Picture this: you’re in the supermarket, comparing cereal boxes, when that neighbor who always seems just a little too informed about everyone’s life appears beside you.
“So, how’s work going?” they ask with a warm smile.
You answer automatically. You talk about the promotion, the new project, maybe even hint at the raise. It feels harmless.
But according to Kabbalistic tradition, moments like this are not insignificant.
In Jewish mystical teaching, there is a concept called ayin hara — often translated as the “evil eye,” but understood more deeply as the draining effect of excessive exposure. It’s not superstition. It’s a spiritual principle: what is overexposed weakens; what is protected strengthens.
Here are five seemingly ordinary questions that, through this lens, carry more weight than they appear — and how tradition suggests responding with awareness.
“How’s work going?”
It sounds like polite small talk. But when you begin sharing details — numbers, upcoming deals, confidential projects — you are revealing what Kabbalah calls your Cli, your “vessel.” The Cli represents your capacity to receive abundance.
Speaking too freely about developing success can symbolically “crack” that vessel. Not because someone will curse you, but because premature exposure disperses focused energy.
A restrained response might sound like:
“Thank God, everything is going well.”
Gratitude without details. Strength without overexposure.
“What are your plans?”
This question can feel encouraging. People love ambition.
But in Talmudic wisdom, revealing plans before they manifest is compared to digging up a seed repeatedly to check if it’s growing. The act itself disrupts the process.