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Why Celebrate?
If you were a granola bar about to be eaten, what would you have to celebrate?
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Why Celebrate?

Sunday, January 23, 2011
Posted by Rabbi Infinity

If you want to know what it feels like to be a granola bar, try this guided meditation:

Imagine you are a miserably poor epicurean hedonist wannabe invited to a hyper-excessive mega-extravagant wedding/bar mitzvah/product release dinner. Knowing that this event is catered by the world's best chefs, you starve yourself for three days in advance. You arrive at 6PM sharp for the rabbit-food entrée. Then there are speeches. Then a second rabbit entrée to make your ears yet longer so you can hear more speeches. Your stomach is growling, your mouth salivating, your dinner conversation has become unintelligible and your head is shifting towards extreme migraine mode as the aroma wafts out of the kitchen and throughout the hall.

Finally, by 9:30 PM, they're serving the main course—starting at the other end of the hall. Waiter after waiter dashes by, providing you uncensored viewing of the Osso Bucco Bourguignon dressed with rare herbs and surrounded by delicately perked garden-picked veggies. The migraine is pounding. Your hands sweat. Your tablemates have found empty seats elsewhere.

Finally, you are the last one served. Knife and fork in trembling hand, you dig in, morsel-to-mouth, anticipating the ecstasy of your long-awaited nirvana-in-a-bite.

Your face pales as the blood drains to your toes and the fork falls from your hand.

Your osso bucco is cold. Cold and greasy.

Now imagine you are incarnated as ossu bucco. Not any particular ossu bucco, but the concept, the idea that formed in some Italian chef's mind and materialized in this form. In essence, you are a spark that fell from the world of Tohu at the pre-dawn of creation. Your entire purpose of being is to be redeemed, repaired and rehabilitated by a neshama that must descend to the material world just for that purpose. For thousands of years, you have recycled throughout the earth, unfulfilled, suspended in anticipation. And now, your destiny has transported you to its final station: You are ossu bucco.

Finally, one day, along comes a neshama, discovers you at a grand hyper-extravagant to-do and determines that you are to be eaten. And just before eating, this neshama recalls that, "Hey, I'm not one of these materialist hedonists. I'm still in control over here. I've got to say a bracha first, to transform this into a G‑dly act. And then, with the energy of this Italian whatever-it-is-mushy-stuff, I'll say some words of Torah and find some wonderful mitzvah to do."

Your moment of glory has arrived. After all those thousands of years of mundane earth-wandering, you are finally privileged to collaborate in a G‑dly act. Finally, you shall be redeemed and reunited with the Infinite Light from whence you fell. You could just burn up in the heat of anticipation, but you muster up the strength to hold together and play your part as a good osso bucco as best you can.

And then your redeemer mumbles a hasty bracha and you are consumed.

You were hot. The bracha was cold. And you ask yourself, "For this I waited all those millennia?"

In truth, every rock, every plant, every creature that walks the earth, every star and every angel, even the highest emanations of the most supernal worlds—all were created to be redeemed, as it says, "that G‑d created to do." "To do," the sages explain, means to be repaired. The rock sits unfulfilled, the angel sings its song daily in prolonged anticipation and those supernal emanations too suffer the ulcers of hyperextended suspense in wait for the moment a breath of G‑d, a neshama, to walk on the scene and do a mitzvah, an act of beauty, or even just learn a lesson of divine wisdom using them as a metaphor, and thereby redeem them.

Which is why all that we do, we must do with simcha—with a celebration. Because, if not, we are just another cold, greasy osso bucco.



Viewer Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Feb 19, 2012
Wow
This is why I believe true Israel should stay away from kabbalah and mystics, HaShem created us with a purpose we are not the remnant of some random distruction
Posted By Yosef, Toronto

Posted: Jan 27, 2011
Living in awareness
Rabbi, You never cease to blow my mind! Thank you for reminding me to be awake and to live every moment with kavannah and with joy.
Posted By Dvorah, Lakeville, PA

Posted: Jan 26, 2011
Simcha
This is not just a word but a mitzvot, to perform with the joy from the study and application of Torah . To study to do.

The act of mitvot itself has an empowering aspect to it. I always find my blessing in the act of ending confusion and suffering as much as God has made me able.
Posted By Sandra L. Johnson, Hebron, In

Posted: Jan 26, 2011
WOOOWW!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you Rabbi Freeman, Thank you G-d, for filling our lives with the light of chassiduss, and in such an entertaining pleasant way.

Thank you!

Blessing and success!
Posted By tiferet, Tzfat, Israel

Posted: Jan 26, 2011
Not kill
It is presented so vividly that I feel myself as a murder every time I consume food without mindful blessing.
Posted By Meira

Posted: Jan 26, 2011
Thank you!
beautiful! instructive! inspiring!
Posted By Menachem Kovacs, Baltimore, Md/

Posted: Jan 23, 2011
Well explained!
Nicely explained! Performing mitzwah with celebration is what G-d wants. Enlightening explanation! Thanks for sharing!
Posted By Syed


 



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

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