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Why Don't I Feel Inspired Anymore?



Question:

I am experiencing a major lull in my spiritual motivation. I started getting into Jewish things around a year ago, but now I just don't have the passion for it anymore. Rosh Hashanah is coming - last year I was all inspired, this year I don't feel any drive whatsoever to attend services. Is there something I can do to revive my enthusiasm?

Answer:

Do you remember how you learnt to ride a bike? Your first bicycle was fitted with training wheels on both sides, to keep you from tipping over. The training wheels allowed you to get the feel of riding the bike and build confidence. You felt so good, speeding along and never falling.

Then, just as you started to get comfortable, your parents removed the training wheels and told you to get on the bike and ride. So you got on, rode for half a second and then lost balance and fell flat. "How can I ride without training wheels?" you thought. But your parents insisted that you try again. So you did, and again you fell.

Your frustration built up, to the point that you were ready to give in. You may have wondered why your parents took the training wheels off in the first place. But had they not, you would never learn to ride your bike all on your own. It's harder to ride without training wheels, but only then is it really you riding the bike, using your own skill rather than depending on outside help. You may fall a few times, but as long as you get back up and keep pedaling, eventually you get your balance and the bike rides smoothly along the road.

When someone gets in touch with their Jewishness for the first time, there is a thrill and an excitement unlike anything else in the world. This initial inspiration is a little helping hand from G‑d; spiritual training wheels that help us start our journey. But once we get the hang of it, once we have advanced along the spiritual path and are ready to go deeper, the training wheels are removed and we have to ride on our own. The inspiration disappears, the motivation fades, and we are left dangling.

Here's the real test. When the excitement wears off, there are those drop out of the spiritual life. They think that the fun is over, this spiritual stuff isn't for me, and they move on. If we do that, then we miss out the chance to go to the next level: to connect to our souls through our own efforts. Precisely the moment when the inspiration fizzles out is when the real soul work begins. Rather than being propped up by divinely created inspiration, we have to look within and start riding on inspiration that we create ourselves. The spiritual path has to become ours, something we work for and earn.

We will fall again, but every fall brings a chance to take things to a new level. Keep on pedaling, inspired or not, and you will advance further and further in your soul's journey.

Feeling uninspired? Your training wheels are off. You don't need them anymore. Get up and ride.


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By Aron Moss   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Rabbi Aron Moss teaches Kabbalah, Talmud and practical Judaism in Sydney, Australia.

About the artist: Sarah Kranz has been illustrating magazines, webzines and books (including five children's books) since graduating from the Istituto Europeo di Design, Milan, in 1996. Her clients have included The New York Times and Money Marketing Magazine of London


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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Oct 17, 2008
why don't I feel inspired anymore
I found that if I am concentrating on myself and my needs my spiritual life suffers. If I focus on the joy of loving G-d and giving to others, I feel the Holiday moment. If my balance of self and others is out of balance the other way where I am giving more of myself than I have to give I can lose joy. I think the answer is find balance in your life in loving your neighbor as yourself. But don't forget self. find your joy, joy, happy, happy, joy, joy.
Posted By shara Dillon, Winfield, mo.usa

Posted: Oct 16, 2008
Uninspired
When I started taking my spiritual life seriously after a near divorce, financial failure ans so on, something happened to me at some stage which was quite astonishing. G-D laid the Jewish people on my heart, Israel and for a period of three months I would cry bitterly just at the thought of a Jewish person or of Israel. To me it represented G_D's sovereignty, His perfectness and His Holiness. It led into a very deep study of the Jewish people the culture etc. After some time I also became a little uninspired but then I realized this was going to be a conscientious decision to maintain the walk once the "training wheels" were off. It is my desire to be close to G_D and remain in His Holiness as a lifestyle that would keep me enthused. This is what happens when G_D touches our lives, it is forever and we cant help it. By the way I am a non Jew.
Posted By Tim White, Cape Town, South Africa

Posted: Oct 16, 2008
Thank you to Aharon
for speaking out about the gifts of learning the Kabballah!!

Yes, i can vouch for your experience of the ostricism from others for heralding the wisdom of kabbalah.

But the payoff, yes, is the fact that you are given in kaballistic thought the intimate gnosis of the fusion of thought and action: its truly about the power of aleph, bet, gimel and all the 22 hebrew letters that will have you sampling the mysteries ...
each season.

A thank you, again to the community that contributes at chabad!!
Posted By Anonymous



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