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Chabad.org » Learning & Values » Kabbalah & Jewish Mysticism » Chassidic Thought » Anthologies » Food: an Anthology » Packaging
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Packaging


I have a friend who will not buy avocados on principle. "Fifty percent of the weight is the seed," he explains. He loves purchasing apples, grapes and bananas, but avocados and mangos are out. Peaches and dates are borderline -- he'll buy them on occasion, with deep misgivings.

My friend has a point - the whole fruit business is a scam. Trees need to procreate; that's why they grow seeds. But trees are not very mobile, leaving them with the problem of how to get their seeds planted a reasonable distance away (if both you and your offspring are immobile, you can't throw them out of the house at age 35). One way would be to tap a passing bird, animal or human on the shoulder and say: "Excuse me, sir, can you please take these seeds and drop them off some distance away, preferably some place with good soil, sunshine and an abundant water supply?" But most passersby would probably mumble something about a doctor's appointment and slink away. So the tree packages its seeds in colorful, tasty and nutritional pulp, and markets it as "fruit".


"Man is a tree of the field" (Deuteronomy 20:19).

We resemble the tree in numerous ways: in our ceaseless "upward" striving, in our need for "roots", in the way that our lives fork and "branch" off in different directions, among others. Chief amongst them, of course, is the way that everything we are and do is focused on the generation of seed.

Man is a spiritual being, which means that we not only reproduce physically -- by giving birth to children -- but also spiritually: we replicate ourselves by seeding our ideas, feelings and convictions in the minds and hearts of others. And here, says the Lubavitcher Rebbe, we find an interesting parallel between the way that the fruit tree dispatches its seeds and the way that we disseminate our thoughts and experiences.

The fruit tree's vehicle of reproduction consists of two basic components:

1) the seed, into which the tree distills its very self - its characteristics, its nature, its quintessential treeness;

2) the "packaging" that makes it attractive and palatable to its curriers and consumers.

Both are necessary. Without the packaging, the seed wouldn't get very far, or would do so only with great difficulty. On the other hand, if a tree were to produce a most luscious and attractive fruit but neglect to include a seed, nothing would happen. There would be no shortage of consumers, but no progeny.

When we seek to "reproduce" spiritually by communicating our thoughts and feelings to others, we, too, package our seeds. We envelop them in intellectual sophistication, steep them in emotional sauce, dress them in colorful words and images. If we didn't, our message might not get very far (my avocado-shunning friend, for one, would not display much interest). But the important thing to remember is that there must be a "seed" in there. If the fruit of our mind doesn't encase a piece of our soul, what's the point?

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By Yanki Tauber   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
By Yanki Tauber; based on the teachings of the Rebbe.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Jan 20, 2011
Yanki Tauber
Oh. My. Goodness.

The man has ridiculous talent! Insane. These days I only read his or Freeman's stuff. Not that the others are no good, but it's too hard to go back.

If Yanki doesn't lock himself in a room for a few hours each day to commit himself to writing, he is a sinner.

G_d given talent that makes my jaw drop. I'm serious...
Posted By Stam Person, Brunoy,, France

Posted: Jan 14, 2011
Source
Nice article.
Any way we could get the source as to where the Rebbe talks about this?
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Aug 19, 2004
Just in Time...as always
I appreciate this thought very much. My student of four years is leaving to go off to college tomorrow. I've had months to prepare, but it doesn't make it any easier. I can console myself with the fact that she has a "beautiful seed" inside the beautiful fruit.

Posted By Bruce Kaplan, Burke, VA



 


Food: an Anthology
The Sages of the Talmud on Food
The Chassidic Masters on Food
Kosher Marks
Bread, Guilt and Grace
Sitting in a Café
The Summer of the Kishka
Cooking the Year
A Set of Dishes
Herschel Goat
Shemurah
Too Good to Be Good
The Rabbi and the Ox
After the Fast
Cholent
Blintzes
Barrels in the Snow
Hard to Swallow
The Gift
The Onion Plot
Holy Lunch
The Development
Spiritual Molecules
Anorexia of the Soul
Eating
Packaging
Three Pertinent Points of the Purim Pastry
Meat
Reverse Biology
Eating on the Job
The Seven Species and Seven Attributes