Showing posts with label mistakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mistakes. Show all posts

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Boo-Boos

We are prone to making boo-boos.  Not the kind where you scrape your knee or hit your head getting out the car too fast but the other kind.  Boo-boos are good.  They mean we are experimenting, taking a chance, stepping beyond our usual habits.  

Take jokes, for example.  Some people seem to naturally funny and others, well, not so much.  Yet we all like to laugh and make other experience the joy of a good chuckle. When they fall flat, do not give up, try telling the joke again until you get it right.

There are many wondrous and difficult aspects to being a child.  One the other former is that we are game for about anything, jumping off a high limb, rolling in the mud, tasting dog biscuits and eating asparagus (that does no usually end up so good).

It is a sad day when we grow up and admit, “We can’t do it.”  And worse, we do not even try.

Y. Peretz, crafter of Hebrew stories wrote, “Nobody trips over a mountain; you trip over a pebble.”  When we fail it is hardly ever disastrous.  Failure is a signal that we need to modify what we did, not stop trying.

On June 2, 2010, Armando Galarraga, 28 pitched what seemed to be a perfect game, a feat only achieved twenty times in Major League Baseball's 130 year history. However, on the very last play of the game, umpire Jim Joyce, 65, mistakenly called the runner safe at first base, ruining the perfect game. After the game, understanding the mistake he had made and the implications to Galarraga, with tears in his eyes, Joyce went over to Galarraga and apologized, admitting his mistake. Galarraga graciously accepted his apology saying, "nobody's perfect. Everybody's human. " They then wrote a book together titled "Nobody's Perfect."

The thing is the pitcher did not retire or give up.  He continued on, having learned an unintended lesson of life.

Mistakes should always be purposeful, never meaningless.  Yogi Berra once commented, “I don’t want to make the wrong mistake.”  He was right, in his inimitable way.  There are some mistakes that are bad choices but even then we learn and grow.

Talmud, which is the judicial and philosophical backbone of our people, is full of trial, error and then more trial.  “Arguments for the sake of truth,” Rabbi Jonathan Sacks labeled it.

The Mei Shiloach, Rabbi Mordechai Yosef of Ishbitz, wrote, “A person can only uphold the teachings of the Torah when he has stumbled in them.”  The sage is telling us, “Go ahead, take a chance, a risk, make mistakes, learn from them, change, and grow.

It’s a New Year.  We are  year older and G-d willing, a year wiser.  Even Torah has Moss and David doing some real bloopers.  Yet their greatness is that they become great through their errors.

Give it your best shot.  Then give it your better shot.


Saturday, February 24, 2018

Scratch-Outs

A little boy was watching his father, Rabbi, prepare a sermon. “How do you know what to write?” he asked. The rabbi said, “Well, after I think for a while God tells me what to write.” The boy was quiet for a moment before saying, “Then why do you keep crossing out so much?”

Privately, it is easy to make corrections: no one has to see the original text. We can write and rewrite the wording. Being creative requires imagination with lots of room for experimentation and errors. Well I am sure that God helps we have a definite proclivity for making errors. That is why we have so many scratch outs.

The Talmud uses a simple and terse language.  It leave so much in need of clarification, that the great sages with scribble notes, pose questions, graft answers and even draw diagrams in the margins (as it used to be the paper was scarce). Some printer later saw the scribbling and had the notation inserted as permanent marginal notes. That was how Rashi’s commentary, among many others, came to found on each page of the Talmud.

Mistakes are inevitable part of the process. Mistakes mean that you were trying. They are living proof of personal growth. A colleague, Rabbi Harold Kushner said, “People do not learn from their successes. They grow from the failures.” These failures represent the scratchers in the margins.

If it were not for the marginal notes of Rashi and others, the Talmud would not be the Talmud.  It is with all scientific studies that take place in labs were failures always exceed successes.

I look forward to the scratch-outs of life.