you organize your ideas and tasks hierarchically as foldable bulleted lists.

I discovered the usefulness and efficiency of an outliner for managing my daily tasks more than 20 years ago when I encountered a very simple Java-based outliner called Java Outline Editor. As my frustration with Java and Java-based programs grew, I stopped using this outliner after a few years. Since then I had been looking for my ideal, one-page outliner, until I stumbled upon Dynalist this Tuesday.

This is a truly amazing crossplatform one-pane outliner who surpasses all my demands and expectations, and it's free at that! A commercial pro version is also available, but at least in the meanwhile I'm more than satisfied with the free version. If I'm to switch to the pro version, this will be mainly for supporting the developers of this incredible tool, which has already become an indispensable tool for me.

I used to use my favorite versatile text editor, EditPad Pro, for processing bulleted lists in Markdown, in which I write almost everything now. Though this superpowerful text editor highlights the syntax of this popular lightweigh markup language, it can't add folding points automatically unlike dedicated outliners.

Even if you haven't used any outliner yet, please trust me and give it a try. In the past 20 years I've tried tens of outliners, and Dynalist far exceeds all its competitors in every respect. But unlike a number of other text-related tools, this outliner doesn't have a steep learning curve. You can start using it immediately. You'll be pleasantly surprised to see how easy and useful it is.

So for what purposes can you use it? You can use it to organize any hierarchically structred texts. I, for example, use it to plan and organize my 1) daily/weekly/monthly schedule, 2) travel, and 3) lists of books I like, plan to buy, am reading now, and plan to read. Since the desktop version of Dynalist is automatically synchronized for free with its mobile version, I also use the latter for managing my shopping list on the go.

2021-11-05

Wants vs. Needs

"When we tell G-d what we want G-d to do, or we tell the universe what we want it to do, we're not really opening ourselves up yet - we're still speaking from an egoic place. But when we confess our deepest heart's yearning and tell the divine that we're inviting it to give us anything we need to awaken, we very well might get it. To open ourselves to this grace, to this flow of truth, means that we have to step out of ourselves. We have to let go of the illusion that we are in control of our life. When we hand it over, we'll find ourselves falling into grace, falling into this clarity and openness and love, falling right into the grace of awakening from separation, where we realize our true spiritual essence: this beautiful, unknown, unborn presence which manifests as everything we see." - Adyashanti

In one online course I joined recently each of us students is asked to draw the so-called "vision board" and share it in the private Facebook group for the course participants. When I was asked to do the same almost around January 2018 in group coaching I participated in as a coachee, I hesitated to do this assignment and showed a blank sheet of paper in front of the other coachees, explaining that I would like to get rid of all the negative emotions.

When I saw vision boards posted by about a number participants so far to the Facebook group of the course, I understood why I had hesitated instinctively to draw one. Most of the pictures on these vision boards reflect what the ego wants - manifestations of materialistic "success". In the meanwhile I've decided to leave this Facebook group in order to protect myself.

What the ego wants isn't the same as what it needs for itself, the physical body and the soul. And for this very reason we aren't supposed to always get what our ego wants. Drawing such a vision board only inflates our ego and gives us an illusion that what our ego wants is what it really needs.

Many people "pray" for the realization of what their ego wants, and many life coaches seem to "promise" to help their clients realize what the latter's ego wants. Just as I hesitated to pray for the wants of my ego, so do I hesitate now as a new life coach to make such promises to my new clients. I'd like to help them help themselves to identify what their soul needs. As for their realization, I'm not worried as I'm more and more convinced that we are supposed to receive all the needs of our soul sooner or later in our respective life until we return to where our soul came from and belongs to.

2021-10-22

Lack of Sensitivity vs. Lack of Vitality

One of the top priorities in my interpersonal relationships is to develop immunity against both lack of sensitivity and lack of vitality. I had some illusory hope that I had stopped being too sensitive to both of them, but I've seen so clearly rather recently that I still suffer from them though in two different ways.

What happens to me when I encounter lack of sensitivity at both individual and collective levels is that actually, I cause mental suffering through my negative mental interpretations and reactions. My reactions to lack of vitality in individuals and social collectives are more physical than mental. I simply feel that my energy has been depleted.

When I suffered from lack of vitality, I told myself that I would prefer lack of sensitivity. But once I found myself in a different environment where lack of sensitivity was the dominant collective characteristic, I told myself that I would prefer lack of vitality. And this repeats itself again and again. I fluctuate between the two as the lesser of the two evils.

Others are actually nothing but mirrors reflecting our inner self. I may encounter (what I interpret as) insensitive or negative people as ways to work on my own character traits. I can change neither them nor their speech and action. I can only change myself. Developing immunity agains both lack of sensitivity and lack of vitality is an urgent task I have to undertake now, but I still don't know how.

In principle, I like to interact verbally with others, but I sometimes feel like spending the rest of my life or at least a few years in a secluded place either alone or with some like-minded life companion though I know this idea is un-Jewish.

2021-10-15

Sensitivity and Negativity

Having been asking myself for a few years, I finally recalled this week the very first thing that had ultimately lead me to the idea of becoming a life coach. It was my self-diagnosis that I was - and still remain - a highly sensitive person and started reading a book entitled The Highly Sensitive Person: How to Thrive When the World Overwhelms You by Elaine Aron after suffering in one environment which I thought was insensitive, and being forced to start receiving psychological counseling. It was February 2015.

Since then I've read and learned a lot about how to survive as a highly sensitive person in a society which seems to have far more people whose speech and action are characterized by insensitivity than all the other societies I know. Having fully realized that I can't change anybody except for myself, or to be more precise, my thought, I've learned to detoxicate or neutralize insensitive speech and action of others without speaking or acting insensitively myself.

Six and a half years since this self-diagnosis of mine, which was later confirmed by the above mentioned and other similar books as well as my first psychological counselor, I've recently started to find myself struggling with a new problem of hypersensitivity - toward a special type of sensitivity - thought this may sound paradoxical.

It's sensitivity that stems from a special type of fear - fear of how you are perceived by others. This fear is rather culture-specific; it's found disproportionately more in certain societies than in others. It seems to paralize not only behaviors of people who suffer from it but even their facial expressions. For fear of how they are perceived by others they gradually lose this latter thing that is fundamental to human beings.

I'm fully aware now that I'm also sensitive to this negative type of sensitivity. I simply absorb this negativity. In one extreme case I even lost the ability to smile for a few weeks. Now I have one special reason for learning urgently to protect myself from this negativity without losing positive sensitivity.

2021-10-01

Flow

Simkhat tora / Simkhes-toyre is my most favorite Jewish festival simply because I'm not only allowed but even commanded to express joy by dancing in public. I feel I'm at my best when I dance because my egoic mind stops thinking. It was only recently that I realized that this condition is what is known as "flow".

During this festival we celebrated this Tuesday I observed not only myself dancing but also other congregants (not) dancing and discovered something interesting I hadn't noticed before with an implication for life in general beyond dancing.

I noticed different degrees of flow in those who danced. The lowest degree was in those who refused to dance and sat still in depression in spite of the commandment. I know at least one of them very well personally. This time I felt much deeper compassion for him as his mind must have been filled with very negative thoughts and feelings. Many people danced awkwardly. Then it suddenly occurred to me that what caused their awkwardness must be their fear and lack of confidence.

Let's compare dancing with bicycling. What would happen if you were constantly afraid that you might fall down while riding a bicycle? You have to take a leap of faith and trust yourself in order to start bicycling.

We can expend this comparison to life in general. So many people, including what I used to be until rather recently, are constantly afraid of failures and hesitate to leave their comfort zone without realizing that the worst risk in life is taking no risk.

What would happen if we could get rid of all our negative thoughts and feelings about ourselves and the world by believing that everything is good and trusting the divine providence? We must starting experiencing flow in our life as we experience it when we dance with full confidence and no fear.

I already know the feeling of flow in dancing. This experience must be applicable to life in general.

2021-09-24

Transformation through Turmoil

Steve Taylor is one of the few authors whose books have truly helped me navigate in what I now know as "transformation through turmoil" (TTT) thanks to his new book entitled Extraordinary Awakenings: When Trauma Leads to Transformation.

I first got acquainted with him and his work through Eckhart Tolle right after my "turmoil" started nearly four years ago. Since then I've read all his books, which are focused on the individual and collective egos of humans.

His books have given me a clear answer to my question about what happened to me - why my state of consciousness has changed for the better instead of being crushed by the turmoil. They have also shown me that such cases are not even rare.

This latest book of his focuses on this phenomenon of TTT on the basis of many personal storied he has collected from people who have undergone it. He is truly unique in that though he is a researcher in psychology, he doesn't shy away from his own experiences of spiritual awakenings and those of others in his books for the general public and academic articles for his colleagues.

When I read this book for the second time soon after my first reading, I focused on TTT and collected what he had to say about it. Here are some of them. I can related to them from the depth of my soul as they seem to describe so accurately and in detail what I myself have experienced in my TTT.

People who have experienced TTT feel a constant sense of well-being and a strong sense of connection to other people, to nature, and to the world as a whole. The world seems a fascinating and beautiful place to them. They are less materialistic and self-centered, more compassionate and altruistic. They have a strong sense of meaning and purpose and an intense sense of gratitude for everything in their lives, and for life itself.

Born-again religious experiences are usually conceptual experiences in which a person's belief system changes and they adopt a new lifestyle based on those beliefs. But TTT is nonconceptual. If anything, it is about letting go of beliefs rather than adopting them. TTT is a complete transformation of identity and being. This is probably why research shows that born-again religious experiences are usually temporary, whereas TTT is invariably permanent.

[T]his is what everyone who experiences TTT discovers: that what we think of as normal is an aberrational state that creates psychological suffering and presents us with a false vision of reality. Awakening gives us access to a fuller, higher-functioning state in which life seems easy and we feel at home in the world.

Essentially, TTT is about ego-dissolution. In situations of intense stress and turmoil, the ego-self may suddenly give way under the pressure, like a building that collapses in an earthquake. Or it may slowly fall away and eventually disappear through a process of detachment, as psychological attachments are broken down, like a building that collapses after enough individual bricks have been taken away. For some people, both these scenarios may simply lead to a psychological breakdown, but for a minority, the breakdown of the ego heralds a "shift up" to a higher spiritual state.

In TTT death and birth occur. There is the death of one identity and the birth of another: the death of the ego and its replacement by a latent, higher-functioning awakened self. The deceased ego carried the person's addiction to drugs or alcohol, whereas the new self that has been born has no addictions.

Although it sometimes occurs gradually, it is most common for TTT to occur instantaneously, as a sudden shift in identity. The person's old ego breaks down or dissolves away, and a new identity emerges to take its place. This new identity is completely different from the person's previous identity, so that the shifter often feels as if they are a different person living in the same body. Some superficial personality traits remain, and people retain the memories associated with their previous identity (even if they don't directly associate themselves with them). But the essence of their identity is completely different. Shifters have a new perception of the world, new values (such as becoming less materialistic and more altruistic), new kinds of relationships, a new relationship to time (i.e., they are more focused on the present and less oriented toward the past and future), and so on.

When TTT occurs, it's like a house suddenly collapsing (or in the case of gradual TTT, being dismantled slowly). But in TTT when an old house disappears, it doesn't just leave an empty plot of land. A new structure emerges in its place. If there was just an empty space of no-self, a person wouldn't be able to function in the world. Without psychological structures or a sense of identity, they would be unable to concentrate, to retain information, to make plans, to organize their lives, to hold conversations. If there really was "no one there" inside them, just an empty space of experience, they would be in a state of psychosis.

Whenever someone undergoes a spiritual awakening, the same type of new self-system emerges inside them, with common psychological structures and processes. It's as if the new house that arises in TTT is based on the same architectural plans and made from the same materials. This self-system features a continual freshness and vividness of perception of our surroundings, instead of an automatic, familiarized perception. It doesn't have boundaries or a strong central point of location, so that it feels a sense of connection to - and participation in - the world rather than a sense of separation. In addition, it doesn’t feature the constant chatter of an isolated and anxious ego-self. Thinking may still take place, but in a slower and quieter way, and without identification with thoughts. As a result, the self-system of wakefulness is a much more pleasant place to live than human beings' normal self-system.

In TTT the new self-system of wakefulness unfolds naturally, as if it has been latent inside the shifters, ready to emerge and waiting for the opportunity. It's almost as if this new self-system is latent within the human race collectively, waiting to emerge as the next stage in our development as a species.

[A] softer or more labile sense of ego, with thinner boundaries, makes a person more likely to experience TTT. To return to the house analogy, here it’s as if the house is made of softer, more pliable materials, such as wood or straw or soil, rather than stone or concrete.

In terms of attitude, the most important aspect of TTT is acceptance. When we go through challenges and suffering, we often go into a mode of resistance, such as when we talk about fighting a disease or struggling to overcome obstacles. But doing so blocks transformation. When we shift into a mode of acceptance - which can occur in the form of surrendering to a situation, letting go, or handing over our problems - then the transformational potential of suffering is released inside us.

Though I'm deeply grateful for this "divine grace", I also feel I've had to pay one heavy price - I've lost a common language so far with many of the people I was in touch with before my TTT, including those who were close to me either privately or professionally. I simply can't relate to many of the things they say or write, especially in social media, as these things seem to stem from their egos. I'm quite sure that this feeling must be mutual - they must be unable to understand what has become of me. Of course, this is in contradiction with teachings of spirituality I've been trying to embrace and incorporate. What I'm focusing on now is letting go of any expectation to be understood by others except by a small number of like-minded people.

2021-09-10

Letting Go of Expectations

I've started to make a conscious effort to let go of my expectations, especially from others, as they guarantee my disappointments, then sufferings afterwards. These expectations generally stem from my egoic mind and are often based on the assumption that I know what is best for me (and others), which is nothing but a reflection of my lack of humility.

Naturally, this is easier said than done. I still have a long way to go to fully let go of my expectations from others, especially those who still belong to the social collectives I used to belong to before starting to undergo some inner transmutation.

It seems to me that I see in them what I used to be. I can't always stand to watch them make what seem to me the same mistakes I used to make. But on the other hand, I realize that if someone who left one of the "caves" I was trapped in expected me to think and behave differently, I might not be able to understand him at all.

I also realize that I can help others change themselves at best, but will never be able to change anyone directly, especially to my liking, nor do I have such a right.

But old habits die hard. I'm still struggling with the temptation to expect those who are still in the same "caves" where I used to live to change. I've devised one temporary precautionary measure to overcome this temptation by simply putting myself in such a position in which I don't encounter it in the first place. This isn't the healthiest way, but it seems to work wonderfully so far.

If I am not to expect anything from anyone, how am I suppoded to respond instead in my interpersonal relationships with others (and myself)? One former teacher of mine in Chabad Chassidus recently gave me one important clue to this in one of his recenly online lectures about psychological modesty. I still want/have to try this brilliant teaching of his before I share it with others.

2021-08-27

Chabad Shluchim ('Emissaries') as Ultimate Marketers

While (and since) I first read The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch - a sociological description by Susan Fishkoff of Chabad shluchim ('emissaries') scattered around the world - several years ago, I asked (and have been asking) what contributes to their overwhelming success. More and more shluchim are sent to less and less Jewishly favorable places, and all of them are expected to become financially independent (and most of them do become financially independent) within a year or so.

They can be called ultimate marketers. What do they market? Authentic Judaism envisioned by the Lubavicher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Recently I reread the above mentioned book by focusing on the question about the possible factors contributing to their overwhelming success. This reading has been complemented by my personal encounters with a number of Chabad shluchim in their twenties, thirties or forties in the past few decades.

The first, and the most decisive, factor for their success must be their faith in their life mission to implement the vision developed and presented by the Lubavicher Rebbe - to spread the fountaions of Chassidus to the four corners of the world where Jews live however assimilated they are.

This faith of theirs leads to their devotion. They dedicate the lives of their own and their still young families to this life mission, fully knowing that they may have to spend the rest of their lives in distant locations from major centers of Judaism in general and Chabad Chassidus in particular.

This faith also leads to their confidence. They are fully certain that they will succeed in their life mission, so they have no fear of failure simply because the idea of failure doesn't seem to cross their mind. They are living manifestations of "Think good and it will be good" - a famous saying ascribed to the thirs Chabad rebbe, Tsemakh Tsedek - a grandson of the Alter Rebbe, the founder of Chabad.

This "ultimate marketing" of theirs is fundamentally different from the commonly accepted approach to marketing, which was also the common denominator among my four former teachers of marketing - a fear-based approach. The approach of these "ultimate marketers" are joy-based.

I had to spend a lot of time and money with their four former teachers who tried to teach me their fear-based approach in order to realize theis difference and start appreciating the joy-based approach of Chabad shluchim.

Their joy-based approach to marketing manifests itself most prominently in their love of fellow Jews (and probably other human beings as well) and their nonjudgementalism. As a student of Chabad Chassidus and a life coach anchored in it I'm better tuned to this joy-based approach. My present challenge is how to implement it in practice.

2021-08-20

Why Is a "Universal" Language Insufficient to Unify the Mankind

* Warning: If you have a blind faith in Esperantism (and aren't open to different ideas), you may find this blog entry offending.

Finally I feel prepared both intellectually and emotionally to articulate why I became convinced that a "universal" language is insufficent to unify the mankind and there is a far better solution for this purpose. Nevertheless, this attempt is a rather paradoxical one as I'm going to explain the limitations of language with a language.

Esperanto must be the most widely known and used "universal" language. The greatest obstacle Esperantism faces as the movement to use Esperanto to unify the mankind is ironically Esperanto itself, or a blind faith that a "universal" language is sufficient for this purpose. But the truth is that no problem can be solved with the same level of consciousness as Albert Einstein said.

Zamenhof was rather naive in this respect. I'm not sure how many Esperantists are aware that one of the most important functions of language or any specific language is to articulate or divide the world, including all the creatures inhabiting it. Language is a tool of duality and its illusions. Esperanto is no exception to this. So Esperantism has to trascend its reliance on Esperanto or any other language, whether "universal" or not, to attain its purported goal.

There is no doubt that the level of consciousness of average Esperantists is higher than that of their conpatriots in their respective countries of residence. But as long as they are stuck in language, they are also stuck with the illusions and limitations of duality, which in turn prevents them from raising their level of consciousness.

Another important problem neither Zamenhof nor many Esperantists seem to be aware of is that a language is a powerful tool to forge, maintain and strengthen the collective ego of the social collective it serves, and Esperanto is no exception to this, either.

When I told one prominent Esperantist that I had completely stopped my involvement with Esperanto, he called me a "traitor". But I didn't "discrimiate" Esperanto; I've completely stopped my involvement with all the other linguistic ideologies/movements that used to occupy me for decates, most notably Yiddishism, which in my opinion, is far more illusionary and reflects a much lower level of consciousness of its supporters.

This may sound unbelievable and unacceptable, but we human beings are already unified. We are sparks of the only presence there is, which is known in various terms such as G-d, Universe, etc. We are like waves of one and the same ocean. To claim that each wave has a separate existence is nothing but an illusion. So is the case with us human beings. This illusion created by our egoic mind, which in turn is maintained mainly by language as its gatekeeper.

So all we have to do is just recall that we are "waves" of Oneness. No "universal" language alone can help us attain this goal because of its very dualistic nature. The best way to raise the level of consciousness I've found so far is to study teachings of nonduality intellectually and practice them through direct experiences without any language, thus bypassing the dualistic illusions and limitations it creates.

The most sophisticated Jewish version of nonduality I've discovered so far is Chabad Chassidus, and this is why I've become so enthusiastic about its teachings and practices. It's true that it does use human languages, but words uttered by nondual masters such as Chabad rebbes can transcend the illusions and limitations of the egoic mind.

2021-08-06

Study of Nonduality and Its Outcome So Far

Since about three years ago I've been learning nonduality from a number of non-Jewish Western nondual masters, including Eckhart Tolle, David Hawkins, Frank Wanderer, Steve Taylor, Adyashanti, Stephan Bodian, Jon Bernie, Jean Klein, and Rupert Spira, in addition to Chabad Chassidus, which is the most sophisticated form of Jewish nonduality.

The more I study it, the more difficult it has become for me, at least so far, to interact with not only strangers I meet for the first time but even friends and acquaintances I already know as most of them seem "asleep" in that they seem trapped in various forms of dualistic illusions, which manifest themselves in interpersonal relationships most prominently in the form of conceptual labeling. I simply can't bear any more being targeted for their constant unconscious conceptual labeling.

One thing I don't understand is why I have to be bothered by this if I'm fully aware that I am (period) with no illusionary dualistic identities these people label me with. I can't deny the possibility that something is fundamentally wrong with my study of nonduality as it is supposed to lead me to love all the other human beings. I'm also afraid that the very idea of mine that these people are trapped in dualistic illusions might be a suble form of dualistic illusion on my part and I'm labeling them conceptually.

In retrospect, my life was a series of self-imposed sufferings when I was "asleep" until I started to wake up in November 2017. My new, intensifying, suffering only occurs when I interact with other people. When I'm alone, seclude myself in nature, or interact with a small number of like-minded people I know, I feel serenity.

I've even starting thinking of becoming a hermit. But the problem is that ascecitism is not part of Judaism and there are no Jewish monasteries. So I have no choice but to continue living with other people in community.

The only viable solution I can think of not to allow anyone to destroy my serenity in interpersonal relationships is not to feed them with any material they will use in turn for their conceptual labeling. But I have to be resolute and persistent.

2021-07-30

Knowing about Someone vs. Knowing Someone

"To know another human being in their essence, you don't really need to know anything about them - their past, their history, their story. We confuse knowing about with a deeper knowing that is non-conceptual. Knowing about and knowing are totally different modalities. One is concerned with form, the other with the formless. One operates through thought, the other through stillness." - Eckhart Tolle

I realized this truth independently after being targeted by others (and targeting others) for conceptual labeling. I haven't met many people who seem to both understand the difference between knowing about someone and knowing someone and behave accordingly. Many people seem busy instead trying to digging the past, history, and story of others they meet for the first time, believing that this way they will know them better.

The most subtle, hence problematic, form of this confusion is concepually labeling ourselves. So many people seem so sure of their self-identities, which are nothing but illusions of their egoic mind. The truth is that to paraphrase what Christ Niewbauer wrote at the end of his truly insightful new book entitled No Self, No Problem, we aren't the name someone gave to us, we aren't the gender that was assigned to us, we aren't the job that we work at, we aren't the social roles that we play, we aren't the age society tells us we are, we aren't the intelligence society defines us as, we aren't our level of education, we aren't the body that others define us as, we aren't the thoughts in our head, we aren't the memories that we think happened, we aren't our preferences, we aren't our desires, we aren't our emotions, we aren't our beliefs, we aren't our reactions, we aren't our expectations, and we aren't the movies that play in our mind.

Since I came to fully realize this mental distortion of myself and others, I've been both careful not to conceptually labeling others and reluctant to cooperate with others in their unconscious attempts to know about me for conceptually labeling me. I have been quite successful in preventing myself from falling into this trap, but I haven't been equally successful in saving myself from becoming a victim of conceptual labeling by others.

In most cases I could discern a drastic change in the way they relate to me the moment they unconsciously gave me their conceptual labels. Then I stopped being a unified being and became one tiny fragment of a whole they have disected conceptually. In some cases they even shared with me, again unconsciously, the conceptual labels they gave me by verbally categorizing me. Some of these labels were really ridiculous, to say the least. I was intrigued with the mental ingenuity of certain people.

2021-07-16

Dream State

"When we are in the dream state, we do not know what we are doing. We are simply acting out of deep programming. But once we have seen the true nature of things - once Spirit has opened its eyes within us - we suddenly know what we're doing. There's a much more accurate sense of whether we're moving or speaking or even thinking from truth or not. When we act from a place of untruth anyway, in spite of our knowing, it's much more painful than when we didn’t know our actions were untrue. When we say something to someone that we know is untrue, it causes an inner division that is vastly more painful than when we said the same thing and thought itwas true." - Adyashanti

If I am to define a dream state as a state in which one is totally identified with one's own egoic thoughts, and speaks and behaves accordingly, then many human beings must be in a dream state. I myself had been in such a state and a very deep one at that my entire life until one life challenge woke me up and I gradually started to disidentify myself from my egoic thoughts.

So I know very well how someone who is in a dream state speaks and behaves. I can't say I've completely stopped speaking and behaving this way, but when I do, I can at least detect this quite immediately and prevent my speech and action from being hijacked by my egoic thoughts.

Recently I've started to wonder whether I've really come out of the dream state or I may have come into a much deeper dream state. Though I'm not sure yet, one thing seems certain. I've lost a common "language" with most of the people I know or encounter. I've lost the ability to relate to most of the things I read or hear from most people with the exception of Jewish and non-Jewish nondual masters as they seem nothing but reflections of what now seems to me as illusions of the ego.

I'm quite sure that many people who still remember me in the "classic" dream state find what I say weird. One great consolation is that I'm not suffering at all from loneliness in spite of the seeming sense of separation.

Do I regret coming out of the "classic" dream state then? Not at all, especially because my life then was difficult not only to myself but also to others around me. But my new life hasn't necessarily become easier so far, at least for me, since I came out of this state.

So if my posts in general and this one in particular sound weird to you, please don't blame yourself. ;-) But if they happen to resonate with you, you and I may share the same "language". :-)

2021-07-02

Completion of a Three-Year Course in Chabad Chassidus in Jerusalem

This week I formally completed a three-year course in Chabad Chassidus I started in November 2018 at Torat Hanefesh School of Jewish Psychology in Jerusalem. This is by far the most meaningful and lifec-changing learning experience I've ever had in my entire life so far. When I started this course, I couldn't imagine that it would have such a profound effect upon me not only intellectually but also spiritually.

It was in December 2017 that I first encountered a teaching of Chabad Chassidus when I started tasting Jewish life coaching in Jerusalem as a client. I was introduced to one of the most fundamental teachings of the Tanya, which is often called the "Oral Torah" of Chabad Chassidus and was written by its founder Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi also known as the Alter Rebbe - we have the animal soul and the Divine soul, and life is an incessant war between them. I was fascinated by this teaching and took an interest in Chassidus in general and Chabad Chassidus in particular, and told myself I would like to study this and other teachings systematically in parallel with Jewish life coaching.

After asking a number of people I decided to study at the above menioned school as one of the few schools in Israel where those who haven't become Chabadniks can study Chabad Chassidus systematically. My initial plan was to taste it for one year. But by the end of this one year it was clear to me that I would like to complete this three-year course.

Now that I have completed it, I have a sense of accomplishment, but his completion is only formal. I feel I've just started to scratch the surface of this vast sea of Chassidus in general and Chabad Chassidus in particular. During these three years of formal study I also built a rather big personal library of Chabad Chassidus thanks to three bookstores in Jerusalem: Heichal Menachem, Pomeranz, and Yahad. So the new challenge as an independent student now is not the lack of learning materials but their abundance. There are so many profound books written by the seven rebbes of Chabad as well as other Chabad rabbis.

I have also been encouraged to start spreading these foundains of Jewish wisdom to others as one of the best ways to deepen my own learning. I'm planning to start this soon. Perhaps the most important change this study has brought into my life is joy, and this is what I would like to share with others most.

Chassisus can be characterized as nondual Judaism, and Chabad Chassidus is intellectually the most sophisticated nondual Judaism. I've read quite a few books by teachers-cum-practitioners of other nondual traditions and teachings, including Advaita Vedanta and Zen as well indivitual nondual masters. So there are a number of similarities between the two, but there is one fundamental difference between the two - the nature of joy and its manifestation. The joy that engulfs the whole being of a true Chabadnik is dynamic rather than static. This dynamic joy is what I haven't felt so far in those practitioners of other nondual teachings I've encountered. But this doesn't mean that joy à la Chabad is not something frivolous but something serious. Yes, serious dynamic joy, which you canwithness, especially, in the so-called farbrengens.

2021-06-18

Control by the Ego vs. Flow with the Soul

"At first you may find that the more you act on your intuition, the more things in your life seem to be falling apart - you might lose your job, a relationship, or certain friends, or your car might even stop working! You're actually changing rapidly and shedding the things in your life that no longer fit. As long as you refused to let go of them, they imprisoned you. As you continue on this new path, following the energy moment by moment as best you can, you will see new forms begin to be created in your life - new relationships, new work, a new home, a new form of creative expression, or whatever. It will happen easily and effortlessly. Things will just fall into place, and doors will open in a seemingly miraculous way. You may have times when you will just go along, doing what you have energy to do, and not doing what you don't have energy to do, having a wonderful time, and you will, literally, be able to watch the universe creating through you. You're starting to experience the joy of being a creative channel!" - Shakti Gawain

My fourth attempt in one new important area of life failed miserably after the previous three failed attempts. I suddenly realized that the common denominator among these four was my egoic desire to control other people. This realization also made me realize that I had been trying all my life to egoically control everyone and everything in my life. Naturally, this control didn't bring me any positive result. My desire to control my ex-wife and ex-students ended in divorce and incessant wars respectively. I've surrendered.

I've decided to flow with the soul in life in general and in this new area of life in particular. Actually I already experienced such flow in my life at least several times. Then I simply stopped thinking (egoically), was at my best, and attracted people and things that aligned with my state of consciousness.

Paradoxically, the biggest obstacle to flowing is making an effort. What is required instead is the so-called effortless effort, which is to be in a natural state of the soul. Of course, this is easier said than done. Like many other people I'm also inundated with involuntary thoughts incessantly, but unlike before I'm not indentified with them. My practice of mindfulness meditation seems to have helped me disidentify with my egoic thoughts.

Though I stopped practicing my daily mindfulness meditation, I still consider daily meditation as one of the most important foundations for flowing with the soul. Some time ago I switched to breathing meditation. This week I encountered and started practicing True Meditation by Adyashanti. It's the most pristine meditation I've encountered so far and meant for helping meditators flow with the soul. Tami Simon, editor of this book, defines True Meditation as follows: "True Meditation has no direction, goals, or method. True Meditation is abidance as primordial consciousness. True Meditation appears in consciousness spontaneously when awareness is not fixated on objects of perception." Please don't try to understand these sentences conceptually as this will lead you to the very oppositve of True Meditation.

I've also enrolled in a forthcoming eight-week online course by Eckhart Tolle on the application of this idea in our life, whether private or professional. He calls this application "conscious manifestation". This approach may sound woo-woo to those who believe in control and manipulation as the best way to realize their desires. The more I read about topics related to "conscious manifestation", the less appealing I find this latter approach.

The former approach, which is new to me, is also in tune with the message I recently received from my "loving guides" and partially shared in this blog about a month ago, especially: "Your first job, your most important job is to heighten your vibration at all times; bring yourself into a place of peace and joy through 'whatever' manner you choose you will see that your outer world MUST match it."

2021-06-11

Sense of Alienation

Sense of alienation must be the price I have to pay for this transmutation of mine that started about three and a half years ago. Most of what many people, including some of those to whom I used to feel close enough, say and write, for example, in their respective personal pages on social media, don't interest me. This must be mutual - few of what I say and write must interest them.

It's not that I'm trying to say either of us is superior but that we live in totally different states of consciousness. What must be self-evident to them seems dubious to me on the one hand, and what must be dubious to them seems self-evident to me on the other.

This may sound contradictory, but I find myself saying and writing more and more from stillness. This is probably the only way of not being subjugated by language and egoic thoughts.

I also find it more and more fascinating to listen to stillness in nature than to people with incessant egoic thoughts, who only increase my sense of alienation. But even when I find myself listening to these people, I try to do so with my full attention to their being rather than to what they say.

2021-05-28

Divine Virtues

I'm in the middle of a truly amazing seven-week online course entitled Awakening to the Spiritual Purpose of the Life You Planned before Birth by my former "life between lives" regression hypnotherapist Rob Schwartz and his wife Liesel Fricke.

What has touched my soul most deeply so far are what he called "divine virtues". They are those spiritual virtues from which each soul chooses a few to work on in each of its incarnations in this world. It attains these self-imposed assignments by planning life challenges before it incarnates into a physical body.

In one of the sessions we've had so far we participants were asked to identify our most significant life challenges and what divine virtues have been enhanced by each of the challenges and how much. I identified two professonal and private challenges I started to experience in October 2014 and November 2017 respectively.

To my dismay, I realized that the first challenge had little impact on any divine virtue, while the second awakened faith, confidence, peace and joy in particular. It's known that suffering is like an alarm clock in that if we ignore its sound, it will become louder and louder until we pay attention to it and wake up. This is exactly what happened to me with these two life challenges. The first could condemn me to social death, but I didn't wake up fully and fell asleep again after a while, while the second was so devastating that I woke up instanteneously and once for all.

In the session of the course we had this week we learned something even more amazing than divine virtues - the master virtues from which lead to other divine virtues. They are unconditional love, open-heartedness, attentiveness, acceptance and gratitude.

Since I started experiencing the second, devastating, life challenge about three and a half years ago, I have been working unconsciously at least on gratitude, then attentiveness. It's only rather recently that I've started experience a series of smaller-scale challenges of the same kind forcing me to learn acceptance and unconditional love the hard way. I'm waking up even further rather abruptly since this course started a few weeks ago and these smaller-scale challenges happen to have started to intensify in parallel.

The most recent of these challenges started last Friday and had a totally unexpected positive end this morning. I'm still filled with a deep sense of gratitude. I still need to experience more challenges in order to learn unconditional love, which according to my spirit guides is my top priority in this lifetime.

2021-05-21

Language as a Double-Edged Sword

This is a daring attempt to explain the most fundamental limitation of language with this very limited tool.

"The words are no more than signposts. That to which they point is not to be found within the realm of thought but a dimension within yourself that is deeper, and infinitely vaster than thought." - Eckhart Tolle

"Language and words cannot possibly express what is inconceivable. Words are at the mercy of an egocentric empiricism. They find their foundation in the consciousness from which they arise and to which they return. The ego has its origins in a mental image: 'I am the body.'" - Jean Klein

Language is a double-edgd sword. It has both a blessing and a curse. Its blessing part must be apparent to everyone. The following passage by someone who is considered a leading linguist, which I stumbled upon last week, depicts both the blessing language brings to us and the contribution linguistics can make.

"Human language is a unique mental faculty emerged at some stage in the evolution of human species. It is the foundation for a variety of creative abilities humans possess, and forms the core of what is sometimes called 'the human capacity.' Since this ability is one that was bestowed upon humans by nature in the process of our evolution, it can be studied (with appropriate abstraction and idealization) as a natural phenomenon using the method developed in the natural sciences. In addition, since the ability to acquire and use human language is universally and uniquely bestowed on human beings, it forms, almost by definition, the core of the special characteristic that could be called 'human nature,' and, accordingly, linguistic research can make a rather fundamental contribution to the inquiry into 'human nature' in the humanities. Furthermore, by 'externalizing' an infinite array of linguistic expressions generated by the language capacity embedded in the human mind, language fulfills an important role in interaction with others (including 'communication'), and, as such, this social function can become the subject of social science research."

This otherwise eloquent passage seems to me rather one-sided and even naive as it ignores or isn't aware of the curse part of language. Language as a faithful servant of our mind, which in turn is supposed to be our servant, is what makes so many people remain trapped in their own mind-made prison. I've met few people who can't label in their mind people and things they meet not only for the first time but even for the second and more times instead of perceiving their presence as it is.

I wonder how many linguists are aware of this labeling function of language as they themselves like many other people must be labeling people and things unconsciously. The more conceptual labels we attach with language on people and things we meet, the more we distance ourselves from them and their essence.

The most problematic type of this conceptual labeling is the one targeted at ourselves. The majority of human beings seem so sure that they are their bodies, names, occupations, statuses, etc. Facebook, for example, is full of manifestations of such illusions ad nauseam. But the truth is that all these identities are nothing but illusions of the ego made by our mind through the intermediary of language. Who are we then? We are. Period.

2021-05-14

Excerpts of a Long Message from "Loving Guides"

The following are excerpts of a long message about my present transmutation I received last week from my "loving guides":

"What you are hearing from your inner voice speaks only in two languages; that of fear or that of excitement (translated as love of self/Love) and you can be certain that the voice of excitement is your call. It may not always be the exact picture you have painted for yourself but nevertheless it is for you to understand that it is your emotions which are the energies of your divine voice speaking to you through and onto the physical body you wear. Fear blocks that voice and listens to the 3D world of what it is you 'should' do, should be and should pursue."

"You have listened to your excitement when you left behind something that did not fill your heart's calling and still hold no regrets as your job was quite valuable for you within a world that you no longer desire to struggle within. We say to you that never have you made a mistake in this lifetime for that is a 3D/fearful concept; you simply were asleep to who you are and what your life was about, meaning that almost all of your life you had no idea that there was so much more to your story than living a life of survival and struggle and most of the time you didn't even know you were living such a life; it was just the way it was supposed to be."

"Life was a series of events that the world and society told you was your 'correct' journey in this lifetime. Academia called you because you held a thirst for knowledge but we say you really held a craving for understanding and since there was no real standard or manner of learning or teaching 'understanding', knowledge and teaching and advancement in education was the path you chose. There was little excitement even in the knowledge you held and shared. But there is real excitement in your preferred plan to go forth and assist others to their waking/awareness."

"You heightened the fear within your life over time to its place of turning as each step along the way led you to the point of surrender. Not to anything outside yourself but the power that resides within that has only/always and still awaited/awaits your recognition."

"Your job in this lifetime is to hold a vibration within your body in activation to the vibration of love upon the planet. How do you do that and what does it feel like. You 'do that' by releasing through conscious recognition a history that no longer serves you; a history of fear that feels/felt like sadness and pain, shame and misunderstandings, unworthiness and all those emotions that are of a lower vibrational field that kept you from the love of yourself. All basic fear emotions no longer need belong to you."

"The platform for this new 'you' that is on the horizon is PEACE. Regardless of your situation on any given day, your 'job' and only job henceforth is to bring your body to a place of peace. It is more important than anything else in your life. When something appears uncomfortable or upsetting or brings you to fear, you can shift your vibration very quickly by bringing back upon you the vibration of peace. Like a magician you can shift your energy/vibration."

"You have felt in your intuitiveness that you almost 'must' teach and yet it was not fulfilling because what you taught was not of great excitement. It did not touch hearts and souls as that is what you came to do. You came to stand firm and solid in your vibration of love and joy and peace and excitement and you know without a doubt what it is you desire to do and bring forth into this world. So henceforth you need only follow your heart, your excitement, your knowing, and things will fall into place for you."

"Your first job, your most important job is to heighten your vibration at all times; bring yourself into a place of peace and joy through 'whatever' manner you choose you will see that your outer world MUST match it."

"We are so thrilled for this moment to touch you with our love and move you with our vibrational words. Our love for you is immeasurable and we are with you ALWAYS!!"

"Our hope for you is to feel this love we are, to enjoy this life you live, to laugh heartily as laughter and humor is one of the highest vibrations a human can hold within their body. Take care, our beloved. Be in peace as that is where you will feel us."

2021-04-30

Suffering as a Spiritual Wake-up Call

"Pre-birth planning" is a quite well-known phenomenon among spiritually minded people, most notably thanks to the work of the hypnotherapist Robert Schwartz, including his three books (Your Soul's Plan, Your Soul's Gift, and Your Soul's Love) that collect testimonies of his life between lives regression clients (I'm one of these past clients of his). Right before our souls reincarnete into specific physical bodies in their respective life between lives", they choose a couple of sufferings - or challenges, to use a more neutral term - that maximize our spiritual learning and eventual growth through physicality. If you've heard this for the first time, you may find it hard to believe; I can't blame you. ;-)

I received his 3.5-hour life between lives regression session in January 2018, a couple months after my ex-wife decided to leave me and I started suffering a lot as a result. I wanted to understand why I chose this suffering as well as another suffering that seemed one of the direct causes for her decision.

More than three years since then, my interest in pre-birth planning was rekindled by an invitation I received from him this week to participate in his seven-week online workshop entitled Awakening to the Spiritual Purpose of the Life You Planned Before Birth that would start next Thursday. Of course, I immediately registered in this event. As a kind of preparation I also started listening to some new interviews of his on this topic.

Pre-birth planning doesn't mean that everything, including all the details of our planned sufferings, is predetermined before "birth". This time I've discovered something new I didn't notice before. It's that there is even a way to minimize, if not totally nullify, these preplanned sufferings.

If you are new to this amazing phenomenon, you may wonder what the use of a suffering. It serves as a kind of spiritual wake-up call. We as souls with physical bodies are here to work on a couple of "divine virtues" in each reincarnation. A suffering we encounter reminds us that our life decisions are based on hate and other negative virtues rather than love and other divine virtues. Like an alarm clock the suffering also becomes noisier if we keep ignoring its "sound", until we won't be able to ignore it and forced to wake up and change our direction. This means that if we wake up early enough, we can minimize the suffering.

Actually, this is exactly what happened to me with my divorce crisis. I kept ignoring the wake-up call until my ex-wifed decided to leave me. Only then I finally woke up once and for all. Since then my life has changed completely, of course, for the better. I've also changed my life path in such a way that it might be in tune with the newly (re)discovered mission for which my soul descended into this body.

After discovering the possiblity of minimize sufferings, I've deciced to make further efforts to base my future decision and resulting actions on love and other divine virtues though I may not be able to completely eliminate all my negative virtues in this lifetime. Even after making such a decision I continue encountering people who get on my nerves. But unlike before I can tell myself now that they are sent to help me notice my negative virtues and work further on them. From the frequency and intensity of my negative emotional reactions I can also identify a couple of negative virtues my soul has planned to work on this time.

2021-04-16

Smartphone Revolution in My Torah Study

I've never liked a telephone of any kind as a means of online communication, except with a significant other when I happen to have one, because of its intrusive nature. This is why it was only several years ago that I started using a cellular phone, and a very simple one at that. It was only about one year that I finally started using a smartphone.

I have to admit that I've become quite addicted to my smartphone since then, but not to its telephone part but to the convenience of those various applications that have nothing to do with online communication. One of such categories is Torah study. Actually, I also have to say that my Torah study has been revolutionalized since I started using a smartphone about one year ago.

One area of my Torah study that has been affected most by this smartphone revolution is daily Torah study, to which I dedicate about half an hour right after I get up in the morning on weekdays and davening. The applications I use now are Daily Torah Study, Hayom, The Daily Sicha and Chayenu. I'm also planning (but haven't started) to use Steinsaltz Daily Study and Daf Hachaim.

A smartphone may not be an ideal electronic platform for reading lenghtly texts for an extended period of time, but nevertheless it's convenient and even assuring to have Torah libraries at my fingertips. I especially cherish Sefaria, RebbeDrive, and Igros Kodesh. When I daven outside (and sometimes even when I daven at home) on weekdays, I use Siddur Tehillat Hashem - Classic Edition. And last but not least, I check Chabad, Chabad Hebrew and Chabad Russian daily on weekdays to keep abreast of what's new in Chabad.

2021-04-09

Jewish Books and Jewish Bookstores

Paradoxically, it was when I started thinking of leaving Israel for sociocultural difficulties here that I felt I had finally become a true Israeli. Though my daily contact with and exposure to the native Israeli culture remain quite minimal, I've stopped thinking of this idea, partly because I've realized that the problem is more in myself than in the outer world, and mostly because I've come to feel that living in Jerusalem is a real blessing for someone like myself who studies Chassidus as life wisdom.

Why? There are a couple of reasons. First of all, Jerusalem seems to have the largest concentration - or at least one of the largest concentrations - of Chassidic scholars (not in the academic sense but in the traditional Jewish sense). I've been blessed with the privilege and honor of studying Chabad Chassidus in a special school here in Jerusalem with amazing teachers who have not only received its oral teachings but also incorporate them in their daily life.

But the main reason why I consider it a blessing to live in Jerusalem as a student of Chassidus and a lover of Jewish books is the existence of some of the best Jewish bookstores in the whole Jewish world. I'm especially indebted to the following three Jewish bookstores here in Jerusalem for my growing private Chassidic library: Heichal Menachem (in Hebrew, English and Russian), Pomeranz (in English and Hebrew), and Yahad (in Russian).

This will not be my Jewish hyperbole even if I go so far as to say that these bookstores alone are sufficient reason for me to continue living here. Every time I discover some Jewish book or books I don't have or haven't read, I can simply drop in at one of all of these three Jewish bookstores without waiting for days or even weeks for their arrival by mail order.

Since I left academia last September, I have no reason - nor budget - to leave not only Israel but even Jerusalem. There are, however, two cities outside Israel that are two of the most important Jewish cultural centers in the world and have one important Jewish publisher-cum-bookstore respectively - Brooklyn and Moscow. I'm even ready to visit these cities just to visit these two Jewish bookstores - Kehot (in Hebrew and English) and Knizhniki (in Russian).

Even when I visited various big cities, mainly in Europe, to attend academic conferences, I spent what little free time I had visiting local bookstores. Museums and other conventional tourist attractions have never interested me; they even bore me to death.

I'm still hoping that travel restrictions will be removed by this summer and I'll be able to visit Moscow, especially Knizhniki (as well as my favorite Russian bookstores) there. This seemingly amazing Jewish bookstore in Russian was opened since I last visited Moscow in September 2017.

2021-03-26

Which Personal Exodus This Year?

In each and every generation a person must view himself as though he personally left Egypt. - Babylonian Talmud, Pesachim 116b

I constantly get out of my comfort zone. Once you push yourself into something new, a whole new world of opportunities opens up. But you might get hurt. But amazingly when you heal, you are somewhere you've never been. - Terry Crews

At least in the past 20 years or so I've always asked myself every year before the Passover what bondage I'd like to be liberated from. In some years it was internal, and in others it was external.

I also asked myself for the first time this year what other types of bondage, whether internal and external, I made a resolution to escape from in these 20 years. I could identify at least three internal and four external types of bondage. And to my surprise and joy, I've escapted from all of them except for the current one.

The past ones include freedom from being unmarried to getting married, from being a part-time lecturer to getting a tenure-track position and then getting tenured, to name just a few.

In the past few years I prepared myself for escape from the rat race in academia. This successful personal exodus has brought me into new internal bondage, and it's this new internal bondage from which I'd like to be liberated this coming year. It's financial instability and uncertainty as a newly self-employed life coach.

I try to encourage myself by saying that I had to struggle with more formidable challenges but eventually got over all of them though I felt like giving up these challenges many times when I was in their midst.

But on the other hand, it's against my nature to remain stuck in the comfort zone for a long time, which for me can even mean intellectual and spiritual necrosis. Not only when things get unbearable but also when they get too comfortable, I have to initiate an exodus.

2021-03-12

(Non-academic) Writer's Block

The single biggest challenge I faced when I still worked in academia was writing papers-shmapers, or to be more precise, the so-called writer's block. The most extreme example is the writer's block I felt against my PhD dissertation. The actual process of writing it took me only about half a year, but I had to spend about ten (!) years to start writing it.

So when I decided to leave academia, I thought - naively in restrospect - that I would finally be freed from this mental challenge. When I started blogging on various aspects of my new occupation - Jewish life coaching- and its foundation - teachings of Chabad Hasidism - about two and a half years ago, I felt as if I had become a writing tool of something bigger than myself. Words simply came out of nowhere, and all I had to do was to write down these flowing words.

But quite unexpectedly, I started to experience non-academic writer's block when I started to work with a personal business coach and write writing assignments, which I can apply immediately to my new business. This new challenge became blown out of proportion. I spent three full work days sitting in front of my computer and not writing even a single word. So I've understood that my writer's block has nothing to do with academia.

I tried one trick that usually worked to cope with this challenge when I had to finish writing an academic paper - getting up at 3:30 instead of 5:00 in the morning. These extra 90 minutes often turned out to be far more productive than eight hours in the middle of the work day, and I could get more things done in these 90 minutes.

This old trick did work with my new non-academic writer's block, too. But it's the last resort. I can't get up at 3:30 every (weekday) morning. And even if I should, I would then lose the freshness of these extra 9o minutes and they will become just like other normal hours of my work day.

In the meanwhile I haven't come up with other, more realistic, solutions I can use on a regular basis.

2021-03-05

Cognitive Intelligence vs. Life Wisdom

What are the characteristics of the rat race?

  • An inordinate emphasis on external matters - good looks, wealth, power, popularity, fame.
  • A profound feeling that life is a great competition, that we must not allow ourselves to fall behind.
  • An acceptance of standards set by others; a drive toward conformity even at the rist of betraying our freedom to make responsible choices.
  • [...]
  • A realization at some point and on some level that the rat race is ultimately meaningless. What have I achieved by "winning"? Has "success" brought me real happiness?

- Rabbi Mark Angel (Losing the Rat Race, Winning at Life)

I think I can see clearly by now why I've completely lost my interest in academia and decided to leave it. Even if you start your academic career with pure love of study, you'll find yourself sooner or later forced to join the rat race. Some people might also realize that the seemingly paradoxical but best way of winning at life is by losing the rat race. Nevertheless not many people dare to actually leave their rat race. I had to experience the so-called dark night of the soul to take the courage to leave my rat race in academia.

I would characterize competition in academia as that for cognitive intelligence. I've also come to realize that high cognitive intelligence is not the most important type of intelligence for true success in life - accomplishing our spiritual mission in our respective physical body in this world. What is far more important for this purpose is to cultivate our spiritual intelligence, or life wisdom to use a simple expression.

We have the following four types of people in terms of the combination of cognitive intelligence and life wisdom:

  1. Unintelligent and unwise people
  2. Unintelligent but wise people
  3. Intelligent but unwise people
  4. Intelligent and wise people

The ideal type would be the fourth. But if I'm asked whichi I prefer, the second or the third, I wouldn't hesitate now that I'd prefer the second. And the third is even worse than the first in a sense.

Of course, I'm not saying that there aren't many intelligent people in academia who are also wise. I've met enough, and I still wonder how they could find time and energy to cultivate their life wisdom in their hective academic schedule.

By continuing your academic rat race you run the risk of equating "success" in the competition for cognitive intelligence, especially in the form of the number of cited articles in peer-reviewed journals, with your life purpose.

It was only I started to experience my own share of the dark night of the sould that I could stop to think for the first time in my academic life what I had been doing for all those years. It didn't take me long to conclude that this competition is absolutely meaningless for me and I'd prefer spending my precious time and energy for increasing my life wisdom.

I've been extremely lucky to have encountered Chabad Chassidus for this purpose. I've been learning, both directly through formal and private study and indirectly by observing Chabad rabbis, how to use intellect to cultivate spiritual intelligence. Having been immpersed in such an environment for about three years by now, I simply can't read most academic studies of Judaism, which are fundementally different in their approach and aftereffects from traditional study of the Torah in general and Chabad Chassidus in particular.

2021-02-19

Career Change and the Second Tshuva

When I was in my early teens, I dreamed of becoming a polyglot, but I never imagined I would become a professional linguist. After I completed my doctorate in Hebrew linguistics, I dreamed of becoming a tenured lecturer in Hebrew linguistics (and never a language teacher) at an Israeli university, but I never imagined I would leave my tenure in Hebrew linguistics at an Israeli university.

It was three years ago that I made a final decision to make this career change and become a self-employed Jewish life coach. I never imagined I would take an interest, and a strong and growing interest in Hasidism in general and Chabad Hasidism in particular, on which my new practice of Jewish life coaching is based.

It was three months before this final decision that I started to undergo what seemed the second tshuva to me in retrospect now. I started to experience "the dark night of the soul". Descent was the necessity for ascent.

Since then I also started to lose an interest in what had occupied me not only professionally but also personally for about 30 years - languages and linguistics. When I stumbled upon the websites of a few linguistic associations in Israel rather recently, I myself was surprised to realize that none of the lectures in their respective conference programs interested me, nor did I even ask myself what is the use of such studies though I don't delegitimize them.

Three years since I was exposed to Chabad Hasidism I think I understand now why languages and linguistics don't interest me any more. For another somewhat different but essentially the same reason I also lost my interest in the academic study of Judaism.

I don't know where this second tshuva of mine will lead me eventually. I'm quite sure that most of those who only know Tsvi 1.0 don't understand what fascinates Tsvi 2.0 so much in Hasidism in general and Chabad Hasidism in particular. I still have a burning desire to share what I see now with those friends of mine who only know Tsvi 1.0. But paradoxically, such a burning desire shows that Tsvi 2.0 still has a long way to go in his second tshuva until he fully internalizes - and behaves accordingly - that everyone is exactly where they are supposed to be now.

2021-02-05

"Honorary Doctorate" for Absent-Mindedness

Perhaps I'm already entitled to receive an "honorary doctorate" for my absent-mindedness.

My joy of finally receiving the second dose of coronavirus vaccine yesterday didn't last too long as I realized soon that I had lost on my way there the following two important personal belongings: my credit card (for the third time) and my Israeli ID card (for the first time). I already have a "glorious" past record of losing the following: my credit card (twice) abroad and the key of my apartment (three times).

Yesterday I was left penniless after the second vaccination and realized that the bank wouldn't reopen until Sunday morning. I discovered soon for the first time the way to withdraw cash from an ATM with a smartphone without using a credit card or bothering a bank teller. I wonder if such a service is available in other countries.

This has enabled me to withdraw enough cash to buy foods for Sabbath. But I'll have to do without a credit card until it's reissued in seven business days, that is, in about ten days. I don't know if I'll be able to have my ID card reissued soon because of the present special situation.

The common denominator for all these unpleasant and inconvenient incidents is my absent-mindedness - I was so preoccupied each time with some immediate worry about being late for something important, etc. that I was too mindless to notice that my waist bag was wide open and something fell out of it. Every time this happened, I upgraded my waist bag, but apparently this hasn't helped me a lot. I need to upgrade my mind as a more fundamental solution to this problem thought I still don't know how.

2021-01-22

Losing Trust in the Mainstream Media and Popular Social Media Platforms

[Some time ago I decided not to talk about politics in public, but this time I have to make an exception.]

I've never been interested in US politics so much as now. I've been following news on the recent presidential election in the US and its results as well as their implications for not only the US itself but also the rest of the world, including Israel.

As I stumbled upon conservative voices that are often ignored or even silenced on the mainstream media and started listening to them, I've gradually lost my trust in the mainstream media. Now I mostly check the former on US politics, including NTD, Newsmax TV, Daily Wire, Sean Hannity Show, Dan Bongino Show, Mark Levin Show, Dennis Prager Show, Epoch Times, National File, etc., among others.

I'm also losing trust in popular social media platforms, most notably Tw*tter and F*cebook, because of their censorship and double standard. I signed up in P*rler just before it was forced to shut down and am waiting for its reopening. Personally, I found the accusation by *mazon baseless. It's scary that such private companies, on which we have come to depend so much, have also come to control our life and our free speech in such an alarming manner.

In the meanwhile I've made a rather long reading list of books on some crucial (and controversial) aspects of US politics (and related areas) I knew almost nothing about, including Unfreedom of the Press, The Manipulators, Deep State, Inside Trump's White House, God Save Texas, The Politically Incorrect Guide to Communism, and Hidden Hand.

2021-01-08

Linguocultural Literacy

As I look back now how I came to completely lose my interest in linguistics in the past three years or so, I notice that there still remains one area of linguistics that still interests me - interaction between language and culture, whose study is called cultural linguistics, anthropological linguistics, or ethnolinguistics - and this area also happens to be the very thing that first kindled my interest in what I later came to know as linguistics when I stumbled upon one such book as a high school student.

But my interest in ethnolinguistics is more practical than theoretical, especially in the context of my continued study of Russian. Though I still have a lot to learn to improve my grammatical and lexical knowledge of this difficult language, I've also started to learn books and dictionaries for increasing my linguocultural literacy - лингвокультурная грамотность in Russian - of Russian, or literacy of Russian culture that manifests itself in the language.

One of the things I really love and admire in Russian intellectual culture is its investment in and love for good dictionaries. Russia is one of the superpowers in practical lexicography, or dictionary making, in the world, probably together with England and Japan, among others.

Recenly one pedagogical dictionary of linguocultural literacy of Russian was published in Russian - Ключ к русской культуре: словарь лингвокультурной грамотности. I couldn't resist the temptation of acquiring a copy of such a dictionary, so I ordered one and received it within a week or so. Russian has another, more comprehensive and more academic, dictionary of linguocultural literacy - Лингвострановедческий словарь «Россия».

I'm not aware of such pedagogical dictionaries of linguocultural literacy for other languages, at least not in such a learner-friendly manner. But this may also be due to my lack of knowledge.

Leafing through the first dictionary mentioned above, I've been telling myself that such a dictionary can help newly observant Jews, be it for Hebrew or English, especially if they have become haredim. The so-called tshuva also involves acquiring new linguocultural literacy, which, to the best of my knowledge, is documented nowhere, and each new baal tshuva has to acquire this literacy through trial and error.

2021-01-01

Rearranging the Personal Library to Better Reflect the Present State of Consciousness

Having realized the impact books we physically face on a daily basis on our psyche, I recently rearranged my personal library. This must be the most drastic rearrangement, reflecting the most drastic (positive) transformation I have undergone in the past three years.

Since I was introduced one book by one of the most important Chabad rabbis three years ago as part of Jewish life coaching I received in a group of about ten frum Jewish men here in Jerusalem, I've become more and more fascinated by the teachings of Chabad Hasidism and the positivity of their followers and more and more engaged with the study of Chabad Hasidism, both formally and privately.

In parallel I've gradually started losing my interest in academic Jewish studies and linguistics though I'm still deeply connected to (Ashkenazic) Hebrew and Yiddish and continue improving my Russian, now by studying Hasidism in it.

The most conspicuous externally visible impact of this change is significant growth - actually from almost none - of the Chabad Hasidic section of my private library. In order to make room for this growing section I discarded many books that not only stopped interesting me but even drain my energy.

In my previous apartment here in Jerusalem my living room, where I also worked, was big enough to hold the whole library (about 1,300 books). But since I moved into a smaller apartment with a much smaller living room, I had to divide my private library into two - the active part in the living room (about 600 books) and the passive part in the bed room (about 700 books).

When I still worked as a linguist in academia, the majority of the books in the active part were on languages and linguistics. After this major rearrangement the majority of the books there are on Judaism, especially Chabad Hasidism. I have only one shelf for Hebrew, Yiddish and Russian respectively there; all the other books on languages and linguistics are now in the passive part of the library in the bed room. There remain few academic Jewish books even in the passive part.

The impact of this rearrangement, not only intellectually but also spiritually, has been enormous. I feel as if my living room became a sacred space. I'm constantly inspired even by the mere presence of all these Hasidic books just by sharing the same space. Of course, I also study them, though little by little to incorporate their profound contents.

If you happen to have seen my private library when it was still dominated by academic books on languages and linguistics, you should visit my apartment so that you, too, may not only see and but also feel the difference.