Your pain isn’t random.
It’s a fallen spark asking you to heal it.
Here’s what Kabbalah teaches:
At the beginning, G-d expressed Himself through 10 energies (sefirot).
He gave them light (goodness and kindness) anonymously, so independence could exist.
Anonymous giving is the purest,
an act of unconditional love.
But the energies got confused,
they thought the light was “their own,”
and their effort mattered more than it did.
Ego formed.
And the more ego grew, the farther they felt from G-d.
They clung harder to their own effort,
not realizing the light was always a gift.
The more they grasped, the emptier they felt,
until their vessels couldn’t hold the light,
and shattered.
Their light broke into sparks.
Those sparks were used to build our world.
1. Some sparks stayed clear, bringing love and wisdom.
2. Others got stuck inside us, becoming pain (darkness, fallen):
toxic shame, fear, guilt, loneliness, self-blame, confusion.
Examples of fallen sparks from the 10 energies:
Kindness turned into people-pleasing.
Beauty chasing applause → showing off.
Leadership (Malchus) twisted by fear → abusiveness.
Victory chasing wins that never satisfy → addiction.
Gevurah (strength) without compassion → harsh judgment, breaking boundaries.
And there’s another way fallen sparks show up:
Fight → defensiveness, anger, attack, mistrust, narcissism.
Flight → avoidance, running from emotions, addiction.
Freeze → shutting down, feeling stuck, rumination.
Fawn → losing yourself in people-pleasing.
These adaptive trauma patterns are fallen sparks too.
They once protected us, but they don’t reflect our true light.
Even sin is another way fallen sparks appear.
A choice fueled by shame, fear, or craving isn’t your essence,
it’s a spark asking for awareness, compassion, and boundaries to rise again.
When someone hurts you, they’re unknowingly passing along fallen sparks.
It feels personal, but it isn’t.
Each time you face your pain with awareness, compassion, and healthy boundaries,
energies rooted in Chabad (Chochmah, Binah, Daas, the 3 higher sefirot),
you lift those sparks back into light.
You become a vessel strong enough to hold G-d’s original kindness,
the act of unconditional love that began creation.
This is also the story of the Jewish people.
Through centuries of hate and persecution, nations cast their fallen sparks onto us.
Each time we endured, we lifted them,
transforming suffering into blessing, not just for us, but for the world. ![]()
And here’s the deeper truth:
By studying Chabad Chassidus, you begin to see that every vessel (label),
even the broken ones (unhealthy),
is really a channel for that same unconditional love.
Here’s how you can raise sparks in your own life:
1. Awareness: Notice difficult feelings or patterns, shame, fear, pain, avoidance, people-pleasing. They’re sparks calling for you.
2. Self-compassion: Remind yourself, “These sparks aren’t my fault. I’m trying my best. My pain matters.” ![]()
3. Boundaries: Say, “I care, but this behavior isn’t okay.” Protect your vessel.
4. Self-forgiveness: Release the past so the spark can rise.
Pain isn’t only suffering.
It’s an invitation.
Every spark you lift makes you a stronger vessel for blessing.
Next time pain hits, ask:
“What spark can I raise today?” ![]()