The Motivation Congregation: The #1 Torah & Mussar Podcast
Michoel Brooke
744 episodes
1 week ago
A deal gone sideways can expose more than a bad contract—it can reveal the gap between who we say we are and how we actually work. I share a raw story from my first 49 days in real estate, when I expected the market to behave like yeshiva and slammed into a seller who hid flaws and cut corners. That moment forced me to confront a quiet assumption: that Torah belongs in shul while business belongs to its own rules. Once I saw the split, I couldn’t unsee it. What follows is a practical, person...
All content for The Motivation Congregation: The #1 Torah & Mussar Podcast is the property of Michoel Brooke and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
A deal gone sideways can expose more than a bad contract—it can reveal the gap between who we say we are and how we actually work. I share a raw story from my first 49 days in real estate, when I expected the market to behave like yeshiva and slammed into a seller who hid flaws and cut corners. That moment forced me to confront a quiet assumption: that Torah belongs in shul while business belongs to its own rules. Once I saw the split, I couldn’t unsee it. What follows is a practical, person...
The Motivation Congregation: The #1 Torah & Mussar Podcast
3 minutes
4 weeks ago
Hope Is Kosher, Quitting Isn’t
A quiet epidemic is spreading, and it doesn’t look like a fever. It looks like old dreams shelved, alarms snoozed, and a heart that once burned now running on dim. We name that sickness—Ye’ush, the giving up of hope—and we take it head on, not with slogans, but with a return to the core of Jewish identity: the will to keep fighting when it’s still dark. We start by tracing the subtle signs of surrender that creep into adult life. The goal posts move, the expectations shrink, and “realistic” ...
The Motivation Congregation: The #1 Torah & Mussar Podcast
A deal gone sideways can expose more than a bad contract—it can reveal the gap between who we say we are and how we actually work. I share a raw story from my first 49 days in real estate, when I expected the market to behave like yeshiva and slammed into a seller who hid flaws and cut corners. That moment forced me to confront a quiet assumption: that Torah belongs in shul while business belongs to its own rules. Once I saw the split, I couldn’t unsee it. What follows is a practical, person...