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    https://freebookweb.com/videos/watch/O2IbbqKyDs7BdCM
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    The Science of Thinking and the Power of Thought [2021 Update]
    The Science of Thinking: How does the brain work? How do we learn? Why do we sometimes make stupid mistakes? Scientific thinking refers to both thinking about the content of science and the set of reasoning processes th
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    https://freebookweb.com/videos/watch/QAEChrdCLYnr6hp
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    What Is True Love? How to Achieve True Love in a Relationship [Kabbalah Relationship Tip]
    What is true love? True love is a strong and lasting affection between spouses or lovers who are in a happy, passionate and fulfilling relationship. An example of true love is the emotion shared between a couple who has
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  • FBI arrested the CEO Behind the California fires
    FBI arrested the CEO Behind the California fires
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    California 💔 Photo taken by satellite HEXMAS
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    What Makes a Superhuman? Physicist Michio Kaku envisions a future where technology propels humanity toward a “super-future,” with devices and machines designed to improve our lives. In theory, this sounds promising. Imagine distributing devices to everyone that, instead of distracting or isolating us like phones do, could truly make us better. That would indeed be revolutionary. However, technology will not save us. The idea of digitizing a person and their memories is intriguing, but without correcting the person, shifting our focus from self-benefit to the benefit of others and nature, such advancements risk leading us to a dark future. If we fail to align our internal development with our technical capabilities, we will find ourselves in a world so despairing that people would rather take a pill to escape it. For technology to be beneficial, it needs to serve our shift from prioritizing self-benefit to that of benefiting others and nature. Above all of our technological dreams, there exists a vast, eternal “supercomputer”—nature and its laws of altruism, interconnectedness, and interdependence. Kabbalists also call nature “the Creator” as well as several other names, defining a supreme intelligence that orchestrates everything to show us our limitations and urge us to connect with it. What makes a superhuman then? A superhuman is not someone who collects vast amounts of information or builds technological marvels. A superhuman is rather one who acquires nature’s qualities of love, bestowal, and connection. Rising above our earthly limitations lets us perceive and sense a higher dimension of existence. While we remain in our physical bodies for now, we can make moves to elevate our attitudes to each other, to perceive reality above our inborn egoistic perspective, similar in form with nature’s force of love, bestowal, and connection. In this elevated state, we can experience a level of perception above our current reality. It is not an extension of the four-dimensional world we know, but a wholly different plane of existence. Infinity is the infinite connection between us people and the integral laws of nature, or as we say in the wisdom of Kabbalah, between creation and the Creator. It is not a network of separate links but a state of total fusion where all distinctions vanish. In this state, the connection between the controller and the controlled is so complete that they merge into a single whole. This is what we call oneness. The purpose of creation is to unite humanity with nature’s altruistic, interconnected, and interdependent laws—with the Creator—in a boundless, eternal connection.
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    What Is Money? The Hebrew word for money, “Kesef,” comes from the word for “covering,” “Kisuf.” It stems from the idea that money is a covering over our desires. Money is not merely cash or the numbers in our bank accounts. If we can cover our desires and aspirations for what we want with what Kabbalah terms a “screen” (“Masach”), i.e., a force that can resist the egoistic inward suction of fulfillment for ourselves alone, then with this force, we pay for our desires. We can then rise above our inborn egoistic desires to receive with an altruistic desire to bestow and accordingly achieve any fulfillment we aspire for according to the strength of our desire. Covering our desires with a screen means that we can only truly fulfill our desires via its covering, which is the transformation of the intention behind the desire: from the desire for ourselves alone to the desire to benefit others and nature. Therefore, if we wish to earn in a way that is truly beneficial to other people and the nature we are parts of, i.e., in a way where we “earn life,” we need to understand the definition of money and covering described here, and what the change of our egoistic intention to its altruistic opposite entails. By acquiring a screen that covers our egoistic desires, changing them into altruistic ones, then in the new altruistic force we experience, we start receiving much loftier fulfillments than the ones we experience in our narrow egoistic perception. That is true wealth.
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    Why Do Children Adapt to Changes More Quickly Than Adults? Indeed, children are much more inclined toward adapting to changes than adults. Adults have already settled into their ways. They believe things cannot change or improve and resign themselves to accepting life as it is. Children, however, still hold on to hope. They have not been dulled by life’s disappointments in the same way adults have. Ideally, with life experience, we should grow wiser and more patient, more determined to make corrections. But the truth is, we don’t. Why not? It is because we lack the patience, determination, and strength to resist the inertia of what is. Instead, we accept things as they are, largely because of the blows we have endured. These setbacks make us too lazy and weary to correct ourselves. Yet, the path of correction remains open to anyone willing to embrace it. By embracing the path of correction, i.e., correcting our inborn self-centered desires with an additional intention to give, love, and positively connect to others, we gain the ability to quickly adapt to changes at any given age. It is because we then learn how nature’s laws operate on us and how we should optimally respond to nature’s impulses at every given moment.
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    How Can We Change Our Thoughts to Create Different Results in Life? First, we need to understand that our thoughts shape our life and what this means. Our attitude toward who and what we are, to what surrounds us, and to our purpose, are all considered “our thoughts.” We would thus be wise to actively seek answers to existential questions that dwell in us, such as why we are here, what is this process we are evolving through in our lives, how will our lives end, and what will we be left with. Such questions might surface in a purely egoistic manner, i.e., in ways where we are solely concerned with what we envision as our own individual bubble of life that includes mostly us and a few people around us, but in any case, we should seek their answers. Eventually, we need to reach a realization that if we focus solely on satisfying our egoistic desires for self-benefit alone, we will end up eventually finishing the same way. If I wish to rise to a higher level of existence, above our inborn egoistic modus operandi and into a spiritual form, then we need to start living according to entirely different values: not to merely envision the purpose of life in filling our physical bodies as much as possible, but to fill ourselves with the supreme qualities that exist in nature, those of love, bestowal, and positive connection. The latter is a completely different value system that leads us to a completely different life, one that is eternal and perfect, with a whole inner connection among all of us, as opposed to our transient and incomplete lives here in our current world, where we are internally detached from each other. At such a juncture, we face a significant challenge. We then start seeing ourselves on a seemingly vast plane that has the egoistic-materialistic values of wealth, respect, and power on one side, i.e., values that the society we were born and raised into sees as worth living for, and a vague and unknown “something” on the other side, where questions regarding our greater meaning and purpose in life prod at us. Accordingly, we start repositioning ourselves in a completely different way in terms of what we value in life, and look into how we can discover a purpose much greater than the egoistic-materialistic goals that we then view as lesser and lesser in value. This plane is an inner plane of our desires and thoughts. More and more people are encountering this existential questioning today. It is the form of scrutiny that can bring about a true change in our lives. By seeking an optimal environment, i.e., texts, teachers, and friends that do not simply fall into the egoistic-materialistic flows of life that lead to a dead end, but those who regularly direct themselves at much higher values, meaning, and purpose, then we can optimally influence our thoughts to develop ourselves toward life’s greater meaning and purpose. Kabbalist Yehuda Ashlag (Baal HaSulam) describes this principle at length in his article, “The Freedom,” and in my organization, the Bnei Baruch Kabbalah Education & Research Institute, we work on growing this environment for the optimal spiritual development for whoever so desires.
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    Is Each Person’s Soul Unique? Each person receives their own soul. However, if you are not satisfied with the soul you received, you have the opportunity to correct it. Correcting your soul means applying an intention to love, bestow, and connect positively with others upon your inborn desires to enjoy for self-benefit alone. With this outward-directed intention, we equalize ourselves with the altruistic and integral laws of nature, a goal that Kabbalah calls “reaching equivalence of form with the Creator.” Achieving this state is the reason for which we were created, and it is where our evolution is leading all of us. We should thus ideally strive for a soul that loves everyone, understanding that it is a desire that we naturally lack. Each of our individual motions to correct the soul we were given are what make our souls unique, but ultimately when we all become corrected, we all connect as a single soul and experience a newfound eternity and perfection as one soul that is equal in form with the Creator, connected by the Creator’s quality of love, bestowal, and connection.
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    Why Do We Have to Change Our Habits? There is a saying, “Change your habits, and your life will change.” It is true that habits govern much of our lives, but the key question is why should we change them and what should we change them to? We need to change our habits to those that bring about spiritual actions and connections. Doing so first requires gaining a deep understanding of our habits, i.e., to learn where they come from, how they become formed, and what drives them. When we understand habits from their root, we can then begin to transform them. But what should we change them to? What are good habits? There are no good habits. By their nature, habits are inherently limiting. They fix us in place and prevent growth. Even what might seem like a good habit ultimately turns into a form of stagnation. What is good, however, is constant ascent—rising from one positive action to an even greater one. Such a process is not habitual though. It requires us to go against our natural tendencies, breaking free from automatic behaviors. This is no easy task. It demands tremendous effort. However, if we hold a higher, powerful goal in our sights as well as a supportive environment of teachers, friends, and texts that support such a motion, we can then rise above our habits by uniting around life’s meaning and purpose: to positively connect with threads of love and bestowal in our connection. The coupling of life’s ultimate goal with a strong supportive environment can then shift us into a continually creative mode of breaking free from our previous habitual stagnation and entering into increasingly greater connections of love and bestowal, aligning more and more with nature’s laws of love, bestowal, and positive connection in the process.
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