
TUESDAYS, 7:30 - 9:00pm,
and our NEW morning class,
WEDNESDAYS 10:00 - 11:30pm
Are you completely happy with your life? How can you add richness and meaning? An antidote to the monotony and grind of unchanging routines, Toward a Meaningful Life provides newfound energy and exhilaration in taking on challenges. It offers practical strategies for developing a deeper sense of joy and satisfaction to teach and empower you with new life skills based on traditional Torah thought, thereby enabling you to transform the way you view your daily life.
Plot your personal mission statement; reclaim love and intimacy in your marriage; learn values upon which to establish your home and family; and acquire powerful tools to help you deal with pain, loss, and anxiety.
The course—by Rabbi Simon Jacobson, author of the bestselling book, Toward a Meaningful Life—utilizes the relevant approach and easy personal style that made the book so popular. However, it is totally freestanding and no prior familiarity with the book is assumed.
Lesson 1
Discovering Your Personal Mission Statement
No business can function without a mission statement. Neither can you. This lesson will establish the foundation for a meaningful life—revealing and understanding why you are here.
Your birth is G‑d’s statement that you matter. You are indispensable, and your soul was deliberately chosen to descend into your body at a particular time and space in order to fulfill a unique objective. Literally every one of your life experiences is driven by this mission—the hub that connects all the spokes of your activities.
This lesson will show you how to graph the coordinates in your life so that you can discern patterns of meaning that can assist you in identifying your unique purpose.
Toolbox Exercise: Writing Your Personal Mission Statement
Lesson 2
Marriage, Love, and Intimacy
What lies at the foundation of a successful relationship? Physical attraction, emotional connection, and intellectual parity are all important kinds of compatibility. In this lesson, we will also explore the importance of spiritual compatibility: the power of shared vision and shared commitment to building something together that is greater than the sum of its parts. While the first three factors vary and fluctuate in importance over time, only the fourth is unwavering and eternal, and it serves as the foundation of all the other gifts of a successful marriage.
Toolbox Exercise: What is Love?
Lesson 3
Home & Family
The home is the most important institution of society, shaping lives and futures, and yet often, it is taken for granted. A home is not merely a shelter, a place where you can be “yourself.” The home is a microcosm of the mishkan, G‑d’s abode in this earth.
How can you build a healthy home for yourself and for your family? The comfort of home can bring out the best and the worst in us. It is vital not to take one’s family for granted, and to balance love and caring with order and structure. In this lesson, we will examine the components of a warm, nurturing, and sacred environment. Our attitudes, activities, and home furnishings that reflect our Jewish values all contribute to building a home of Torah, avodah, and gemilut chasadim.
Toolbox Exercise: Planning Your Home Makeover
Lesson 4
Work, Charity, and Wealth
Why must we work? The purpose of life is to become a giver, not a taker. We are invited to be a producer, creator, and a partner with G‑d, by transforming the resources we were given into divine energy that illuminates and warms our environment.
As we age, our work changes, but we should never retire. The Jewish attitude is that we always remain producers and givers, though we may reframe the focus of our efforts. At the same time, there are principles of spiritual time management that can keep us from being consumed by work. By distinguishing between ends and means, we can keep from losing sight of our underlying objectives.
We also look closely at money and why it holds so much power. Money is “soul energy,” embodying our time, energy, ingenuity—and is a reflection of our investment in this world. This is why we find it so difficult to give away our money. In effect, it is like giving a way a piece of our life. However, it is precisely this that gives tsedakah its great power, freeing us from the powerful tentacles of materialism which often threaten to hold us hostage in their clutch.
Toolbox Exercise: What’s your real job?
Lesson 5
Pain, Loss, and Anxiety
Only live, healthy, and sensitive people feel pain. Any form of pain, physical or psychological, signifies that something is misaligned. Pain is the first step in the natural process of healing. Pain is all consuming, commanding our attention, demanding we shift our perspective on life. In the process, it helps us define our priorities and our commitments, by testing our strength and resilience. Thus, pain often pushes us to access deeper resources. Pain need not be denied. It is a natural and important part of life.
In this lesson, we will look at meaningful ways of coping with pain. We can draw on our trust in G‑d, on positive thinking, and on our capacity to find joy. We’ll learn to find a balance of grief and building so we can translate pain into action and tears into growth. Finally, we’ll discuss ways of supporting others in their pain, providing hope as well as a listening ear.
Toolbox Exercise: Rx for pain
Lesson 6
Religion and Faith
Why is it that so many of us struggle with the role of G‑d within our lives? Perhaps it is because we are working with the wrong definition. The Barditchever Rebbe once said, “The G‑d that you don’t believe in, I don’t believe in either.” We’ll begin by reframing G‑d, identifying the conventional images we have of G‑d from school, home, and comic books, and then challenging our premises and probing beyond the platitudes.
Why is it important to try to “know G‑d?” Because how we see G‑d dictates how we will relate to Him. If our view of Him is immature, then our relationship with G‑d is driven by guilt, nostalgia, family upbringing, and social programming. It is a mechanical relationship governed by rote. But as we develop a more mature and introspective understanding of G‑d, our relationship becomes richer and more personal, relevant, dynamic and passionate.
The primary modes of interacting with G‑d are through love and awe, and it is critical to keep these in balance. We will also discover that faith and reason are not antithetical. Faith is not the absence of reason. It is an independent faculty which complements and enhances reason. Reason leads us to a door; faith takes us through that door.
Toolbox Exercise: What does G‑d mean to you?
