One of the Rebbe’s  followers, Reb Chaikel, had a relative who was extremely poor. Once, while traveling with Rebbe Nachman, Reb Chaikel instructed the wagon driver to stop at this relative’s house. Inside, Reb Chaikel pointed out the man’s poverty and asked the Rebbe to give him a blessing for wealth. T he Rebbe said to Reb Chaikel, “I have no blessings for him. If you want him to have a blessing, you give it.” After making certain that he’d heard correctly, and obtaining the Rebbe’s assurances that he wouldn’t mind his “presumptuousness,” Reb Chaikel emptied a pitcher of water across the floor. Then he spread the water in all directions, saying, “Abundance to the east, abundance to the west, north and south!” Then Rebbe Nachman and Reb Chaikel left. Shortly afterward, a group of merchants came to this man’s home seeking to purchase food and drink. When the man told them that he had none, they gave him money to buy it for them. From then on, whenever these merchants came to  the  area,  they  would  lodge  at  the  man’s  house,  and  they eventually commissioned him to sell their wares for them. Before long, the man prospered and became very wealthy. Before, whenever he came to Breslov, this man had always made certain to visit the Rebbe. But now, the more he prospered, the more engrossed he became in his business dealings. He no longer had the time to visit the Rebbe. Once, while rushing around Breslov on business, he passed by the Rebbe’s house. Rebbe Nachman saw him and called him in. “Did  you  glance  at the sky  today?”  the Rebbe  asked  him.  The  man  replied  that  he  hadn’t.  Calling him  to  the  window,  the  Rebbe  said,  “Tell  me  what  you  see.” “I see wagons and horses and people scurrying about,” the man replied. “Believe me,” Rebbe Nachman said, “fifty years from now there  will  be  other  market  days.  There  will  be  other  horses, other wagons, different people. What is here today will no longer be. I ask you, what pressure are you under? What’s making you so busy that you don’t even have time to look at Heaven?” Based on Kokhavey Or 
#5, p. 41 ENCOURAGEMENT. 27. At times  a  person  can  undergo the  most  terrible  decline,  and  then  the  fall  can  be  very, very  low.  There  are  some  who  fall  so  low  that  the  only term  for  where  they  are  is  the  “filthy  places.”  Such  a person  can  become  wracked  with  doubts,  morbid thoughts  and  mental  turbulence.  His  heart  races, because  the  “husks”  torment  and  circle  the  heart  with every  kind  of  confusion.  It  may  seem  impossible  to f ind  God  in  such  places,  but  the  very  act  of  searching for  God  from  there,  asking  and  seeking  “Where  is  the place  of  His  glory?”  –  in  itself  can  bring  healing  and reconstruction. The  more  a  person  sees  how far  he  is  from  God’s  glory,  the more  grief-stricken  he  should become.  He  should  search even  more  intently  and  ask, “Where  is  the  place  of  His glory?”  Through  the  very  act of  searching  and  seeking and  longing  for  God’s  glory with  anguish,  cries,  questions ... through  this  alone,  he will attain the ultimate ascent  –  he  will  be  worthy  of ascending  to  the  level  of  “Where?”  which  is  the  most exalted holiness. The  essence  of  repentance  is  to  search  at  all  times, “Where  is  the  place  of  His  glory?”  Then  the  fall  will  be transformed  into  a  great  advance.  Understand  this  well, for it is very deep (Likutey Moharan  II, 12). breslov.org PO Box 5370 • Jerusalem, Israel • 972.2.582.4641 PO Box 587 • Monsey, NY 10952 • 1.800.33.BRESLOV Pathways  is a weekly publication.  To subscribe, please visit  breslov.org/pathways.  To make a dedication, please  email pathways@breslov.org. © 2018 Breslov Research Institute