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In a summer post-Shavuot reflection, the speaker recounts a call with Rabbi Levy about personal growth rooted in recognizing one’s Tzelem Elokim, which can become “numb” through aveirot, middot like gaavah, or simple unawareness. They contrast a Western “zero-to-one” identity—where worth depends on achievement and failure means being a failure—with a Torah paradigm of “infinity,” where success is following Hashem and being judged by clean, heartfelt effort (ratzon), not results, which belong to Hashem (“yaagata u’matzata”). Rabbi Levi teaches that making Hashem happy is linked to our happiness, that sincere striving is credited as action and creates “malachim” that help further mitzvot, and even mere existence can be a tikkun. The episode ends with homework: nightly rate one’s daily effort 1–100 and aim for 1% better tomorrow.
By JewishPodcasts.fm4.8
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In a summer post-Shavuot reflection, the speaker recounts a call with Rabbi Levy about personal growth rooted in recognizing one’s Tzelem Elokim, which can become “numb” through aveirot, middot like gaavah, or simple unawareness. They contrast a Western “zero-to-one” identity—where worth depends on achievement and failure means being a failure—with a Torah paradigm of “infinity,” where success is following Hashem and being judged by clean, heartfelt effort (ratzon), not results, which belong to Hashem (“yaagata u’matzata”). Rabbi Levi teaches that making Hashem happy is linked to our happiness, that sincere striving is credited as action and creates “malachim” that help further mitzvot, and even mere existence can be a tikkun. The episode ends with homework: nightly rate one’s daily effort 1–100 and aim for 1% better tomorrow.

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