Category: Seder
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Seder Meditation on Shevuot 12
APPLICATION OF THE MIDDAH OF SEDER TO SHEVUOT 12 Torah Context Recap: Mussar Middah: Seder – Deep Structure Over Superficial Uniformity Stable Anchors: Dynamic Assessment: Seder as Alignment of Systemic Layers The Torah uses multiple words that appear similar (Torah, Chok, Mitzvah, etc.), but the sages insist each word points to a different…
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Seder meditation Shevuot 11
Contextual Recap (Shevuot 11) The gemara debates whether the Ketores possesses only kedushat damim (monetary sanctity) or also kedushat haguf (inherent sanctity). A Tevul Yom, someone not fully tahor (pure), disqualifies the Ketores if it has been placed in a makhteshes (grinder). The halakhic implication: when sacred purpose is near, even latent ritual impurity matters.…
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Jungian archetypes (light and shadow), IFS parts, Wounds, and SMART Goals affecting seder
The Mussar trait of Seder (order) reflects an individual’s ability to bring structure, organization, and clarity to their life and spiritual practice. It is essential for maintaining balance and harmony while striving for personal and communal growth. Jungian archetypes, with their light and shadow aspects (which loosely match yetzer tov and yetzer hara), offer a…
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Cognitive biases and impact on seder with SMART Goals
1. Anchoring Bias Impact on Seder: Impedes. Fixation on initial information may prevent dynamic adjustments to order. SWOT Details Strengths Initial decisions can provide a structure for creating order. Weaknesses Over-reliance on initial information can cause rigidity. Opportunities Practicing Seder helps reassess and refine routines. Threats Sticking to flawed initial plans can derail long-term organization.…