This week, Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David continue the letter from Reb Usher which deals with one of the most painful questions in real avodas Hashem:
Why do the dirtiest, most damaging thoughts show up precisely in our holiest moments – during davening, on Yom Kippur, when we finally feel like we’re showing up?
Instead of letting those thoughts “prove” that we’re garbage, Reb Usher flips the script. He teaches that these intrusive machshavos are not a verdict on who we are – they’re a wake-up call to who we aren’t without Hashem, and an invitation to deeper bitul and compassion instead of toxic shame and self-loathing.
Rav Shlomo walks us through:
For anyone who’s ever walked out of davening feeling like, “If people knew what was in my head…”, this shiur is a lifeline. Don’t let damaging thoughts define you. Let them become the place where you discover how deeply Hashem is holding you, every second.
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Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David learn a fierce, grounding letter from Reb Usher Freund: why the most confusing thoughts show up specifically in the holiest moments, and how that’s not a failure but a signal. From the Kohen Gadol’s risk in the Kodesh HaKodashim to David HaMelech’s “beheimos hayisi imach,” we’re taught to stop panicking, return to bitul, and let those thoughts flip into emunah peshutah. Galus HaShechinah isn’t abstract. It’s the ache of not feeling seen - in tefillah, in marriage, in self. The work is to notice, name, and tether the mind back to “Imach,” and to cry over the right things.
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For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
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Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David learn a fierce, yet compassionate, letter from Reb Usher Freund on what to do precisely when, in holy moments, the mind floods with מחשבות זרות—blurry, intrusive, and confusing thoughts. Instead of spiraling into self-hatred, Reb Usher reframes them as invitations to ביטול/אין: not “I am garbage,” but “I’m held and that my strength is borrowed Light.”
We explore how recognizing our true value as receivers gives us real contro, not over what thoughts appear, but over how we respond. With Tehillim’s “הוציאה ממסגר נפשי,” the image of the loyal בהמה to its master, and Avraham’s “ואנכי עפר ואפר,” the shiur charts a path to turn rent-free thoughts into rent-paid growth.
Topics include:
- Why bad thoughts show up in good places—and why that doesn’t define you.
- “Control” redefined: not stopping thoughts, but steering response.
- Living with thoughts vs. warring with them; tasting ביטול without falling into ייאוש.
- “בהמות הייתי עמך”: learning holy surrender from a loyal animal to its Master.
- “הוציאה ממסגר נפשי”: escaping the hamster-wheel mind.
-Avraham’s “ואנכי עפר ואפר” as the gateway to deepest strength.
- Turning confusion into clarity: from rent-free to rent-due.
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For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
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Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David learn a short but searing letter from Reb Usher Freund about what happens when pain starts to crumble. Writing to a woman trapped in an agunah reality, Reb Usher validates the anguish, and then reframes it: pain can be a cleansing wash (רחיצת שמלה) that scrubs away stains; the process still hurts, but accepted with love it stops being torture and begins to reveal Or Shivat HaYamim (the primordial “seven-day light). “Ketz sam la’choshech”— there is an end to darkness, and it arrives faster when we choose patience, prayer, and love over despair and victim-identity.
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Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David learn Reb Usher’s short but piercing letter about the “game” Hashem set into creation: neshamas sent into gufim—so that our way to powers lema’alah min ha’teva (above our nature) actually runs through the body, not around it. We explore free will in real time (not acting on every thought), the danger of turning streaks of self-control into self-worship, and the quiet addiction to feeling like a victim. The avodah is to notice the strength we’re given, trace it back to its Source, and live like a baby held by its mother—safe, nourished, and not compelled by every impulse.
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For more Shiurim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
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Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David learn a piece from Reb Usher that reminds us that the foundation of our existence is emunah—and that the milchemes hamiddos (inner war of character) never clocks out. We learn how to ask not “lama?—why is this happening?” but “lemah?—what is this for?” and how that shift turns panic into tefillah, despair into light, and homes full of worry into homes clothed in warmth.
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For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
Join Rav Shlomo Katz's WhatsApp Community: https://chat.whatsapp.com/KHKOhhPaeHx5Kb74WL9L9a?mode
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For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
Join Rav Shlomo Katz's WhatsApp Community: https://chat.whatsapp.com/KHKOhhPaeHx5Kb74WL9L9a?mode=ems_copy_t
Rav Shlomo Katz learns from a letter of Reb Usher (Nisan 5751) about the foundation of our existence: emunah. Together we explore how friendships rooted in emunah help us hold steady in times of torment, how the deepest pain can transform into hidden light (Or HaGanuz), and why believing in Geulah means believing in Am Yisrael.
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A shiur for Elul and beyond: practical, challenging, and deeply strengthening.
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For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
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What if the friendships in your life weren’t random at all, but eternal assignments from Above?
Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David open a fiery letter from Reb Usher Freund zt"l, teaching us that Hashem places us together on life’s narrow tracks for a purpose far beyond coincidence.
With stories from the chuppah of Rav Leo Dee and the struggles we all face between fleeting highs and crushing lows, Rav Shlomo brings out Reb Usher’s radical call: to transform emunah from a noun into a verb—faithing—and to hold each other up so the hand of faith always rises above nature.
If you’ve ever wondered why certain souls appear in your life exactly when they do, or how to turn ordinary friendships into lifelines of eternity, this shiur will help you discover the hidden light within every connection and every breath.
What if the very pain you're desperate to escape is actually your greatest source of strength? Join Rav Shlomo Katz and the chevra of Shirat David and explore a groundbreaking insight from Reb Usher Freund: your struggles aren't just hurdles to overcome—they're the very tools Hashem uses to help you grow.
Drawing from powerful personal stories, including the miraculous story of his own grandfather’s survival during WWII, Rav Shlomo helps us internalize the life-changing truth that pain and challenge are not mistakes, but carefully crafted lifelines from Above.
If you're feeling overwhelmed, lost, or confused by life's hardships, this shiur is your invitation to see your trials through new eyes and discover the hidden kindness within your struggles.
What if the pain in your life wasn’t a punishment, but a tap on the shoulder from Heaven?
Join Rav Shlomo Katz and the Shirat David chevra as we dive deep into a 1971 letter from Reb Asher Freund zt”l, revealing the hidden invitation behind our struggles. Drawing from Reb Usher’s piercing insights, we learn that real emunah means believing not only that things will work out, but that the very obstacles we face are themselves part of Divine hashgacha. The suffering isn’t a glitch in the plan.....it is the plan. Not to break us, but to bring us back.
Through Torah, stories, and soul, Rav Shlomo opens a powerful door to understanding the voice of Hashem in a world gone mad. This is the Torah of now.
In this shiur:
Why pain is often the loudest voice of Divine love
The trap of “calculating” our suffering—and how it cuts us off from real connection
The difference between numbing emunah and living emunah
Reb Asher’s life-altering teaching: “It’s not about correction—it’s about connection.
Is our suffering divine punishment, or is it something deeper?
Join Rav Shlomo in unpacking a soul-stirring 1971 letter from Reb Usher Freund zt”l that redefines how we view pain, failure, and confusion. With brutal honesty and infinite compassion, Reb Usher teaches that the deepest afflictions in life are not punishments. Rather, they are the very vehicles through which we connect to Hashem.
Rav Shlomo explores the inner wars with the yetzer hara, the moments when we feel too broken to pray, and the radical emunah that God isn’t pushing us away, but pulling us closer. This Torah is for the heart of anyone who's ever suffered and still dared to hold on.
In this shiur:
Why we must stop trying to explain our suffering
The hidden kindness in our most bitter battles
How personal pain is the gateway to collective redemption
The difference between divine help and divine partnership
Why do some people with endless hardship live in serenity, while others crumble under far less?
What if it’s not the circumstances causing pain, but how we think about them?
Dive into the inner world of Rav Asher, who teaches that most suffering doesn’t come from reality. Rather, it comes from the imagination. Our own thoughts become our enemy. But once we learn to trace our strength not to our ego, but to the Ein, to the place of nothingness where only Hashem is real, we begin to live.
This is more than emotional healing. It’s spiritual realignment. It’s shifting from self-pity to divine support, from illusion to Emunah.
This shiur might change the way you wake up in the morning—and how you relate to your entire life.