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What Greatness Actually Looks Like

 

Most people think greatness means never being wrong. Never messing up. Always having it together.

But our greatest Torah leaders – Mordechai, Esther, David HaMelech, Yosef, our Avot and Imahot – showed us something completely different.

The more they lowered themselves, the greater they became.

Moshe Rabbeinu, the greatest leader we ever had, was the most humble person on earth. David danced before the Aron with complete self-nullification. Esther hid her royal lineage and identity for years. Mordechai sat in sackcloth and ashes at the king's gate, publicly mourning for his people.

Their greatness came from their willingness to bow.

A Modern Lesson

That Japanese volleyball player who slid across the court on his stomach to apologize? He got it.

No excuses. No protecting his image. Just an immediate apology.

And he became great. Millions watched what real strength looks like.

The Real Path to Greatness

When you admit you're wrong without protecting your ego, something shifts. People feel they can trust you. They connect to your integrity. They realize you're not out to win at their expense.

True greatness isn't about never making mistakes. It's about how you respond when you do.

Want to be great? Stop protecting your image. Own your mistakes immediately and completely.

The very act of lowering yourself is what elevates you.


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