PARSHAS KI SETZEI 5778

STAM
TORAH
PARSHAS
KI SETZEI 5778
“ALTERED
SPIRIT”
Smartphone Detox: How To Power
Down In A Wired World
February 12, 2018 5:03 AM
ET
Heard on Morning Edition,
NPR
 “If the Russian psychologist Ivan Pavlov were
alive today, what would he say about smartphones? He might not think of them as
phones at all, but instead as remarkable tools for understanding how technology
can manipulate our brains…
“Pavlov
originally set off to study canine digestion. But one day, he noticed something
peculiar while feeding his dogs. If he played a sound — like a metronome or
buzzer — before mealtimes, eventually the sound started to have a special
meaning for the animals. It meant food was coming! The dogs
actually started drooling when they heard the sound, even if no food was
around.
Hearing the
buzzer had become pleasurable.
“That’s
exactly what’s happening with smartphones, says David Greenfield, a psychologist
and assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of
Connecticut.
When we hear a
ding or little ditty alerting us to a new text, email or Facebook post, cells
in our brains likely release dopamine — one of the chemical transmitters in the
brain’s reward circuitry. That dopamine makes us feel pleasure, Greenfield
says.
“That ping
is telling us there is some type of reward there, waiting for us,”
Greenfield says.
“Over time,
that ping can become more powerful than the reward itself. Research on animals
suggests dopamine levels in the brain can be twice as high when you anticipate
the reward as when you actually receive it.
“In other
words, just hearing the notification can be more pleasurable than the text,
email or tweet. “Smartphone notifications have turned us all into Pavlov’s
dogs,” Greenfield says.
“The
average adult checks their phone 50 to 300 times each day, Greenfield says. And
smartphones use psychological tricks that encourage our continued high usage —
some of the same tricks slot machines use to hook gamblers.
“For
example, every time you look at your phone, you don’t know what you’re going to
find — how relevant or desirable a message is going to be,” Greenfield
says. “So you keep checking it over and over again because every once in a
while, there’s something good there.” (This is called a variable ratio schedule of
reinforcement. Animal studies suggest it makes dopamine skyrocket in the
brain’s reward circuity and is possibly one reason people keep playing slot
machines.)
A growing
number of doctors and psychologists are concerned about our relationship with
the phone…
Consider a digital detox one day a week
Tiffany Shlain, a San Francisco Bay Area filmmaker, and her
family power down all their devices every Friday evening, for a 24-hour period.
“It’s
something we look forward to each week,” Shlain says. She and her
husband, Ken Goldberg, a professor in the
field of robotics at the University of California, Berkeley, are very tech
savvy. But they find they need a break.
“During
the week, [we’re] like an emotional pinball machine responding to all the
external forces,” Shlain says. The buzzes, beeps, emails, alerts and
notifications never end.
Shutting the
smartphones off shuts out all those distractions.
“You’re
making your time sacred again — reclaiming it,” Shlain says. “You stop
all the noise.”
“The days
felt much longer, and we generally feel much more relaxed,” says Goldberg.
When they started the digital break about nine years ago, which they call
“Tech Shabbat,” Saturdays suddenly felt very different. The family’s
not religious, she says, but they love the Jewish Sabbath ritual of setting
aside a day for rest or restoration.
Their daughter,
Odessa Shlain Goldberg, a ninth-grader, says the unplugging takes some of the
pressure off.
“There’s
no FOMO — fear of missing out — or seeing what my friends are doing,”
Odessa says. “It’s a family day.”
The teen says
the perspective she gains from the digital power-down carries over into the
rest of the week. For instance, she thinks differently about social media. She
realizes the social media feeds often make other people’s lives appear more
exciting or glamorous….
A
recent study of high school students, published in the
journal Emotion, found that too much time spent on digital
devices is linked to lower self-esteem and a decrease in well-being…
Parshas Ki Setzei contains the most mitzvos of any parsha in
the Torah. One of the common themes that runs through many of the mitzvos is
our obligation to live on an exalted level as a holy people. A Jew must
maintain his sense of holiness even in the throes of war, laws of morality, financial
honesty, judicial honesty, etc.
One of the most unusual topics the parsha discusses is that of
the Ben Sorer Umoreh – wayward and rebellious sin. In many ways it is an
enigma. The wayward and rebellious son is sentenced to death even though he has
not actually committed any capital sins at this point.
Ramban explains that he is culpable of disrespecting his
parents and of violating the command “You shall be holy”[1],
and “Him you shall serve and to Him shall you cleave”[2].
One who is a drunkard and glutton “does not know the way of G-d.” He is not
killed because of what he is destined to do at the end. It’s not only about the
actions one is doing, but also about where one is heading, and the path one is
on.
When delineating the steps towards teshuva, Rabbeinu Yonah[3]
writes that the second step of teshuva is to “forsake the sin”, i.e. stop
committing the iniquitous act: “That he forsakes his evil ways and resolve with
his entire heart to never again return to that path… as it says, “Let the
wicked one forsake his way”[4].”
In doing teshuva one must be wary of his direction, before he
can truly repent. Rabbeinu Yonah emphasizes that the penitent must not only
cease his sinful acts, but he must seek to leave the path which has led
him towards sin.
One of the challenges we struggle with is that we become used
to our lifestyles and don’t like altering our daily habits.
One of those areas which we are all aware needs improvement,
is our habituated lifestyle regarding overuse of technology.[5]
With this in mind, I present the following powerful lecture.
It is my personal notes from the derasha of Hagaon HaRav Aharon Feldman shlita,
Rosh Yeshiva of Ner Yisrael in Baltimore, MD.[6]
It was delivered at the Torah Umesorah Convention, Erev
Shabbos Kodesh Parshas Behar, May 2014/ Iyar 5774:
—————————
“עד מתי פתים
תאהבו פתי ולצים לצון חמדו להם וכסילים ישנאו דעת: תשובו לתוכחתי הנה אביעה לכם
רוחי אודיעה דברי אתכם”  (משלי
א:כב-כג)
“How long O simpletons, will you
love folly? And scoffers covet mockery for themselves? And fools hate
knowledge? Return to my reproof! Behold, I will express my spirit to you; I
will make my words known to you.” 
The Gra explains that when someone speaks devarim b’taylim[7] a ruach
of tumah[8]
envelops him, and it doesn’t let him rest until he speaks more devarim
b’taylim
.[9]
The next pasuk continues that if someone speaks words of
kedusha, it will fill him with a ruach kadosh[10]
which will not allow him to rest until he speaks more words of kedusha.
Why is speaking devarim b’taylim so serious that it
causes a person to become filled with ruach hatumah?
Kuzari
explains that all tumah is rooted in the loss of potential for life[11]. Tumah
of a corpse, niddah, a woman who gives birth, keri – all of these involve the
loss of life, or something that can promote life. A Metzora denigrates his tzuras
ha’adam
[12] and therefore also generates
tumah.[13]
What
is an adam/human?
Onkelos
defines Adam as “Ruach Mimalila” a spirit that speaks.[14] The
world believes that humans are thinking beings. But Torah defines Adam as a
speaking being. Why?
The
purpose of man in this world is to express his neshama in this world. That is
the sod ha’adam[15]! The expression of
one’s neshama occurs through one’s power of speech. One can take his thoughts –
which are developed in his neshama – and bring them to life in this world by
verbalizing those thoughts. If they are never verbalized they remain within one’s
neshama, and don’t enter the realm of the physical world.
The
Gra writes that one should use his ability of speech only for Torah and Chesed.[16]
That
is the purpose and motive of man – to bring his neshama into this world, which
happens through speaking words of Torah and words of chesed.
[Of
course, we must do acts of chesed as well. But animals also perform ‘acts’. The
ultimate expression of man’s humanness is through speaking Torah and
chesed, because speech is unique to man.]
That’s
why tumah sets in when one speaks devarim b’taylim. When one speaks
about nonsense he has destroyed part of his humanity; he has negated part of
his essence as a human.
Chesed
includes making a friend feel good, promoting friendship, givng chizuk, a kind
word, etc.
The
Chofetz Chaim was known to be a loquacious person, but he only used his words to
speak about Torah and chesed.
When
one speaks many devarim b’taylim he turns into a purposeless human being!
The
Mishna[17] states:
“I have found nothing better for the body than silence.” The Mishna doesn’t say
for the soul, but for the body. A body filled with devarim b’taylim
contains a damaging ruach hatumah which leads the person to perform more
aveiros (sins), which eventually destroy the person.
What
does this have to do with the Torah Umesorah Convention?
A
principal recently related to me that the biggest problem facing us today
involving youth and the internet – even more than looking at forbidden images –
is the proliferation and acceptance of engaging in devarim b’taylim. The
ruach hatumah it engenders is tremendous and is becoming an ever-deepening
issue.
Our
society is addicted to texting, and chatting endlessly. It’s a world engaged in
devarim b’taylim.
Someone
said in a girl’s seminary they classify level of frumkeit based on whether the
girl texts on Shabbos. Soon on wedding invitations they will write
“הכלה
הבתולה המהוללה השומרת [18]שבת”
The
Yetzer Hara has flared up in our time, much like a candle flares up just before
it becomes extinguished. We are almost at the time of Moshiach and the Yetzer
Hara is grasping mightily with his last surge of strength.
The
Yetzer Hara capitalizes on usage of internet and cell phone, destroying our
basic humanity, and the
רוח ממללה which is
supposed to be dedicated to Torah and chesed.
The
nisayon (test) of our time is devarim b’taylim!
How
can we overcome this?
The
best chinuch is by example. We have to be the role models. We have to stop
prattling on the phone and allowing ourselves to become subhuman.
It’s
appropriate that one of the major forums of social media is called Twitter. A
bird twitters and chirps incessantly. We too prattle and twitter endlessly
about needless information.
The
challenge is that our children want to imitate us!
We
can’t allow that ruach hatumah to invade our lives.
But
beyond that, in regards to actual education too, we must convey to our children
the idea of kedusha. Just as we are struggling to convey appropriately about kedushas
haguf[19]
, so must we teach
about kedushas hapeh[20]. It is a chiddush to
most children, but we must teach it.
When
I was a young boy my father told me[21] that
a person only has a certain amount of words to use during his lifetime, aside
from Torah and chesed. When he uses up that allotment he will die (perhaps at
least in a spiritual sense).
There
are ways to keep children away from phones, and we must employ those ways.
The
mouth is a davar kadosh. We need to be wary of that, and then our words
will influence others.
Mnay
years ago, I met Rav Avrohom Shkop z’l, the grandson of Rav Shimon Shkop zt’l.
Rav Avrohom related to me that as a bochur he had once accompanied his Zayde to
a meeting of Roshei Yeshiva to spread the building of Yeshivos Ketanos[22] in
Europe.
At
the gathering the elderly Chofetz Chaim addressed them. He quoted the pasuk we
recite in the haftorah of fast days:
[23]
“כי כאשר ירד הגשם והשלג מן השמים ושמה לא ישוב כי אם הרוה את
הארץ והולידה והצמיחה…”
“For
just as the snow and rain descend from heaven and will not return there, unless
it waters the earth and causes it to produce and sprout…”
Once
Hashem sends rain into this world it will not return unless it makes things
sprout and grow. That is how Hashem created the world – that the hashpa’ah
(influence) He dispatches to the world has an effect.
“כן יהיה דברי אשר יצא מפי לא ישוב אלי
ריקם”
“So
shall be My word that emanates from My Mouth…”
So
too the Word of Hashem which descends into this world must ‘give birth’ to something;
it must have an effect in this world.
Every
mechanech (educator) should know that every words he/she speaks in Torah must –
by ‘natural law’ – have an influence on the student who is listening. Never
give up or despair on the level of influence you can have on the student. It’s
a pesik raysha[24] that
it must have some effect.
We
can add to the Chofetz Chaim’s words that, how much of an effect one’s words
will have, is dependent upon the speaker’s level of kedushas hapeh!
The
prevalent addictive ruach hatumah nags at us and draws us down – taking along
with us our children and society.
The
only way to fight back is with kedushas hapeh and training ourselves and
our talmidim about it.[25]  


[1]
Vayikra 19:2
[2]
Devorim 13:5
[3]
Shaarei Teshuva 1:11
[4]
Yeshaya 55:7
[5] This
is not only a religious matter (although as Torah Jews it has even greater
importance), but something the world recognizes to be a serious challenge. This
is not only true with children and technology, but adults as well.
[6] I
hope I have presented the ideas properly.
[7]
Foolish speech/ Wasteful words
[8]
Spirit of impurity
[9] גר”א – “והטעם מפני שבכל דבר שאדם עושה נותנים לו רוח ממרום והוא
המסייע אותו לעשות דברים עוד כאלה וזה הרוח אינו נח ושקט עד שעושה עוד דברים כאלה
והוא נהנה מהם ומזה יש לו נחת רוח הן בדבר מצוה או בדבר עבירה וזהו עבירה גוררת
עבירה ומצוה גוררת מצוה וכל דבר עבירה שהיא גדולה גם הרוח הבא ממנה היא גדולה
ומתאוה יותר לעבירה עוד וכן בדבר מצוה גדולה בא רוח ממקום קדוש מאוד ומתאוה מאוד
למצוה ונהנה מאוד מחמת זה ממצות”
[10] Holy
Spirit
[11] הכוזרי (מאמר שני, ס’): “אחר בקשת הסליחה מאת הא-לוה ומתוך הימנעות מהכרעה – אני
אומר: ייתכן כי הצרעת והזיבות תלויות בטומאת המת, כי המוות הוא ההפסד הכללי לגוף,
והאבר המצורע דומה למת. וכן הזרע הנפסד, כי יש בו רוח חיים טבעי ובו ההכנה להיות
לטיפת דם ממנה יתהווה האדם – הפסדו של זרע זה הוא, אם כן, ניגוד לתכונת החיות ורוח
החיים
[12] Literally –
form as a human
[13] Tumas Sheretz is a separate category and needs a discussion
of its own
[14] Bereishis 2:7
[15] Secret of man
[16] He doesn’t mention tefillah because the Gemara Shabbos says
that tefillah is part of chesed.
[17] Avos 1:17; it is the statement of Rabbi Shimon ben Gamliel
[18] “The
praiseworthy kallah who is Shabbos observant”
[19] Physical
sanctity
[20] Oral sanctity
[21] I’m not sure what his source was
[22] Elementary
schools
[23] Yeshaya 55:10
[24] An inevitable
consequence
[25] Subsequent to the derasha, the Rosh
Yeshiva clarified to me that texting is the same as speaking in this regard
(Kesiva k’dibbur dami) and texting devarim b’taylim brings about the same ruach
hatumah as speaking them.

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