Yearly Archives: 2013

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Fight for the light

November 27, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

Our war for light is a fight for the truth to be revealed.   When we live in darkness we are cut off from reality – we do not benefit from HaKadosh Baruch Hu’s presence or take pleasure in our relationship with Him.  We are left empty and alone – separate.

However, within this darkness we can find ourselves; it is a road to self-discovery to make positive changes in our lives.  The Ba’al Shem Tov HaKadosh teaches that the greatest difficulty we endure is when we live in darkness and don’t realize that it is dark.  We reside a blackness and sense it being brightness.

The galut becomes comfortable and we adjust to our surroundings not feeling that anything is wrong or out of place.  How can we find our way through that?  A fundamental rule in psychology is that you cannot help someone if they refuse to be helped.  How can we work towards the geula if we don’t sense discomfort in the galut?

This is the delusional power of the yetzer hara.  Rebbi Nachman ztk’l brings down that during our generation the yetzer hara will be renamed – the power of delusion!  We are lacking our natural habitat and yet accept it.  Therefore it is here where we need to fight.

Tonight, when we light the menorah we must turn to Hashem and ‘demand’ the geula.   We should tell Hashem that we refuse to live in darkness and need light – Borei Olam’s light, the light of truthful reality.  Chazal teach us that this is the tefilla that Hashem ‘craves’ and ‘yearns’ for.  A demand for Him to reveal Himself and for His name to be universally recognized and glorified.

A fight on the emuna battleground is what it should be called.  Our constant conflict between body and soul, clarity and confusion, emuna and doubts must be done with once and for all.

Tonight, request light; peaceful light in your homes, intimate light in your relationship with Hashem, loving light in Klal Yisrael, joyful light in every home, healing light for the sick, zivug light for singles, baby light for childless parents, blessed light for our parnassa, and the light of teshuva to the wandering souls in B’nai Yisrael.

This is one war we all need to fight together … and cannot afford to loose!

Please post your comments and questions here.  It is important that we all gain insight from each others thoughts.

The Daily Dose will be taking a break from posting emuna lessons until Monday, B’H.  May the miracles of Chanukah surround Klal Yisrael always, Amen!

 

Chanukah Segulot (powerful practices)

November 26, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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chanuka_segulot

 

 

http://www.dailydoseofemuna.com/2013/11/26/chanukah-segulot-powerful-practices

BS’D

CHANUKAH SEGULOT:  (SOME OF THESE COME FROM R’ YEMIMA MIZRACHI, SOME FROM HANDOUTS THAT WERE GIVEN AT A SHIUR I ATTENDED IN HEBREW.  DON’T HAVE ANY MORE INFORMATION TO TELL OTHER THAN THAT.)

  • It is good to read the following tehillim perakim in front of the menorah candles:

Begin by reciting the last passuk only in

perek (90צ  “v’hi noam….”

And then after the entire perek (91צא: repeat this 7x’s consecutively out loud + 1 time silently (total 8 x’s):

then continue with the perakim  (30) סז (67) ,לג (33) , ל (in the shape of the menorah), (133יט (19) , ק (100) , קלג

  • Recite the prayer of Ana b’koach
  • Look at the candles and absorb the kedusha of the Ohr Haganuz (the hidden light of creation).  You are buying emuna!
  • Use this time now to beseech Hashem
  • Ask Hashem to remove your fears and strengthen your emuna
  • According to the Chida ztk’l,  ask to see the good in others, to be gifted with a good eye: see the good in yourself, in others and in life’s difficulties, tests and tribulations
  • Ask for children who will float above in holiness.  They should be blessed with wisdom (oil) and good memory
  • HaRav m’Slonim ztk’l teaches that we should ask that our children go in the path of Torah until the coming of Mashiach and that they not be embarrassed to be ‘frum’.  They should be zoche’ to yirat shamayim and tzniyut.  Ask that we merit to greet them always with a ‘glowing’ smile and that we love each child the same with no favoring among them.
  • Fry donuts in lots of oil – according to the father of the Rambam HaKadosh, it is a praiseworthy practice that blesses us with bountiful sustenance all year long
  • Gaze at the candles and ask that Hashem erase any bad or difficult images and memories from our minds’ ‘hard drive’.  Ask that we should live with inner composure, yishuv ha’da’at.
  • Through the act of staring at the candle flames, we ask that we be gifted with the ability to see things clearly and see Hashem’s compassionate hand in all that occurs since we are glancing at a reflection of the Ohr Haganuz (the hidden light of creation).  This light enabled Adam HaRishon to see from one end of the world to the other and detect Hashem’s presence and Divine energy in everything.  So too, we ask that we see Hashem in every aspect of our lives.
  • Always try to light Chanukah candles in your home even if you will be going to someone else
  • Ask for Mashiach = משיח = מדליקים שמונה ימי חנוכה
  • Ask for a miracle – one you think is impossible in the zechut of your renewed emuna!

 

The Kedushas Levi says that each night of Chanuka is mesugal, an auspicious time for different things to daven for:

  • 1st night -not to be lonely or depressed
  • 2nd night- Shidduchim, Shalom Bayis, to find your marriage partner and marital peace
  • 3rd night- Good children, Happy children and healthy
    (Chasam Sofer ztk’l says when you cry in front of the candles you can be sure your tefilos are answered)
  • 4th night- 4 Imahos
    To be a healthy and wholesome woman/mother in the 4 walls of your home, of true essence
  • 5th night – Chamisha Chumshei Torah,  The Five books of Torah
    Daven that your husband should be a talmid chacham and your children. By the 5th night more of the menorah is lit up than not.  Pray for more light in your life, for clarity.
  • 6th night – Simcha
    You can have everything and still be sad, therefore pray for joy and happiness
  • 7th night – Happy and Peaceful Shabbos – zmiros ,Divrei Torah by your Seuda. Shabbos is the source of all bracha.
  • 8th nignt- mesugal, auspicious time to pray for barren women
    8 is above nature, powerful day to pray.

Kedushas Levi says if you are planning to start something new if you start it on Chanuka it will be blessed, B’H.

A freilichen chanuka

Chanukah: The festival of emuna

November 25, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

Chanukah is the festival of emuna, the light that glimmers in midair and has the power to dispel darkness in an instant.  The glow of light is a flicker of hope and testimony that Hashem can do anything.

Everything that occurs in life is sunlight enveloped in blackness. All is hidden and concealed before the human eye so that we may choose our path without readily seeing which way it leads.  Our soul knows and drives us to choose spirituality, yet our body sways us to material avenues.  The constant battle between cloudiness and clarity is the journey of a lifetime.

Chanukah is a holiday where we physically act to increase light in our homes for all to see.  When things look dreary, hopeless and desolate especially as the days are shorter and physically there is less light shining in the world, we declare, “There is no despair in this world at all!” HaKadosh Baruch Hu instructed us to engage in the deed of lighting the menorah so that we can personally participate in the creation of light.

The emuna that the Maccabim portrayed by fighting against the Greeks, against all odds for a chance to win, brought about their yeshua.  They trusted in Hashem’s intervention and saw themselves as a child of Hashem in dire need of His help.  That was the key to their salvation.

“Hashem, we are Your children, please help us”; that brings victory!  It was not natural to survive. Now it is our calling to display that same emuna as the Maccabim.

Tomorrow, we shall review a number of segulot (powerful resources) that will serve, Be’ezrat Hashem, to bring miracles into our lives “…Ba’yamim hahem b’zman hazeh  (…who performed miracles for our ancestors in those days, at this time).” 

Miracles transcend time.  The Sfat Emet ztk’l teaches that the light of the menorah exists in the heart of every Jew in every generation.  We can ignite it… tomorrow we’ll see some ways how.

 

Today’s daily dose is dedicated to the refuah shleimah of Ephraim ben Chaya.  He is a father of three young children and has stage IV melanoma.  May Hashem create a miracle for Ephraim ben Chaya and send him a complete healing among all of those sick and suffering in KlalYisrael, b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen!

When our ego gets in the way

November 24, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

According to the Steipler HaKadosh, one of the main dangers we regularly face in ‘forgetting’ our emuna comes from our ego.  The weakening of one’s trust in Hashem that comes in the form of doubts, worries and frustrations most often originate in the negative trait of arrogance.

Rav Hisda in Masechet Sotah 5 says in the famous verse, “Ein Ani v’hu yecholin ladur b’yachad… (Every Man in whom is haughtiness of spirit, Hashem declares, I and he cannot both dwell in the world).”  Pride is a destructive force as in another text in the Gemara, Rav Elazar writes, “Over every man in who is haughtiness of spirit the Shechinah laments.” In fact, the bulk of Sotah discusses the sin of conceit in a very harsh manner.

Superiority in many of us may have been part of the molding of our character as children.  However, as we mature, we must remove this negative trait as it only leads to our downfall.  Once we are able to control and channel our arrogance, we will find ourselves flourishing with emuna and all of our doubts will simply disappear.

This comes as a product of the renewed feeling of not being entitled to anything.  If we could only live our lives with the attitude that everything is a gift, to be more precise an undeserved gift that we are given by Hashem solely out of His eternal love for us, we would reach an unbreakable level of emuna.

A key tool in increasing the attribute of humility comes from learning divrei mussar (moral discipline).  There is an abundance of CDs, shiurim and books available that help us acquire this noble trait of humbleness.  As we develop this praiseworthy quality, our ability to attach ourselves to the Borei Olam with emuna shleimah will become, B’H, second nature.

Today’s daily dose is dedicated to the refuah shleimah of Roula Chaya bat Latifeh a mother of three who fell suddenly into cardiac arrest and is now in a coma, r”l.  May Hashem shower her with rachamei shamayim and complete healing refuat hanefesh and refuat haguf amongst all of Klal Yisrael who are sick and suffering b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen!

Soul-union

November 22, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

On Shabbat, we receive the special gift of soul-union with Borei Olam.  We experience His companionship – an envelopment of togetherness.  This comes as a result of leaving the commotion and fragmentation of the past workweek behind and entering into a state of unity and peace within oneself, with the souls of Klal Yisrael, and undoubtedly with Hashem.

Upon giving over our will to Hashem, we become one with Him.  This ‘enjoins us together’ allowing Hashem’s presence to saturate our entire being.  It is almost like entering a spiritually sensitized habitat where material barriers are barred from entering.  Over the six day workweek, we must work so hard to experience this amazing ‘high’.  However, on Shabbat, it enters our life ‘naturally.’

Why then do many of us not feel this ‘high’?  Each of us can feel Hashem to the degree that we work on the refinement of our middot and the way in which we keep Hashem’s mitzvot.    The stronger our desire to ‘see’ Hashem while working to improve our character traits, the more intense Divine energy will be poured our way.  The more we think about Shabbat during the mundane routine of our week, the stronger our bond with Hashem will be on this holy day.

We must observe Shabbat below on earth in order to merit being its mate in the World-to-Come.  Observing in this case refers to honoring and anticipating its arrival.  By beautifying Shabbat with our best china, exquisite delicacies, and royal attire, we are proclaiming to HaKadosh Baruch Hu, “We await Your arrival and are honored to ‘host’ You.”

Preparing ourselves, our family and our homes for the Shabbat Queen must be accompanied by joy since we are being honored with Her presence.  The simple deed of changing our clothes to regal attire should bring us joy since we are emulating Borei Olam Who ‘changes His garb on Shabbat and adorns Himself in multiple garments of Light.”

What simcha – such an honor.  Thank you, Hashem, for being our guest this and every Shabbat.

Today’s daily dose is dedicated to the refuah shleimah of Rafael Elisha Meir ben Devorah.  He is a 6-year-old boy who doctors say has a week to live. Please daven for him and his family.  The family is in touch with very big gedolim.  Any woman who would like to raise her level of tzniut in the merit of a refuah shleimah for Rafael Elisha ben Devorah will get a bracha from them.  Please email Chaya Dana Parkoff cdparkoffcoaching@gmail.com to do so.  May HaKadosh Baruch Hu shower rachamei Shamayim on this beautiful little boy and family and gift him with a complete healing amongst all of Klal Yisrael who are sick and suffering b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen.

Have a wonderful Shabbat Kodesh!

 

Tough questions require honest answers

November 21, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

There is a phenomenon called self-belief.  A person may live his life certain that He believes in Hashem, nevertheless he really has faith in himself. Let us look at nine questions which we should answer with full honesty in order to discover whether we really trust Hashem or ourselves.

1)      The ba’al habitachon (man who trusts in Hashem) has inner tranquility and lives a life of calmness. How much inner composure do you have?  Do you often worry or have fears?  Are you overly concerned about your livelihood?  If we trust in Hashem, we remain peaceful even in the face of uncertainty.

2)     Do you look to others to help resolve your hardships and anticipate that they will ‘rescue’ you from your troubles? (Not as messengers but as ‘independent agents’).

3)     Are you investing an abundance of hishtadlut (exerted effort) to bring about a yeshua?  In other words, do you see the solution to your problems as a product of your intervention or cause-and-effect?

4)     Do you get angry easily when things do not go your way?  A person with strong emuna is able to let go of his feelings more readily as he knows that it is not within his control and is being directed from above for his eternal best.

5)     Where are you in terms of experiencing feelings of jealousy and envy? How is your response when you hear something good occurred is someone else’s life while it is that exact same thing which you majorly lack?  This displays an unwillingness to accept Hashem’s just ways together with the feeling that things should be different.

6)     Does your ego get in the way? We have nothing of our own. Our intellect, physical features, and everything about us is not ours.  They are lent to us on this temporary journey called this world.

7)     How is our Torah learning?  In spite of those busy times at work, do we make the time to connect spiritually?

8)    What is your reaction to paying yeshiva tuition, Shabbat expenses, Yom Tov costs, or supporting a Torah organization or a Torah scholar?  Do you give wholeheartedly believing that this is money given to you by Hashem from His ‘own’ personal funding account?

9)     How grateful are you to Hashem?  Do you see everything, yes everything, in your life as a gift and not earned by you because you ‘worked for it’ and ‘deserve it’?

These are tough questions indeed.  Please respond, with or without your name, in the comment and post section at the end.  It will be interesting to learn from one another’s answers.

 

Today’s daily dose is dedicated to the refuah shleimah of Yaakov Tzvi ben Anat.  He is a young boy having hernia surgery today.  May the malachim guide the hands of the doctors and gift Yaakov Tzvi ben Anat with a complete healing amongst all of Klal Yisrael who are sick and suffering b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen!

Beseech and you will find

November 20, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

We should strive to live a life which depicts a surrendering of our will to that of Hashem’s will.  ‘Whatever is straight and good in Your eyes Hashem is the way I wish for You to direct me.”  If we reach out to Hashem with such simple words, B’H we will be zoche to live out the passuk in tehillim, “Rotzei Hashem et yeraiav, et hameyachalim l’chasdo /  Hashem desires those who fear Him, those who long for His kindness.” (Tehillim 147:10).

Hashem’s intimate closeness and supervision in our lives will never cease if we only desire to attach ourselves to Him.  There is no room for despair. We must keep hoping with more resolve each time and in time B’H we will see yeshuot in our lives.

I heard a beautiful shiur last week by a Rav in Teaneck, NJ, Rabbi Simon shlit’a, who made a very moving point. The words ‘I can’t’ really mean ‘I don’t want to’.  Ein davar haomed lifnei haratzon (nothing can stand in front of a person’s will) or in simple English: when there is a will, there is a way.

We hold within us an inner point of truth that is a direct pipeline to infinity otherwise known as our G-dly spark.  Storehouses of potential greatness sit dormant within each of us.  However, if we do not wish to enter the storeroom, we cannot benefit from what it has to offer. If we do not actively pursue finding Hashem in our lives, we will not sense His being.

There is no ‘stopping’ Hashem from pouring boundless goodness into our lives.  However, He wants us to recognize where it is coming from and not delude ourselves into believing that it is a result of cause and effect or natural happenings.

Committing ourselves to doing teshuva every single day will unclog the channel for blessings to pour forth.  Hoping for an ease-up in our hardships cannot come about if we are steering on the wrong path.  All blessings travel through a spiritual passageway. If we aren’t on this route, we cannot catch them.

We must take the first step toward forming a strong bond with Hashem.  This drive comes from a heart of passion to feel His existence and invite Him into our lives.  As we become enveloped in His embrace we will find it easier to ‘let go’ and cast our burdens onto Him.

Today’s daily dose is dedicated to the blessing of zera bar kayama, having children to Sara Rivka bat Gittel Yuta.   May she together with all of the righteous Jewish women merit to give birth to healthy children and continue to build their bayit ne’eman b’Yisrael, b’mazal tov ub’karov, Amen!

Kindness; the result of trust

November 19, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

Haboteach b’Hashem chesed yesovevenu (The one who trusts in Hashem, kindness will envelop him).  Why?

Firstly, Hashem does not want to ‘disappoint’ those who hope and display their reliance on Him.  Secondly, measure for measure, when we entrust ourselves only in Hashem’s hands without any rhyme or reason attached to it, so shall our yeshua come about through illogical means.  Let us not be confused. Illogical is not miraculous. It is simply a way in which we hadn’t realized the yeshua could occur.

Lastly, because I allowed myself to trust in that which I cannot see, the path that my yeshua will travel on to reach me will not be shown to the harmful forces which may dispute my worthiness in receiving it measure for measure.

Sometimes, we still feel, though, that we are undeserving of a yeshua due to our transgressions.  Yet, if we closely read the passuk above again, we shall see that Hashem’s kindness embraces us as a result of our trust, not our worthiness.  It is appropriately known as chesed chinam (unconditional kindness).

The conclusion to this: when we fail to hope and wait for the yeshua, we deprive ourselves from allowing Hashem’s kindness to cuddle us. Hashem wants to shower us with good, His goodness and our eternal best. However, if we stop ourselves from hoping, we essentially seal off the channel for the yeshua to arrive.

So what am I hoping and trusting Hashem to do?  Steer me away from anything that is not beneficial for me in this world.  I do not want to travel on a road which is unsafe for me to be on.  Hashem is my ‘tour guide’ in this world and I am but a tourist needing Him to show me the way to the most exalted lofty places!

May the zechut of today’s learning serve as an iluy neshmat Rina Lucille bas Riva Rut on her yahrtzeit today, Amen.

Today’s daily dose is dedicated to the refuah shleimah of Akiva Meir ben Malka a beautiful two year old who is running a high fever and simply not doing well.   May HaKadosh Baruch Hu shower him with a complete healing amongst all of those sick and suffering in Klal Yisrael, b’karov, b’rachamim, Amen!

Endless possibilites

November 18, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

Today, 15 Kislev, is the yahrtzeit of Yehudah HaNasi ztk’l.  Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi was the editor of the Mishnah in its final form. He is referred to as “Rebbi,” Teacher par excellence, and as “Rabbeinu HaKadosh,” our Holy Rabbi.    Light a candle in his memory.  May he serve as an advocate on high for Klal Yisrael, Amen!

How do we clarify the teaching that when Hashem ‘creates’ a miracle for us it is deducted from our ‘eternal reward account’? Chazal teach us that this refers only to the person who makes a distinct separation in his mind between nature and miracle.  Let us delve further.

When we see this world as two separate powers, the force of nature and the concept of miracle, and make a request before Hashem that ‘qualifies’ as a miracle, measure for measure we need to ‘pay’ Hashem for ‘troubling’ Him to make a miracle.   However, if we truthfully live with the idea that everything is possible and it is all comes from Hashem Yitborach and there is no such thing as natural or miraculous means, than we are in fact making a simple request which is not a ‘big deal’ for Hashem to bring about. That being the case, no ‘payment’ is required and Hashem does not have to create an unusual chain of events to fulfill our request.

This is a remarkable insight that can be further understood by the following example.  If I was in distress over not being able to make my mortgage payment this month under ‘normal’ circumstances, my anguish is the result of my inability to see my salvation through any other means but natural conditions which are not present. My hope is limited to rational thinking and the means by which the rescue may come about is constricted to that which I think is possible.

However, if I contemplate the endless options of how Hashem may send me a yeshua, some of which I have no ability to even fathom, I am connecting to limitless ways by which I will be able to make my mortgage payment.  In fact, because I believe in that which I cannot comprehend or see, Hashem Be’H will likely bring about the solution to my problem from a place that I least expected or knew existed.

You see, I am connecting to infinite possibilities since Hashem is limitless and kol yachol (able to do it all).  The more I trust in HaKadosh Baruch Hu, the further He will reveal to me the never-ending possibilities to resolve my hardships.

Hashem=HaTeva

November 17, 2013
Orit Esther Riter
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BS’D

In the sefer Nefesh Chaim written by Rav Chaim m’Volozhin ztk’l he writes that there is an amazing segula to annul harsh decrees.  It unfolds through uttering three simple words, Ein od Milvado three times consecutivelyWhen we plant in our hearts that everything comes from Hashem and nothing can come about without His personal intervention, we tap into Hashem’s rachamim thus sweetening and shortening the difficult times.

The words ‘There is none other than Him’ brings to light the concept that there is no other power in the universe other than Him.  This encourages us to subjugate ourselves to performing His will. The intense task of surrendering one’s mind and spirit in spite of the pain that one feels is very powerful.  Measure for measure by going against our natural tendencies, we will merit B’H yeshuot above nature.

When we recite the words ‘Hashem Hu HaElokim (Hashem is our G-d)’ we are in essence saying that Hashem is ‘the nature’ since the word Elokim=HaTeva (nature).  We are reaffirming that there is no other force that can bring about anything at any time other than HaKadosh Baruch Hu.

The sefer Shomer Emunim teaches us that when a person does not strengthen himself in emuna and bitachon in Hashem Yitborach, he places himself in a risky place whereby difficulties may appear in his life. These hardships are essentially ‘wake up’ calls for us to realize that we are treading on the wrong path and need to re-evaluate where we are heading.

Difficulties may c”v work to further distance ourselves from emuna in Hashem since we become emotionally weakened and pained by the challenge.  However the Ba’al Shem Tov HaKadosh reveals to us that particularly during this time we should be aware of this threat, increase our tefillot and beseech Hashem that He gift us with clarity of thought and an extra dose of emuna to help us make it through.

 

Today’s daily dose is dedicated L’iluy neshmat Rivka bat Avraham z’l. May her neshama bask in the Divine radiance amongst all of the tzaddikim who have departed from this world, Amen!

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