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The World of Souls Not an Escape

The World of Souls is Not an Escape From Responsibility

“You don’t automatically remember everything you learned in this world when you enter the world of souls.”

The Talmud says:

“Fortunate is the one who comes here [to the world of souls] with his Torah learning still in his hand.” – Rabbi Alexandri appeared to R’ Acha in a dream and revealed this to him.

That means a person does not leave this world with money in his hand.

Not with status.

Not with the image he built.

Not with the arguments he won.

He comes with what became part of him.

His wisdom.

His responsibility.

The compassion he is capable of. His ability to understand life through the Creator’s wisdom. That is why Rav Ashi, one of the great sages who helped shape the Talmud, asked the Angel of Death for thirty more days before his soul left this world.

Not to make more money.

Not to fix his reputation.

Not to take one last vacation.

He asked for time to review his learning. Because he knew that when the soul leaves the body, the question is not only:

“What did you enjoy?”

The question is:

“What are you able to feel?”

“What are you able to face?”

“What kind of relationship can you actually hold?”

Torah [Hebrew bible] learning is not just religious information. It trains a person how to think.

How to listen.

How to take responsibility.

How to notice what matters.

How to see another person as real.

How to build real compassion instead of avoidance, judgment, people pleasing or control.

How to live in relationship with the Creator.

If a person does not study, he does not only become less knowledgeable. He becomes weaker in the inner language of relationship.

Less able to stay present when emotions rise.

Less able to carry responsibility without shutting down.

Less able to feel compassion without becoming overwhelmed or defensive.

He has less truth to hold onto when pleasure, fear, shame, anger, and ego pull him away from relationship. And that matters in this world.

It matters in marriage.

It matters in parenting.

It matters in friendship.

It matters in how a person handles pain.

And according to the sages, it matters even after this world.

Because the world of souls is not a place where your personality disappears. It is where your inner life becomes more visible.

The Torah you reviewed.

The truth you practiced.

The responsibility you accepted.

The compassion you developed.

The relationship with the Creator you built.

That is what you bring with you.

Life is not mainly about collecting experiences.

Life is about becoming the kind of person who can stay in relationship, with truth, with other people, and with the Creator.

And Torah is how the soul learns how to do that.

In the world of souls, everyone thirsts to know the Creator more, there is no physical suffering, you feel emotions.

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