🪄 Transformative Mussar Practices Course 🔄
What if change isn’t just something you hope for, but something you practice?
The Transformative Mussar Practices course is a journey into the concrete habits, disciplines, and rhythms that help you do the inner work of becoming more whole, more grounded, more loving, and more like the person you were made to be.
In these conversations, we explore ancient Jewish wisdom through practical Mussar practices like awareness, acceptance, boundaries, listening, journaling, silence, prayer, study, service, repetition, and more. These aren’t just ideas to think about. They’re steps to take, again and again, until they begin to shape your heart, your habits, your relationships, and your story.
Real transformation usually doesn’t happen all at once. It happens little by little, practice by practice, step by step. And this course is an invitation to begin that work with honesty, patience, courage, and hope.
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🪄 TRANSFORMATION or NARCISSISM: What’s “Change” in Hebrew? 🔍 INTRODUCTION
You watch makeovers. Weight loss stories. Home transformations. Why are those so gripping? And if change feels that powerful when it happens outside you, what would real change feel like inside you?
In this conversation, we ask a harder question: are you actually working on yourself—or just blam...
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👣 How Do Baby Steps Become Transformation? 🦋 Mussar Practices 2: CHANGE
Change can feel exciting when it’s big and visible. A new body, a new face, a full metamorphosis. But what about the kind of change that happens slowly—so slowly you almost can’t see it?
In this conversation, we look at the Hebrew noun for change and discover that it can mean huge transformation...
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👣 Small Steps, Big Story — Where Are Your Rhythms Going? 🔁 Practices #3: STEPS
Every journey is made of steps. Not one giant leap, not one dramatic moment, but one repeated action after another.
In this conversation, we look at the Hebrew word for “practice” and how deeply it connects to repetition, habits, and the steps that carry your life forward. Mussar practices are n...