Duncan Trussell Family Hour - 525: Dr. Benjy Epstein
Episode Date: September 3, 2022Dr. Benjy Epstein, psychologist, author, one of Duncan's favorite people on earth, and his rabbi, re-joins the DTFH! You can learn more about Benjy on his site, DrBenjy.com. You can also check out T...he Goal is Soul! Be sure to read Benjy's book too, Living in the Presence: A Jewish Mindfulness Guide to Everyday Life, available everywhere fine books are sold! Original music by Aaron Michael Goldberg. This episode is brought to you by: DraftKings - Use promo code DUNCAN at sign-up and bet $5 on ANY football game to get $200 INSTANTLY! ZipRecruiter - Try for FREE at ZipRecruiter.com/Duncan Herb Stomp - Use code DUNC15 at checkout to receive 15% OFF your first order! If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800-GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/PA/WV/WY), 1-800-NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/NH), 888-789-7777/visit http://ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), call/text TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. New customer offer void in NH/OR/ONT-CA. $200 in Free bets: New customers only. Valid 1 per new customer. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 wager. $200 issued as eight (8) $25 free bets. Ends 9/19/22 @ 8pm. Early Win: 1 Early Win Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Token expires at start of eligible game. Min moneyline bet $1. Wagering limits apply. Wagers placed on both sides of moneyline will void bet. Ends 1/8/23 @ 8pm ET. See terms at sportsbook dot draftkings dot com slash football terms.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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I'm sure you're familiar with it.
It's that show about celebrity morticians.
Kind of like Hell's Kitchen, but for morticians.
And they were so turned on by my ability to French kiss
that they agreed to give the DTFH an exclusive sneak peak
of the next season of Forever Home.
And here it is.
Previously on Forever Home,
Mortician Master Darius Weiss made history.
For the first time ever, the morticians will be all stars.
By inviting back 16 all-star morticians
with the greatest prize ever on the line.
One of you will become the head mortician
at the brand new Forever Home Mortuary
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A new Forever Home Mortuary on the Vegas trip?
You can roll the dice
that I'm going to be the head mortician there.
What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas
especially if you die in a bury there.
I know if I win, you'll take my back.
Stop singing.
What these contestants don't know
is that they aren't on Forever Home
but are subjects in America's
favorite government experiment show, Bohemian Grove.
Eleven of the planet's top evil scientists
have been assembled on an island in Florida
and paired with eleven death row prisoners
whose memories have been erased
and replaced with artificial ones.
They think they're contestants on a game show
about celebrity morticians
and have no idea they're on Bohemian Grove.
Whichever scientist can transform their prisoner
into the ultimate assassin
will get invited to the Bohemian Grove.
And now we join test subject David Glersen
in his hotel room where he thinks
he's having a private conversation
with his terminally ill grandfather.
Of course, it's not his grandfather.
It's Professor Zeldik from Prader University
who must keep Glersen from remembering his true identity.
No, no, the show's going great, Grandpa.
I had them bomb a dude who got run over by a crane today
and, uh, your master mortician, Terry,
said I made him look better than he did
before he got ran over by that crane.
That's great, Davey.
You're always the best and baller in the family.
Well, maybe it's the stress of the show or something,
but, uh, I'm having these memories that aren't mine.
Like what?
Like, uh, like I was on death row or something.
Did they put me there because I crucified a priest in a church
and then burned it down?
This is horrible.
I feel like I'm losing my marbles, Gramps.
Well, maybe it's the stress of the show.
I'm thinking about quitting.
You can't quit.
You want to make your dying grandpa proud, don't you?
Yeah, of course I do, Gramps.
Good.
Look, even if the memories were real, let's say,
it's not so bad that you killed that priest.
It's that you got caught.
Look, just forget these phantom memories
and get back to winning that show.
Anyway, you can.
What are you saying?
I mean, anyway, you can.
Those phantom memories,
you should think of them like dreams
and sometimes dreams show us things that we're capable of,
things that we don't want to accept about ourselves.
Yeah, you know, when you put it like that, Gramps,
it did feel kind of good
choking the life out of that dumb old priest.
It was like, I was myself for a second.
Only a brave man could admit that.
It would be a shame if some of the other contestants
had any accidents,
little accidents that took them out of the show.
Oh, yeah.
Like, when I did that priest in that phantom memory,
dragged him into a church, strangled him,
burn the whole thing down.
Yeah, but this time, you don't get caught.
Life, like doing in secret, that's even better.
And what's even better than that
is if you're listening to this,
you're on Bohemian Grove.
You're having this podcast
pumped into your consciousness
while you lay in an induced coma,
getting your memories white.
Activate Kilgore Protocol.
Activate Kilgore Protocol.
Wow, looks like it's going to be a killer season.
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And now, we have got an incredible podcast.
Dr. Benji Epstein is here.
We're going to jump right into it,
but first this.
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Darlings, would you like commercial free episodes
of the DTFH?
Then go no further than patreon.com
forward slash DTFH.
You're going to get commercial free episodes.
You're going to get the opportunity
to hang out with your true family once a week.
We got a meditation group.
We have our family gatherings every Friday
and I'm excited to announce
that this coming Friday, September 9th,
we're going to be gathering together
to plan out our next book.
Yes, we write books together
and if you want to participate in that,
we would love it.
All you got to do is subscribe
to youtube.com forward slash DTFH.
Also, I got some comedy shows coming up
that I would love to see you at.
Come and see me.
I am going to be at Cobb's Comedy Club
in San Francisco.
That is September 23rd to the 24th.
I'm going to be at Wise Guys in Salt Lake City
September 30th and Hyena's Fort Worth, Texas.
Here's a special announcement on the 17th.
If you want to see me in Austin,
I'll be doing an hour at Vulcan Gasworks.
All those ticket links are at dunkintrustle.
Today's guest is one of my favorite people on earth.
He has to be.
He's my rabbi.
He's also a psychologist.
An author has written a wonderful book
called Living in the Presence,
a Jewish Mindfulness Guide to Everyday Life
and also many, many years ago
we were in a band together.
We talk about that in this episode
and that's not all we talk about.
We talk about how deep Judaism is.
I mean, maybe it's impossible to talk about how deep it is,
but I always have Buddhists on.
I always have spiritualists on or comedians on,
but I don't give the Jews enough DTFH time
and that is doing everyone a disservice,
especially me.
If you're not familiar with Judaism,
this is going to blow your mind.
Want to talk about the Kabbalah?
It's in this episode.
Want to talk about the tree of life?
It's in this episode.
Want to talk about the time, space continuum
and the way the divine breathes life into it?
It's in this episode.
Everybody strap in and welcome back to the DTFH.
Dr. Ben Epstein.
www.B kay.
and don't forget to,
go find a link to our channel
www.B Anyway,
Arina Makashar,
with the Duncan Trussell Family Hour Podcast
www.DunkinTrussellFamilyHour.com
We just bound ourselves through this service of this podcast
to all the righteous people in our generation
and to all the righteous who are no longer in the living with us
but all attached in the vortex of life who reside in the earth
and specifically our Tzadik, our Rabbi,
the foundation of the world, the flowing brook,
the source of wisdom,
Rabbi Nachman bin Phega,
Nachman the son of Phega,
may their merit be a meritorious for us
and for all of Israel in the world, amen.
Cool, I love that.
We started strong, we started strong.
Y'all go so deep.
It is wild.
The language itself is so beautiful.
You know what it sounds a little like
and I'm sure the reason it sounds like that
is because it was intentional,
but we've been rewatching Game of Thrones
and they speak High Valerian is what it's called.
High Valerian.
And that's definitely what it sounds like.
It sounds so close to that that I have no question
but whoever formulated that language was Jewish
and could speak Hebrew and just took that.
And speak to dragons.
Yeah, well, yeah.
My wife is definitely a Khaleesi, that's for sure.
She's it, I think, I don't know.
Well, here's something that I heard
from someone on the Patreon, my friend Valo.
He told me, and I don't know where he got the data from,
but I found it to be so beautiful that the name of God,
Yahweh, Yahweh, is actually,
why, how do you spell it?
There's no vowels in it.
The English doesn't do it justice,
but it's Yud, Hey, Vav, and Hey.
Those are the four Hebrew letters that make up God's name
and we could spend a lifetime on it.
We could spend a lifetime on it.
Well, let's start.
He was telling me that,
and I don't know where he got the data from,
but it represents, it's the sound of breathing,
that it's the exhalation and the inhalation.
Have you heard this before?
I've definitely seen this, you know, the Yud,
because the Hey makes it like an H sound,
and there are people who are doing Abulafian meditations
with the different, and they're taking the letters
and the way they, I'm not a linguist,
the way we vowelize letters in Hebrew,
they're like little dots, and the dots are the movements.
These are the tenuot, the movements,
and the quesufim, the longings,
and so you'll take the Yud, the Y sound,
and you'll do it with an ah, yah,
and then each letter like that,
and focusing on a different part of the body,
and then an e, and each one of those vowels
is also connected to a Kabbalistic sphere,
is connected to loving kindness, or severity,
or beauty and splendor, and all the other different ones.
It's, yeah, taking it down.
So is the tree of, no, not taking it down,
I was making a gesture, thinking of like the tree of life.
So is the tree of life somehow encapsulated in that name?
Are we allowed to talk about midnight gospel,
and the fact that you were going to animate me
as a corned beef sandwich with earlocks, and that sort of thing?
Yeah.
Yeah, I would.
Can that still happen?
Can that still happen?
No.
Sadly, at least not as the midnight gospel.
Have we processed this?
Is this something that needs to be processed,
or you've moved on, you're living in the moment,
and it's just like, because people are broken hearted.
Yeah.
Well, I'm sorry about that.
You know, I was bummed, but I knew, like,
I mean, you know, you know if it's not happening again
before they tell you it's not gonna happen.
So I have plenty of time to sort of go through
all the phases of grief, the stages of grief,
mixed in with the gratitude that they let me make it,
mixed in with, like, you know, a kind of pining over,
like, man, I really wanted to get more into that world,
and there was more of a story.
But yeah, I mean, I'm sorry people are broken hearted about it.
I think we all just have to be grateful that they let us make it.
I mean, like, getting a show like that made is impossible.
Like, the fact that they let us do it is just wild
that they would be like, oh, yeah, sure, let's make this
weird psychedelic, mystical, rambling thing.
They let us do it.
So that's to me, I'm happy with that.
I remember when you tried to introduce,
or you didn't try when you introduced it on Joe,
and Joe Rogan, and, you know, he's just looking at it,
like, how did you get them to green like this?
I know, it's Pendleton.
They wanted to work with Pendleton.
He got us through the door.
Yeah, so the name of God, this name of God,
is, it's a map and a sound.
It's the map, it's the sound, it's the building block.
It's everything that every single
Kabbalistic intention is going back to.
And there's so many permutations,
and there's so many combinations,
and there's so many different systems of, you know,
coming from, well, let's, coming from the czar,
which is the hidden wisdom, the esoteric wisdom,
which was, you know, that's the first book,
and then there was a sage in the 1500,
oh, God, I hope nobody's listening to this,
who knows what they're talking about,
1500, 1600s, who also formulated a system from that.
So there's Rabbi Shimon Bar Yohai,
and it's good to say names of the righteous.
So we're just saying Shimon Satzadikim here,
names of the righteous.
It's just going to bring lots of good things here.
Rabbi Shimon Bar Yohai wrote the czar,
and then the Ari, the Rabbi Yitzchak Luria and Sfat
in the mid-1500s, systemized it, categorized it,
cataloged it, excuse me, and created the Tree of Life,
that system that you're familiar with,
and then that was subsequently explicated more
on a more accessible level by the Baal Shem Tov,
who makes it more about, instead of focusing on what's going on
in the spiritual realms, more how it transposes onto ourselves
and our body, and how we can, as above so below,
and so how we're really, you know,
the way the system works is we have a real input
and what we do matters, and so the Kabbalistic spheres
can be mapped onto our bodies, and that sort of thing.
So that's Malkuth, how do you say it?
Malkuth, Keith, Keith there, the crown?
We're going to say it OG.
We're going to say Kesser, Kesser,
it makes it so much easier.
Kesser, because you're going to do the more
Eastern European pronunciation, so it doesn't do the,
it changes it again.
Kesser, yes, we just said Kesser on a podcast.
Kesser is the crown.
Kesser is the crown, then there's the wisdom.
Kesser represents heaven, that's like,
if we're going to talk about just the heaven and earth,
I mean in the Taoist sense, or the idea of light,
or the Buddhist sense, heaven and earth,
Kesser is heaven, Malkuth is earth,
and this is the way heaven and earth talk to each other.
And then there's the connection between Tfer,
Splendor and Mahut, or Yasod and Mahut,
which is the foundation, and you'll see the different
body parts are so in line with them,
and we're actually coming, I was just thinking,
I mean, we connected, our relationship started
in that cover band, in the Fergus Blanders cover band.
Fergus Blanders, yeah, I remember that.
The Red Hot Chili Blanders, the Red Hot Chili Blanders.
Yeah, right.
You know what, it was so thrilling to find out
you were also a fan of Fergus Blanders,
because you never run, a lot of people have never heard of him,
so it's really cool.
You never even heard of him, and now the mad rush right now
to be googling this, and if you guys find out
the Red Hot Chili Blanders band.
Yeah, it's out there.
It's out there too, it's all out there,
and it's part of the multiverse.
I like to think Fergus Blanders is out there somewhere,
that he did, he will say, he's probably dead,
but I don't like to imagine.
If Elvis could still make it through that,
then for sure Fergus Blanders is.
Right.
You really believe he might still be alive,
because I just feel like, you know,
sometimes I like to pretend Elvis is alive.
Why not?
Yeah, I know he's.
But there's still, you know,
maybe not, maybe not, but it would be nice.
You could still talk to him sometime, no?
No one even knows how old he is, so I mean,
it's theoretical that he could,
he seemed timeless in the sense that every picture
that you can find out there, he seems old.
He's the same, he's just, he doesn't age,
he's the secret of Elvis.
That's what it seems like.
But I'm going to tell you how our relationship,
you know, because the band didn't work out,
and then you sort of drifted,
and how we really rekindled it is that.
I didn't drift.
He keeps saying I drifted, I didn't drift.
Why do you always say I drifted?
You're always right there.
I'm okay, okay, I got busy, okay, I got busy.
It was, I couldn't keep, I'll be honest with you.
I couldn't bear the heartbreak of having his words
come out of my mouth and knowing that probably he's gone.
So that's why it was hurting too much.
And the thing you're calling a drift was my own grief.
It was me just trying to get to a place where I could
accept the fact that I probably will never see him live.
Right?
And what we need to appreciate is that he did exist.
You know, that it did happen.
It's similar to the way you want to approach the gospel.
It's just like, we just have to appreciate the fact
that we were in the presence of something.
Right.
Just, just some, just any exposure to it's like,
and we want more, we're so, we're so clingy.
It's just like, just appreciate the fact
that you got to hear Fergus, you know?
Some people can't hear Fergus.
Now, this is, you know, to connect to what we were talking
to you before, the Tree of Life and Fergus Blanders.
I, you, you just gave me some new information about that.
Somehow I assumed that the, that system, the Tree of Life,
had existed for thousands of years.
I didn't know that it was created in the 1500s,
so that there was a time, just like there was a time
before the existence of Fergus Blanders,
where no one had heard it, where he wasn't born yet,
where maybe his grandfathers were great, great, great grandfathers
were around, but similarly, the Tree of Life,
the components that would eventually become the Tree of Life
were floating out there, but the connection,
the thing that connected all of them hadn't happened yet.
That's fascinating to me.
I thought we were talking about something that goes
all the way back.
Well, it depends on which, in which camp you want to be a part of.
You want to be in part of the camp that's, you know,
more academic and says, okay, this is, this is nice,
but, you know, we could probably trace this too,
or you're in the, the, the side, the right side of history,
where it's just like, this started from the beginning.
This is all from the beginning, and you could take the text
of the Bible, which is, you know, if you, you know,
see it as coming from, from the hand of the divine,
the mouth of the divine, and saying this was part
of the esoteric wisdom that came down from Moses and Sinai,
and it was passed from, you know, the oral tradition
until it was finally put together
during that medieval period.
But, you know, the people who, the people who are making
the pilgrimages to the, to the, to the, to the graves
and, and studying it and believing in the,
the holiness of the words, don't see it as being this sort
of, you know, academic type of thing where there's,
but the, I mean, the, the, the, the language of the Zohar,
the language for Mim Shem Bar Chai is, it's, it's not coming
from a, a, a typical state of consciousness.
It's, it's, you know, as we, as we would say,
it's like, it's, it's beyond. It's, it's, it's really not,
you know, there, it's, it's, it's not coming from,
from, you know, just having a cup of coffee here.
Okay. Let's talk about that. I'm really interested
in what you just said. I'm not the right guy for this.
I told you, I'm the hack. I'm a hack for you.
I, we need to find you a cabalist who will come on the show.
No, you are, what are you talking about?
You have been in the course. I'm your rabbi. I'm your rabbi.
That's right. I'm your rabbi. By the way, I'm my, I'm my,
on my, on my, on my, on my website, on my website,
which I have because of you. Cause you're like, how can people
reach you? And I said they can't. And somebody's like,
that's, that's messed up. So he made me, he made me a website.
My buddy Zev made me a website. Part of my bio, if you don't
mind is in addition to my private practice, I lead mindfulness
and psychedelic integration, excuse me, seminars and sessions
for trippy.vc, reppering here. He received my, I received
my, the certificate in Academy of Psychotherapy from
Reconcious Medical with my buddy and partner, Dr. Mark
Bronstein. And I also, he also has the distinct privilege
of being Duncan Trussell's rabbi. Yeah, that's true.
That's my website bio. That's literally like come work with
me because it's true. I'm all in. I'm all in.
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So this, the thing you're talking about, I'm curious from
the Kabbalistic perspective or the Jewish perspective. If
there's one of the cool things about Judaism is there's so
many names for things that if you you've probably experienced
but you don't you never thought, oh, that could go into a word.
So when I'm reading, sometimes when I'm reading like some
Tibetan Buddhist scripture or even like a good translation of
the Gospels, regardless of my belief in the reality of what
they're saying, the way that they're saying it, the way the
words have been assembled points to this elevated
consciousness that you definitely don't get from drinking
coffee. Like it doesn't matter if you or maybe you do really good
coffee. But the when you're when you're reading it, like for
me, this has always been like a good sign that I've kind of
pushed through to a deeper part of the scripture is when I
start recognizing the consciousness behind what behind
the words. And I'm wondering, is there a word for that? Or is
there an idea about how consciousness itself can get
wrapped up in the writing that somehow the writing acts as a
medium or a vessel for the consciousness that wrote it,
even if that even if it's being translated. What is that?
I think so. Isn't there some sort of unconscious way of just
doing that when you're when you're when you're just writing
and I don't remember the exact word for it, but there is
that there's definitely a phenomena where a person can be
get into that state through the writing. But I don't know if
that was the meaning these were recorded conversations. These
were they were they were taking they were taking mystical
journeys through the fields and just seeing whatever came up
because ultimately what comes up in all of these things. And I
think this what were the intentionality comes from is
there's different levels of understanding the scriptures.
There's the basic verses, the homiletic version and there's
the you know, the hints, there are illusions to it and then
there's this idea of so which is the secret there's there's a
secret code to everything and you're reading the Bible and
it's like that's great and then you read some commentary says
everything that you're reading right now is the name of God.
That's why the way that you the way that you read this the
book the way that you write the book there there are rules for
all of these things because this is something that we believe
is an ability to tap into an altered state of consciousness
of really accessing divinity. I mean, I could get up and get
it for you but like literally every single word in the Bible
is code. It's a code for and and and the people who lived in
the Bible they existed and there's also a different level
what we're talking about you know what what Jacob represents
what Rachel represents what Leah his wife represents and all
these different stories that happen in the Bible. Yes they
happened. What happened in the garden? You know we're talking
about a cataclysmic event of of which shattered everyone's
consciousness and we're all suffering because of that.
That's the trauma that we're all trying to heal from and so
yes was there some sort of something happened there but it
also happened on on on so many different levels and it's still
impacting us today and so what we try to do is really live with
the here and now of whatever the Torah whatever the Bible is
saying and it can't be a story that happened thousands of years
ago. Meaning it's even in last week last week's you know weekly
portion that the you know you know if you're going to temple
you're going to synagogue you're reading the the that week's
Torah portion it says you know and now what does God ask from
you and what does God ask him and it goes continues says but
you know and then my friend my teacher of Judah Michelle the
chief rabbi of the world teaches you know you know what God's
asking from you is right now the atah is the Hebrew word for
right now so God is asking for you what's God asking for you
he's just asking for you to be mindful to be present and this
is where which is part of where I see my very small part in the
mission is you know you think of mindfulness and who are your
teachers you know they're beautiful people they're amazing
and it's Sylvia and and and and Sharon and and Ram Dass and
and Tara Brock and they're you know and it's just like Nick
turn Dave I forgot you know I'm a little bit actually I didn't
forget I probably consciously forgot him because I'm like he
has his meditation field well again you know Joe's got you know
Mark Zuckerberg and Aaron Rodgers and you get cornfield and
Benji Epstein so like take that for your experience you know
I will take a Mark Zuckerberg too please well we can meditate
actually I actually just finished Jack cornfield's course
with Tara Brock and I got my teacher certificate yeah except
for the fact that now I can't do my hundred hours with David I'm
like I can't keep buying I can't keep spending money on
degrees I just need to meditate we got to talk about our
meditation practice I've I've got a teaching for you but in
terms of of these code words you know it's all coming back
the present moment what does God want from you what does God
want and also and but these teachers I'm sorry to interrupt
these teachers are are you know they're so focused on the
Buddha studies like let's find it in in in Judaism and and I'm
and I'm really starting to have people are just so open to to
you know seeing it in their own tradition it's like whatever
you're doing right now with the right intention with with
faith with what we talked about last time with the vacuit with
that connectivity knowing precisely and fully that at this
very moment God's infinite light is contracting itself to where
we are right now it's happening right now in this moment and
what we're now experiencing and allowing ourselves to feel is
God's presence in us right now and we become the temple we
become the temple and we brought God into this moment and
and if you're rushing through whatever you're doing if you're
trying to get through it it means you're denying God's presence
right there in the moment and it's just a wow it's like let's
be here now and let's make space for for the divinity that's
residing it or creating or or and and innovating that moment
the the okay the the a lot there the one thing that you're
bringing up I think is really important and and I'm just
realizing it is how you can accidentally become less of a
spiritualist and more of an archaeologist so that because
you are looking at whatever the scripture is you may be
reading regardless of the tradition it comes from and
thinking this is old I'm reading something really old
accidentally under the surface you're also thinking therefore
not alive therefore not happening now these events that
are being talked about or this being who is writing them down
or the being they're referring to is dead and that if you're
doing that that's another way of cutting crimping up the hose
so to speak because where the magic really happens is when
somehow you break through and you get those glimpses of like
wait how is this not wait this is happening now like nothing
has changed no we're we are there experiencing it in a
first person way so that the moment I'm able to do that I go
from being a bystander to a participant you know and and
that's that you know what I mean and that's no it's like
you're either watching the game you're what and this is the
LeBava Terebi made this oh you know what I had a dream I had
a dream where I sent you a biography of his remind me to
send you a copy of that it's gonna blow your mind talk about
like you know again I think I saw that that name Crowley
Bob but they just came out with a book of his stories of the
people and I'm gonna send you one about the LeBava Terebi
ah this is why I'm put on the planet this is why I'm here
but you know if you're if you're a spectator it's just like
that's not gonna do it that's not and there are people who
don't even think about it they're not thinking about it and
they go through their days I don't know how I don't know how
and God bless them but like that's not the way I'm gonna go
through life that's not the consciousness that I want to
that's not the relationship that God wants from me God wanted
to be animated and if you think about it in the garden
did not get it in the garden there were two trees and there's
there's a there's a discussion about what it might be the same
tree but if you read the scripture carefully there's one
tree that was called the tree of knowledge good and evil and
then there was the tree of life and you know what else is
called the tree of life in the verse it says
is a tree of life to those who hold on to it that's also
referred to the Torah the Torah is is analogized analogize
excuse me English you know as as the tree of life because
that's the and the Torah is what how God chose to include
himself he that's that's the story that he's telling and
he's always telling and he's constantly telling that story
there's a story and there's a there's a book and there's a
writer and they're all you know there and then you have
Thoreau who's telling you that you know everything that's
happened past present future it's sublime it's true he says
but all of these times and places I don't have the exact
quote are here and now now and here and he says God is
culminating in the can I look it up can I look up that quote
yeah yeah please because this is what we're talking about
and and hold on yeah okay in eternity there's indeed
something true and sublime but all these times and places
and occasions are now in here God himself culminates in the
present moment and will never be more divine in the lapse of
the ages wow right we have to we have to be living with God
right now if that's how we because if it was something
that happened if it was a story that happened a long time ago
and and we talk about and we're going to talk about the
Baal Shem Tov who is the person who really took these
Kabbalistic ideas and he really brought them to the masses
can I tell you a story yes this is this is the Baal Shem Tov
story and we're all living in a Baal Shem Tov story we're all
living in some mystical story whether or not we're aware of it
we just want to know are we if we're awake to it then we
realize we're all part of some what are the chances of this
I'm not I'm sorry the ADHD is strong right now what are the
chances of this happening I just want to again take that moment
to breathe and just just you know today I dropped my kid
off to first grade how your kids doing great thank you for
asking yeah they're they're both in school now both in school
both in school now what a what a what a blessing preschool
preschool so saying so so when's the when's your oldest going
to be going to first grade or kindergarten we do kindergarten
so kindergarten and then you don't you don't have first grade
after first I mean it's like meaning I think we're going to
that's going to be through I think we're talking two years
two years right so you got two years to just prepare yourself
mentally for this because I was hit with a ton of bricks that
I'm sending my kid to a school where he will probably
because this is what schools do remove all of his love of
learning and curiosity and just you know fill his head with
you know wrote facts and things like that but I'm hoping that
won't happen but there was this feeling and I was walking and
somebody stopped by he's like you ever hear this expression
called the Ichijo Ichi or something Ichigo Ichi and he
and I was like no he's like it's it's this Japanese concept
that is translated as you know for this time only and it's
it's you're supposed to just treasure the unrepeatable nature
of a moment right this this and they do it during the tea
service and it's just like wait one second I saw the
translation was one lifetime one meeting and it's just like
every single moment and this this is a one lifetime one
meeting type of thing so I just want to again all glory
wait there's it I'm going to look at all glory say all glory
what all glory to the midnight gospel gods the gospel the
the gospels is that God's when they're referring to the
gospels no there's just one God that's the thing but again
when you say there's one God here's here's our prayer for
the day Shema Israel Adonai Elohim Adonai Echad right
that doesn't mean that there's one God as opposed to your many
God's it's all one it's really connecting to the one and
that's where we're all trying to get to and the name that
reflects the one is is this this Yudhei bovenhei which if
you take it has the Hebrew words for it past future and
present the Yudhei bovenhei can be combined into Hovey
Haya which is past and yeah which again is the same letters
which is will be and then the Hovey is so all of it and we
are our dualistic minds can't comprehend that but no right
but but but we I choose and I and I affirm and I believe
and this is what I'm consciously working on through
through through doing psychedelic assisted therapy through
doing meditation through through through prayer to
really access that and and and you know otherwise what else
are we doing what else because we're coming back about
well I want to tell my story I might I might throw you
out wait I wait no you're not but I need to clarify it
ball shim how do you say it again ball shim tov ball shim
tov ball shim tov ball shim tov ball shim tov who is
founder of Hasidu Hasidu you see you see Jews who are
dressed a certain way so they're they're the
progenitor they're their followers of that certain
movement but I mean we're all we're all students of the
ball shim tov he's he's he's okay so he's he's he's
he's in the God I'm so so terrible with the history but
you know late 1700s early you know mid 1700s early
1800s okay and and the state of Judaism is completely
dire and despair there's been a there's been false
messiahs there's been the the the just pogroms pogroms
for many many thousands of years you know since the
exile of the temple and we were you know we're we're
we're we've got a lot of of collective trauma we've
got a lot of that epigenetic trauma it's it's it's
yeah you I can't even it's the story is it's so
bloody it's so bloody it's so bloody incomparably brutal
so ball shim tov and he ball shim tov just came and he
and he was a one of these there are many ball shim tov
I mean literally means master of the good name and he yeah
right and he came to just literally teach people that
they can meet God where they are and it doesn't it doesn't
belong to the oligarchy who can read and write and
who can actually study the dialectics of Talmud it's
like you could be the simple tailor and the stories and
I'm going to send you another amazing book called I can't
remember the name by Elie Wiesel it's called wow I'm
going to it doesn't matter who just tells these beautiful
stories where he brings these Hasidic personalities alive
and you're watching miracle workers but they're not
interested in doing miracles they're interested in
showing the common folk how beloved they are and how
and how dear they are to God and how and how beloved
their services yeah because but now what you're saying may
not seem that spectacular and the in the sense that this
the the the hierarchized priest class right idea that used
to be like legislated because of people like ball shim tov
it has been it was like it was revolutionary it was
revolutionary at them and he was put and they were put
into excommunication there was there was again not a civil
war in terms of violence there was a here here and there
but like they were communities like they would not marry
into each other and then they were saying that they were
heretics and they were saying but the test of time has
shown that this is what's kept you know a lot of people in
the faith and there are people who don't connect to it and
that's fine but if you don't know a certain it's a wordless
song which is called the nighun n i g g u n a nighun which
is just something soulful and haunting and there's some
beautiful music I've buddies named Zusha anyone listening
to just just have their minds completely blown about how
you can connect to God through wordless song and just how
the simple person isn't so simple and to just be simple
you know who's the most simple God he's the most
simple he's not he's not complicated he's because again
when you're complicated then you've got layers and you've
got pieces and you've got a sort of meld things together
it's just like God is just unity and when you're
complicated the the the the more complicated a system is
the more likely it is to break so you know you get it you
get a thing with lots of parts it's probably going to
something will malfunction so if you're going to you could
if you want to associate breakability with complexity
and if we're talking about an unbreakable thing then it
would be the most simple thing that's a beautiful
elemental explanation I'm take that's such a beautiful way
to explain you know the ultimate simplicity which is
something we strive for because again in this day and age
we're we're we're cultivating personas in online and how
we are with certain people and it's just like you want to
get back that beginner's mind that innocence of the child
where he's just like yeah he's going to speak his mind you're
like oh right how do you like it he's like it tastes
terrible it's like thank you thank you it's like it's
really good like no this is gross give me something else
like thank you for that so refreshing and so honest and
so and again you can't hurt people's feelings but if
you're saying it from a beautiful place and that's coming
because they love themselves this is what I'm working on
therapy you know what the oldest said to me once daddy
your lip your lip stinks when I had breath I didn't know
yeah if your wife had said that to you how personally would
it would be World War three she has said it to me
and she's like I'm getting you her yeah I've got these
halitosis things that don't work but I'm just like hey you
know what your breath stinks but your kid says and you're
just like and like saying I love you so much these like daddy
I just want to go to sleep right now Abba can you stop talking
and I'm like yes of course yes of course no but all we want
for our kids and this is one that's amazing all we want
for our kids for them to unconditionally radically love
themselves I'm thinking about this as it goes to first grade
I'm like please just don't lose that because everyone who
I'm seeing in therapy and this is where you know this is
where we're speaking the language of just love yourself
you know and it's like it's getting either harder or
or people are just struggling with it and my wife got
blessed her is one of the one percenters and meaning she's
one of the people who just like yeah I love myself like why
don't get it what are people coming to therapy for you
know of course you love yourself and I'm like yeah and
she's it's not narcissism it's not she's just you make you
mess up like oops I made a mistake I'm really sorry move
on like well you know I think an important distinction
between narcissistic traits and actual loving of oneself is
that the narcissist clings to one to itself the narcissist
is trying to cling to some identity and amplify that
identity to the world because they think they are that and
and to deconstruct that or for that to not be anymore I
think for a narcissist is death whereas there isn't a
loving oneself is it's not clingy you're not it doesn't
mean pushing yourself out into the world as much as
surrender I think it's more of a surrender quality than a
clinging quality you're you're not attached to it but
but I'm saying name Karol Ibala if you said did he love
himself did he love himself he loved himself like there
was unconditional radical and when you mess up when the
Dalai Lama messes up when my when my when my one of my
rabbis messes up the laughter that comes from it the just
the absolute joy of when they when they sort of do a faux
paw of just like this laugh and they laugh it off because hey
what are we taking so seriously here and and just to have
that it's like well you messed up and like your whole self
worth is tied up into whether or not you get this deal or
whether or not this person and this is like it's it's not
not a big deal it's not a big deal yeah where you you
just do that's part of the thing is that is the failure
and the failure is you know again to go back and I think
having kids is a great way to connect to this is when you
when they when when your child you make some mistake or
something you know it's like hopefully you're not holding
whatever that thing is against the child at all you're
just like you're new this is your brand new you don't know
you're learning what's the big you're going to learn you're
going to keep trying but like and and I think the other
thing you said earlier is important I want to put it in
italics the connection between simplicity and God or
simplicity and and awakening or however you want to put it
awakening is that when some when something that's simple
tells you something when it when something that's that that
that loves itself or is so in in the universe and so in the
moment that the concept of not loving themselves hasn't
even appeared yet they can say anything and it doesn't have
that jagged edge that people who have disconnected and are
like really condensed in an identity has as someone who
was good at like pulling the shank out and stabbing someone
you know what I mean that is not coming from a simple place
it's coming from complexity and all the insecurity the other
thing that it must go along with complexity is insecurity
insecurity if you have if you're in a complex if your
defense mechanisms are complex you're going to be naturally
nervous because there's so many areas that could collapse or
be invaded there's too many systems in place you're going
to feel insecure and insecure people tend to be mean and
defensive defensive and triggered and and and they get off
on it they're getting off on this I've seen people who just
like need to be righteous and indignation the righteous
indignation morally and it's like you don't want to look at
yourself you'd rather just rage you'd rather just you know
brew haha or something it's just like take a deep breath and
say what's really upsetting you right now and there are people
who get upset there's a way you're not you're not going to be
passive and you get let people roll over you and but you're
also not getting caught up in things that don't really matter
like how are you getting involved in this and it's just like
or your insecurities such that you want to just focus on
anywhere external rather than actually look at your inner
life and look at what's going on and what's really true right
now.
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Music
What's really true right now?
What's bothering?
You know the ultimate example of this is the hoarder
like a hoarder.
Guilty, guilty.
That you're not, you're, no, we're talking like the show.
Oh yeah, yeah.
You know what I'm, you show that, but they don't want,
they don't want to look, they don't want to admit
when you're trying to point out to them,
hey, you know what?
You don't need a room full of cat litter boxes.
You don't need this much cat litter.
You don't need, you got no one needs this.
This is enough cat litter for a hundred years,
for a hundred cats.
You can get rid of like half the cat litter.
They will be like, no, you don't get it.
I got this cat litter at a discount.
I'm not getting rid of this cat litter.
It's a great deal.
You don't get it.
You're gonna lose it.
I could resell it.
You don't understand what that banana,
that rotting banana peel in the box of old fruit
means to me that I had that banana peel on my birthday
a few years ago.
It's a complex, hoarding is not simple.
Not at all.
It's complex and the, many of us are inner hoarders.
At least the hoarder,
you can't say, no, that's not there.
The hoarder has to admit there is a room full of newspapers
mixed in with cars,
mixed in with toy train tracks and a few piles of white peas.
They have to admit it's there.
A person can pretend it's not there.
You can lie and you can lie to yourself.
There's no room like that inside of me,
but my point is this,
if you are in a hoarder's house,
if you're a hoarder, their house is fucking,
they catch on fire all the time.
You know what I mean?
It's bad news.
That's the problem.
There's no space.
The kindling is, you know,
you don't want to live near a hoarder
because you're likely out of getting your house on fire.
Similarly, an inner hoarder,
they catch on fire all the time.
They have these blazes that they are always
constantly trying to put out.
You know what I mean?
So simplicity is you doing the thing to yourself
that they do on that show, hoarders,
which is unloading all the shit if you can.
It's harder, though, inside than a house.
The hard part about it is
you're going to really have to confront all that kitty litter.
And you're going to have to confront the fact
that you behaved in ways,
or you did things that were completely antithetical
to what you valued, to what you really wanted.
And it's a scary thing.
I was talking to a client recently
and just saying that, like, you know,
he couldn't understand why a person behaved this way.
And this person sounded like they had a personality disorder.
Like, they were really struggling.
They were suffering.
And he couldn't even be comprehend.
You know, how could she have turned that on me?
How could she have turned that back on me
after she did something wrong?
Because I said that person,
if they ever feel the slightest tinge of uncomfortability
or judgment or blame,
they'll believe that they will implode.
They will literally,
and they were going to set up this boundary
for if you go anywhere near there,
and they know they're doing it also.
They know that they're doing something to push people away
when all they want is to just connect
and really have a deep, meaningful, emotional connection.
And it's fascinating and it's tragic.
But the alternative is,
and this is the time of the year,
you know, as we go on to Rosh Hashanah,
which again, I was thinking about how we connected.
And after the band,
and we sort of didn't drift,
but we didn't really maintain the connection,
is I saw this unbelievable quote that said,
maybe you're not healing
because you're trying to be who you were before the trauma.
That person doesn't exist anymore
because there's a new you trying to be born.
Breathe life into that.
And I enclosed a gif of Clancy,
and I don't know if you remember, you better remember,
Clancy to get out of whatever universe he was in.
You know what he was blowing?
I do.
What was he blowing?
He was blowing the hunting horn
that was hanging over my father's bed when he died.
You just destroyed the myth
for every single Jewish person in the world
because you know what we thought that he was blowing?
Hold on.
I know exactly what you're bringing out.
You know what I'm bringing out?
A kazoo.
I'm just kidding.
Yeah, well, it's just a horn from a different animal.
It's just a horn from a different animal.
But this is blown on Rosh Hashanah.
This is the horn that's blown on the Jewish New Year,
and we talked about this offline,
where we talked about how it's this belief of the New Year,
is that this isn't a continuation.
This is a brand new,
and the services that we do on the High Holy Day of Rosh Hashanah,
which means New Year, Rosh is the head,
means where the kessar is,
and again, what we're doing on Rosh Hashanah,
according to the Kabbalahs,
which is synonymous with the word kessar,
for God to once again reincarnate the world in this form.
We are, again, believing that we're instilling that desire,
and we do that through blowing this ram's horn,
and the ram's horn is, again, this worldless prayer,
and it's the manifestation of what?
Of breath, of breath, through our breath.
Listen, don't, just so everyone knows,
I was aware of that as well.
I just didn't have one of those,
but I did have a hunting horn,
and I understood the mystical symbolism,
not just of what that horn meant to me,
but also, and to my dad,
and also what it meant to all the traditions
that have an aspect of that,
like the Hare Krishna's blow a conch shell,
and that's the most intense thing
when they're blowing it during a puja ceremony,
and also that you are combining life with death.
Blowing into a bone is blowing life into a dead thing,
which represents, I think, what you're talking about with Rosh.
How do you say it?
Rosh Hashanah, Rosh Hashanah.
Yeah, you're describing, even the word itself,
Rosh Hashanah, it's like an outflow.
It sounds like you are blowing it out,
like making it, blowing up the balloon again,
putting air back in, restarting,
and that we get to do that because we have,
that's the other thing I love about the Book of Genesis story
is the breath is, you know,
the divine breath is placed into Adam, right?
Yeah, that's it, that's what we're doing,
because Rosh Hashanah is actually not the day
that God created the world according to tradition,
it's the day that He created man.
Man was created on the sixth day,
and you see these rabbis in the Talmud arguing
about when God created the world,
and they have disagreements,
and there's so many metaphysical layers about this,
and they end up saying that they're both right.
One was in divine wisdom,
one was in divine actualization,
but the Rosh Hashanah is not commemorating
the day that God created the world.
We say He created the world,
but what it actually means is He created man on that day.
So let's talk about that.
Sorry, go ahead, I'm sorry, go ahead.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
knock on the myth, I said we have a lot to talk about,
we've got to tell a Baal Shem To story.
I want to get to that Baal Shem To story,
but I want to talk about this.
With the Shofar, when Clancy blows it,
it's like again, we become that new person,
and the way that, we talked about that brokenness,
how a person needs to confront that brokenness
in order to get whole,
and it's not to ignore that brokenness,
and that's sort of like, you know,
a lot of what I'm thinking about right now
is Rabbi Nachman and the Arizal who we talked about,
they talk about the intention for this month
as we build up that liminal space of the end of the year
going to the beginning of the year,
and Rabbi Nachman says that a person has to be an expert
in running and returning,
or the Zohar would say going up and going down,
and I'm thinking to myself,
that's the practice of toggling, right?
Yes.
And it's just like, again, not meaning I'm taking it in
and I'm doing it out and saying a person has to,
Rabbi Nachman says a person has to be an expert
when he's doing that,
because that is how a person comes back
to who they really are.
That's how a person does tshuvah,
which again, tshuvah means return,
which again, is classically translated as repentance,
but it's again, it's the mindfulness myth
of just returning to what?
Returning to essence.
But no, this is for you, Rabbi Duncan.
This is for you.
The word tshuvah is made up of the letters
taf, shin, vav, vet, hey,
which is again, at the end,
if you remember the word hey, the letter hey,
yud, hey, vav, and hey.
Tashuv means to return.
What are you returning?
You're tashuving, you're returning the hey.
You're putting that hey back into the name of God.
You are unifying God's name
by you returning to yourself.
If you want to connect to God,
you got to connect to your soul.
I have to blow your mind once it, once it, once a cast.
Wow!
My mind is the dead horn.
And you just blew it.
The...
Hey.
Wow.
Should we prepare for that?
That is so cool.
I felt, I felt, I felt inspired.
But if you listen to those samas here,
just a little bit more,
this is called the tekiah.
Tekiah.
It's one simple blast.
Straight, simple, no movement, oscillation.
The next sounds are either...
There's again an argument about how it's supposed to sound.
We sort of,
but it's supposed to be some sort of either a three short notes,
the sort of blasts called a shvarim,
which means brokenness.
And then there's the just outright balling,
just the brokenness of the trua,
which is also means connectivity and friendship,
but it's...
And then it ends once again with the tekiah,
the simple, uncomplicated sound.
And that's what Killance is doing,
and that's what we're all doing.
You start off life with that simple, straight sound.
You're good.
Your essence is good.
And then, guess what?
You break up.
You break down.
You break apart.
You're out of the garden.
Things go to, you're out of the garden.
Things go to pieces.
You know, stuff happens.
And, you know, sometimes it's just like a little bit of a
sob, a whale, like, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
And then there's just this unfettered, uncontrolled,
just you just broke down.
And you say, I can't get back, right?
But you don't have to get back to that old person.
You don't have to hoard that person.
You get back to that simple sound.
You get back to that tekiah and your essence,
and that's what we're trying to return to.
And that's why you can hear the sound of a dead animal,
and you could be balling.
Imagine a Martian coming down and saying,
like, okay, what's going on here?
I don't know.
You're blowing a ram's horn.
That's how you're coordinating the king.
He said, there's no greater coordination of the king.
There's no greater way that we can be,
and that's all we're doing on Rosh Hashanah.
We're just crowning you king.
We want you to be king.
We want to be servants.
And you can't do it without us.
That's the crazy piece that we,
you talk about being empowered.
Even in the Hebrew language, there's dictatorship
with there's mem shala.
And then there's melucha, which is, again,
you hear the word malchut.
We're building up the kingship.
We're building it up.
And the cabalists are doing it through the names,
and they're into, and it's happening anyway.
It's just whether or not you're aware of it.
Meaning, what am I doing by it?
It's like, well, I'm tapping into it,
and I'm accessing more of this awareness and knowledge.
But again, it's just that inculcation,
inculcating that brokenness and not divorcing it
and bringing it in.
Oh, it's so deep.
It's so deep.
And I love how everything is a map in Judaism.
Everything is like a hole on it
and is representing the cycle.
We're going through the holographic principle.
The part contains the hole.
You cannot look at that piece and not see the all in it.
If you're missing the all in it, then you've,
like you said, you've cut it off.
Okay.
So if the breath that is resonating the horn
represents the divine,
then you separate those two things
and you just have the horn.
It's dead, lifeless,
and you have some breath that has no mode of expression.
Right?
It's just, it's not, it's not forming into time space.
So the two things when they combine,
regardless of the horn itself, the lifelessness.
This is, I think, when they talk about karma, maybe.
You can say, that's the material,
that's just the stuff, the stuff.
But the breath of God part,
you hear in Buddhism fundamental goodness.
Fundamental goodness.
This is always, it's always there.
If you're hearing anything, in other words,
if you're experiencing humanity,
if you're around,
the thing that's resonating you,
whether you can understand it or not,
is perfect, simple, no matter what.
And the way that it's being expressed through you
can seem like chaotic and like,
all kinds of weird ways of expressing that thing,
but it's still,
what's making it come into life
is this eternal simplicity, right?
That's the idea.
And then you have equanimity.
And this is the teaching of the Baal Shem Tov of Shiviti, Adonai,
Yudhe Vavinhe, again, Linnegdi Tamid.
And Shiviti means I place God in front of me.
So you'll see that people have mandalas.
People have the, hold on one second.
Can you see this?
You see that there?
Yeah.
I mean, that's something you'll see in synagogues.
You'll see this is the letter-
What is it?
What is that?
This is the letter Yudhe.
Oh, this is the letter Hey.
This is the letter Vavinhe.
This is the letter Hey.
This is exactly-
Wait, let me describe what I'm looking at.
Everyone I'm seeing is-
Hold on a second.
I want to, good luck with this one.
Here we go.
It's definitely a mandala.
It's rectangular.
It's one, you have circular ones too?
Yeah.
One, two, three.
I can't see the entire-
The shape doesn't matter as much.
I'll send you a picture.
Each side is three.
It looks like, what is that?
One, two, three.
I can't tell if it, okay.
It's two, one, two.
You could spend hours.
You could spend hours.
There's a menorah.
There's a menorah that has a chapter of zoms on it.
And so again, that's what you're supposed to be visualizing as you say it.
You can see different permutations of the Yudhe, Vavinhe.
But anyway, I'll give you a more simple one again.
Why this is on my desk, you know?
Because we like to have fun here.
Here's another one for you.
This will be a little bit more simple.
It says the word Shibiti means a place.
And then it's the Yudhe, Vavinhe.
And then it says it has the Yud and then the Aleph.
And Aleph is the name of Mahut.
So this is the Chetrogrammatan.
It's the Yudhe, Vavinhe.
But the name of Mahut is mixed in it.
And so you're trying to see is how God is enlivening, is breathing life into the Mahut.
So you combine them together.
So usually I place God in front of me and just see it as like a visualization, a meditation.
What he says is Shiviti also means it's equal.
Praise, blame, it's all equal to me.
Why is it equal to me?
Because Yudhe, Vavinhe is in front of me always.
If I see whatever I'm seeing right now is Yudhe, Vavinhe, the traffic, the traffic jam,
the most mystical experience of the world, you know, after the ecstasy, the laundry.
Meaning there's no difference.
There's no difference.
And we struggle with that.
I struggle with that because I like Ramdas, you know, it's like it's just a drug experience.
I'm like, yeah, but it was, I felt like I was clicking at a higher level there.
That during that meditation I was clicking.
When I'm driving the car, when I'm tying my shoes and Judaism really tries to,
because people feel it's very regimented.
There's so many laws, so many rules.
It's like it's just to create awareness.
We've sort of lost the forest and the trees.
But if you take a step back and realize that everything is supposed to connect us.
And what can you give God?
God's got a lot of palaces and spheres and angels and doorways and castles.
You know what he doesn't have?
This.
What?
He doesn't have, he doesn't have this planet.
He's, he's, he's, you know, what if God was one of us, you know, wandering around.
And you're seeing, you know, maybe it's everyone you look at is God in drag.
But we just, we, we, we don't want to believe that.
But the, the, the, what the, what the, what the Baal Shem Tov was teaching,
what the Baal Shem Tov really, you know, review is just like,
if you're not seeing God and everything you're doing, you know, and all God wants is to,
it's his Nistava, you know, to have a Dira betachton him.
We think he wants to be up there.
He's, he's fine up there.
Imagine taking that dead, you know, that ram's horn.
Imagine taking that, that person on the street.
Imagine taking that food that you put in your mouth and, and, and, and raising it up
and, and elevating it to something that is divine service.
Only do that.
It's incredible.
But, but it's, you don't, you don't really need to raise it up, right?
It's already raised up in the sense that, in our consciousness, in our consciousness,
for ourselves to begin, but that's what we can give him.
That's, that's, that's the pleasure that you can give to God.
Ah, that's okay.
Right.
You need something to do.
Here's the thing to do.
And, and this, and this going away and coming back that you're talking about that,
that cycle is like long form of that, right?
You're talking about each year, we're going to go away and come back.
But in every single moment, in even to get back to the breath, you're, you're looking
at a going away, the exhalation and a coming back and inhalation as though the message
was like, you know, that movie Memento where he's got shit painted all over the wall.
It's painted in your, the main thing keeping you alive is this very cycle, which goes
back to the possibility that that name is the sound of your breath.
The sound of your breath.
That's what's giving it to you.
That's, and that's, and that's.
Your breath is the scripture.
It's the map.
And this is, you know, the word for soul and Judaism.
Nishama also means breath.
Nishima.
Wow.
Nishima, Nishama.
Yeah.
I was saying that I think that that's, that's the breath connection.
And again, we're doing it and we're seeing it.
And it's running and returning, you know, running, you know, sometimes you feel so close to
the divine and sometimes you're returning.
Sometimes you feel so far removed and you feel so bereft of God's.
And it's like, you're in, right there in that moment, if you're tapping in your, your,
you can never leave God's presence.
And so we, we make this arbitrary, well, does it matter what I do?
Of course it matters what you do because you don't want to create that, you know, quote,
unquote, demon, or you want to build that, that angel.
They talk about that karma we're talking about.
Just, you know, that, that Hashqacha Pratid of just like our actions that have reverberations.
They, it matters.
What you say matters, you know?
Because if you know that your words actually matter, you would never speak poorly about somebody.
Of course we wouldn't kill somebody, but we're not killing people because it's illegal.
We're not killing people because we believe in, like you said, that fundamental goodness.
And so we have to work in, especially during this time of year when we're going to be crowning God as king,
is this is the time of chuva.
This is the season of, of returning, of returning that hay and, and returning that hay to God's name,
which we can only do through empathy and compassion and love of ourselves and others.
You know, the, the, the month that we're in right now is called elul.
And the Ari teaches us is a, an acronym.
Is alif elul is ani, ay, lamid is lido di.
I'm not doing a great job explaining this because it's Hebrew and I apologize to those who I'm not doing this well.
I love it.
Vido di li.
I'm to my beloved and my beloved is to me.
It's like, I would never left.
I never left and you never left.
And this is like, we've been here all along and we've been sort of playing this hide and seek game.
It's just like, we don't have to play this game, but we have to stop.
Like you said, we have to stop already.
I didn't drift.
We didn't drift.
We never, I never went anywhere.
You could, there's nowhere you could possibly go.
It's like, it's like, you don't love me, mom.
And it's just like, there's no way I could stop loving you.
Right?
There's no way I could stop loving you.
And, and we're just, we're in this dance.
Yeah.
This shivisi-al-don island that you saw me, this, this place in God for me and this equanimity
and this going and giving in this, and this receiving and, and returning and, and going up and going down.
And it's just like, it's just this dance where if we recognize that it's all part of one united whole, you know, again,
if, if you only heard that, then you would, you know, then you're, you're, you're a righteous individual,
but you're not somebody who's, who's, you know, who's gone through the process.
And, and again, I think there are Bodhisattvas and there's Tzadikim who come in and they're here to just,
just get us right on the path.
But we don't have to look at them and be like, oh, well, I should be like that or I need to be.
That's like, no, no, no.
The Talmud says in the place where those who are Baalei Chuvah, masters of this returning, masters of returning the hey,
where they stand, the righteous, the gurus, the, the, the Tzadikim, they, they have no place there.
They can't be there because they just, they can't.
They're just like, that's not their, that's not their job.
And it's not your job to be the Bodhisattva.
Now again, it could be to tap into that, but not, you know, in your own, in your own way to believe in your unique way
and your unique greatness and your unique individuality and how God can't do it without you.
And we struggle with it because we don't feel special.
We say that.
Okay, let's decom, let's decom, I want to decom, I want to make,
Decomplexify.
By the way, this was supposed to happen for everybody.
Everyone should know that this was supposed to happen in Burning Man, but I pulled out.
So I apologize about that.
But we're next year, next year.
And I pulled out.
Well, I didn't pull out, which is why I couldn't burn.
There you go.
And I'll explain it to you.
Well, the, the, the, the, the.
Thank God you didn't.
Yeah.
More hashtag more Duncan.
Thank God.
Thank you.
I, but, but that's brings me to what I was in an attempt to, even though I don't think it needs to be Decomplexify.
Cause you so beautifully described it.
I'm just thinking in the beginning, you were talking about the experience of dropping your kid off at kindergarten.
And you know, you're going to see, you're going to pick them pick them up after school.
Oh, sure.
But it's, but, but so that cycle is still going to happen in, in one of these books I was reading about raising kids.
It talks about how toddlers, what they, the cycle of a toddler is they'll hang out with the parent for a second.
Then they'll go out to explore.
And then they come back and they'll hug you for a second.
And then they go out again.
Attachment, attachment theory one on one.
That's it.
And that is the respiratory cycle of parenting that going out and coming back.
Right.
It's the same thing.
And, and, and it's in just because you made the kids doesn't mean like you don't need them.
I mean, every time they come back and hug you and like, and when they get older and start like hugging you and then saying, I love you.
Those are the greatest moments.
Those are the moments of ecstasy.
Those are the highest moments.
So if, as above so below, then this returning the crown or the running back to God, this must be adding of the hay.
Right.
It's like God, I don't know how, if God, how God feels or what that is.
I know how I feel.
Right.
If, as above so below, it must be this.
Okay.
I didn't lose you.
You're here.
You came back.
Okay.
Okay.
And I love you.
It's no big deal.
And I was always here.
And I was always in the room.
I was in the room.
You didn't lose me.
You didn't lose me.
You didn't lose me.
You know, just I lost.
Again, you lose yourself for a minute and then you find yourself.
It's like someone's like, oh, I lost myself.
I think that's okay.
You're here now.
And that's okay.
That's it.
You're here now.
This is something that I know from listening to you and, and, and dovening and praying
with you and, and just like we love our kids to death.
And we also know that loving our kids to death means that's going to bring suffering.
It's just, if you like, if you want to understand love, if you want to understand suffering,
you know, they have to go together.
This is the only one way because the ultimate suffering is to lose the thing that you love
most and everything else you could be fine with.
I'm fine with everything, but like, you know, you were talking, I think with Jack about,
about, you know, if God forbid somebody did something to your kid and we don't even want
to, our brains, we're not even going to allow our brains to go there.
You're like, I could talk about love and kindness, but like I will rip you limb to limb.
And even, and it's just like we have this, it's, it's, it's more, it's, it's deeper
than, than, than, than, than, than, than, you know, animalistic.
It's, it's so much more primal.
And yet we also know intuitively as, as people on the path and people who are struggling on
the path and losing the path, but never leaving the path and recognizing that, you know, it's
straight, it's going to get straight at the end, you know, by some incarnation, it's going
to be straight in the beginning and straight at the end, you know, it's going to hurt like
hell.
Yeah.
It's, and, and you talked about it so poignantly.
And I think for so many people, it opened up a real language, you know, when you talked
about your mom and you were talking about how, you know, even bringing it up in the book,
it brought up something for you as you're writing the book and we're going to write a beautiful
book on parenting.
Just kidding.
Is that the name of the book?
No, the book is, the book is, the book is, don't pull out, don't pull out, just kidding.
Just kidding.
No, but it's, it's, it's this, the fact that you still felt it is, is because you'll never
stop feeling it and you never want to stop feeling it because it's, that's, that's how
people, we're still, they're still here.
We can, we connect, we believe that we can connect to people even more possibly when they're
not in this physical plane and, and there's just this, this, this sadness, which is, you
know, this, it's, it's, it, we don't allow our minds to go there, but when we do that,
you know, and then we can really connect to the suffering of the world and that's the
also part of this, of this ability to do that.
Again, the only people who can teach, you know, are the ones who understand suffering
and, and you're somebody who is, is a real, you're, you're a person, you tell me if you
can hear this.
Do you feel this about yourself that people gravitate towards you as a person that they,
that they love being in your presence?
Uh, no, you know what, I'm not going to go there because to me, I try, like, I, I would
love that.
That sounds wonderful.
My feeling with it is, uh, I, I don't want to, if that is happening, that's great.
And I'm hot.
That makes me happy, but I don't want to think about it because I'm too not, I'm too my,
the blowing of my horn.
Yeah.
I don't want, I don't want to do my own horn.
I don't want to blow the thing.
No, because we're, there's that, because we don't, we don't love ourselves enough.
It's, we don't love ourselves enough because, I, I, right.
I'm too complex.
There's too many things going on for me to accept anything like that.
And, and, and, and I'm okay with that right now in, in, in the, uh, but the conversations
like this, you know, I, you know, I guess the reason you're seeing some like stammering
here is because to me in the, you know, if we're going to use the analogy of blowing
a horn.
Yes, please.
There's a big difference between tooting your own horn and, and I'm like, there you
go.
But that's, but that's a tank of gas.
That's a tank of gas.
That'll fill you up for a tank of gas till you need the next one, till the next person
will be like, okay, I need you to blow and the, and the, and the, you need, you need,
you need to do a bigger horn or, or, or more blowing.
But at the end of the day, if it's, if you're, if you're not able to do it, if you're not
able to do it yourself, if you're not able to give it to yourself, which is really this
is the, this is the month of compassion where we're really, and, and even in the astrological,
um, I believe the astrological sign for this month right now is the virgin because we're
getting back to our pristine essence and that takes a boatload of compassion, compassion
for the people who've wronged us, compassion for the things that we've done wrong and compassion
for God.
You know, he also needs this, he again, not using the gender specific just to make it
clear again, there is no pronoun for God.
You know, this, this, this loving and compassionate being also is suffering and that's the, the
suffering of the Shreena and that's the suffering of Mahut because it's, it's just, you know,
when we're, when we're not living with awareness, when we're living with ignorance, it, it,
it also pains him.
It creates, it creates pain, divine pain.
And so, you know, the sort of like, you know, field of dreams, I imagine like, heal his
pain.
It's like, heal your pain and you're going to be healing his divine pain.
And again, you can only help the suffering of others.
If you've really learned how to suffer yourself, if you've really learned how to accept your
own suffering, because then you start to see the ubiquity, not the ubiquity, the, the,
the, the, what's the opposite of ubiquity, the, the, the universality of suffering.
It's like, oh, my suffering is different than yours.
I understand suffering and this is, and I could have compassion for you.
Like I have compassion for myself and we can, we can, pain is inevitable, right?
Suffering is optional.
Yeah.
So you blow your horn, blow your horn.
This is the month of the virgin, the month of blowing your own horn.
Right.
Well, you, can you, why don't we close?
Thank you so much.
Why don't we close on you resonating, blowing the horn again for us?
I think it's a beautiful, can I, can I tell that story?
Can I tell that story?
Do we have time for a story?
Oh yeah.
Tell the story and then let's blow the horn.
It's, it's, it's, it's something my, my friend Joey or my friend, Matt, I forget
which one, just shared this story about, and it's a Baal Shem Tov story, but it's
about where a living Sadiq right now, one of the, one of the rabbis, one of the,
one of the gurus, he told a story of his grandfather, who was also a righteous
individual who dreamed that he saw the Baal Shem Tov, right?
The master of the good name, revolutionary change the world.
Remind me, I got to send you a copy of that, that book of the rabbi, just to
see what, how it's Sadiq lives.
It's just, they're not, they're not like us, but they're like us.
And they see, they see, they see the good in us in like, so in this dream, right?
So this, this, this, this grandfather, he's telling the story.
He sees the Baal, he sees the Baal Shem Tov and they're both standing on this
majestic mountain and you want to picture this scene of these two, you know,
beautiful saintly individuals, radiant, basking, glowing and they're
looking over this huge abyss and the Baal Shem Tov says to him, you want to
see what it means to really serve God.
You're imagining this, right?
Your eyes closed.
You know what, you can see this huge precipice, they're, they're, they're
standing over this huge precipice and it's just this valley and it's like, he
says, you want to know how to serve God, what it really means.
Can I teach you how a person is really supposed to serve God?
And even before the person who was dreaming could answer the Baal Shem Tov,
the Holy Baal Shem Tov just free dives right off the cliff.
He just jumps right off.
And this other person, this, this Sadik who's having the dream is just
watching an abject horror as like his, his guru just throws himself off the side
of this, this, this cliff and, and he's just watching him and he sees, he hits
the ground and he shatters into a million pieces.
He shatters into a, in a myriad of pieces, like a vase.
Just a picture of this, right?
Just go with the Baal Shem Tov has just shattered into a million pieces and the
guy doesn't know what to do.
And he runs down and he gets to the bottom and he's like, okay, like, you
know, maybe this, and when he gets there, every piece he finds, he picks up, he
starts to pick up the broken shards and every single piece he finds is an exact
replica of the Holy Baal Shem Tov.
Right in that sliver contains the whole, contains the whole.
And it's just like, we think we're so broken.
And we realize that that brokenness, that brokenness is all, all going to be
part of that unified oneness.
And we want it to be, we want it to be less complicated when we see that in
that darkness, in that difficulty, in that suffering, in that struggle, there is
also, and there's nothing more whole than the broken heart, says the rabbi
of Kotsk, Menachem and others, there's nothing more whole.
And he's, there's the students asked and they said, why does it say in the, in,
in the Shema prayer?
Why does it say to put the words on your heart?
Why does it say in your heart?
He says, because your heart's stone, he says, you pray with grace and with divine
love and with a little bit of luck, you know, that, that stone is going to melt.
So when it does, when it turns into that heart of flesh, right, those words that
you've been placing on your heart, they'll just fall right in.
They'll just be right in, you know, and that's all we're trying to do is, is take
that brokenness, take it, that brokenness.
And, and again, there's nothing more whole than that broken heart.
Um, I just saw this amazing poem that said, um, it's called, uh, it's called,
it's called last fragment or late fragment.
Again, it's thinking about the fragmented pieces.
And did you get what you wanted out of life even so?
And that even so is just like, you think about your even so.
And did you get what you wanted out of life even so I did?
And what was it you wanted to call myself beloved, to feel myself
beloved on this earth?
No, even with that, even so, even with those fragments, those pieces, that regret,
the should've, could've, would've, this another year coming into this, this
being, and it's like, I don't want it to be the same.
It's like, it doesn't have to be, it doesn't have to be.
Stop trying to blow life into that person.
You're not that person from before the trauma or from before you started
hoarding those, those Katie litters.
Breathe life into that new person.
You're not who you think you are, right?
Ram Dass 101.
You're not who you think you are, right?
Anyway, I love you.
I really, I love you so much.
You're, you're a beautiful.
Thank you, Ben.
Saad, for you are, you are a being of light and compassion.
You have, you have, you have real radiance.
You have glow.
I, I, I, I wear t-shirts with you on it.
I wear t-shirts.
Because.
Well, wait till our next podcast.
I'm going to have.
Amen.
No, can we, can we do it in person?
We would have so, if we could do a live podcast, I'm telling you, we'd
have like three people, including my mom.
She would love this.
You know.
I've always wanted to come to Israel.
You?
It's something I've always wanted to do.
Duncan, Duncan, Duncan.
Again, ain't d'Avara homemade before now, Ratzon.
You know what?
Ratzon is that highest sphere because Ratzon comes even before it's that
before there's even a plan.
There's something that's there, that kernel of, of ineffabilic.
Where did that come from?
I don't know.
It's Ratzon.
It's my will.
You come.
Who knows?
You come to, to Israel.
Messiah.
I don't mean, I'm not saying he won't come.
I'm not saying animals won't attack you, but I'm not, not
saying, you know what?
I don't think the Messiah will be the thing that induces the birth of the
Messiah if I come to Israel.
But I do think we would have a pretty awesome podcast there and lots of fun.
Thousands of people live podcasts in Israel.
Tell me what you need me to do to make it.
I'm calling Nicole right after this.
She's getting a copy of this.
And yeah, let's figure it out.
I think that would be real to do a live DTF age in Israel.
I would, that would be a dream come true.
Say the word.
Your wish is my command.
As you wish.
We're going to blow the shofar.
I'm going to plug my, my t-shirt company that doesn't exist.
And we're going to, we're going to have wish each other.
We're going to wish each other.
Okay.
Tiva vechatima tovah.
All right.
So again, it's just, uh, let's this, this is the intention for also the
ram's horn is, and again, this is going to be in the parenting book.
Don't wake your kids up with a ram's horn.
It's a terrible move.
Terrible.
My daughter might never speak to me again.
Love you, Hadasa.
But, um, we're taking a deep breath.
This, the, the, the, the, the, the, the Maimonides, who was the irrationalist did
not study or may not have access to the access to the Kabbalah, but he's certainly
somebody who keeps things rational.
Says, you know why we blow a horn?
It's because the Torah says to the Bible says to, he's like, but if I would have
to give an illusion to it, it's because it's a reminder that it's time to wake
up all of our service, all of our practice has to be a practice of waking up.
All we're trying to do is wake up out of our ignorance and just connect to the
divinity within and around.
And so my blessing to us as, as, as soul brothers is, uh, is let's wake up,
wake up from not, not from coffee, but from something a lot stronger and a
lot more simple.
Yeah.
Wow.
So much love.
One love, not so much so there was no AI.
We didn't talk about AI.
We didn't talk about aliens.
We didn't talk about Gnostic Christians.
We didn't, we have, we have so much, so much to cover.
So much psychedelics.
Well, again, but this is, this is the Ichigo Ichi of just like, you know, I just
appreciating the fact that this is happening, that we live in a time where we
have the technology to just, you know, see each other.
How are we connected?
And we're like, we're connected on a level.
That's just like, I was on, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was,
I was on another podcast on the Be Here Now Network with Madison Margot and
she's wonderful.
And it's just like, I'm connected to Ramdas and I'm connected to, to, to
Duncan Trussell and we're all like, there's one degree of separation to all
of us.
We're all connected.
Let's share, let's love, let's be connected.
Let's really see the good in one another and, you know, really feel proud of
where we come from, our heritage and see how the perennial wisdoms all
complement one another.
You do you, I do me and we all come together and just say Shalom, you know,
Wow.
And I, and I, and you know, I, I.
And you know, I, I, and I, I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and
and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and
I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I.
And if you I don't love me, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and I, and
Echad.
dot com.
That's your t-shirt.
Company the girl is sold dot?
It doesn't exist yet.
But I have a landing page, which is again, the guy who made my website, because
he's like, you have to have a website.
I was like, that's great.
Let's make t-shirts.
Next thing I know the, girl is sold dot, CEO top secret project.
You heard about a first, sign up your emails.
Do you want to be, part of, can if I send, if I ever make a t-shirt, will
you wear it for like a second?
Are you kidding?
Of course.
And I want that.
Tell me, tell people where they can find you.
This is my rabbi.
Everybody.
You can see why I will not be your rabbi.
I am only Duncan Trussell's rabbi.
It says it on my website, drbenji.com.
I'm doing a lot.
I'm going to do, start doing some mindfulness courses online and selling
t-shirts at the goal of so dot co and doing some good work in psychedelic
assisted therapy.
I'm doing some bougie group, uh, ketamine, um, uh, sessions with my,
with my colleague, Dr.
Mark Bronstein and slowly, but surely, um, really working to heal people.
Again, it's, it's the integration.
It's the integration after the ecstasy, the laundry, but really providing
space for people to heal myself and others.
Um, so reach out and touch someone and, um, and, uh, yeah, I love you.
The goal is soul.
Love you.
All the links you need to find.
Dr.
Benji will be at delkatrussell.com.
If you forgot those links, thank you.
You got to come back sooner than a year.
It's ridiculous.
I dropped the ball.
I dropped the ball.
You would never do this sooner.
You were always here.
You were always there.
You were always there.
You never drifted.
Thank you for this.
Howdy, Krishna.
Thank you.
I love you.
I love you.
Goal is soul.
That was Dr.
Ben Epstein.
Everybody head over to drbenji.com and you can connect
him, check out his book, Living in the Presence, a Jewish
mindfulness guide to everyday life.
A big thank you to our esteemed sponsors.
And thank you for listening.
I love you so much.
Howdy, Krishna.
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