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Don't Just Do Something
Posted by Rabbi Infinity
This one I learned from a paramedic. He said it came in very useful in panic situations and places like the emergency room. There, if you just react, you could end up killing someone. Better to take a moment to stop and size up the situation before acting. The problem is, you’re often in panic yourself. So you need to just stop in your tracks and restrain yourself, so that your brain can catch up to your feet.
In ordinary life, the experience of sitting there quietly while the world around you is going berserk takes real fortitude. You can feel yourself growing wiser and more mature as you do it. Every moment, you can feel yourself pulling the reins and holding back the wild horses inside you that want to go running wild. Once those reins feel a little slack, that’s when you can get up and go about your business—with a head on your shoulders.
In Kabbalah language, this state is called “Mochin D’Gadlut”—literally meaning “large brains”. That’s when the mind controls the emotions, rather than the other way around.
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32 Comments Posted

BRILLIANT! go chabad.org!
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Keep it up. The writing is terrific and the lesson is brought so nicely in the cartoon
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It keeps getting better. Again, I have heard this before, so the reminder is welcome, particularly on a day when I've dicovered that I'm $300 overdrawn in my checking account! I'm going to take the next five minutes sitting still and let G-d spin the globe for a while.
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As a single mother, I lose my cool and yell at the kids more often than I should. Sitting before acting will help me a lot. Also, at NASA we have the saying "If you don't know what to do, do nothing." A good first step strategy.
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Excellent strategy! I am going to start using it right away.
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So simple yet so difficult. But being someone with panic attacks this is a wonderful remiinder on how to let your mind control your emotions..I am going to try this. THANK YOU CHABAD!!!
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Yom Kippur holds a mystery that provides a powerful way to handle the world. Picture the High Priest entering ancient Jerusalem. He sees many buildings and people. As he approaches the Holy Temple, he sees less structures and individuals. As he passes through the courtyards, only the Holy Temple is in view and the number of people has dwindled. By the time he enters into the Most Holy Place, there are only a few items and more importantly he is now alone with the only One Who can give him true peace and joy. When the world threatens to overwhelm us, a special visit into the Presence of the Most Holy One is all we need. Baruch HaShem. Yom Tov all!
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I was overwhelmed by bills... hydro, gas, phone, cell, credit cards, etc. so I tried your strategy: I just sat there and did nothing. Now I live in a cold, dark, lonely place, and go to the library to use the internet! Thanks!
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KabbalaToons are awesome.
Another lesson I pulled from this, but R' Infinity did touch on it in the beginning......Don't JUST DO something. When you're late, and can't find the keys, and the pots are boiling over, and your job is at stake, and everyone wants you right NOW, you run the risk of doing EVERYTHING wrong or dangerously (spilling the hot liquid all over, road rage, dangerous driving, etc...) if you don't keep a cool head.
Hey...maybe that's the lesson in the aggressive driving ticket I got a while ago......
Now, if I can only just DO the lesson.......!
I can't wait to see the other 'Toons!
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Shouldn’t the Sefirot seen in the background represent the Chabad sefirot as taught by the Alter Rebbe Chochmah / Binah/ Daath on the first level under Kesser? I.e. is the current Sefirot in the cartoon missing Daath?
All the best
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Both matrices are valid. It's sort of like the wave/particle thing--it depends on whether we're looking at the light, or the vessels that contain the light (among other things). The rule of thumb is "when keter is counted, daat is not" and vice-versa.
But, hey, that's cool you noticed!
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I REALLY appreciated this one. Take time to just breath and slow your heartbeat.. It IS rough but worth it. To often we get "caught up" in the goings on of life and not the living of our life. I don't believe He put us here to get over whelmed by outside forces but to overcome. The overcoming is in realizing G-d is the one who is still in control. Sop to listen to The Still Small Voice instead of the raging loud one. Thankyou as always.
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It's easy to say and to know, but to DO? I know I should just sit but controlling the emotions is so hard...how? How does one just sit there when we spend are whole lives working at, "putting out forest fires." It becomes automatic and it's often too late when we've already acted.
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No one said it would be easy. As a matter of fact...most worthwhile "things" are not easy. Does being difficult mean it can not be obtained? No. Running a marathon is not easy. But you train and train and train. Then you will be able to obtain your goal. I'm still in training.
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i think this toons are great ,short ,easy to read. keep on sending them
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These toons are great. I like episode 3 the best, it's always how I have lived my life.
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Really powerful tip. This procedure was very important in many moments of my life.
Thanks by this beautiful cartoon.
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l think kabbala toons are just great and marvelous keep them coming
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You keep telling us that you got these things from sources that are other random people (i.e. doctors, professors). Aren't your sources supposed to be learned from Chassidut itself (the Tanya)?
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The metaphors come from out there. The idea inside the metaphor comes from chassidus. Like in "Mind before heart"--that's all over in chassidus.
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Thank you so much; I love it how you answer our comments and questions, and get involved with the "community". I'm sure that I speak for (nearly) everyone on this site when I say thank you for that! Chag Sameach!
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But doesnt Chassidus also teach that we can learn something from everyone? and Rabbi Infinity said "In Kabbalah language, this state is called “Mochin D’Gadlut”—literally meaning “large brains”. That’s when the mind controls the emotions, rather than the other way around."
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My best shrinks have always been Jewish and esepcially those with a deep grounding in ethics and the ethics of care and responsibility. This Kabbala Toon teaches a very valuable lesson for the anxious and frenetic in our world, for what better to do is there than to sit quietly and to tell your world going mad about you that you've simply had enough? So often we are assailed by everything around us and being clinically depressed or even mentally ill is no picnic in the fray of the commotion. It isn't easy to sit still for 2 minutes for many of us, and Shabbos rest is either truly welcome or it is dreaded because ideally it is a time when there is absolutely knowthing that should or ought to be down, but here I am a ger typing these words at the absolute bitter end of Shabbos and really in fact desecrating the day in my act becasue I can't sit still lomg enough to actually hear G-D if G-D would actually deign to speak to me. I want to be Jewish and Shomer and Frum and yet ....
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so what do you do next (about the important things)
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What do you do next? That's what you sat down for--so you'll have a clear brain to decide what to do next!
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If you sit down long enough to realize that G-d is powerful and is absolutely EVERYTHING and nothing else other than G-d exists...you will know exactly what to do :)
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As a "sub-trick", what you can do is look at your self in a sort of third person view (a friend of mine calls it the "helicopter view" because it's as though you're seeing yourself from a helicopter--just one way of looking at it), and focus on all of your general problems and worries. Then you zoom back a bit (kinda like in Google Earth), and look at your friends and acquaintances and THEIR problems. Next you zoom back even MORE to your entire region, and more and more until you eventually reach the entire country, and the president, and the general issues concerning this enormous body of living souls as one (rather than individual matters, things like the budget etc.). Then, of course, see the world in its entirety and its myriad of "defects". And then the vast, infinite universe, in which WHO KNOWS what lies. Then take a leap back to your own issues, very suddenly, and see how little they truly are when you see them for what they are, and how you truly have nothing to worry about
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What gives you (one) the right to put the world at bay when it is your duty/responsibility to tend to it. When everything is screaming, should you just not care? This sitting down takes a certain amount of not caring.
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But the new,real version, is still greater!
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