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    REFRAME YOUR LIFE

    During these
    extraordinary times for
    the Jewish people, there
    have been extraordinary
    stories, videos, and
    vignettes emerging.
    The challenge is to not
    only watch them,
    marvel at them, cry with them or forward
    them, but to be changed by them, to inculcate
    these extraordinary lessons and examples
    into our own lives.
    Among the moving videos that have been
    coming out are the ones of soldiers coming
    home and being reunited with children,
    spouses, parents, and siblings. It is almost
    impossible to watch them without tissues
    nearby. While Baruch Hashem, many such
    videos have made the rounds, last week a
    video went viral of a son coming home that
    stood out among the others.
    After long, hard days of fighting, a soldier
    came home to surprise his father who hadn’t
    seen him in 73 days. With a look of shock,
    joy, relief and gratitude on his face, the father
    jumps up, hugs his son, starts saying lo
    ma’amin, he can’t believe it, and while still in
    a tight embrace, proclaims Shema Yisrael
    Hashem Elokeinu Hashem Echad, Baruch
    Ha’Tov V’hameitiv. He can’t stop hugging
    his son, looks him up and down and says,
    “ha’kol shaleim,” you are whole, and then
    offers a tefilla, asking Hashem for all soldiers
    to come home whole to their mothers and
    fathers, and may He protect all of our
    precious soldiers.
    It’s impossible to see this video and not be
    reminded of last week’s parsha when Yaakov
    Avinu finally reunited with his cherished son
    Yosef HaTzadik and recites those same
    words of Shema. The viral video provides an
    image of our capacity to shower love and
    affection on a family member while
    simultaneously channeling the overwhelming
    feelings into gratitude to Hashem in the
    statement of Shema.
    That particular video and its Parsha
    connection are heartwarming and they caught
    the attention of so many. There is a different
    connection between something that went
    viral from Israel last week and the Parshios
    we are reading right now that is also powerful,
    almost unbelievable, that I think can inspire
    each of us in our own way.
    Yosef was marginalized, dismissed,
    ultimately sold into slavery, thrown into jail
    for a crime he never committed, waited
    twenty-two years to see his dreams realized.
    In the text of the Torah we don’t find him
    getting words of encouragement from
    Hashem, messages or signals from above to
    stay the course because it is all going to work
    out.
    He struggled, he suffered, he navigated an
    unfair world all alone, and yet, at the end of it

    all, when he reveals himself to his brothers,
    rather than bitterness, resentment, or revenge,
    he urges his brothers to join him in seeing
    that everything that happened was part of
    Hashem’s plan. He doesn’t hold his brothers
    accountable; he doesn’t seek to make them
    pay, he isn’t even lukewarm or cold to them.
    After all that happened, Yosef comforts his
    brothers, telling them “Al tei’atzvu,” don’t be
    sad or distressed, don’t blame yourselves,
    this was orchestrated from Above, from
    Hashem. He used you to send me here for the
    good of our greater family, our nation. This
    was Yosef’s message in last week’s Parsha
    when he first revealed himself, and continues
    into this one when Yaakov dies and his
    brothers feel threatened. Yosef doubles down,
    says he has no intention of seeking revenge,
    and repeating to them it is all from Hashem.
    אַל־תֵּעָצְבּ֗ו ו ְאַל־ ,words superhuman Those
    reproach or distressed be t’don ,י ִחַר בְּעֵינֵיכֶם
    yourselves, words we cannot believe
    someone so wronged could be capable of
    saying, were essentially repeated last week,
    granted in very different circumstances.
    After IDF troops mistakenly identified them
    as a threat, three hostages, Yotam Haim, Alon
    Shamriz and Samar Talalka, were shot and
    killed. They had escaped Hamas terrorists
    and were waving white flags, but instead a
    videoed reunion with their families set to
    music, with hugs, kisses and gratitude, these
    three of our hostages missing since October
    7th will not come home.
    The circumstances of the incident are still
    under investigation and suffice it to say none
    of us can imagine the decision-making in real
    time, the threats of urban warfare, and the
    immeasurable challenges of fighting terrorists
    with zero scruples. The pain of the families
    is enormous and the pain and guilt of those
    who made the mistake is also beyond and one
    would have seen them as contradictory or
    incompatible with one another.
    But last week, Iris Haim recorded a message
    to those soldiers essentially saying what
    Yosef said:
    I am Yotam’s mother. I wanted to tell you
    that I love you very much, and I hug you here
    from afar. I know that everything that
    happened is absolutely not your fault, and
    nobody’s fault except that of Hamas, may
    their name be wiped out and their memory
    erased from the earth. I want you to look after
    yourselves and to think all the time that you
    are doing the best thing in the world, the best
    thing that could happen, that could help us.
    Because all the people of Israel and all of us
    need you healthy. And don’t hesitate for a
    second if you see a terrorist. Don’t think that
    you killed a hostage deliberately. You have to
    look after yourselves because only that way
    can you look after us. At the first opportunity,
    you are invited to come to us, whoever wants
    to. And we want to see you with our own eyes

    and hug you and tell you that what
    you did — however hard it is to say
    this, and sad — it was apparently the
    right thing in that moment. And
    nobody’s going to judge you or be
    angry. Not me, and not my husband
    Raviv. Not my daughter Noya. And
    not Yotam, may his memory be
    blessed. And not Tuval, Yotam’s
    brother. We love you very much. And
    that is all.
    The soldiers sent her back a voice
    note, “We received your message, and
    since then we have been able to function
    again. Before that, we had shut down.” She
    sent back, “Amazing, that is what I wanted.”
    The next day, the opportunity came and the
    soldier from the battalion that had made the
    mistake visited Iris. She continued to repeat
    the same message Yosef told his brothers,
    be t’don ,אַל־תֵּעָצְבּ֗ו ו ְאַל־-י ִחַר בְּעֵינֵיכֶם
    distressed or reproach yourselves, this was
    Hashem’s plan.
    How? How did Yosef so long ago, and Iris
    in this war, find this superhuman strength and
    perspective?
    When Yosef first reveals himself to his
    ו ַיֹּ֗אמֶר אֲנִי יֹוסֵף- :them tells he ,brothers
    am I ,אֲחִיכֶם אֲשֶׁ ר־מְכַרְתֶּם- אֹתִי מִצְרָי ְמָה׃
    your brother Yosef, he whom you sold into
    Egypt. The Sfas Emes highlights Chazal’s
    (Shabbos 87) interpretation of the expression
    Hashem uses to Moshe regarding the Luchos:
    “asher shibarta, that you broke – Yasher
    Koach she’shibarta, good job for breaking
    them.” So too, the Sefas Emes says, here
    Yosef tells his brothers, “asher Machartem
    osi, that you sold me” – Yasher Koach
    she’machartem osi, shkoyach for selling me!
    In that moment, Yosef made a choice. He
    could focus on their actions, remain deeply
    injured and wounded, see himself as a
    complete victim, or he could zoom out the
    lens, see a bigger, more complete picture,
    choose what to do now and be the arbiter of
    his destiny. He chooses the latter by
    employing something cognitive therapy calls
    reframing. Reframing means that just like
    we can have a painting or picture and when
    we change the frame, it looks different, we
    see it differently even though the picture
    remains the same, so too in life, events and
    experiences can happen but we choose what
    frame to put around them and with that
    reframing, how we see them and how they
    make us feel.
    Rabbi Lord Sacks points out that while
    Yosef may have been the first to employ the
    reframing technique, it is what has enabled
    and empowered us to navigate nearly
    impossible circumstances since then. He
    writes:
    Viktor Frankl showed there is another way
    – and he did so under some of the worst
    conditions ever endured by human beings: in

    Auschwitz. As a prisoner there Frankl
    discovered that the Nazis took away almost
    everything that made people human: their
    possessions, their clothes, their hair, their
    very names. Before being sent to Auschwitz,
    Frankl had been a therapist specialising in
    curing people who had suicidal tendencies.
    In the camp, he devoted himself as far as he
    could to giving his fellow prisoners the will
    to live, knowing that if they lost it, they
    would soon die… Frankl writes that he was
    able to survive Auschwitz by daily seeing
    himself as if he were in a university, giving a
    lecture on the psychology of the concentration
    camp. Everything that was happening to him
    was transformed, by this one act of the mind,
    into a series of illustrations of the points he
    was making in the lecture.
    In his Tanya, the Alter Rebbe, Rav Shneur
    Zalman of Liadi, emphasizes that if we
    change the way we think, we will change the
    way we feel and if we change how we feel,
    we will transform how we behave. Rav
    Shlomo Wolbe points out that the Rambam
    places the topic of Middos, character, in
    Hilchos De’os, the Laws of Mindsets,
    because our actions are all rooted in our
    mindset.
    Yosef was trying to get his brothers to see
    their situation and their picture with the new
    frame he had placed on it. He had made the
    choice to no longer see himself as a man
    wronged by his brothers. Instead, his life was
    framed by a mission from Hashem.
    Reframing allowed Yosef to live and function
    without anger, without outrage or a thirst for
    revenge. Framing the picture this way
    enabled him to forgive his brothers. As Rabbi
    Sacks says, the frame transformed negative
    feelings about the past into a focused mission
    about the future.
    The video of the father hugging his son and
    saying Shema is amazing, but the voice note
    of the mother who will never see her son
    again saying don’t blame yourselves is truly
    extraordinary.
    If Iris can reframe the accidental killing of
    her son, what can we reframe in our lives?
    How can we choose to interpret something or
    the behavior of someone differently? How
    can we see the picture of our lives, not as
    victims of the past, but the arbiters of our
    future?