07 Jun PARSHAS NASSO: DECLUTTERING OUR LIVES
All of us, I imagine,
find life stressful.
But at least for most
of us, it doesn’t have
to be this way. The
Torah in Parashat Naso discusses the
laws of a nazir – the person who
decides to raise his spiritual level by
spending a period of time – usually a
month – refraining from wine. After
he completes this period, the Torah
commands¨†–†דעומ†להוא†חתפ†לא†ותוא†איבי
he is required to come to the Bet
Ha’mikdash and bring special
sacrifices. Rashi points out that the
Torah does not say that the nazir
should come to the Bet Ha’mikdash,
but†rather†ותוא†איבי†–†he†is†broughtÆ
Rashi†explains†this†to†mean¨†תא†איבי
ומצע†–†“he†brings†himselfÆ”†This
sounds like a very strange thing to
say. Why doesn’t the Torah simply
state that the nazir comes? Why is the
nazir†described†as†“bringing
himself”øøø†The†answer¨†I†believe¨†is
that after observing this period, the
nazir is able to find himself, his
essence, his core, who he really is.
Marketers make us believe that our
lives will be so much better if we
purchase whatever it is they’re selling,
go wherever it is they want us to pay to
go, or do whatever it is they want us to
pay to do. Maybe in some situations
this is true, but most of the time, it’s
wrong. Very wrong. As our Rabbis
teach†in†Pirkeh†Avot¨†הברמ†םיסכנ†הברמ
הגאד†–†the†more†possessions†a†person
has, the more worries he has. And
they really meant it. The more we
have, the more we need to worry
about. The more cars we have, the
more trips to the garage we need to
make. The more homes we own, the
more leaks and electrical problems we
need to deal with. The more luxury
trips we take, the more we need to
pack and rush to the airport. That’s not
to say it’s wrong to purchase more
than one car or home, or to go on
vacations. The point is that all these
things come with a price beyond the
dollar amount. Having extra things
we don’t need, and doing extra things
we don’t need to do, clutter our lives.
They give us more stuff to think about
and worry about. They distract us.
They take us away from the things that
matter the most. The definition of
“holiness”†is†knowing†what†one†needs
and what he does not need, what
belongs in his life and what doesn’t,
what deserves more attention and
what deserves less or no attention.
This is what a nazir wants to do. He
takes the courageous step of saying
“no”†to†things†he†doesn’t†need¨†and
that would distract him from the
things he does need. The nazir is the
person†who†has†the†guts†to†say¨†“I
don’t need the latest iPhone. I don’t
need to make such a fancy wedding. I
don’t need to go away on vacation. I
don’t need to renovate again. I don’t
need another suit or outfit. All these
things make life complicated for no
reasonƆI’m†happier†living†simplyÆ”
The nazir is the person who recognizes
that a lean life is a happy life, that less
so often is more, that keeping things
simple eliminates unnecessary stress
and†makes†life†calmerƆÆומצע†תא†איבי
The nazir gets rid of the clutter in his
life so he can find himself, who he
really is, what’s really important. Let
us follow the nazir’s example, and
work to declutter our lives, because
having more does not mean we’re
better off – and often leads to more
stress and less happiness.