5778: The Year of Unattained Desires
Ā THE YEAR OF UNATTAINED DESIRES (AKA,CLEANING THE FLOOR IN THE BEIT HAMIKDASH) The last few months, Iāve been finding it really hard to get motivated about anything much.Ā By nature, Iām really not a lazy person. I work hard, I strive, I put effort in, I usually wake up as early as I can, even on Shabbat, and I hate, hate, hate that feeling that Iām not doing anything meaningful with my life. But for all that, the last few months Iāve been feeling pretty aimless, unmotivated, and just kind of drifting. In my hitbodedut, on the rare occasions when I can actually get a hold of myself, internally, I get this picture that Iām just kind of floating through space. Iām not miserable, Iām not down, Iām just utterly unmotivated ā and itās been like this for months. I went looking in Rebbe Nachmanās Sefer HaMiddot, (Book of Traits) to see if he could help me to get a handle on whatās going on, and this is what I found: > āThrough unattained desires, one falls into laziness. The opposite is also true.ā WHERE DID MY 'GET UP AND GO' GET TO? Now, I am filled to the brim with bad middot, but thank God, laziness is normally not one of them. So my ālazyā attitude towards life has been perplexing me greatly the last few months, until I read this, and suddenly the penny dropped. If you could characterize 5778, at least for me, I would call it āThe Year of Unattained Desiresā. Like a few other people out there, I was really hoping that 5778 was the year that Moshiach would finally reveal himself, and the geula would finally, and obviously, get under way. That didnāt happen. 5778 was also the year when I thought Iād finally got to the point of being able to buy our own place in Jerusalem, thanks to the money my mother-in-law left us when she passed away, on the third day of the new year. We even found the placeā¦we even signed the contractā¦we even arranged the moving date⦠and then it all unraveled in the most yukky, stressful, awful way ever. Instead of having a hanukat habayit, I spent months Google translating legal documents and writing letters to lawyers, and praying my socks off that our erstwhile seller wouldnāt take every last penny we owned. ONE IN A GENERATION The book about the Rav, One in a Generation [https://ravberland.com/shop/one-in-a-generation/], also came out last year. I thought it was going to be a real game-changer. I thought it was going to transform the tone of the debate about the Ravās recent exile and incarceration, as more people came to understand who the Rav really is, and a little more about the spiritual dimension of what was really going on, the last five years. Well, I was half-right. The more I pinned down the facts to show that the Rav was completely innocent of any wrongdoing, and had just been hounded, persecuted and framed by a bunch of very disturbed individuals, the more the psychos online switched from ārational argumentsā about the facts of the case to ad hominem attacks on yours truly. And there were a lot of other āfailuresā and āunattained desiresā going on last year, too, behind the scenes, in a whole bunch of different ways. NO ENERGY FOR THE NEW YEAR So, 5779 began, and I had absolutely no energy or enthusiasm for it. What, Iām going to start trying to move again after everything thatās gone on? Iām going to try to get something ādoneā again, when nothing really gets anywhere, despite maximum effort? Iām going to sit and do more mind-maps on āprioritiesā, and more big lists of things to do and books to write, and make more big plans about where Iād like my life to go and how Iād like it to look? > Really, whatās the point? Donāt we all know itās not going to happen, itās just going to be more wasted time and effort? I realized, this apathetic, lazy, and at least a bit despairing attitude has been coloring my thoughts for months. As always, understanding the cause of the problem is always the most important element of solving it. So once I read that laziness comes from unattained desires, it became really obvious why Iām acting and reacting the way I am at the moment. HOW CAN WE TURN THIS AROUND? But what to do about this? How to get out of this apathetic rut? Thatās what Iāve been pondering the last couple of weeks in my hitbodedut, and the answer that Iāve been getting back is to value the small stuff. Like, time to be able to talk to my husband and kids. Like, the fact I can walk, and even better, walk around Jerusalem. And like, the fact that I have a nice, spacious place to live in, even though itās not mine, and even though itās apparently in the wrong area (more on that topic another time.) This Shabbat, I was looking around my poor, neglected home that has really borne the brunt of my ālazinessā. I havenāt sponga-ed for months. I didnāt care how things are arranged, or whatās still in boxes, because who even knows if Iām staying here another 6 months?! I stopped caring if the duvets match the pillowcases. Yes, things got that bad. Luckily, my kids have been picking up a fair bit of the slack, as they like the place to look presentable for their friends, so thereās no rats, mold or anything too disgusting going on. So there I was on Shabbat, doing hitbodedut, and realizing that keeping my house clean is actually a very important, and very meaningful part of life after all, when my husband came over and told me something the Rav had said in recent shiur: > When a woman cleans the floor of her home, itās considered in Heaven as though sheās cleaned the floor of the Beit HaMikdash. Itās a small chiddush, but itās made the world of difference to my outlook. Sure, we havenāt got the real Beit HaMikdash yet, sure, things are still so unfinished and so incomplete and so lacking for so many of us. But if I clean my floor, with its old, yucky, crumbling tiles, God still considers it as though I cleaned the floor of the Beit HaMikdash. HOUSEWIFE HITBODEDUT So, that was enough for me. This morning, I did some āhousewife hitbodedutā for the first time in a long time, and I cleaned the floors and washed them (and itās not even Pesachā¦) I told God, āHashem, please consider this as though Iām cleaning the floor of the Beit HaMikdash!ā, and for the first time in ages, I felt like I wasnāt just wasting my life. But I also told God that when the real things shows up, He should probably find someone else for the job. Sponga is really not my strong point. You can read more of Rivkaās musings on her blog:Ā https://rivkalevy.com/ [https://rivkalevy.com/]