HIGH HOLIDAYS 2011

the last time i wrote about the high holidays, it was with such negativity, i thought i would balance that out with a positive entry about this year’s holidays.

finally, after some time of searching, i had a very enjoyable; very peaceful holiday experience.
it seems that i have been constantly trying to “return” and find my place among a jewish community for quite some time. lately, the spirituality has been taken out of everything because i couldn’t “afford” to attend services or didn’t have money to pay dues. this would always lead me to a rant about how modern society has commercialized religion into a money-making scheme and ‘argh argh argh!’
this year, we finally move into the small town outside the city i was looking for which, of course has a shul and small jewish community. i start attending family events, meeting members, rabbi, sweet female cantor, and executive directors…i am told that i can attend anything i want, that i may take all the time i need to see if this is something i want to be a part of – to feel RIGHT.
so i do.

and come rosh hashanah, i was ready for a spiritual new year. i was ready to spend some time inside of myself and find some peace. i was ready to pray for my sins and those of others. to confront errors i have made and find ways to be more whole. to do better. i was definitely ready to sit in shul, listen to the song of the most soulful cantor i have ever heard and just cry. let the tears roll in joy and in pain. to let the tears roll down my face in honor of life. in honor of those no longer with us, in honor of my children, myself, and my family.
when else will i do that, if not sitting in temple with others who are trying to do the same? i don’t know about everyone else sitting in that temple, but i know i get very distracted in the daily doings that i barely take a moment to say a prayer before going to sleep. i barely take a moment to sit down and simply take some deep breaths in quiet meditation. things that do nothing but good for me.

i was sitting in services because THIS year when i asked “how much is it?” the response was “just come.”
“just come” – with no talk about dues memberships or fees. and that is all i wanted to do. just come.

as i come to peace with the fact that there are the ways of dues memberships and fees, i have to say that without that taking the spotlight from the holiday, i was able to fully engage. to fully immerse in the holidays and the spirituality that comes with it. i am so very thankful for the “just come” because my focus was right where it needed to be. i made my first brisket, baked some challah and chatted with the big guy QUITE a bit. he even threw me a curveball at services, and i met a troubled soul who made everything that much heavier.
i have to say that troubled souls are everywhere and anywhere you least expect it. a recovering alcoholic or struggling crackhead can be sitting right next to you at shul. she can be speed-dialing the rabbi when she has relapsed and used again. this, my friends, made it all so real.

yom kippur. when we talk about being good people. people that clothe the naked and feed the hungry. during a time when we give to charity and to the needy, i had needy right next to me. needing rides to services, trips to the supermarket and a friend to cry next to during kol nidre. when i first met her, i looked up at Gd and i said “really???”, shaking my head. and by the end of the holidays, at the end of my rejuvenation and spiritual comeback, when a troubled soul was on her way home to mom and dad — i heard him answer “really.”

no clichés

you are 18 months already and i am 30 years old.
“they grow so fast”, they say. yes, they do – but only as fast as time “flies” on a regular basis. time is flying only because it’s been so amazing.
only because each day is more beautiful than the day before.

i could sit here and break my writer’s block with an entry filled with details on how quickly the time has gone, and how i blinked and she was so big and chatty that i do not know where the time has gone. but honestly i have been as present as i could be every single day.
i have jumped into the intensity of each day with my heart wide open.
i have done my very best not to miss a single beat; to catch every moment that i could.
if i missed my family for two days straight, i make the next two days feel like four.

in truth, she is quite different than she was 18 months ago and it is truly magical to watch a person be born and grow while you guide that being with no real knowledge of what you are doing.
(she’s actually getting real funny. my kid makes me laugh – what a joy)
and my family has, in fact, made a move to the west coast creating more intensity to life.
but i do look forward to tomorrow the same as i looked forward to today and yesterday.
i try and remind myself to stay in my body and not lose myself in the intensity of life and mayhem that is my emotional body. i continue to wear my heart on my sleeve as it keeps me true.
i continue longing to be in fifteen places at once as everyone’s family grows and as everyone grows farther away in body and mind.

in this new year (where i didn’t even attempt to find services to attend) – i wish for everyone’s family to continue to grow. with so many families growing and “starting up” by so many people i know – i can only shed tears of joy, long to be there with you, and ask G-d and the universe to bring you peace always. good vibes for good people!

L’Shana Tova

I will keep catching up with me here soon…

religious heartbreak

HIGH HOLIDAYS TIME, 2008

i had saved Rosh Hashanah in the nick of time with a delicious homemade apple pie, great friends, my husband and a bottle of wine.
A week later it was time for Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement.
I have to say I was quite enthusiastic this year for the holiday. It is not a very “festive” holiday, per say, but I was looking forward to it nonetheless.
I think it is important to take the time to reflect on ways we can be better people; talk to Gd about the wrongs you have done, reflect, repent…this type of prayer and meditation helps us become more aware of ourselves and helps us grow.

So I tried on clothes and chose two outfits for temple, marked my prayer book, prepared candles, and called the local temple to confirm times for service.
Here is where things went sour – I was informed that services were for MEMBERS ONLY and if I was not a member, I would need to PURCHASE a ticket for services. At what cost? Two Hundred and Fifty DOLLARS! I thought that was crazy and proceeded to call the rest of the temples in the area only to find that this was the case EVERYWHERE. There I was, broken down into tears, trying to find a service I could afford. Who has ever heard of that?! Shopping around for religious service…one woman even said to me that she had the “best price” – that I would not “find anything better”…!

yes, i cried. i cried every time i hung up the phone and picked it up again.
it was such a sad moment. i could not go to service because i couldn’t afford it. everywhere – one hundred fifty, two hundred, two fifty…
is it just me or is this just not biblical or spiritual?
i was so disheartened. i could not believe this type of thing happened in Judaism. i’ve always heard things about other religions and perhaps the lesson is that i should not have judged other religions. i suppose i did not realize it’s all the same everywhere.

i was so disheartened.
i lost all enthusiasm.
i start to question all the rituals. i haven’t lit Shabbos candles.

the whole time i was preparing for Yom Kippur, i was praying and meditating, going over the things one goes over during this time…
people i have wronged, judged, or disrespected —
lost my temper, lost control

so i didn’t enjoy a service with others, with community.
i didn’t hear any sounds from the shofar
i focused but not long enough.
but who is to say that it was not long enough?
i know Gd hears me
my thoughts

my atonement.

i am not sure where i am going with this experience.
but it was sad.
so very sad.