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Training Feivel
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Training Feivel

Thursday, February 07, 2008
Posted by Rabbi Infinity

Apropos to this weeks ’toon, here’s a neat piece of correspondence dealt with recently:

Dear Rabbi Infinity,

Our agency has received anecdotal information concerning a certain Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov, describing how this aforementioned rabbi engaged horses in highly accelerated travel for the purpose of spiritual enlightenment of his students and other various escapades. As concerned representatives of an international NGO for the investigation of folk tales and legends that may be responsible for injustice towards other-than-human citizens of our planet, we are requesting any information you may have on the following issues:

  1. Were these horses whipped, beaten, over-worked, stressed or otherwise treated in an unfair fashion in order to facilitate these journeys?
  2. Were any provisions made for the possible trauma, anxiety, disorientation or other such psychological disorders that may have been brought upon these horses due to the extra-normative experience of hyper-accelerated travel?
  3. If this was considered a spiritually enhancing experience for the aforesaid rabbi and his students, were these horses granted fair share in this facet of the experience?
  4. Were these horses provided appropriate compensation in form of standard and fair horse wages for their services?

Signed:

Officers of Very Official NGO for Investigations of Folk Tales and Legends That May Be Responsible For Injustice Towards Other-Than-Human Citizens Of Our Planet

 

Dear Very Official People,

After intensive research, here’s what I got: 

Standard procedures were as follows:

  1. Rabbi I. Baal Shem Tov instructs his students, “Okay, guys! Load up the wagon!”
  1. Everybody piles onto the wagon.
  2. The Baal Shem Tov instructs, “Okay driver, get those horses into gear!”
  3. Horses start pulling forward.
  4. Baal Shem Tov instructs, “Okay, everybody! About face!”
  5. Everybody turns to face the road behind them, including the wagon-driver— horses excepted. At which point, all becomes a psychedelic blur. Fields, forests, cottages and cows whiz by at light speed until…
  6. Next thing you know, wagon screeches to a halt in front of some quaint tavern in a distant land for today’s setting of the continued adventures of the Baal Shem Tov and Associates.

Concerning the horses: 

Horses went by the names Charles and Joseph. Due to retro-seating of all human passengers of the Baal Shem Tov vehicle, no eyewitness reports of the horses’ physical states during the journey were recorded. However, the following account of Charlie and Joe’s audible conversation has reached us: 

(As you may be aware, students of the Baal Shem Tov were required to attain fluency in languages of animals, birds, fish, trees, men, lichen, several other plant species as well as certain forms of inert elements. Afflicting unnecessary discomfort on any of the above was strictly prohibited.)

C: Hey Joe!

J: Yeah, Charlie?

C: We’re movin’ pretty fast, eh?

J: Yeah. Cool, eh?

C: Joe, see those cows zippin’ by?

J: Wip-Zing! Sure. Neato, eh?

C: Joe, horses don’t move this fast.

J: So wadduzat mean, Charlie?

C: It means we’re not horses any more!

J: So if we’re not horses any more, what are we?

C: Well, what’s better than horses, Joe?

J: Well Charlie, I’ve been socially conditioned since childhood to believe that people are better than horses…

C: Which means…

J: That we’re not horses any more…

C: We’re…

C & J: PEOPLES! HEY! WHOAH! PEOPLES! ALRIGHT!

At this point, the Baal Shem Tov wagon velocity accelerated dramatically. 

Moments later, further dialogue was noted. 

J: Peoples! Whoah! Peoples! Whoah!

C: Hey Joe, we’re not peoples.

J: We’re peoples, Charlie! Did you see that town flash by? We’re flyin’, eh Charlie!

C: Joe, that’s what I’m talkin’ about. Peoples don’t fly.

J: Peoples don’t fly? Sure peoples fly! We’re flyin’, and we’re peoples!

C: No, we’re not peoples.

J: So if we’re not peoples and we ain’t horses for sure, so what are we, eh?

C: We gotta be…

J: You’re kiddin’! We gotta be…

C & J: ANGELS! HEY! WHOAH! ANGELS! SUPER COOL, BROTHER!

At this point the Baal Shem Tov transport device achieved light speed. Which means that they were immediately in all places at once, transcendent of the space-time continuum. The Baal Shem Tov then chose the precise vector coordinates at which he resolved their location and terminated the journey process. Horses Charlie and Joe were unhitched and fed oats. The following conversation was recorded:

J: Oats! Yeah, I’m famished, eh!

C: They’re not all for you, eh!

J: Say, Charlie, do angels eat oats?

C: Waddoo I care, I’m hungry! Hey, how come the good stuff is always over on your side?

No signs of trauma, anxiety or emotional impairment were noted. On the contrary, all subsequent behavior appeared perfectly normative for your typical horse. As one of the Baal Shem Tov’s wise students noted, “When you’re being the horse for a tzaddik, you could really fly. But the acid test is in how you eat your oats afterwards.”

 

Postscript: Charlie and Joe were later seen draped in Jewish prayer shawls, swaying to and fro, Kabalistic manuscripts laid out before them. Their dialogue was noted and recorded:

J: Hey, Charlie! I’m flyin’, eh!

C: Yeah! We’re goin’ high, eh, brother…



10 Comments Posted
Viewer Comments
Posted: Feb 10, 2008
Please explain
Gevald R'Zvi can you please explain some of this because this has just gone into the range where I'm having a very hard time deconstructing all the metaphorical analogy. :)
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Feb 12, 2008
Re-training the Mind
I enjoyed both the Training Feivel cartoon and the blog about the Baal Shem Tov's horses. R. Tzvi, I hope your creative output continues and increases in joy.

On training the heart, I have to disagree. When Western people say "the heart," it is the same as medieval people saying "the kidneys." What is really meant is the emotions, the ability to feel, also the ability to know things beyond rational thinking. The ability to know in extra-rational ways has been suppressed by Western culture, which is a grievous mistake. This extra-rational knowing is how we apprehend prophecy from G-d. It is also a mechanism for listening to the natural world.

I will keep "my heart" intact, thank you very much. And Rabbi Infinity might do well also to let his heart speak to him in a less constrained way. Hint: rather than point and counterpoint, maybe freewriting, painting, or going back to music would free that heart. The Baal Shem Tov would have been quite familiar with heartspeak.
Posted By Melissa, Greenville, SC

Posted: Feb 12, 2008
For Melissa
You raise a good point. The Baal Shem Tov spoke of the "outer heart" and the "inner heart". Then there's the "advising kidneys".

To hear the voice of those kidneys and that inner heart, however, you first need to get that outer heart to quiet down. Watch again and you'll see how I tried to bring this out at the end.
Posted By Tzvi Freeman (author)

Posted: Feb 12, 2008
Cats Don't Train; They Are
Do you mean the outer heart or the id? Maybe they are the same, but I see them as different from each other. The heart, the core, is the way of knowing, of interacting, of intuition. Some focus of that pathway is needed, certainly, but I think calling that focus "training" is not the right approach. "Torah study," in the sense of reminding ourselves what we already know, might be better.

But then, if I were going to present my own inner-knowing in a cartoon, it would be a cat, not a robot dog.

So may Rabbi Infinity's robot dog Feivel learn to share with the other creatures who are less inclined to accept commands and are more inclined to be their own cats, listening to their inner guides that might possibly be their sliver of the Divine Spark giving direction.

(I've taught three college classes today, attended a seminar on on-line teaching, and have to wash dishes before I can cook dinner tonight after driving home for an hour; I am waxing poetic....)
Posted By Melissa, Greenville, SC

Posted: Feb 13, 2008
Re: Cats (Melissa)
Feivel is a dog?! Oy!

Feivel is an id! A robotic id!
Posted By Rabbi Infinity

Posted: Feb 13, 2008
"G-d desires the heart" - which heart?
Melissa, might I join this discussion...
A motto of the Baal Shem Tov was, "G-d wants the heart."
When I learned this I asked my teacher, but isn't Chasidic philosophy about training and mastering the heart?
Apparently there are different levels of meaning to the term heart, as to extra-rational experience (as you phrased it).
The heart of which the Baal Shem Tov spoke, it appears, is one's G-dly core. This G-d desires, and is beatufuly expressed through the emotional faculties, also called the heart. In other words, these are two seperate things, one a medium for the other.
The emotional heart must be tuned in to the reverbations of the innermost heart to transmit them, as it can.
Intellect focuses the emotions by directing it away from other fixations and to the music of its soul.

Similarly, a central concept in Chasidism is the distinction between sub-rational experience and supra-rational experience, the latter being the beyond-reason experience of the soul/inner heart.
Posted By Chanah

Posted: Feb 13, 2008
Chanah's Lovely Post
Chanah, that's lovely! That is a really great explanation of Chasidic philosophy on the G-dly core/the heart, and I really needed to read it tonight. Thank you. It is this aspect of Chasidim that keeps me coming back to this website.

I am working on my Anusim conference paper, to be presented on Friday, gulp, and have vacillated between tears and frustration all evening, but I'll finish it tomorrow. Facing what happened to Spanish Jews in 1492 has nearly got me physically sick. (Wash up after reading this post...I have been dealing with very grim scholarship). I am trying to follow my inner-heart in presenting this particular paper; we're seeing mass t'shuvah from the descendants of the anusim, and that needs to be articulated....

I think it must be important for us to learn to distinguish between the sub- and supra-rational.... There are so many distractions. Maybe that is what Rabbi Infinity was getting at?
Posted By Melissa, Greenville, SC

Posted: Feb 14, 2008
Melissa
It's great to know that two people could spontaneously share real communication over cyberspace!
There is much said on this topic in Chasidus, and therefore I'm sure that there are many articles touching upon it in the archives of Chabad.org.
Good luck with your paper!
Posted By Chanah

Posted: Feb 14, 2008
Not Particularly for Publication, Up to You
Chanah, Rabbi Freeman, thanks for the good wishes. I just finished my paper and Power Point presentation. I cited particularly from Chabad.org Rabbi Nissan Mindel's article and also one that has been personally very meaningful to me, Rabbi Yanki Tauber's article "How to Change the Past."

I present tomorrow, early afternoon. Between now and then I have to do laundry and make a 5-hour drive. Seems easy after writing the paper, which made me cry a lot--both grief and joy.

This website and your organization has helped me so much, and continues to. Thank you, Chanah, especially, for the good words.
Posted By Melissa, Greenville, SC

Posted: Feb 17, 2008
Please help with the distractions, R. Infnity!
After Mellssa, from Greenville?

R. Infinity, could you explain a bit more the importance of humanity learning the important difference and 'interplay' between the sub and supra-rational... universes?

Whether you see yourself as leading a certain 'demographic' discussion of what has been called 'pictographic cybernetics' or not, it seems to mee that you have somewhat of a subscription to be in the front rows of this 'cosmic performance'.

We all know that most of the world continuously struts and frets across our stage here, but, could we still have a good 'homegrown' blog on David and Goliath?
Or even the Egyptian Pharoh's Dream, that he asks of Joseph to interpret (See Genesis 41 and further).

Thanks again for your stewardship
Posted By Thumbelina, Toronto, Canada


 



By Tzvi Freeman   More by this authors...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Written and conceived by Tzvi Freeman. Rabbi Freeman is available for public speaking and workshops. Read more on his bio page.
Animation and SFX by Pilar Newton of Pilar Toons
Music by The Piamentas
Rabbi Infinity played by Andrew Torres

The content on this page is copyrighted by the author, publisher and/or Chabad.org, and is produced by Chabad.org. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with the copyright policy.
 
 

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Sifting Gold
Matzah Therapy
Feivel Gets Stuck
The Grand Feivel Rollout!
Feivel's Bad Day
Feivel Goes Wacko
Training Feivel
Walking Your Heart
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