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The Rebbe's Love Laboratory



The sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn of blessed memory (1880-1950), once addressed a certain person in a letter using the title, "a G-d-fearing man" (ish y'rei Elokim). The Rebbe's secretary remarked that this person's reputation did not justify such a distinguished title.

The Rebbe used the example of a pathology lab to explain his point. When a lab technician examines a blood sample, he or she looks under a microscope for any trace of the suspected cells or element. The discovery of even one thousandth of a percent of it is regarded as very significant, as it implies a potential for this "tiny trace" to grow and develop into a most tangible factor in the person's life.

So too -- said the Rebbe -- I look at the person's soul under a spiritual microscope. I never fail to find there a trace of the fear of G-d. To me, this "tiny trace" is very significant. In fact, by conferring upon the person the title "G-d-fearing person" now, we accentuate that quality in him or her, and encourage it to grow and develop and become a tangible reality in that person's life.

In a seminar I once attended, the speaker asked the audience: "What makes a successful person?" The responses were: "a person who is honest", "enthusiastic," "kind", "has integrity", "cares about others" and so on. Most of the items mentioned as a recipe for success had to do more with attitude than skill. Regarding a particular skill a person might claim, "I just don't have it in me"; but when it comes to positive attitudes, these are things that each one of us possess -- at the very least in the form of a "tiny trace." We need only to discover them and allow them to develop.

We believe that every single person has a trace of honesty, good will, gentleness, politeness, and so on. It is our job as parents, spouses, friends and fellow human beings to find that trace -- even if we need to take out our inner microscopes -- and encourage it.

The author and motivational speaker Zig Ziglar suggests that we stand in front of a mirror each morning and say: "I am an honest person. I am a person who cares about others." We should go on and list all the character traits which we would like to reveal in ourselves. We should encourage our children to do the same.

The next step is to act in the way a person who possesses those traits would act. Just like we cannot learn to fly an airplane or play a violin just by reading up on it or listening to lectures about it, so, too, the development of character requires practice. I know of parents who take their children to visit people in a hospital or an old age home. They encourage their child to use some of his pocket money towards helping others. Practicing acts of charity and kindness on an ongoing basis makes a kind person.

In a nutshell, the steps are: believe that we have the attitudes, and practice them until they become second nature.

Try it -- it works!


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By Yaakov Lieder   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Rabbi Yaakov Lieder has served as a teacher, principal and in a variety of other educational positions for more than 30 years in Israel, the US, and Sydney, Australia. He is the founder and director of the Support Centre to aid families struggling with relationship and child-rearing issues. Click here for more articles by Rabbi Lieder.

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Love: an Anthology
Love Yourself
The Grammar of Love
Man and Woman
Mikvah Time
The Jealous Lover
Do We Love Too Much?
Trust
How to Criticize and Other Thoughts On Love
The Rebbe's Love Laboratory
Love According to the Rebbe
Love in a Heartbeat
The Calling
Uncle Irv
Mirrors
Sitting in a Café
The Gift
Two Against One
The Meaning of Love
The Man Who Mistook His Wife's Foot for His Own
Kabbalah of Love
Why Do We Fall in Love?
Alienation and Faith
The Loving Friends
Love at First Sight: Five Biblical Examples
A History of Love
24,000 Plus One
Partner
Are You Happily Ever After?
Ramblings about Stress and Love
The Cry of the Holy Sparks
The Morality of Weakness: Defining Sexual Harassment
Why Is Torah Law So Restrictive of Contact Between the Genders?
What If You Mess Up?
Tanya Chapter 32
The Baal Shem Tov on Love
A Joyous Divorce