Inicio › Foros › Course Forums › Kabbalah in Action › Course Reflections › Share any/all of the following: What most inspired me in the course? What have I learned about myself in the process? What do I wish for my fellow students in their spiritual development?
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Sue.
- February 28, 2021 at 5:25 am EST #41589

Julian Edwards- KabU InstructorModeratorShare any/all of the following: What most inspired me in the course? What have I learned about myself in the process? What do I wish for my fellow students in their spiritual development?
- Autor(a)Respuestas
- July 27, 2025 at 12:43 am EDT #446414
RitaPartícipeBesides the lectures and readings in this course, the live meeting with Julian inspired me the most. To have so many of my questions asked by other students was amazing. Seeing and hearing the others also made me feel closer to them.
I have also learned that I have so much to learn. It is easy at the beginning of sensing the light to feel you are “there” but it is not so. The concept of the ladder in my corporeal mind had a few steps. I now know there are many steps inside of those few.
For my fellow students, I wish that you continue in this journey and we all become closer to each other and to the light.
- July 12, 2025 at 5:26 pm EDT #445067
Janae Ben-ShabatPartícipeWhat most inspired me in this course was the deep reminder that none of us can ascend alone. The Light reveals itself in the space between us—in our effort to see, support, and uplift one another. I was especially moved by the teaching that our individual sparks, no matter how sincere, are not enough on their own. It’s only through unity, through choosing to come together above ego and difference, that we create a flame strong enough to illuminate the path forward.
Through this journey, I’ve learned something quietly powerful about myself: that my desire to give, to serve, and to connect isn’t just a personality trait—it’s a spiritual tool. The more I lean into that desire with intention, the more aligned I feel with the purpose of creation. At the same time, I am also painfully aware of how self-centered and self-serving I am and have been—how often my thoughts and choices revolve around my own comfort, control, or recognition. That awareness has been humbling, even uncomfortable, but also clarifying.
To my fellow students, my wish is this: that you continue to strengthen your connection to the Light by strengthening your connection to each other. May your sparks find each other in the dark. May you always remember that what you seek is not far off—it’s already in the heart of your friend, waiting for your love and your courage to draw it forth. I hope your path is filled with joy, honesty, and the kind of growth that brings you closer to the truth of who you really are: a giver, a builder, a beloved piece of the whole.
- July 8, 2025 at 4:21 am EDT #444676
LucyPartícipeWhat inspires me most, is about how the course was structured and it like it keeps
- July 4, 2025 at 3:49 pm EDT #444306
SallyPartícipeI have learned that every single idea i had about spirituality was not correct, but misguided. While I am making g progress in my thin king, a lot of things are still not clear. I am trying to understand how we do not have a soul but gain it has we moved towards the Creator. Also i don’t understand how time is not linear. How can this be? I would like clarification on these concepts
- June 28, 2025 at 4:58 pm EDT #443789
SmithPartícipeWhat most inspired me in the course?
What have I learned about myself in the process?
What do I wish for my fellow students in their spiritual development?I was inspired by the way Julian ended the final video lesson, with “I’m not going to tell you,” and added that students had to study Kabbalah and learn for their self. I thought that was both funny and inspiring. The students with a true desire to learn will proceed. The students who are angered and that are not meant to continue for now will quit.
I liked how Julian emphasized that we can’t be crusaders, but need to work on ourselves.
I wish that my fellow students and I continue to work on ourselves.
- June 23, 2025 at 2:39 pm EDT #443311
Sun
PartícipeWhat I found most interesting, during a zoom session with Gianni, that he spoke as if he took 100 percent responsibility for everything that happens in his life, even if they are bad, violent events.
But when he described how inside “the Ten” we are expected to be exclusively positive, avoiding not only negative talk but even nice, mundane topics, it dawned on me that this is repressing all negativity instead of dissolving it. Such strongly repressed negativity is bound to pop up somewhere on the outside. Would I therefore be giving too much credit to Bnei Baruch if I postulated that all that powerfully repressed negativity in all cells of “the Ten” is responsible for the manifestations of world- wide conflicts and wars? Take it as a compliment.
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