Month: Adar
Sign: Gedi - Capricorn
Planet: Saturn
Element: Earth
Gender: Female
Human Atribute: Anger
Tribe: Dan
Movement: Function
Forefather: Abraham
Hebrew Letter: Tzadi |
Adar What is Hidden
What allows someone to see that which is hidden? Sometimes
you can tell what's on someone's mind by looking at their
face. You can also know what's in a person's heart at times.
This month is all about revealing the unseen.
Just as children like to play peek-a-boo or hide and seek,
adults also get pleasure out of finding what is hidden. It's
in our nature to seek what we can't see. The U.S. is spending
billions trying to find intelligent life on other planets.
What is the source of our curiosity for the concealed? It
may very well be something God implanted in us to cause us
to seek Him.
Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto writes that a healthy mind craves
truth, and is bothered when a piece of the puzzle is missing.
We need to have our questions about life answered or else
we're left agitated. Being ignorant of an aspect of reality
does not bring bliss, it causes annoyance. We want to find
out the truth that is veiled, not merely out of curiosity,
but out of a desire to resolve a conflict within. When we
do find the missing piece, when we are convinced that God
exists, or any element of truth, then we experience pleasure
and joy. The sages say, "There is no joy like resolving
a doubt."
The month of Adar is most noted for the holiday of Purim.
Hiddenness pervades this special day. God's name is only
hinted at in the scroll of Esther, never mentioned explicitly.
The unusual events surrounding Mordechai, Esther, and Achashverosh
all form a story that reads as divine intervention, yet no
miracle was performed, no laws of nature were abrogated.
Masks, pretending to be someone else, and putting on plays,
are all traditional ways of celebrating Purim. All these
things express the concepts of hiding and revealing. The
custom of drinking wine also reinforces this as it allows
a part of one's personality that's usually under wraps to
come out. The main focus of these activities is to help us
feel joy. Rabbi Avigdor Miller says that every person has
a reservoir of infinite joy inside. We need to take away
the barriers that block this source from pouring forth.
The constellation of this month is the fish, Pisces. Fish
are a symbol of blessing in Judaism, no doubt stemming from
God's blessing on the fifth day to the fish. (see Genesis
1:22) Traditionally there has been a custom to get married
on this day because of that blessing. The kabbalists also
point out that since fish are hidden from view, they are
impervious to jealousy. The feeling of jealousy is somewhat
dependent on sight. This is the source of the concept "ayin
harah", the evil eye, so common as a Jewish "superstition." The
sages say, "Blessing only falls on that which is hidden
from the eye." Someone who sees your blessing may feel
jealous, and that feeling causes a judgment on you. This
can have a negative consequence on the blessing. That is
called "ayin harah".
This month is ideal to meditate on the important questions
you have. It is a good time to seek out the hidden mysteries.
You can also tap into the spiritual power of the month by
revealing the good inside your heart.
Now is the time to reveal the joy hidden inside you. Now
is the time to uncover the love you have for all humanity.
If we can do these two things even a little bit, we can expect
some major changes in the world.
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