In the introduction to his book, Blink, writer Malcolm Gladwell notes: “We live
in a world that assumes that the quality of a decision is directly related to
the time and effort that went into making it...We believe that we are always
better off gathering as much information as possible and spending as much time
as possible in deliberation. But there are moments, particularly in times of
stress, when haste does not make waste, when our snap judgments and first
impressions can offer a much better means of making sense of the world. The
first task of Blink is to convince you of a simple fact: decisions made very
quickly can be every bit as good as decisions made cautiously and
deliberately.”
The
Torah certainly agrees with Gladwell. In
this week’s portion, Mishpatim, the
Israelites accept the yoke of the Torah’s teachings at Mount Sinai—well before
reading the fine print of what they are committing themselves to practice. They say to Moses: “Na’aseh v’nishmah—All that
God has spoken, we will do and understand.”
As countless sages have noted, the doing
precedes the understanding. Commenting on this, Rashi notes: “In that
instant, the Israelites acted with the genius of the Ministering Angels.” For Rashi, Gladwell’s snap intuition is a
kind of angelic gift.
When we think back on
most of the biggest decisions of our lives—such as choosing a college, taking
(or leaving) a job, getting married (or not), having (or not having) a child,
buying a house, moving to a new place, when to retire, etc—we realize that we never
really understand full implications of our actions before we make them. No matter how much research and deliberation
we do, in the end, we always make a kind of leap of faith into the unknown
because we cannot ever truly grasp, in such situations, what we are
really getting ourselves into. Our course
at Sinai, Na’aseh v’nishmah—to act,
and only afterwards, gradually, come to appreciate the consequences of our
actions—remains the only way to move forward in our personal, professional, and
communal lives. In the end, there is no
path that does not demand significant faith.
In those fearful times just before we leap, it is good to know that our
ancestors have been there before us, and that, with God’s help, we are likely
to land with the earth solidly beneath our feet.
2 comments:
Kagyu Monlam
I think all decisions are a blink. I can't think of any time you when you "pull the trigger " and you fully know what happens next. Neither do you make a totally uninformed decision otherwise you you wouldn't be thinking about it. doesn't everything have history? Be it a reckless decision or a cautious one it has history. The only thing a decision does not have is future.
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