Everybody's a Dreamer – Everybody's a Star
Insights from this week's portion - Kedoshim
* This Week's RRRR (Relevant Religious Reference): “...Love
your Neighbor
like yourself – I am the Lord” – Genesis, 25:30
* This Week's SSC (Suitable Secular Citation): “All the
world's indeed a
stage, and we are merely players, performers and portrayers, each
another's audience
outside the gilded cage” – Rush (lyrics by Neil Peart), paraphrasing
Shakespeare
from “As you Like it”
OUR VERY OWN TRUMAN SHOW
Is it even possible? Is it remotely realistic to presume that I am
capable of truly
“loving my neighbor as I love myself”? After all, I exist around the
clock in
my own body, well aware of the fact that I must function as my own “Primary
Caretaker”. And Jewish wisdom itself acknowledges that “if I'm not for
myself
then who will be for me?!”2 Perhaps we can suggest that the key to
fulfilling the
neighbor-loving mandate – at least in part – is to learn to see others as
being
just as real as we are. But even this is a tall order, as we naturally
walk around
with the entitled sense of being the Star Protagonist in our own Truman
Show,
perceiving the world to be our set and all others to be “extras” in our
movie.
THE VIRGINIA TECH MASSACRE AND MASS KILLER NARCISSISM
The twisted extreme of viewing others as “extras” finds tragic expression
in the
self-absorbed behavior of mass murderers. Our nation recently observed the
anniversary of the horrific Virginia Tech Massacre – and has tragically
experienced other massacres since – which ominously occurred on Yom
HaShoah, the
very day that we recall the many millions of beloved lives that were
destroyed by
evil in the Holocaust. As David Von Drehle writes in a Time Magazine
article about
the Virginia college campus murderer Cho Seung-Hui (entitled “It's all
about
him”3): “Only a narcissist could decide that his alienation should be
underlined
in the blood of strangers... Charles Whitman playing God in his Texas clock
tower...Harris and Klebold in their theatrical trench coats – they're all
stars in
the cinema of their self-absorbed minds. Freud explained narcissism as a
failure to
grow up. All infants are narcissists, he pointed out, but as we grow, we
ought to
learn that other people have lives independent of our own. It's not their
job to
please us, applaud for us or even notice us — let alone die because we're
unhappy.”
COMMANDMENTS 1 & 6: “I AM THE LORD...” & “THOU SHALT NOT MURDER”
When we view the tablets of the “10 Commandments” 4 as two columns of
five, we
see that there is a shared essence between commandments on the same row
(i.e. 1 & 6,
2 & 7, etc.). For our purposes, the parallel between 1 & 6, “I am the Lord
your
G-d” & “You shall not murder”, is replete with crucial insight. When a
person
internalizes the concept expressed by “I am the Lord your G-d – and
understands
that humans are “created in the image of G-d”, possessing their own spark
of
divinity and inner dignity – then the idea of murder is not even a remotely
reasonable option to entertain 5 (we'll discuss below how recognizing
humanity's
divine sparks can improve us in matters much closer to home, since most of
us are
hopefully not overly tempted to murder).
This is a major reason that when people want to rationalize murder –
whether the
genocide of a nation or the cold-blooded killing of an individual – the
murderer
must first “dehumanize” his victim. Since it is a person's divine dignity
that
makes him or her “human”, the murderer must mentally strip away the
recognition
that their victims are created in the image of G-d, with their own
significance and
greatness. G-d is the ultimate Star, the ultimate Protagonist – the
ultimate
Being that can be described as “Real”. But once we narcissistically
remove the
recognition of G-dliness in others, we have deluded ourselves into
believing that
they are not as real as I am, and we have relegated them to the roles of
“extras”. It seems that this is why the mandate in this week's Portion to
“love your neighbor like yourself” concludes with the declaration of “I am
the
Lord” (see this week's RRR above).
LOVING YOUR NEIGHBOR BY “KEEPIN' IT REAL”
When we clearly recognize the divine spark in others, we shield ourselves
from far
more than the harboring of murderous tendencies. The more we perceive the
“realness” of others – i.e. the more we assign significance, goodness, and
intrinsic value to them – the less we will be capable of causing them any
level of
harm: whether it's embarrassment, property damage, harm through negative
speech or
hurtful looks, physical injury, loss through dishonest business dealings,
etc.
One way to perceive another's realness is to visualize ourselves and
others as being
primarily spiritual beings. Why? Because to the extent that I identify
myself and
others as being physical, since matter is finite and resources are
limited, I may
feel the need to compete for the limited resources. 6 But to the extent
that I
identify myself and others as being spiritual – existing in a realm of
infinity in
which resources are not limited – I will not feel the competitive need to
view
others as being “extras”. May we all merit to embrace others and to
empathize
with their plights as being real! If we train ourselves to see what other
people's
movies are all about, perhaps we can land genuine roles as neighbor-loving,
supporting actors and actresses.
Have a Wonderful Shabbos! Love, Jon & The Chevra
1. From the song “Celluloid Heroes” by The Kinks
2. “Ethics of the Fathers”, 1:14
3. Time Magazine April 19, '07 – article entitled “It's all about Him”
4. “10 commandments”: in quotes b/c the “Aseres HaDibros” (often called the
“10 commandments”) is accurately translated “10 Statements”, which consist
of more than 10 commandments
5. Note: this is certainly not to imply the converse: that “atheists” are
likely
to murder or that all “religious” people will refrain from murder. That
would
be an absurd contention. It merely implies that a person who truly sees
the image
of G-d in another is incapable of murdering that person in cold blood.
6. From Living Each Day, by Rabbi Dr. Abraham J. Twerski
Text Copyright © 2009 by Jon Erlbaum and
Torah.org