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Jewish inspiration Archives - Page 7 of 9 - Out of the Ortho Box
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Jewish inspiration

Uncategorized April 5, 2012

49 Days of Inspiration

Hey readers,

There’s a pretty cool thing I did last year, and this year I’d like to offer it to the readers of OOTOB.

There’s a period of time on the Jewish calendar called “sefirat ha-omer.”  It’s the counting of the 49 days from Passover (Pesach) till the holiday of Shavuot, which commemorates the acceptance of the Torah at Sinai.  There are 7 major character traits that we are meant to focus on at this time, and each of the seven gets paired with another for each of the 49 days to produce a very fine-tuned trait to focus on.

I used a book by Rabbi Yacov Haber to convey the trait of the day with a particular action point that I sent out on each of the 49 days (usually the night or afternoon before), either via text or email.  Last year 75 friends were on the list, and I’d like to offer it to you, my readers.  If you wish to receive the message (you can cancel at any time) you may comment below or email me with your preference (text/email) and contact info.

I am at ruchi@jewishfamilyexperience.org.

Have a wonderful Passover to my Jewish readers!

Uncategorized March 29, 2012

The Most Important Word of the Seder

Hey readers… today I’m blogging over at Life in the Married Lane, a blog by my friend Rivki Silver.  Rivki is my band-mate, fellow can’t-stop-thinking-about-random-things-usually-connected-to-Judaism girlfriend, and grammar geek.  I like her.  And her blog is great reading too.

“Word association game:  Seder.

What do you think of?
Brisket.  Matza.  Family.  Bitter herbs (maror).  The Four Questions.  The Four Cups.  Afikoman.
Yup, all those are features of the seder.  But I’ll bet the most important word is the one you haven’t thought of.”

To read the rest, head over this way.  And have a wonderful Passover – if you’re Jewish!

Uncategorized January 30, 2012

Why I’m Still Proud to be an Observant Jew

Still got my head held high
Still so proud I could cry
Trying to be a Torah-observant Jew
is a privilege
an honor
a treasure

Proud of the people that make up my world
Strong women
Kind men
Sweet children, singing pure songs
Respectful teenagers, keeping their language clean, even when so frustrated
Grandparents, who are given the seat of honor and the attention.

Proud of this community
that takes care of the sick
the needy
the stalled cars
just for the mitzvah
non-profits started by individuals in their homes
on every corner.

People
forgiving debt
refraining from gossip
giving 10% of their tight incomes to charity
inviting strangers into their homes
to help a fellow Jew.

My husband, and so many others, who get up while it’s dark
to study some Torah before beginning their day
who find a minyan in which to pray
while traveling
vacationing
who never sleep in…. because they have a higher Boss.

Torah is perfect –
People are not
Is it a surprise that “we” include
the stupid, the rude, the sick, the emotionally disturbed?

Is there any race, religion, neighborhood that doesn’t?
Expectations are exhausting,
impossible.

We’re just people
trying
striving
to live according to the Torah – the one that belongs to us all.

Sometimes we succeed, and sometimes we fail.
But we are trying.

And in the meantime, that makes me proud.
Individuals and communities trying to live meaningful lives
according to our holy Book.

No matter what people may do
or say
my head is held high,
proud, honored, humbled, striving, grateful to be
a Torah-observant Jew
even when
I
fail.

Uncategorized January 19, 2012

My Jerusalem

My Jerusalem is
gold
wet stones
copper sunshine in the morning
prayerful words, fighting their way to my lips.
Grapefruit and pomegranates, and
the most passionate people of the four corners of the earth
converging, colliding, headily.
My Jerusalem is
Ma nishma?
Yalla!
Boker tov!
My Jerusalem is
raw emotion, tears – from where??, a soaring love that
threatens to break out of me,
beautiful people and beautiful art,
soulful words, scribbled on construction sites.
Taxis filled, bursting, with the personalities of their
oh-so-colorful drivers.
My Jerusalem is
Shabbat Shalom
and
Baruch Hashem.
My Jerusalem is
far.
Away.
Uncategorized January 13, 2012

6 Ways to Re-Inspire

Some people look at Judaism as a marathon.  If you finish, you’re Orthodox.

However, God seems to have a rather interesting and multi-layered way of judging us.  And we’re not privy to much of it.  In any event, all Jews of all stripes ought to be asking themselves some tough questions each day.  Like, who am I?  Where am I going in this life?  Why?  Whom have I chose to surround myself with in this journey?  What am I doing Jewishly?  Why?

As an observant Jew, I’m hardly exempt from these questions.  Which
some find unfathomable.  I feel it’s just the opposite: if I’ve been
gifted with passionate Judaism, oughtn’t I constantly check in and see
what my relationship to that entity looks like??

A dear reader Facebook-messaged me the following:

So, I would be looking for suggestions on how to keep that fire for Judaism going. I find that I get it for a while and then I get busy
with all the day to day stuff of work, preparing for Shabbat, childcare, etc.
and then one day I realize I’m totally stagnating Jewishly. So then I
try to get fired up again. I would find helpful 1) tips for getting
fired up and 2) tips for staying fired up amidst the day-to-day grind.
Feel free to hit the delete button.

So it ebbs and flows, like any relationship.  This process is described in many Torah sources.  For the Kabbalistic, mystical-minded among you, one way of describing it is “days of love and days of hate.”  And the real question then becomes: what to do about it??

Here’s what I’ve learned:

1. Exercise.

Whoa – did you read that right??  Yup.  I find that when I’m on my game, I’m on my game across the board.  I’m getting enough sleep, eating well, working out, and paying attention to my soul.  Success breeds success.  Put a different way, when you take care of yourself, you want to take even better care of yourself.

2. Check in with another.

So here’s a newsflash: as smart, savvy, psychologically-aware, and emotionally astute as you may be, you are incapable of being objective about your own stuff.  That’s not an insult, it’s a statement of fact on the human condition, so you’re in good company.  Whoever thinks they can be is in further delusion than simple subjectivity.  So take a deep breath, grit your teeth and ask a wise person who loves you where you can reign it in. Are you being lazy?  Envious?  Materialistic?  Be willing to hear the answers.  Make sure they know you want the (loving version of the) truth.  And don’t respond for 60 seconds.

3. Listen to a lecture.

There are so many ways to hear a good, juicy, deep, thought-provoking class that will re-inspire you to want to be the best version of yourself.  There are Jewish sites that offer material on virtually any topic under the sun.  Some of my personal favorites are aish.com, simpletoremember.com, torah.org, chabad.org.  You can read it, download it onto your ipod (or have your kid do it), play it off your laptop, burn it onto a CD, digitally embed it into your cassette player (kidding).  You can have a Torah thought texted to you, telephone-conferenced with you, Facebooked to you, tweeted at you, or beamed at you daily from above (again, kidding).  It’s a brave new world.

And shockingly, you can learn something live too.  Check out the resources in your area.  Just make sure it’s commensurate with your skill, style and interest level.

4. Do an act of kindness.

Nothing makes you feel like a better person than, well, acting like a better person.  The ancient practice of “mussar” – character development with spirituality – teaches that growth can occur from the outside in.  In other words, behave as though you are spiritual and you will become more spiritual.  On a very practical level, you feel great when you give, and success breeds success (see #1).

5. Switch it up.

Stagnating in prayer?  Make a change in what, where, when you pray.  Add something new to your routine, or say less to focus better.  Shabbat: start inviting guests.  Or stop inviting guests.  Change around your menu.  Light candles in a new place in your home.  Holidays – try a new service, introduce a new family ritual, poll your friends for ideas.  Kosher: scout out some new foods that you’ve never tried before.  Do a food swap with other kosher friends for dinner.  Eliminate your go-to food for a week to appreciate it more.  Don’t let stagnation build.

6. Ask for help.

So this may be new for you, but I find prayer really works.  Ask for help from Above in whatever language feels right for you.

Here’s one for beginners:

“Um, hi.  I don’t know who You are and I don’t know what to call you, and actually I feel very strange talking to You because I feel like I’m talking to myself.  Oh… you probably already know that… OK, I’ll get to the point.  So I’m feeling disconnected… unmoored… uninspired… so maybe you can help me.  I don’t know how You can help me, but probably You know how.  Help me to become more integrated in myself, to be the person I know I can be, to be in touch with my spiritual side, and to feel good at the end of the day.  Help me make a difference in this world, be a good example, and do good deeds with all the amazing gifts and resources You’ve given me.  Kay.  That’s about it.  So… thanks.  Um, have a good day… and let’s chat again tomorrow.”

 Jewish tradition teaches that God will never say no to a prayer like that, because while not everything we pray for is in our best interests, becoming a more spiritual human being is always in our best interests.

So I turn to you now.  Have you experienced the dark days?  What ideas have worked for you?

Uncategorized January 11, 2012

Meet Me in Chapter 3

My friend Lori Palatnik says you “meet people in chapter 3.”  Meaning you are clueless as to what people experienced before you met them, including upbringing, childhood, challenges, traumas, or triumphs.

If you would have walked into my house a couple of Friday nights ago at 9 pm, here’s what you would have seen:

Me, standing at the sink washing dishes. Husband, asleep on the couch. Daughters, reading on the couch. Toys, strewn across the floor.

Here’s what you may have concluded:

This woman does everything around here!  Why is her husband snoozing on the couch while she does the dishes?!  And what about those spoiled kids – why does she let them slack off??

Here’s what happened in chapter one and two:

Husband encouraged me to take a nap earlier that afternoon.  While I napped, he cleaned up the house, bathed the kids, and finished up in the kitchen.

Husband woke up at 4:45 am that morning while I woke up at 7:30 am.

Daughters helped all afternoon and evening with carpools, shopping, salad-making, serving dinner while I sat at the table, and clearing the table.

Can’t wait for chapter 4!

Have you made the mistake of meeting others in chapter 3, not realizing that you haven’t read chapters one and two?

Uncategorized January 9, 2012

Poll: more, less, or stay where I am?

They say in Judaism your observance should be somewhere between “comfortable” and “overwhelmed.”

Do you wish you could take on more observances?  Feel stretched, and wish you could scale back? Or do you feel you’re holding the tension at a good place?

Complacent? Stressing? Growing? Stagnating? Stretched?  What do you say?