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    LAG B’OMER & GRATITUDE

    Years ago, someone
    gave me a Tony Robbins
    cd to listen to. I was
    excited to hear what one
    of the most inspirational
    people of modern times
    would have to say and how it could change my
    life for the better. He started his talk by saying
    that he has the secret to both happiness and
    success. If you follow his advice and begin each
    and every day of your life exactly as he
    prescribes, he can all but guarantee you will
    find yourself both happier, and achieving your
    goals and dreams.
    I was very eager to hear what his secret is.
    What Tony Robbins said is correct, but for me,
    and for you, and for Jewish 3-year-olds around
    the world, it was nothing new. The secret to
    happiness and to achieving success, he said, is
    to start every day of your life by expressing
    gratitude. As soon as you wake up, before doing
    anything else, say thank you. Be grateful and
    appreciative for being alive, having a roof over
    your head, having your health if you are lucky,
    your family, etc.
    He continued that it isn’t enough to think
    appreciatively, but you need to start your day by
    verbalizing and actually saying thank you out
    loud. If you wake up with an attitude of
    gratitude, the rest of your day is guaranteed to
    be successful and happy.
    What Tony Robbins is teaching in the 21st
    century, Judaism has taught since its inception
    thousands of years ago. From an early age, we
    teach our children to wake up saying Modeh ani
    lefanecha, I am grateful to you God for the fact
    that I woke up, that I am alive to see another
    day, for the wonderful blessings in my life and
    for my relationship with You. It has been
    inculcated within us from our youth that we
    don’t wake up feeling entitled, deserving and
    demanding. Rather, we wake up with a deep and
    profound sense of gratitude, appreciation and
    thanks.
    In my experience, Tony Robbins is right. How
    we start our day has an incredible impact on
    how the rest of it will go. This week we will
    celebrate Lag B’Omer, the 33rd day of the
    Omer. Each day of the Omer is characterized by
    another kabbalistic attribute. Lag B’Omer is
    Hod sh’b’hod, the glory of glory, reflecting our
    appreciation of God’s greatness and glory. The
    Hebrew word hod can be understood as coming
    from the same word as hodu, or modeh, meaning
    thanks. Lag B’Omer is a day characterized as
    “thankfulness within thankfulness,” or a day to
    celebrate gratitude.
    Lag B’Omer is a day characterized as
    “thankfulness within thankfulness,” or a day to
    celebrate gratitude.
    The Chassam Sofer, Rav Moshe Sofer says
    that the miraculous manna that fell from Heaven
    began to descend on Lag B’Omer. On the first
    day, the manna was undoubtedly greeted with
    great enthusiasm and appreciation, but as time
    went on and there was an increasing expectation
    the heavenly bread would descend, it became
    much easier to take it for granted and to forget
    to be appreciative for it at all. Therefore Lag
    B’Omer is a time that we identify and say thank
    you for all of the blessings that regularly

    descend into our lives, but unfortunately, like
    the manna, that we take for granted.
    It is so easy to fall into a sense of entitlement
    and to forget to be grateful. Why should I thank
    my children’s teachers? They’re just doing their
    job. Why should I be so appreciative to the
    waiter, or the custodian, or the stewardess? Isn’t
    that what they are supposed to do? When was

    the last time we said thank you to whomever
    cleans our dirty laundry? Do we express
    gratitude regularly to our spouse who shops,
    cooks dinner, or who worked all day to pay for
    dinner, or in some cases did both?
    As we celebrate Lag B’Omer, let’s not just say
    modeh ani in the morning and then quickly
    transition to feelings of entitlement. Let’s

    remember to say thank you to the people who
    do extraordinary things in our lives. But even
    more importantly, let’s especially express
    gratitude to the people who do the ordinary
    things that make our lives so filled with blessing.