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    EIKEV: GETTING ALONG WITH OTHERS

    A counsel for joy
    is to learn to get
    along with others.
    This will save you
    from much pain and
    hardships.
    Reb Avraham
    Genachovsky zt’l
    once said to
    someone who
    recently became
    rosh yeshiva. “Do
    you know what the job of a rosh
    yeshiva is? His job is to swallow nails
    and not let it be known to anyone that
    he swallowed them.” And he gave
    him a brachah that he shouldn’t need
    to swallow too many nails.
    He meant to say that there will be
    hardships, people will give him a
    hard time, and he should accept and
    swallow the troubles. No one should
    know of his struggles, and he should
    be kind and pleasant to everyone.

    He said this about being a rosh
    yeshiva, but the rule applies to every
    parent. There are things parents must
    swallow. Children aren’t perfect; they
    don’t always behave as their parents
    want. Sometimes, parents should be
    mechanech, speak to them, etc. But
    often, the parents should just swallow
    and look the other way.
    And it isn’t solely about being a rosh
    yeshiva, teacher, or parent. The same
    lesson is needed for all relationships
    between people. Neighbors can be
    difficult, and family can be difficult.
    There are many nails that we need to
    swallow, but that is the best way.
    Rebbe Aharon of Belz zt’l once
    stooped down to enter a taxi and
    commented, “If you want to go
    anywhere in this world, you must
    bend your head.”
    Baalei mussar tell the following
    parable:

    There was a deer whose
    antlers were constantly
    getting caught in the branches
    and the foliage. One day the
    deer decided it was time to
    remove all the branches. It
    began bucking the trees with
    its antlers and hind feet to
    clear the forest from all
    deterrents so it could run
    freely. A wise animal stood
    by watching and said to the
    deer, “Even if you work your
    entire life, you won’t succeed in
    knocking down all the trees. Instead, I
    advise you to cut off your antlers, and
    then you can run through the forest
    unimpeded.
    The nimshal is, instead of trying to
    improve others, change yourself.
    Train yourself not to let things bother
    you. That is a better approach than
    trying to train others.
    Eliyahu HaNavi z’l once said to

    Rebbe Dovid of Lelov z’l: “When
    trying to place two planks side by
    side, and one of them has a knob
    jutting out, instead of cutting out the
    knob, make an indention in the other
    plank to make room for the knob.”
    This means don’t try changing others,
    rather become a person with a heart
    that can accept other people’s
    idiosyncrasies. Let the other person
    have his way, and you can run through
    life unhindered.