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The Rising Life Page 6


  just said “no” to me? Google it! But, sadly, the plethora of differ-

  ing opinions, each one claiming to be unequivocally true, often

  just leads to further confusion.

  Listening to our Inner Voice

  “Every day a bat kol goes forth from Mount Sinai . . . ” (Avot 6:2).

  This bat kol, or voice, beckons us to our deepest reality.

  We are all equipped with an incredible inner receptor to this

  voice of the bat kol. Heeding this voice, we are guided by it; it is

  a deeper listening to the reverberation of the vibrations of Sinai

  during the time we received Divine wisdom in our lives. The bat

  kol is a femininely termed name, literally translated as “daugh-

  ter of the voice,” for it is a gentle echo, a receiving, continuation,

  and realization of the wisdom of Sinai. The bat kol lives inside

  each of us and, if we can tune in to its vibrations, we can access

  its eternal wisdom.

  Sounds too incredible?

  7 1

  R I S I N G

  Consider this: how often do we look to others for answers,

  only to speak with a really good listener and discover that the

  answers were within us all along and we simply didn’t take the

  time to listen and acknowledge our own inherent wisdom? Most

  “WITH BREAD YEAST & HUMANS, THERE ARE ABOUT 45 AMINO ACIDS

  of the time, we actually know the answers to our deepest ques-

  tions; they are part of who we are. In reaching deep down to our

  bat kol we can access them and integrate them into our lives.

  When we nurture our families, we are often at a loss for what

  to do next. As soon as we feel like we are getting the hang of

  nurturing a spouse, we become partners in raising a new life

  and need to relearn the art. Just as we begin to feel proficient

  in the newborn stage, suddenly she’s an infant, and then, all too

  quickly, a toddler, a teenager, an adult. . . . Life moves quickly and

  we want quick answers.

  When we take the time to bake our challah, and place our-

  selves fully in the process, we find ourselves accessing our very

  own answers, our own deep intuitive knowledge, which tells us

  we have the tools we need to get this right and do it with joy

  and fullness of being. Just lean in and listen closely. Pour in each

  ingredient and focus on the recipe for nurturing in your very

  own way, rediscovering and rethinking each part of the recipe

  each time you go back to your challah bowl. Each new week of

  baking brings with it new realizations and new opportunities

  for exploring the way we have been doing things, allowing us to

  determine whether we need to find new direction.

  We’ve spoken about the flour and water, the basics that we are

  born with. Now let’s talk about the other stuff.

  7 2

  T H E I N G R E D I E N T S : A R E C I P E F O R R I S I N G

  “WITH BREAD YEAST & HUMANS, THERE ARE ABOUT 45 AMINO ACIDS

  THAT ARE DIFFERENT AND ABOUT 59 THAT ARE IDENTICAL.

  THINK HOW CLOSE TOGETHER MAN AND THIS OTHER ORGANISM,

  BREAD YEAST, ARE. WHAT IS THE PROBABILITY THAT IN 59 POSITIONS

  THE SAME CHOICE OUT OF 20 POSSIBILITIES WOULD HAVE BEEN MADE

  BY ACCIDENT? IT IS IMPOSSIBLY SMALL . . . AND SO WE SEE THAT NOT

  ONLY ARE ALL MEN BROTHERS, BUT MEN AND YEAST CELLS, TOO. . . .”

  — LINUS PAULING, GREAT AMERICAN CHEMIST, 1933

  7 3

  R I S I N G

  Yeast

  While rising will naturally occur when flour and water are left

  to their own devices, this can be quite a lengthy process. The ad-

  vent of adding a previously fermented yeast product has short-

  ened the process and added to the tastiness of the bread, as well.

  Yeast is a microscopic single-cell organism that is naturally

  present in the air. When added to flour and water, it feeds on the

  sugar in the flour’s carbohydrates. As the yeast multiplies and

  grows, it produces alcohol, which add flavor to the dough, and

  also carbon dioxide, which creates the structure of the bread.

  Carol Field, in her book, The Italian Baker,1 writes that when

  there is a lot of bread being prepared in one place, there is a high

  concentration of naturally occurring yeast in the air that adds to

  the bread.

  1 Field, Carol. The Italian Baker. New York: Harper & Row, 1985. Print.

  7 4

  T H E I N G R E D I E N T S : Y E A S T

  The moral of the story is, the more challah you bake in your

  kitchen, the better your challah will be!

  With the availability of commercial yeast, and later, the in-

  vention of granulated yeast (courtesy of Charles Fleischmann,

  a German Jewish immigrant, during the Second World War), the

  process of rising our dough has been considerably expedited.

  A Closer Look

  Yeast is an interesting organism that has been given much at-

  tention in the Torah. Passover is an entire holiday, in fact, that is

  dedicated to the avoidance of the fermentation process in gener-

  al and, more specifically, to the consumption of yeast.

  Interestingly, the discovery of yeast as a food fermentation

  product dates back to ancient Egypt, where our own story be-

  gan. The Egyptians, most likely having left flour and water

  outside in the heat, realized that the fermentation leads to a

  better-risen and more flavorful bread, as well as a really great

  beverage known as beer . . . so now just imagine that the whole

  story of our exodus occurred with a thoroughly inebriated Egyp-

  tian Pharaoh, but that’s for another time.

  In the Torah, this rising process represents a rising ego, just as

  the matzah, flat bread traditionally eaten on Passover, symboliz-

  es an absence of ego, a humility as it were. This is why the Exo-

  dus from Egypt, the place of constriction, serves as a metaphor

  for our own personal release from our ego, which is the root of

  all perceived limitation. We take a week off from all association

  with yeast and, therefore, ego, and allow ourselves to re-cali-

  brate our internal rising system.

  7 5

  R I S I N G

  Balancing Ego

  Ego is essential to our survival. Without it, we wouldn’t get

  up in the morning, feed ourselves, go to work or bother to look

  both ways before crossing the street. The Torah prescribes an

  eight-day abstention from yeast, a deflating of the ego, that may,

  with time, become opaque and overly bloated due to perceived

  threats to its survival when, in fact, there are none. For example,

  there are times when we walk into a room and think that the

  people in it are talking about us, affecting our ability to focus

  and function. That is an expression of an inflamed ego, an exag-

  gerated or skewed sense of our place in this world that leads to

  an unhealthy relationship with others and the world around us.

  Unlike humility, a low self-esteem is actually a sign of an in-

  flated ego. The person perceives all of humanity as a threat or, at

  the very least, to be revolving around his existence.

  With a healthy sense of self, we are comfortable with who we

  are and are happy with our place
in society. From that vantage

  point, we are comfortable and have a healthy, realistic sense of

  ourselves. We are able to view the rest of the world as a coun-

  terbalance to ourselves. We see every person and situation as

  someone or something to learn from as we strive to grow and

  perfect ourselves towards our own tikkun, personal soul eleva-

  tion and articulation.

  The Import of Faith

  In raising joyous and confident children, our first job is to give

  them a healthy sense of self. We do this by acknowledging them

  as part of the Divine, a perfect gift from above.

  7 6

  T H E I N G R E D I E N T S : Y E A S T

  Faith is the very first thing a child learns upon entering this

  world and it is the mother who provides it. It is, much like bread,

  essential to our survival. In responding to our child’s immediate

  needs, we are able to instill within him a healthy sense of trust

  and faith in humanity, an inherent knowledge that he is deserv-

  ing of care and love, and an instinct to trust in goodness.

  All the information our children will receive during their lives

  will be filtered through this lens of trust and faith. It is precisely

  this faith that will allow them to receive knowledge and inte-

  grate it in a healthy way.

  Our first and foremost responsibility as nurturers is the trans-

  mission of a sense of self-worth and esteem in the people we

  love and an inherent sense of faith in their inner goodness and

  wholeness. A person who has received in such a way is capable

  of giving in much the same way, creating a cycle of love that pro-

  duces whole and happy human beings. As such, I wholeheart-

  edly believe that the healing of this world will be brought about

  through the perfect love of each mother to her child, each nur-

  turer to those he or she embraces.

  When we think of the brokenness of the world, the fighting

  within families, the wars, the struggle for power and wealth, it

  is obvious that the pain is caused by children who have grown

  into adults never having felt that they are essentially good and

  whole in the crucial beginnings of their lives. Perhaps this may

  sound presumptuous or perhaps an oversimplification of a fact.

  However, it is something that, over my years of nurturing, I have

  come to understand as a deep, deep truth.

  When we are taught to believe that we are whole and com-

  plete at our essence, we see the whole world as participating

  in our growth and sustenance and the world looks back at us in

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  R I S I N G

  the same way. If we haven’t received this knowledge of our in-

  herent positive qualities, there is a shattering. Essentially, this is

  a breaking of our natural trust in the inherent goodness of our-

  selves and therefore in others, and a distrust of others is born.

  All our brokenness and pain in life, aside from circumstances

  beyond our control, such as, G-d forbid, death or illness, can be

  traced back to this lack of faith in our own wholeness.

  When we decide to believe that we are each a G-d given gift

  and, as such, wonderful even in our imperfections (which, of

  course, does not negate the need to constantly grow and bet-

  ter ourselves), we shine a light into this world, one that brings

  healing and peace to those around us. I have seen it happen

  countless times. A person who feels secure about himself enters

  the room and the room lights up. Those in his sphere feel better

  about themselves just by being in his presence and the effects

  can be far-reaching.

  This innate security that radiates outwards is known in He-

  brew as chein, an inner light that comes along with a person’s

  outside being aligned with his or her inside. It is a wholeness of

  self, a deep belief that he or she is lovable and worthy of love,

  which, in turn, makes him or her lovable and pleasant to others.

  Children who are young enough to be un-self-conscious radi-

  ate this natural chein; it is what draws us to them and makes

  them so beloved. They are not worried that something is wrong

  with them. They know we will love them and they believe them-

  selves to be worthy of that love. And so it is true, we do love them

  and believe wholeheartedly in their inherent right to adoration.

  We don’t need to have received this perfectly in our infancy to

  be able to achieve this state of chein, nor do we need to be in a

  perfect state of chein to pass it on to those we love.

  7 8

  T H E I N G R E D I E N T S : Y E A S T

  Second Chances

  A frantic call at 3pm on Friday: It is Giselle. She has been com-

  ing to my challah class about once a year for the past few years.

  Challah baking does not come naturally to her but she is hero-

  ically determined to master it. In a panicky voice half-hiccup-

  ping with despair as I pick up the phone, she blurts out, “My

  challah dough! It’s not rising! It’s been an hour and still no sign

  of rising. I used all the ingredients you told me, I did everything

  right. What happened?”

  We calmly went through all the steps. I had her check the

  package of yeast she had used. Had it expired, or was it fresh

  and still “alive”? We determined that indeed the yeast was okay

  but perhaps the water she had used had been too cold and the

  environment the dough had been placed in, too dry and cool.

  I had her place a pan of boiling water on the bottom of her

  oven and set her stubborn, unrisen dough into this steamy, sau-

  na-like environment. She shut the oven door. Within moments,

  the dough was rising.

  Sometimes, we don’t get it right the first time. We gave it all we

  had, or perhaps we didn’t. Maybe we were distracted, not com-

  pletely present at the moment. Overwhelmed by the peripherals

  and unaware that this precious time to create the dough was so

  short, it passed by quickly and we missed the moment. What-

  ever the case may be, at some point we see the dough we have

  created and feel that we have failed. The dough is not rising.

  Remember the basic ingredients of challah: flour and water.

  That’s it. All of us already possess these basics ingredients, a

  body and a soul. Bathed in a conducive environment of mois-

  ture, warmth, and sweetness, it will eventually rise. When the

  7 9

  R I S I N G

  dough does not seem to be developing as it should, just remem-

  ber these three simple elements: water, an environment that is

  eternally alive with spirituality and connectedness; warmth, an

  embracing, accepting place; and sweetness, pure kindness and

  patience. Mix together, give it plenty of time and watch your

  dough rise.

  We don’t always remember or know to have given these things

  when our babies were young, when our marriage was new,

  when the friendship began. We ourselves may not have received

  the connectedness, the warmth, and the sweetness. But the les-

  son in our challah bowl is that it is never too late. It is a constant

  striving to
reach this place of deep faith in ourselves that gives

  rise to the perfect nurturing of others.

  When we put the yeast into our dough, we take the time to

  focus on our own sense of self-worth and faith in our essential

  wholeness. We then extend that faith into the ones we love and

  nurture. We understand that each moment, each day, is a new

  opportunity for us to instill a deep-seated sense of the inborn

  wholeness of each person whom we love. With this “bread of

  faith” we will heal and transform, allowing ourselves and our

  loved ones and, in the process, our challah dough, to rise.

  Note to my reader: To the novice challah baker, yeast seems to be

  the scariest part of the process. I'm here to tell you, don't fear the

  yeast! Proofing the yeast will determine whether or not the yeast

  is working and, as long as conditions are right (very warm water

  and some sugar, see page 174 for more detailed instructions) the

  yeast will do its job and your challah will rise.

  Did everything right and the dough still isn't rising? See RISING!

  (the cookbook,) for troubleshooting a non-rising dough.

  8 0

  S U G A R V S . S A LT

  Sugar vs. Salt

  : the great debate

  While sugar and salt may seem like simple flavor additives and

  extraneous to the essential building blocks of a challah dough,

  they are, in fact, quite necessary in the creation of a perfect chal-

  lah.

  Sugar and salt, while both crucial elements in the challah

  dough, serve opposite and even opposing functions. Sugar en-

  courages the growth of yeast and the subsequent rising of the

  dough. Salt does the absolute inverse of this. It serves to quell

  the rising, inhibiting the growth of the dough and creating a

  tighter structure of gluten strands.

  So herein lies the great debate: to sweeten or to brine? Would

  we create giant swelling mounds of yeasty goodness, or tightly

  controlled spheres of gluten correctness?

  Of course, this debate doesn’t end with dough. It always goes

  back to the nurture balance. So read on . . . and decide for your-

  self!

  8 1

  R I S I N G

  “WHATEVER WE ARE DOING, NO MATTER HOW

  HOLY, WE SHOULD NEVER BE SO ENGROSSED

  AS TO MISS THE SOUND OF A CHILD’S CRY.”“

  —Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi

  (the Alter Rebbe)