Burst Your Comfort-Zone Bubble: 5 Insights for Spreading Divine Light into a Benighted World
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By Yonason Goldson, Director, Ethical Imperatives, LLC
It’s 2025.? Raise your glass of champagne to toast the new year.? And then, before you take your first sip, ask yourself this question:
Where do the bubbles come from?
You see them, don’t you – those strings of tiny bubbles rising steadily from the bottom of your fluted goblet?? They seem to appear out of nothing and come from nowhere.?
And yet, they keep coming, like refugees from some parallel universe escaping through an inter-dimensional portal, yearning to be free.
The explanation is quite simple.? What is more compelling is how the mystery of champagne bubbles can lead us to victory in the modern culture wars.
It can also provide a deeper understanding of history’s first culture war, commemorated earlier this month by Jews worldwide with the Festival of Chanukah.
Trapped in the depths
An average glass of champagne contains about 20 million microscopic bubbles, produced when fermentation under pressure forces carbon gas into wine.? The relatively few bubbles that rise to the surface burst and release their CO2.?
As for the rest, the even distribution of internal pressure across the surface of each bubble keeps the gas trapped inside and invisible.
Along the interior surface of the glass, however, are minuscule imperfections.? When bubbles encounter those tiny flaws, the slightest change in pressure at the point of contact is enough to cause them to burst.?
Once released, the gas inside streams upward to the surface in a race for freedom.
Now, think of champagne as an allegory for life.
A world of bubble-dwellers
Never in history has a society been more comfortable than in this generation. Our homes are climate-controlled within a two-degree range. Our cars have automatic entry, heated leather seats, and complete entertainment centers.
We buy our groceries and holiday gifts with the click of a mouse and wait for them to be delivered by bonded messenger or drone. We text people in the same room and find it too burdensome to open our email.
And what do we have to show for it?
We have lost all ability to cope with inconvenience, delay, and change. A website refusing to load, a text not returned in 15 seconds, or our favorite TV show preempted by an amber alert — these are the crises of our times, the insufferable challenges of our era.
It’s both laughable and tragic to imagine how we would manage if we had to face the hardships of the crossing of the Mayflower, the Great Depression, or the Battle of the Bulge — let alone Auschwitz or the Soviet Gulag.
The plight of refugees from war or children starving in the third world is too horrific for us even to contemplate.
So we don’t.
We’re too comfortable inside our bubbles, insulated from the cold, hard realities that most humans have endured through the ages. We hide from the rest of the world until something pricks the surface to burst our bubbles — leaving us in pieces and gasping for breath.
But really, we should be grateful for those pinpricks, both great and small.
Like the gas that remains trapped beneath the surface, our own potential for greatness remains dormant within us until we are forced to confront the sharp edges of life. Instead of hiding from them, we must prepare ourselves for when they inevitably arrive.
Highs and lows
This was the state of affairs 22 centuries ago in ancient Judea under the rule of the Seleucid Empire. The prevailing culture, a legacy of Greek philosophy and values, worshipped aesthetic idealism.
Graceful lines, elegant syllogisms, and harmonic symmetry represented the highest expression of human civilization.
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But it also represented the lowest.
Where the ancient Greeks revered physical and intellectual beauty, they abandoned children with physical deformities or mental impairments and left them to die in the fields. They valued the philosophic sophistication of their greatest thinkers less for its content and more for the polished sophistry of its expression.
They ruthlessly stamped out all dissonance – as they did by sentencing Socrates, the greatest among them, to death for the crime of forcing them to confront the logical contradictions of their own beliefs.
Enamored with the cultural idealism of Greece, Jewish Hellenists believed they could blend their practice of Judaism with the prettified ways of their masters.
But Jewish philosophy demands that one challenges the external status quo and push their personal boundaries outward even as they strive to refine their commitment to the values and traditions on which spiritual truth is founded. It is a prickly discipline in which bubbles cannot long survive.
And so, the culture of Greece tried to swallow the soul of the Jewish nation.
But in the end, the weak rose up against the strong, and the few prevailed over the many. Instead of capitulating to the apparent inevitability of their defeat, the Maccabean heroes fought for their physical and spiritual lives.
By doing so, they broke through the boundaries of what anyone imagined possible, and they set free the potential that would have remained forever hidden if the Greeks had not tried to crush it into non-existence.
And, when the hidden spark of determination inside them caught fire, it lit up the darkness of exile, just like the tiny container of oil that burned miraculously for eight days – a sign of divine favor because the Jews refused to exchange their divine mission for the comfort of cultural superficiality.
The culture wars wage on today as fiercely as they did 22 centuries ago.? If we want to impress an increasingly secular world with the depth of our convictions, it’s not enough for us to believe.?
We need to:
●???? Show respect for non-believers, even when they can’t bring themselves to respect us.
●???? Resist the impulse to preach to those not yet ready to hear our message.
●???? Learn to articulate our values in the language of secular society.
●???? Model sincerity and consistency in the way we live our values.
●???? Project the joy of commitment found in living a life of higher purpose.
For all that, the real work begins within our own hearts and minds.?
When we reject comfortable confinement and fight our way out of the bubbles we live in, there is no limit to the miracles we can expect to see in our daily lives.
You can reach Yonason at [email protected].
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2 周Amen!!! Thank you for 'pricking' our very souls.
Master Trooper | Commercial Vehicle Enforcement I Training
1 个月Great word of truth for application Yonason Goldson - The Ethics Ninja! Thank You for sharing!
Outstanding and poignant commentary that hits home. Thank you for sharing!
Strickel Leadership Development LLC and author of People are the Plan (Speaker - Development Coach - Team Builder - Business Coach)
1 个月I so enjoyed reading this article. The reminder that very little is ever achieved sitting in the shadows of a comfortable life. It's only when our lives are disrupted, that we are challenged, or we face uncertainty that meaningful growth takes place. Through these tough times, we discover new things, we impact new people, and we rise to new levels. Thank you!
Professional Speaker and Advisor | Award-Winning Podcast Host | Hitchhiking Rabbi | Vistage Speaker | Create a culture of ethics that earns trust, sparks initiative, and limits liability
1 个月Thanks so much for posting, Paul. Readers who enjoy these reflections might also appreciate today's thoughts on spiritual leadership for #MLKDay: https://www.dhirubhai.net/posts/yonason-goldson_ethics-culture-mindset-activity-7287103414562406400-BlRQ?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop