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On today’s pages, Chullin 29 and 30, the rabbis wrestle with an odd question: why does the Mishna repeat a law we already learned only a few pages earlier? Their answer opens into a surprisingly modern meditation on distraction, memory, and the limits of human attention. In a world increasingly dominated by notifications, interruptions, and fractured concentration, the daf reminds us that repetition is not redundancy but mercy. What if reminders are not signs of weakness, but essential tools for living wisely? Listen and find out.
By Tablet Magazine4.8
541541 ratings
On today’s pages, Chullin 29 and 30, the rabbis wrestle with an odd question: why does the Mishna repeat a law we already learned only a few pages earlier? Their answer opens into a surprisingly modern meditation on distraction, memory, and the limits of human attention. In a world increasingly dominated by notifications, interruptions, and fractured concentration, the daf reminds us that repetition is not redundancy but mercy. What if reminders are not signs of weakness, but essential tools for living wisely? Listen and find out.

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