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...
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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
4 minutes
4 months ago
I Dislike Old People
What does it truly mean to "grow old" in Judaism? This question leads us to a profound insight that might just transform your spiritual practice forever. Delving into Moshe Rabbeinu's prophecy about the destruction of Zion, we uncover a fascinating distinction between two Hebrew concepts of aging. "V'noshantem" – spiritual retirement marked by apathy and complacency – stands in stark contrast to "zikna" – the respected wisdom that comes with experience. This linguistic nuance reveals that ou...
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...