realsimcha wrote on 20 Mar 2016 21:49:
When i stop focusing on myself and I focus on outside of myself, then I am suddenly able to see how selfish all the acting out is, and how I am more than just satisfying urges. So, yes its to stay alive but not just so that i can be happy. but so that i can function in my world the way i was meant to .
You are saying the same as I am exactly. The reason I am consciously deciding to put my mind to caring about her is because this puts me back where I am supposed to be: responsible for others.
ShaL"oH writes that pig will become kosher one day - that is why it is called 'chazir', meaning 'to go back' (as in "chozer b'teshuva"). He writes that it's ability to be fixed in the future world is dependent upon us having the
proper relationship with pig, in the here and now. He explains that this is an aspect of why we refrain from eating it today: If we eat it in its present state, we lock it deeper into tum'ah. But if we establish a proper
relationship with pig now, it will be fixed up just right, in the future.
Is spitting on pigs and kicking them whenever a yid sees them the way to properly relate to pigs? Nope. The RMB"M writes, "A person should not say "I hate pigs and am disgusted by them!," for there is nothing immoral about eating pig. Rather, a person should say "I'd sure like to eat some pig, but Hashem says I must not." Hashem wants us to establish the right relationship with pig, in olam hazeh, so that pig will simply continue to it's next proper level l'asid lavo. Now let me add one more piece, please:
Chaza"l tell us a tzaddik is described as: "Achid Shmaya v'ara" he unites heaven and earth. The good Jew sees a squirrel and wishes it only well. He hates no animal, plant, or person. Even his shunning of the true rosho (and we know
very few of those I am sure) is just because the roshon needs din, not chessed, to learn to relate to Hashem right. This is what it means when it says that "Tzaddikim turn midas haDin into Chessed (they use Din only for the ultimate purpose of Chessed) and resho'im turn midas haChessed into midas haDin (because they 'make' the tzaddik use Din for the sake of Chessed though the tzaddik would rather just do Chessed for Chessed and keep the outside of things looking just like their insides [tocho kebaro])".
So nothing is really about what we 'do' with things or 'don't do' with things. Rather, it's all about
relationships - how we
relate with everything around us. We are all here together - us, the goyim, the pigs, our neighbors, our children, our wives, our parents and the people in ur neighborhood - and also the pretty women in the world that don't know better. The tzaddikim know how to relate properly to everyone and everything, each tzaddik according to his own derech. And through that, they unite everything to it's own nekuda of malchus, it's individual tachlis, it's nitzotz of kedusha.
The fact is that the more a yid spits on and 'detests' the pretty woman - yes, the very image he obviously worships because we see he keeps trying to follow and see it again!...the more of a pedestal he puts her on. The more he obsesses about her. The more he puts her down and says she is a prutza and a subhuman - the more of an object he makes her into...all just a trick to lust his brains after her more and more, really. A silly game. Instead of learning to relate to her properly, he is relating to her through his arrogance, shame, and self-comtempt. His trief azus d'kedusha (which is usually
just plain azus with a 'hechsher') is gonna kill him, in the end.
Praying for her is a simple thing that we can do to start to restore her humanity
to us - to get us back onto the same page Hashem is on. For if we are drooling after her, dying to see her naked on that screen, plotzing to take her image in and use it....then we are treating her like an
object already. Hating her at this point does nothing: for we already
love her as an object! If that is not corrected soon, we will just use her more and more. Praying for her is a tool for restoring our proper relationship with her once we have taken her as our toy already. As a result of fixing that through the humbling act of suspending our making her into an object and instead praying for her, we will become free of her. She will be restored to the truth of just being Hashem's creature just as we are Hashem's creatures. She has
her place in Hashem's world and a tachlis, and so do
I. And so does every leaf, rock, and squirrel. That's just a simple, humbling fact to accept. Getting all twisted up with the side-issue of who has a bigger tachlis is not the point. Size does not matter here. (sorry!)
Now a
disclaimer:
The prayer tool is usually not useful as a first-string tool. The first, proper response is to have the right relationship with her right this second that we are sitting on the same bus or train together. And that is simply this:
We have nothing to do with each other - she is not my business any more than I am her business!
But once I
make her my business and have already been taking her in again and again, following her to the computer (or in person) and worshipping her, etc, it's too late for that great and healthy first-round response. It's now necessary for me to eat some humble pie and face the music. To accept that I have already taken her into my mind and I am not letting her go...a problem. Now is the time for praying for her.
I only pray for those I do not ignore. My ignorance is usually quick and decisive...and when I fail at it for one reason or another, my prayers are quick, sincere, real and decisive. And they always work.
But if I tried to go around praying for all the shiksas I can find, that would be a bastardization of the entire thing I am suggesting and it would horribly backfire. I have seen people do that. It's just a trick to think about them more and more - just like obsessing about tzniyus and tikkun haBris all day is just a trick to think about women and sex all day long.