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TOPIC: yechida's reflections 143648 Views

Re: yechida's reflections 25 Feb 2010 20:34 #55501

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Acceptance
by Dawn Anderson
------------------------------------------------------------------------

the poem actually came along with a picture

of a caterpillar and a butterfly

and it is the caterpillar that is pleading

------------------------------------------------------------


Accept me for who



I am, not for who you hope



I will one day be.



(and yechida adds, that it is the accepting who I am--fully and conditionally-- that gives me the encouragement and strength to be one day what you hope me to be)


Last Edit: 25 Feb 2010 20:37 by .

Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 00:26 #55542

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Beautiful and thanks again R Yechida!!
"Off the 18-wheeler and fine on this tricycle!", "I do not particularly care exactly which "lav" suicide is. I'm not interested in it for other reasons...and you are probably the same."
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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 15:49 #55624

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thank you dov
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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 15:55 #55625

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Big snow storm in NY-was able to come into work, so here is a post about Gratitude.

A big part of Purim,because that is the main way to get to Simcha.

I have alot to learn about both Gratitude and Simcha.

It's been a very very long time since I've felt either one in a powerful way.

It's time to welcome those dear old freinds.

It's been  long overdue

Have a wonderful Shabbos,dear friends



Gratitude by –Jason Westlake


“Why should I be grateful for anything?”
Says the misguided soul, “How does it help me?
“It seems like a nice gesture, but nothing more
“It surely can’t hurt me if I don’t have it”


This man never felt the need to show gratitude
He felt the world owed him for what it had withheld
But when he became bitter, his life unfulfilled
He wanted to change, but didn’t know how


He picked up a book one day out of the trash
He knew not why, but felt compelled to read
A new feeling, a new light entered his heart
His life now infused with a joy he never knew


All from this book and the ideas it conveyed
His friends and family were amazed at the change
And they implored him to share what he had learned
This is the message he related that day:


We are all receptors with great capacity
To receive all blessings for our benefit—
Knowledge, revelation, light, and experience
For our personal growth, to show us the path


Parents, teachers, counselors, coaches, and friends
Who provide support, love, guidance, and strength
Our bodies a physical tabernacle
Food and nourishment so we can survive


Money, time, and physical resources
Which are tools to help us on the journey
All of creation for our enjoyment
All of our talents to assist even more


The key to receiving all of these blessings
Lies in the receptors if they are willing
The receptors are powerful magnets
Easily attracting all things for our needs


But when they are closed, all blessings are repelled
Our bodies, souls, and minds shut down, starved to death
Deprived of basic needs, our lives shrivel up
Bitterness, anger, and depression result


The blessings are like an ever-flowing river
Continually coming to us in abundance
This is its natural state, with us as its end goal
The receptors being the gateway to entrance


During times like this, when great dams we’ve built
Blocking and repelling the flow to us
It becomes more difficult to break these walls down
And open up the soul once more to its blessings


Herein lies the miracle of gratitude
When we can’t find how to open the floodgates
Letting the flow return to its natural state
When everything we try just doesn’t work


When our faith and hope seem to be lost to us
Gratitude then serves its fundamental purpose
To open up our hearts and minds once again
To remind us of what we’ve received before
To open the floodgates of blessings flowing down
To help us remember what we knew in the past
To return us to our former state of glory
To tear down those walls that repelled those blessings


It’s the first step towards finding our faith and hope
Towards receiving more knowledge and resources
To empower us to fulfill the dreams we have
To fill our hearts with love and the power to choose


It’s not merely a nice gesture to others
But instead a critical key for ourselves
That turns our hearts in the right direction
Returning to us our power to receive
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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 16:26 #55628

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Between Cracks

by Dawn Anderson


Neglected and

abandoned by all,

save hope

-

Through cracks

in a sidewalk,

flowers grow.



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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 16:36 #55629

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Definitions Without Words
by Dawn Anderson

Often, what is seen is more powerful than that which can be defined with words.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Her one single tear falls

Upon his unsympathetic glance.

Silence hangs heavy.





Definition - broken heart.


The mind’s photograph, now

A stored memory.



Meaning - not found

In Webster.




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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 17:03 #55634

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A poem I saw

Writing down your thoughts and feelings can be very healing in many ways

My Journal 

 
  my inner child’s security blanket:
i find solace in its blank pages
and its ability to change.
a silent sounding board,
it reflects my perspective
from a different time and space.
my magic mirror, my time machine.
simple muse: it collects my thoughts,
wishes and whims together,
and treasures them in leather bound.
it sits on my knee patiently,
suggesting that I express myself.
i’m allowed to say anything
without fear of negative recourse.
the journeys of my mind made tangible
through ink and paper’s union:
My sacred evidence of life lived.

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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 17:12 #55636

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 WE MUST LOVE OTHERS

God has told us-
'We must love others'-
For without loving others
We cannot love God truly.

Shalom Freedman  

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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 17:17 #55637

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There Are Poems Too Painful To Be Written 



  THERE ARE POEMS TOO PAINFUL TO BE WRITTEN

There are poems too painful to be written
Poems also too shameful-
And poems that cannot be said,
Because of the pain they would give others.

No one can tell all their truth
Without hurting too much.

Silence may be sacred
Hiding – True Love.

Shalom Freedman

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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 17:22 #55638

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and yet,despite it all,
each morning bring forth new light,
into the window of the soul,
shedding healing light,
on places,
that were one time,
very dark.
 

  THE LIGHT THROUGH THE MORNING WINDOW

The light through the morning window
The small leaves of the light green tree
The pale sky waiting behind everything
The night which is gone now.

All these failures one after the other,
Other names other destinies, greater than mine
The single singing I cannot hear
The great prophecies I will not realize.

Others who are more to me
Even than I am to myself.

The morning
The morning again
Words again
Trying to live again
A poem again perhaps.

In a life of many days
In which each small day
Its own struggle
And each night
A night which ends
With morning light.

Shalom Freedman


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Re: yechida's reflections 26 Feb 2010 20:28 #55655

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yechida wrote on 26 Feb 2010 17:17:

There Are Poems Too Painful To Be Written 



  THERE ARE POEMS TOO PAINFUL TO BE WRITTEN

There are poems too painful to be written
Poems also too shameful-
And poems that cannot be said,
Because of the pain they would give others.

No one can tell all their truth
Without hurting too much.

Silence may be sacred
Hiding – True Love.

Shalom Freedman



Very true...sometimes our need to be honest, to come clean, can hurt the "other."
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Re: yechida's reflections 28 Feb 2010 16:59 #55722

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PURIM

Today is an Eis Ratzon
Daven for all of us YECHIDA
Please beg Tatty to come home,
as He shakes up this world
which has rejected Him and all His admonitions
May He cradle His kinderlach in His arms
and comfort us as only He can
Please
beg Him
Hashem is addicted to you! Feel His hugs!"Sheva yipol tzaddik VKUM"
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Re: yechida's reflections 01 Mar 2010 14:16 #55763

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7UP

I wrote this the night after Purim in NY (the beginning of your Yerushalayim Purim)

As a nation,
we suffered greatly,
terrible pain,
darkness,
so though there may be,
sime excess,
in the pent-up outburst,
of Purim Simcha,
perhaps beyond what it should be,
please forgive us,
we are Your children,
human,
broken,
smiling and dancing outside,
crying inside,
as many of us,
need desparately,
to feel Your love,
underlying it all,
that is what,
we really need
to feel. 
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Re: yechida's reflections 01 Mar 2010 14:50 #55766

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from aish

it is helpful to many that have pent up emotions of thing that are truely hurting them,to speak to God about them,or atleast,put it in writing.

A letter to my abusive parents.

by Hadassa Luk 

My letter is written to you, but it's intended for me. To clear things up inside. To try to understand myself better. To comprehend the perplexity of the human heart.

I can’t even address you as I should. It hurts too much. Should I start with questions? Should I start with telling you what is on my mind? What has been weighing on my heart probably since I was born? Maybe even since you carried me? I don’t know how you felt when you carried me, but I assume it was not the healthiest feelings. I do know though that you did not want to see me for the first few minutes of my life. My life that has plagued you.

I don’t know how to write this letter at all. It is so deeply recessed in my heart, in the innermost chambers. I was too scared to enter these chambers. I didn't have the emotional strength to go there. You have given me a lot of grief. I have been a crippled human being because of you. I have grown up without parents and have never been a child because of you. I have never known what it means to trust someone because you have taken that away from me. I have learned to be scared of people, because you made me scared of them.

I learned to be immune to hurt and insults, because you have done it so many times. I have since learned that lacking a mother and love are things that can never really be filled. I live that void every day. I've learned that when someone loves you, don’t allow it to seep in, because you can never make up 20 or so years of it. I learned to be immune to hurt and insults, because you have done it so many times. It was just a part of life, part of getting up in the morning and pushing through another day.

You taught me to go into my own world, which in itself was not too pleasant, because you were in your own world when I was a child. I learned to see the outside world as a threat, as if people are out to get me. I learned to shy away from good gestures and don't know how to get out of harmful situations because you have alternated between the two, way too often. I learned to just grit my teeth when given criticism, because that's all I ever heard from you. I don't know how to accept praise, because I was never deserving of it. I never learned to laugh, because you never allowed me to. I never learned how to say no when needed, because you never gave me that choice. I don't know how to be a productive member of society, because you demanded me to produce too much.

I am young in years but old in resilience. Too old. I have learned to shirk responsibilities, because you never took it. I learned that punishments come regardless of intentions, because nothing was ever good enough for you. I learned that it’s the simplest to blame others for your shortcomings, because that is what I have always heard from you.

I learned that squelched emotions are much better and safer, because you never let me voice them, and I could not afford to feel them. I learned that it is okay to be alone in this world, because you did not allow anyone into my world. I learned that it is safer to hide, because if I was around, you would always get at me. I learned how to be there, yet be invisible, because if I was seen, it never ended well. I learned that you should never admit to your wrongdoings, because I was always blamed for your mistakes. I learned that if you’re hurt, you deserve it, because that's what you always told me.

I learned to let people roll all over me, because I believed if I would allow it, I would finally win your approval, your love… I learned that love is conditional, because you put down very harsh conditions. I learned that values are valueless, because you didn't have any. I learned to beg for what I need, because that was the only way I got anything.

I learned too many things to list. Most of them were negative. But one positive thing that life has taught me is that just when I feel that I can’t go on any more, God sends another spurt of strength.

I pray that I take adversity with the grace of an adult, not the grief of a child.I just wish I would have learned it in a different way. I just wish that I had parents that I can be proud of, that my childhood would not have been wasted like that. I just wish that I would not be so crippled by your teachings and your crookedness. How I wish that I would have known a different life, that I would have known right from wrong through your teachings. I know the wrongs, but I do not know the rights.

I want to be able to tell you all this, but I'm not ready, and I might never be. I want to give my children, please God, everything that I did not get, but how do I do it? I want to know where the balance between love and discipline is, but I never saw it. Maybe it is one and the same thing. You can’t discipline without love.

I hope that one day you will be proud of me, even though I have a hard time knowing that I give you nachas. But I realize, most importantly, I need to be proud of myself.

I pray that my life may be a lesson for my future years. That I learn only good things from my past. That I take adversity with the grace of an adult, not the grief of a child. That I do not lean on my handicaps, but that I use it to push me forward and upward.

I hope that one day I will be able to stand up proudly and say that I have come out the winner, in spite of my past. Or maybe because of it.

The writer is using a pseudonym.
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Re: yechida's reflections 03 Mar 2010 21:39 #56181

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The Seven Wonders of the World
Author Unknown


Junior high school students in Chicago were
studying the Seven Wonders of the World. At
the end of the lesson, the students were asked
to list what they considered to be the Seven
Wonders of the World. Though there was some
disagreement, the following received the
most votes:

1. Egypt's Great Pyramids
2. The Taj Mahal in India
3. The Grand Canyon in Arizona
4. The Panama Canal
5. The Empire State Building
6. St. Peter's Basilica
7. China's Great Wall

While gathering the votes, the teacher noted that one student, a quiet girl, hadn't turned in her paper yet. So she asked the girl if she was having trouble with her list. The quiet girl replied, "Yes, a little. I couldn't quite make up my mind because there were so many." The teacher said, "Well, tell us what you have, and maybe we can help."

The girl hesitated, then read, "I think the Seven Wonders of the World are:

1. to touch...
2. to taste...
3. to see...
4. to hear... (She hesitated a little, and then added...)
5. to feel...
6. to laugh...
7. and to love.

The room was so quiet, you could have heard a pin drop.

May this story serve as a gentle reminder to all of us that the things we overlook as simple and ordinary are often the most wonderful - and we don't have to travel anywhere special to experience them.

Enjoy your gifts!
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