Holy Days
10 Ways to Destroy Your Life
By Yosef Y. Jacobson
The ten famous plagues that are recorded in the Torah (Ex.
How are we then to apply the remote story of the ten plagues to our
personal lives in the year 2003?
Anatomy of the Soul
The Kabbala teaches that every human soul is comprised of ten points of
energy, ten characteristics that make up its inner "personality". The
first three form the super-conscious identity of the soul and its cognitive
powers. The final seven constitute the emotional persona of the soul.
These ten characteristics, also known as the ten sefirot, ten emanating
lights, are depicted in Kabbala in the following manner:
Hebrew Name English
Name
Keter The
super-conscious
Chochma Conception
Bina Intelligence
Chesed Love
Gevura Rejection
Tiferet Compassion
Netzach Ambition
Hod Submission
Yesod Bonding
Malchut Confidence
Every one of us has been given a choice in life. We may either refine
these ten attributes so that they express our inner divine light, or we may
pervert and corrupt these very attributes by using them in unhealthy and
immoral ways. Ancient
In our personal lives,
Plague Attribute
Blood Confidence
Frogs Bonding
Swarm Ambition
Epidemic Compassion
Boils Rejection
Hail Love
Locusts Intelligence
Darkness Conception
Death of Super-Conscious
First-Born
Blood - Destructive Confidence
The first plague, in which the
The
Frogs - Cold Intimacy
The second plague, in which swarms of frogs inundated
Frogs are cold-blooded amphibious creatures that hatch in cold environments. Female frogs usually deposit their eggs into water where they hatch into tadpoles. Some frogs attach their eggs to water plants; others lay the eggs in damp moss or attach them to the limbs or leaves of trees overhanging the water.
Frogs reflect…an emotional state of apathy, detachment and coldness…
Land-dwelling frogs deposit their eggs in cool, moist holes. Due to
this, and to the fact that eggs deposited in this fashion receive no parental
protection, frogs reflect in the Kabbala an emotional state of apathy,
detachment and coldness. This condition robs a human being of the ability to
experience genuine emotional intimacy with any other person - a spouse, a child
or a friend.
(This brings to mind an anecdote. A man was once asked, "What is
the difference between ignorance and apathy?" To which he replied, "I don't know and I
don't care.")
Lice - Unhealthy Submission
The third plague, in which the dust of
"Egyptian" submission…crushes one's spirit and dulls its zest for life…
Destructive "Egyptian" submission is a humility that crushes
one's spirit and dulls its zest for life. In this type of submission, where one
thinks of himself as a worthless inconsequential creature, the perception of
the self as useless dust develops into lice that demoralize and debase one's
life. Like lice, this type of humility sucks out a person's blood, depriving
him of his vitality and energy-flow. The holy Rabbi Aaron of Karlin put it in these words: "Depression is not a
sin; yet what depression does, no sin can do."
Devouring Beasts - Wild Ambition
The fourth plague, in which a swarm of devouring beasts attacked
Epidemic - Sly Compassion
The fifth plague, in which an epidemic annihilated the Egyptians'
cattle, served as the physical embodiment of the attribute of sly compassion,
which, like an epidemic, harms people silently and inconspicuously.
What is compassion? The Kabbala states that compassion is more powerful
and enduring than love. Love usually overlooks the flaws of a beloved one;
therefore, when flaws do emerge, they may weaken the love, if not destroy it
totally. Compassion, on the other hand, takes into consideration all the flaws
of the individual and extends a helping heart and hand notwithstanding. This is
moral compassion, the ability of a soul to experience the pain and the needs of
its fellow man.
"Egyptian" compassion is sly, shrewd and deceitful, where the seducing quality of compassion is used in order to exploit people's weaknesses for selfish purposes and destructive goals. When one uses compassion in this well-finessed manner, it inflicts damage on a person in the silent deadly way of an epidemic.
[The point becomes clearer when the epidemic plague is contrasted with
the plague of hail that also annihilated the cattle of
Boils - Brutal Rejection
The sixth plague, in which embers from a hot furnace were hurled over
the land developing into boils on the skin of the Egyptian population, is the
physical symbol of cruel rejection. The Hebrew term for this plague, shchin, implies heat
Fire surges upwards, moving away from earth…
In Kabbala, fire embodies the soul's capacity to reject. Just like fire,
an act or verbal rebuff may "scorch" or even demolish the one who is
rejected. An additional connection between fire and rejection lies in the fact
that fire surges upwards, moving away from earth. Rejection too constitutes an
act of traveling inward and upward into one's own world, removing one self from
the people and the events around.
Yet a healthy soul needs to know how to reject just as it must know how
to embrace. One is often called upon to refuse a destructive urge, to sever an
unhealthy relationship, to say no to a spoiled child or an unethical business
offer. That is healthy fire. It is a fire that destroys the negative in order
to build the positive.
However, when our inner capacity for rejection turns into hate,
bitterness and cruelty, the embers of our soul become a destructive force. Like
boils, they infect our lives and the lives of people around us.
Hail - Frozen Love
The seventh plague, in which produce-destroying hail descended upon
Yet, a man who finds himself in "Egyptian" bondage knows only an icy love, a love that is based entirely on self-seeking motives and self-centered considerations.
This person's rain-like flow of love becomes cold and frozen like hail…
This person's rain-like flow of love becomes cold and frozen like hail, harming his loved ones instead of nurturing them.
[This explains the mystical significance behind the fact that the hail
that fell in
Seven and Three - From Heart to Mind
It is no coincidence that the first seven plagues are recorded in one
section of the Bible (Vayera), while the final
three plagues are recorded in another (Bo).
The first seven plagues - blood, frogs, lice, devouring beasts,
epidemic, boils and hail - reflected the Egyptian perversion of the seven
emotions - confidence, bonding, submission, ambition, compassion, rejection and
love.
The last three plagues - locust, darkness and the death of the
first-born - represent the more severe corruption of the intellectual faculties
and super-conscious dimension of the Egyptian soul. When one's emotions and
instincts are impaired, the sane and objective mind offers hope for healing.
Yet when one's mind starts playing ugly games, the path toward recovery becomes
painstakingly challenging.
Locust - Perverted Intelligence
The eighth plague, in which invading locusts left no greenery in their path, serves as a symbol of the destructive consequences of a corrupted mind.
The ability of intellectual inquiry… may serve as a tool to rationalize every evil…
The ability of intellectual inquiry and scrutiny remains the singular
most precious gift of the human race. It allows us to explore the universe,
improve our lives and discover the higher moral calling of the human family.
Yet the very same power may serve as a tool to rationalize every evil
practiced under the sun and to justify every destructive lifestyle or habit.
Like the locust that consumed all existing plants of
Darkness - A Locked Mind
The ninth plague, in which a thick darkness enveloped all of
When one is arrogant and smug, he deprives his mind of the ability to
experience illumination, forcing himself to remain in darkness, constricted
forever to a narrow vision of life.
Death of Firstborn - Death of Identity
The tenth and final plague, the death of every Egyptian first-born, was
the most devastating of all. It reflected the fact that the Egyptian abuse of
the soul did not only affect its conscious faculties, but went on to distort
and destroy its super-conscious forces as well.
In the Kabbala, the first-born is symbolic of the inital
instincts and motives of a soul that lie beneath the surface of the conscious
self. That dimension of the personality is naturally more difficult to violate
because it is hidden and inaccessible. But a lifestyle of ongoing addiction and
abuse will ultimately bring about the death of the first-born - the death of
the super-conscious element of one's soul.
This was the final "bullet" that put an end to the vicious
cycle of Egyptian addiction and abuse. With this plague the Jewish people were
set free and were well on their way to receive the Ten Commandments.
What are the Ten Commandments? They correspond to the ten plagues.(See Seder Hayom, Geulat Olam
- Haggada by the Chida, Sfat Emet and Shem
Meshmuel, parashat Veira.)
Just as the plagues reflect the perversion of the ten faculties of the soul,
the Ten Commandments represent the path of spiritual healing in each of these
ten faculties, allowing them to express the harmony and splendor of man's divine
essence.
Note: Drawn from the following sources: Zohar Vol. 2 29a. Shaar Hapasukim (by the Arizal), parashat
Veira. Sedur Reb Yaakov Emdin, Haggada Shel
Pesach. Yalkut Reuvani,
parashat Veira. Minchat
Eliyahu, chapter 24. Pri Tzaddik, parashat Bo. The psychological
interpretation of the soul's faculties in their constructive and destructive
patterns is based on the writings of Chabad Chassidism.
Copyright © 2002 by
Yosef Y. Jacobson, with gratitude to Shmuel Levin for his editorial assistance.
Rabbi Yosef Y. Jacobson is an acclaimed teacher, lecturer and writer, based in the New York area. For a copy of his speaking schedule, or to order his audio tapes or subcribe to his weekly essay, contact: YYJacobson@aol.com.