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Something I've Been Building
A few months ago I started this community because I wanted a space for people who are quietly doing the inner work. People who know how they want to show up but feel the gap between that and how they actually live day to day. The content I've been sharing here, the posts, The Gap mini-course, the ideas about what it looks like to actually live what you believe, all of that has been building toward something. For the past few years I've been developing a method. Not more information. Not more ideas to add to the pile. A way to actually practice living your values on the moments of your real life. I built it because I needed it myself. I spent years teaching principles I deeply believed in and then going home and not living most of them. I knew the gap was there. I just didn't have a practical way to close it. That's what A Calmer Way to Live is. An 8-week transformational program rooted in Jewish wisdom, designed to close the gap between what you believe and how you actually show up. Two lessons a week, a live group call, and a daily micro-practice that takes just a few minutes but changes how you move through your day. Cohort 1 starts July 6 and is limited to 30 people. I put together a full overview with all the details (see the flyer below). If you want a taste of what we'll be exploring together, start with The Gap, a free 5-part mini-course in our Classroom: https://www.skool.com/calmer/classroom/e3c8aa7d If this speaks to you, I would love to have you. You can apply here: jewishcenter.info/calmer And if you have questions, ask them right here. That's what this community is for.
Something I've Been Building
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WELCOME!
Years ago, I was teaching Jewish wisdom to hundreds of people. I was coaching, writing, and giving classes. And on the outside, it looked like I had it together. But inside? I'd lose my calm with my family over small things. I'd get defensive the moment someone challenged me. I'd walk away from conversations with my kids knowing I hadn't been fully present. The hardest part was that I knew better. I knew exactly how I should respond. I grew up with strong Jewish values that were supposed to help me navigate life…but when life pressed my buttons, none of it was there for me. So there was a gap between what I believed and how I actually lived. It was very frustrating. Most of the successful, thoughtful Jewish people I know are walking around with the same gap. They've learned a lot. They believe deeply. But their beliefs and their daily experience feel like two different lives. That's why I created A Calmer Way to Live. To help each other bridge that gap between our head and our life. I’m glad you are here. Welcome. Want to go deeper? Click Here and take my mini-course, The Gap
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What the Rebbe Taught Me About Worry
Today is the yahrtzeit of the Lubavitcher Rebbe. Here's what I want to share with you. Years ago I was going through a stretch where I was anxious about nearly everything. Work, family, finances, whether I was doing enough, whether I was enough. It wasn't dramatic from the outside. I was functioning fine. But inside I was running a constant loop of worry that never actually solved anything. During that time I came across a letter the Rebbe had written to someone in a very similar place. And instead of giving this person a long theological explanation, the Rebbe said something startlingly simple. He told them that worry itself was the problem. Not the situation. The worry. Because worry drains the exact energy you need to actually do something about the situation. It sounds almost too obvious. But when I sat with it, I realized I had never separated the two things. I thought worrying about a problem was the same as working on it. It isn't. Worrying is just suffering about something without moving. Action is what moves you forward. The Rebbe's approach was always the same. Don't sit in the heaviness. Do one thing. Give charity. Learn something. Help someone. Take a practical step. He clarified that action could reach places that thinking and worrying never could. That principle is baked into everything we do in this community. When you're stuck in your head, the answer is almost never to think harder. It's to do something. If this resonates, check out "How to Dispel Anxiety and Worry" in our classroom, where I teach one of the Rebbe's actual letters on this topic: https://www.skool.com/calmer/classroom/deace024?md=f78a8411f6b1453fa9cc6abdf947fde4 May the Rebbe's teachings continue to be a source of guidance and strength for all of us.
The Rebbe's Most Counterintuitive Advice
One more thought connected to the Rebbe's yahrtzeit before Shabbos. There's a teaching the Rebbe returned to again and again that I think is one of the most counterintuitive ideas in Jewish wisdom. He called it "tracht gut vet zain gut," which translates loosely to "think good and it will be good." When I first heard it, honestly, it sounded like positive thinking in a nice Yiddish wrapper. But the more I studied it, the more I realized it was something much deeper. The Rebbe wasn't saying to ignore reality or pretend everything is fine. He was saying that how you hold a situation in your mind actually affects what you're able to do with it. When you approach a challenge convinced it's going to crush you, you show up differently than when you approach it believing there's a way through. Not because the situation changed, but because you changed. Your clarity changes. Your courage changes. Your willingness to take the next step changes. I've watched this play out in my own life more times than I can count. The moments where I showed up with genuine confidence that things could work out, I made better decisions, I was calmer with the people around me, and I had more energy to actually do what needed to be done. The moments where I was convinced it was all falling apart, I usually made things worse. This isn't about faking optimism. It's about understanding that your inner posture shapes your outer reality more than most of us realize. If you want to go deeper on this one, I did a full class on it in the classroom: "Think Good, Celebrate Before the Miracle": https://www.skool.com/calmer/classroom/deace024?md=a54726cac5864781ad6aba7cc0718550 Have a beautiful Shabbos, everyone.
Tomorrow Is the Rebbe's Yahrtzeit
Tomorrow marks the yahrtzeit of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson. I want to share something about why his teachings are so central to everything we're building in this community. I grew up around the Rebbe's influence. His letters, his talks, his way of guiding people. But it took me years to realize what made his approach so different from anything else I'd encountered. Most teachers I learned from gave me ideas to think about. The Rebbe gave people something to do. Not eventually. Not when you feel ready. Now. Today. Something small, something specific, something real. He didn't wait for people to figure themselves out before asking them to act. He understood that the acting itself is what changes you. There's a line that kept showing up in his letters that I've never been able to shake. He would tell people not to be overwhelmed by the size of the problem. Not because the problem wasn't real, but because the overwhelm itself was the thing stopping them from doing the one next thing they could do. I think about that constantly. How often do I let the size of what needs to change paralyze me from doing the one thing I could do right now? Tomorrow I'll share more about what this day means. But for today, I want to leave you with this: If you've never explored the Rebbe's writings, we have a full course of his letters right here in the classroom. A good place to start is "Conquering Self Before Conquering the World": https://www.skool.com/calmer/classroom/deace024?md=9b9061ebcf9943e1b8867d9a712b67eb What's one thing you've been putting off because the bigger picture feels too overwhelming?
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A Calmer Way to Live
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Less anxiety. Less inner pressure. A steadier way to live.
Peace, clarity, and meaning through lived spiritual values.
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