Toldot: Staying Hungry “Stay Hungry, Stay Foolish.” Those were the closing words of Steve Jobs’ famous 2005 commencement address at Stanford University. It is a provocative idea. How is staying hungry helpful? Isn’t the sensation of hunger uncomfortable, painful, and even sometimes intolerable? I am not talking about actual hunger or malnourishment. I’m talking about the daily feelings of desire and craving that seem to bring us a lot of pain and suffering. Esau in this week’s Torah portion is this type of hungry. Walking in from the fields one day, he is so ravenous he demands his brother Jacob give him some stew. Esau’s discomfort with his hunger is so extreme that he agrees to Jacob’s outrageous bargain of food for Esau’s birthright: 32. Esau replied, "Behold, I am going to die; so why do I need this birthright?" -
וַּי ֹאמֶר ֵעׂשָו ִהּנֵה ָאנֹכִי הֹולְֵך לָמּות ְו ָלּמָה ּזֶה לִי.לב ּבְכ ָֹרה:
Bereshit 25:32
Was Esau really going to die in that moment? Unlikely. On a psychological level, however, I think Esau felt what many of us feel – A deep emptiness or lack at the center of our being. A hollowness. A place where no love can reach us. A place of constant, voracious hunger that all the soup in the world can’t fill. If our birthright is a sense of self worth, of love, of freedom, we sell this away all the time for quick fixes that temporarily make us feel better. We are supported in this by our popular culture, which tells us that not only should we fill every hunger, of every kind, as soon as possible – ideally, we should arrange our lives so that we never feel the hunger sensation in the first place.
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