HHM,
Here's some winnings from the lotto. One of Hashem's many generous gifts from Yom Kippur:
Some thoughts from Yom Kippur: When we daven אשמנו בגדנו... על חטא שחטאנו.... How on earth am I doing teshuva on behalf of another Yid?
The answer I always heard is very simple: we are all one.
But what does that mean?
When Hashem created us, he took a "piece of Himself" and made it into a neshama. He then split that neshama into millions of pieces and put different pieces into different bodies.
Now comes Yom Kippur, the day we invite all the sinners to join us before we start Kol Nidrei, because we need ALL of us to daven together in order for our prayers to be whole. On this day, there's a special koach that Hashem puts in the world. We can connect to one another through our soul. We don't have multiple souls. It's all one soul. That means, if there's a Yid that's completely lost and disconnected, but we want his tefilla, what are we going to do?
He's not going to shul and he's not gonna daven, so how do we include his tefilla? We can daven for that Yid, if we realize that we are all the same. The only difference is our bodies, a mere technicality. So if "my soul" and "your soul" is the same soul, when "I" say על חטא, if I have in mind to connect to a part of my neshama that's currently in another body, and I'm "davening from there" that's what is actually happening. The physical body that "my" neshama is in, it's just one branch" of our collective neshama.
We are one. You is I. I is we. We is him, is her, us, etc. We are all one soul. A gut kvitell to the all of you/me/us!