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Why do I want something more or
different than what everyday life offers? Kabbalah phrases this
question like this: How does the desire for the higher force emerge?
Humanity has developed over many
lifetimes; first resembling beasts, with desires only for food,
family, sex and shelter; then developing through stages of wealth,
power, honor and knowledge.
At the first stage of
development, desires for food, family, sex and shelter are a
person’s only desires. Even a totally isolated individual has these
desires and tries to fulfill them. Desires conditioned by society’s
influence (desires for wealth, power and honor) emerge at the next
stage.
Afterwards, the desire for
knowledge appears. Sciences flourish as we set out to discover where
everything comes from, to find our roots. This desire for knowledge,
however, still only resides within the framework of our world.
Only at the next stage does a
human being desire to know the real source, one’s essence—the
meaning of life. “Where do I come from?” “Who am I?” “What am I?”
These questions cause discomfort and trouble a person.
Human beings are naturally
egoistic. All of our desires are self-motivated and crave
fulfillment. They pressure us, literally controlling our every move.
The height of egoism in our world is the desire to be filled with
knowledge about something above us.
What is the source of desires and
how do they appear? The source of desires is suffering. Passing from
one type of desire to another happens only under the influence of
suffering. If I am in a balanced state, then I feel comfortable and
everything is just fine. A new desire then appears, and I feel that
something is missing. Now I want to experience something new, so I
start trying to fulfill this desire…and this process keeps repeating
itself. In other words, I am always running after new pleasures.
We are born on this planet, we
live and we die trying to satisfy our countless desires. Only after
many lives do we reach the state when one desire is all that
remains: the desire to attain our source, the meaning of our lives.
Once this final, ultimate desire appears, everything else seems
unnecessary and meaningless. A person gets depressed, feeling
emotionally and spiritually empty, as if nothing in this world can
bring happiness. Life seems pointless and lacking something
real…“What is the purpose of my life?” “Why do I exist?” These are
the questions that bring people to Kabbalah.
What is Kabbalah?
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What
is Kabbalah?
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Why am I looking for
something spiritual?
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What does Kabbalah
teach, and what does studying Kabbalah do for me?
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What is reality?
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Why do I feel bad?
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Why Kabbalah? Why Now?
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Rav Michael Laitman,
PhD answers questions on Kabbalah
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