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    MIKETZ: STAYING COMPOSED

    Parashat Miketz tells the
    miraculous story of Yosef’s
    rise to power in Egypt. After
    having been falsely accused
    of assaulting his master’s
    wife, and sitting in jail for

    twelve years, he suddenly became the second-
    in-command in Egypt, as a result of his being

    brought from prison to interpret Pharaoh’s
    unusual dreams.
    The Midrash comments that Yosef was actually
    supposed to be released from prison two years
    earlier, when the Sar Hamashkim (cupbearer)
    was released from the prison as Yosef had
    predicted. Yosef had asked the Sar Hamashkim
    to mention him to Pharaoh and have him
    released from jail. Yosef made this request
    twice. Since he placed his trust in the Sar
    Hamashkim instead of trusting in Hashem, the
    Midrash says, Yosef was punished with an extra
    two years in prison – one year for each request.
    The Midrash is very difficult to understand. Is
    there anything wrong with asking for
    help? Yosef knew that the Sar Hamashkim was
    going to come before Pharaoh to serve him. Why
    shouldn’t he have asked the Sar Hamashkim to
    mention him to Pharaoh so he could be released
    from the dungeon?
    The Hazon Ish explained that what Yosef did
    was an act of desperation.

    There was no reason to believe that the Sar
    Hamashkim could help him. The Sar
    Hamashkim was just one of many, many royal
    servants, and he had been imprisoned for
    committing a crime. He was not a man of
    influence. There was little to no chance of him
    helping Yosef. Indeed, it took a great miracle –
    Pharaoh’s strange dreams and his strong need
    for an interpretation – for the Sar Hamashkim to
    help Yosef. But Yosef asked him because he was
    desperate, and when people are desperate, they
    act irrationally. For a man on Yosef’s level of
    faith in Hashem, this was considered a sin.
    This mistake made by Yosef sheds light on
    what might be his greatest quality – and one
    which we should all learn from.
    Throughout Yosef’s life, no matter what
    situation he found himself in, he remained
    composed. He acted with reason and with
    discipline, without losing control. This is true
    when he was a slave, when he was in prison, and
    when he was the vizier and his brothers came to
    buy grain. The commentators explain that Yosef
    knew he could not right away reveal his identity
    to them, because he suspected they still hated
    him and wanted to hurt him. Instead, he devised
    an intricate plan to have them gradually realize
    that they had made a mistake by selling him as a
    slave. He controlled his emotions throughout
    this painful process, retaining his composure at

    every step of the way. His only mistake was
    asking the Sar Hamashkim for help.
    How did Yosef develop this quality? What was
    the source of his extraordinary ability to remain
    calm and composed?
    The Midrash teaches that when Yosef was
    tempted by Potifar’s wife, he told her that he
    could not commit this sinful act because his
    grandfather, Yitzhak Avinu, was chosen by G-d
    as a sacrifice, and so he, too, might be chosen as
    a sacrifice. If he committed this grave sin, he
    would be invalid as a sacrifice. According to
    another opinion in the Midrash, Yosef said that
    G-d might choose to communicate with Him via
    prophecy, and he would be unable to receive
    prophecy if he committed this act.
    When we dream big, we have more discipline
    and self-control. If we have lofty ambitions, we
    have more at stake, and so we retain our
    composure.
    I’ve seen this many times with regard to
    finances. Ironically, wealthy people are
    sometimes more fiscally disciplined than people
    in debt. When a person already has a $10,000
    debt on his credit card which he cannot pay,
    he’ll be more reckless, figuring that another few
    hundred dollars of debt won’t make much of a
    difference. But when a person is financially
    secure, he is more careful, because he does not

    want to compromise their financial security
    Yosef dreamt big. He did not see himself as
    just a lowly slave. He saw himself as the son of
    Yaakov Avinu and the grandson of Yitzhak
    Avinu, as a member of a special family that has
    a special relationship with Hashem. And seeing
    himself this way enabled him to stay composed
    and act in a noble, dignified manner under all
    circumstances.
    Let’s always remember who we are – that we
    are the descendants of Avraham, Yitzhak and
    Yaakov, and of so many great individuals in our
    history. Let’s always remember that we belong
    to a special, ancient people, that we are
    Hashem’s beloved, chosen nation, that we are
    all princes and princesses. If we keep this in
    mind, we will act in a respectable, dignified and
    composed manner, even under stressful and
    difficult situations, as is befitting for members
    of Am Yisrael.