
דְּאָגָה בְלֶב אִישׁ יַשְׁחֶנָּהIt is written: “If there is worry in a man’s heart, he should minimize it (yashchenah).” וְאָמְרוּ רַזַ"ל שְׁנֵי פֵּרוּשִׁיםOur Sages interpret this in two ways: יַסִּיחֶנָּה מִדַּעְתּוֹ(a) he should take his mind off it (yasichenah, spelled with the letter samech), יְשִׂיחֶנָּה לַאֲחֵרִיםor (b) he should relate it to others (yesichenah, spelled with the letter sin). וּפֵרֵשׁ הַצֶּמַח צֶדֶקOn this the Tzemach Tzedek commentedלַאֲחֵרִים רַק בְּגוּףthat “others” refers to people who are only physically separate from the speaker,אֲבָל מְאוּחָדִים אִתּוֹ עִמּוֹbut are united with him in spirit,שֶׁמַרְגִּישִׁים אֶת עִנְיָנוֹsensitive to his concerns.Text and Translation courtesy of Sichos in EnglishFor questions and follow-up: cablejew@gmail.com
Podzilla Summary coming soon
Sign up to get notified when the full AI-powered summary is ready.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.

Hayom Yom 2 Tammuz - Loving your fellow Jew is the Gateway to prayer

Hayom Yom 1 Tammuz - Self-sacrifice appropriate for Torah scholars

Hayom Yom 30 Sivan - Spirituality and physicality are intrinsically opposites

Hayom Yom 29 Sivan - This alone constitutes the life & existence of all creations
Free AI-powered recaps of The daily Hayom Yom with Rabbi Yosef Katzman and your other favorite podcasts, delivered to your inbox.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.