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Jewish inspiration Archives - Page 8 of 9 - Out of the Ortho Box
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Uncategorized January 3, 2012

Checkpoints for Your Speech

Every Friday night at Shabbat dinner, my family does something hard – and very cool.

We checkpoint our speech.

See, I’ve mentioned a few times on this blog that Jewish tradition has a lot to say about what we say – and what we shouldn’t say.  Some of the things we shouldn’t say are words of gossip, anger, false flattery, and sarcasm – even if the words are true.  Interesting how in American law “libel” or “slander” are prosecutable only if false. But in Judaism, they are condemned even if true.  Perhaps, especially if true – due to the damage caused to the subject.

So we’re supposed to watch our speech all the time (gulp).  But sometimes, when we want to curry extra favor with God, we do something extra special, and choose a finite period of time – say an hour or two each day or week – to be extra vigilant, in the merit of a loved one that needs healing or wishes to find that special someone or perhaps become a parent.  Or in the memory of a loved one that has passed.  It’s called a “machsom l’fi” [pronounced MACH (as in Bach, the composer) some (rhymes with “foam”) l’FEE] which literally translates to “checkpoint for the mouth.”

A year ago, two lovely young women were diagnosed with cancer – one is a little 2-year-old daughter of a good friend, and the other is a 41-year-old friend suffering from a recurrence.  We decided to do a machsom l’fi each Friday night at Shabbat dinner, for one hour.  I promoted it on Facebook and many of my friends decided to do so as well, each in our own homes.  I know some are still doing it – we sure are.

If conversation wanders into questionable waters, one of us will inevitably remind the others that we are “in the middle of a machsom!”  Or we’ll check our watches to see when we can share the juicy tidbit to make sure we are keeping the hour correctly.

After kiddush, I introduce the hour with a short Hebrew formula.  The translation is:

I hereby accept upon myself, without actually taking a vow, to be careful of words of gossip, slander, anger, and false flattery, whether by speaking, hearing, believing, or writing, from now and for one hour, in the merit that the following may experience a complete healing [here I insert their names in Hebrew and their mothers’ Hebrew names] among all the other sick members of Israel, amen.

It is so encouraging that though I am quite helpless in the face of illness, this is something I can do in the spiritual sphere – and at the same time elevate this special time with my family by raising our conversation and our awareness of respect for others to a higher level.

Have you ever joined a machsom l’fi?

Uncategorized December 21, 2011

The Formerly Orthodox: A Reader’s Response

In response to yesterday’s post about not judging those that have left Orthodoxy, a regular reader of mine emailed me this thoughtful response:
Ruchi, I truly enjoy your postings and I believe that your posting
on the formerly Orthodox is poignant in light of Chanukah (pun intended). 
I
know more than one formerly Orthodox person who holds his upbringing as
responsible for his outcome – that is, not being Orthodox today. But
and yet, these formerly Orthodox people that I know still want (I would say even
cling to) certain aspects of Judaism that they cannot disengage from:
any invite to a Shabbat dinner they accept; lighting Chanukah candles
and saying their prayers, absolutely; hearing the shofar on Rosh
Hashanah, yes; putting on a kippah when going to a kosher restaurant
with friends. 
I could go on and on, but suffice to say, I think we all
cling to tradition – Orthodox or not, just sometimes it’s fraught with
anxiety and other times, it’s very connected to prayer, spirituality,
and/or acceptance in a community. 
I think that goes for all Jews, not
just formers or currents [formerly or currently Orthodox]. How often do the prayers we say slip away
and we’re just saying it by rote? As someone who became more observant
over time, I can easily imagine how easy it would be to slip and fall. 
I
am lucky that I had an education that provided me with various
alternatives to practice within Judaism and the strength to practice as a
now Orthodox woman, who has very strong ties to my upbringing (my
ideology/philosophy on Judaism really reflects my upbringing yet is
mixed with the changes I have experienced over time). This, and what I
think is the most important (for me) was the ability to engage with
Judaism as an intellectual – it’s not just about doing, it’s about doing
with the knowledge of what I am doing with an awareness of where it has
come from.
We as a Jewish community need to provide, maintain and sustain a
support system for both Orthodox, non-Orthodox and formerly Orthodox
peoples to feel comfortable/confident as Jews and to be united in the
miracle that we begin celebrating at sundown tonight – that we are
strong when united and that Jewish practice cannot be taken away. 
Like
what the other posters have said, lighting tonight reminds us, as it
should everyone, that no matter how we practice we (all Jews) are a
nation that are a light to the other nations – what any of us does
reflects/refracts back to everyone else. 

Thank you Ruchi and Chag Chanukah Samaech [happy Chanukah] to you, your family and all your readers!
What do you say, readers?  Agree?  Disagree?  Ideas?  Is anything special being done in your community to provide that support system?
Happy Chanukah and thanks to all of you that are participating in these important conversations about Judaism!
Uncategorized November 14, 2011

Mussar

Tonight I taught a Mussar class. Mussar is the organized study of refining our character traits through Judaism.

It dawned on me: all the negativity in the world, and I do mean ALL, can be reversed by studying mussar in tandem with halacha – Jewish law.

Every single time someone is upset, offended, annoyed, enraged, sarcastic, cynical, or rude, it’s a mussar issue. Guaranteed. That means the one experiencing the negative emotions has something to work on.

Incredibly empowering… and burdensome. So much more fun to blame others.
(For a participant’s viewpoint, check out mussarforthemasses.com.)

Uncategorized October 7, 2011

Yom Kippur, Day of White

There are 6 fast days on the Jewish calendar:

The man, the woman, the long, the short, the black, the white.

Man: Fast of Gedalya (day after Rosh Hashanah)
Woman: Fast of Esther (day before Purim)
Long: Shiva Asar B’Tammuz – longest because of the number of daylight hours (it’s in July)
Short: Asara B’Teves – fewest daylight hours (January)
Black: Tisha B’Av – blackest, most mournful day on our calendar
White: Yom Kippur – white for purity, cleansing, and repentance

Do you dread Yom Kippur?  I do too, sometimes.  In my immature moments I dread the fasting and high expectations of prayer.  In my more mature moments, I welcome the opportunity to truly dust off the cobwebs and stand bravely to face my demons.

And in my most mature moments, I dread it again, wondering if I’ve overestimated myself.

Yom Kippur looks white.  It’s quiet.  People walking to services, from services, dressed simply.  They’re quiet. It’s a serious day.  Nothing else matters.

It smells fresh, like after a good rain.

It tastes metallic, from fasting.

It sounds like a rush of the ocean in prayer, the melody swelling and falling like the tide.

It feels like the pages of my machzor (holiday prayerbook).   Turning, turning, turning.  I’m cold, from not eating.  I pull my sweater close around me.

That was in my youth.

Now, I care for my kids.  Teach at JFX.  Run to catch a small morsel of the service at shul (synagogue).  I grab it like the hungry woman I am.  Try not to kvetch about the fasting; that’s SO not what it’s about.

Hope I’m using the hours well, as they tick, tick, tick away…

Uncategorized October 3, 2011

8 Steps To Your Favorite New Year’s Resolution

Jews are lucky.  We
get two birthdays – our Hebrew date and our solar calendar date.  We get upwards of 10 holidays throughout the
year, separate from legal holidays.  And
we get to fail at our New Year’s Resolutions twice – once at January 1st,
and again at the Jewish New Year in September!
How to beat the odds? 
In 8 steps, that’s how.
1.       Choose what you’re good at.
Most folks invariably make doomsday mistake
#1: they pick what they’re bad at.  Fail
continuously at dieting?  Resolve to lose
weight!  Have an awful relationship with
your in-laws?  Resolve to be nice to
them!  Consistently lose your temper with
your kids!  Resolve to be more patient!
While these goals are lofty and admirable,
they are bad choices for one reason: they will never work.
Choose something you’re already good at, but resolve to upgrade
it in quality or quantity.  Or,
similarly, choose something you’ve been jonesing to do for awhile, want to do,
and know you can do, but needed a poke in the ribs.  This is it. 
New Year’s is your poke.
Example:
You
have a good marriage, but have noticed yourself slipping in disparaging your
spouse to others, all in a jokey way. 
You know you can reign this in, and really want to. 
2.       Pinpoint an action.
Saying, “I’m going to be more healthful” is
super nice, but until you make it a specific VERB it won’t mean much in the
real world.  Try: I’m only going to spend
$5 a week on junk food.  Or: I’m going to
join a produce food share.  Or: I’m going
to move my computer upstairs so I have to do the stairs several times a
day.  Those are actions!
Example:
In
your marriage resolution, the action might be: I’m going to order a set of CD’s
on marriage improvement and keep it in my car. 
Or: I’m going to use the words “sweetie” or “honey” more often.  Or: I’m going to call relative x, who’s been
happily married for 50 years, and ask her if I can come over to do an informal
interview and get some nuggets of wisdom. 
Note the verbs: order, use, call. 
They are practical actions that you can visualize yourself doing today.
3.       Make it specific.
Now that you have an action, make it more
specific.  You’re going to join a food
share?  When will you call?  Whom will you call?  Where will you store it?  Get as nitty-gritty as you can – it will save
you heartache later instead of having your resolution die a slow death of
neglect and ambiguity.  You’re going to
move your computer upstairs?  When?  To where?  
Is there space?  Think all the
details through.
Example:
From
whom will you order the CD’s?  Do you
need to do research on a good recommendation? 
Are you going to be more mushy in public, or just in private?  Which relative will you call, and when?  Do you have time for the interview, or is
this just wishful thinking?  You know you’ve
accomplished this step when you have a plausible to-do item that is on your
list or in your calendar.
4.       Limit by time.
Don’t leave your resolution
open-ended.  How much time will you spend
on this?  If your resolution is to be
more patient with a co-worker, give yourself a time-frame: from 9-10 am, you
will work on your attitude.  Or if your
resolution is to call your mother-in-law once a week, pinpoint your time-frame:
Friday mornings, for a maximum of 10 minutes.
Also set a deadline by which you will stop
and re-assess if this resolution is the right one: ie, after a month, or
six.  The length of time is less
important than that you are giving yourself a kosher endpoint to stop and take
stock.  At that point you may choose to
scrap and start over – hopefully you’ll have learned something in the
process.  Or you may choose to upgrade
again.  Or even to continue exactly what
you’re doing.
Example:
“I
will listen to the CD’s for 10 minutes a day, when I’m on my way to my 3:30
carpool.  Or, I will be especially kind
on Sunday mornings, from 8-9 am (try it at a time that you’re awake for a
greater challenge).  I will try my
program for two months.”
Now
set a reminder on your iphone or Blackberry or whatever – both to remind yourself to
do it, and to let yourself know when your endpoint approaches.
5.       Limit by place.
Don’t expect yourself to abide by
your resolution everywhere.  We all have
times that we’re away from home, not on our own schedules, and are otherwise
not in control of life’s details.  Build
that right into your resolution so it doesn’t throw you. 
Example: only going to spend $5 a
week on junk food?  What about when you’re
away on vacation?  Will you be
exempt?  Will you up your allowance to
$10 a week?  Make these decisions in
advance.  Going to call your
mother-in-law every Friday?  What about
when you’re traveling for business? 
It’s fine to limit your resolution
to only apply when you’re home, when you’re eating at your own table, or in
your car.  It’s even better – both because
you’re making your resolution that much more attainable, and because you’re
planning for the unexpected  – which will
happen regularly.  One year, I resolved
not to make phone calls when I was driving a child to or from an appointment,
but only if that child was the only other person in the car besides me.  This would be my private time with that
child.  Had I resolved to not be on the
phone when my kids were around, my resolution would’ve died eons ago.  As it stands, I still am in full observance
of that resolution, made a number of years ago – because it was so very
specific and limited.
Example:
“I
will work on my marriage in the car listening to the CD’s.  If I’m driving someone else’s car to carpool,
I will not hold myself responsible.” 
Or,
“I will be more cognizant of my language while at the breakfast table.  Or, when we go out with friends to venue x, I
will be especially aware to build my spouse with positive language, and not be
denigrating.”

 Specify the place where your resolution will
happen.

6.       Write it down.
No, not in your head.  Not in your computer.  Not even in your iphone.  Take an index card or piece of PAPER, and a
good ol’ fashioned PEN, and write it down. 
Next, TAPE it somewhere  you will
see it every morning: on your alarm clock, on the mirror in your bathroom, in
your underwear drawer.
Example:
“I
will use especially soft language to my spouse like ‘sweetie’ and ‘honey’ every
morning as we are getting ready to leave the house, from 8:00 am-8:30 am.  I have set myself a reminder in my
phone.  I will only do this when we are
home.  I will try it for one month, then
reassess.”
Now
tape it to your bathroom mirror.

7.       Share it with someone who loves you.
Make a copy of your index card or
paper and give it to someone who loves you. 
No need to shout it from the rooftops, and also not smart to share it
with the butt of your resolution, but definitely make yourself externally
accountable by sharing it with someone who really wants you to succeed: your
spouse (unless you’re working on that relationship), a good, trustworthy and
discreet friend, a sister.
Example:
Make
a copy of your marriage resolution and share it with a close sibling or
girlfriend who also has a good marriage and truly wants you to succeed – but won’t
share it with others.

8.       Set yourself a consequence.
When (not if) you slip, you will give yourself a consequence.  Determine what that consequence will be
now.  It should be a proactive action –
not a “refraining from” kind of thing.
Good: I will unplug the TV for ½ hour.
Bad: I won’t watch my favorite show.
Good: I will send a $10 donation to a cause I
disagree with.
Bad: I will skip my favorite Starbucks drink.

Good: I will spend ½ hour folding laundry [insert
your least favorite chore here].  This is
actually very good, because your household benefits.
Bad: I will do my resolution for longer tomorrow
(the time frame you chose is just right; if you couldn’t swing it today, don’t
expect yourself to surpass your original expectations tomorrow).
Example:
If I flub up my half
hour, I will spend an extra fifteen minutes prepping my spouse’s favorite
salad/dessert/picking up something special for him that day.
***
Now you see what you can do
How to choose to see this through
Try the steps, one through eight,
See how soon you celebrate!
Let me know how it goes!
Uncategorized September 23, 2011

The Jewish Family Experience (JFX)

I can’t believe it’s taken me this long to blog about JFX.

JFX is an organization that my husband and I and some friends began 7 years ago.  We were back in Cleveland after having lived in Israel and Buffalo Grove, IL, and were running some Torah classes with some folks that my husband had met at bris ceremonies.  And they said:  “Who knew Judaism was so cool???  Will you teach our kids?”

And we said: “Yes!”

And JFX was born.

At this point we run 10 different kinds of programs such as Sunday school, Shabbat events, Bnei mitzvah, holiday celebrations, classes of all kinds, and Israel trips.  And that’s all very cool, and you can check it all out on our (shameless promo) website: www.jewishfamilyexperience.org.  Be sure to check out the blog too – it’s fun.

But that’s just the face of JFX.  There’s a whole other part to us:  the soul.

Basically, we’re a family.  A community.  My husband and I, we’re like the parents.  And then there’s all this extended family.  They’re all my friends.  We like hanging out with each other.  We invite them for Shabbos and they invite each other.  We take care of each other in joys and sorrows.  No, we’re not all the same.  Some keep Shabbat and some go to Vegas Friday night.  Some keep kosher and others… don’t.  Some don’t gossip and some wear skirts.  Some kids’ go to day school and some to Hawken and some to public school.  Some wear kippahs and some lay tefillin and some are atheists.  But, I dunno, it works.

We’re not afraid to tackle some serious issues: G-d?  Developing a relationship with Him?  Why do bad things happen to good people?  Why do good people do bad things?

And we all are investing our kishkes into our kids.  Making sure they stay Jewish.  Making sure they love it.  Making sure they find it cool, fun, and awesome.  Making sure they know the Rabbi’s cell phone number.

JFX is so special to me.  I feel humbled and loved and enveloped and grateful.

JFX… I love you.

Uncategorized September 18, 2011

What the High Holidays Mean to Me

The air is cooler, softer
the new start
new school
supplies
season
Jewish year
fresh start
Fall has always been my favorite season
Rosh Hashanah is approaching
It starts with Elul:
that Jewish month that starts whilst summer still lingers
and whispers
“they’re coming…
it’s time
start thinking
it’s sobering
start wondering
tracking
accounting
resolving”
Thirty days prior to the holiday
must prepare
NO, silly
not the honey
not the chickens
not the apple picking.

That was the easy part.

The reflection
selection
connection
is the hard part.

Serious holiday.  Whazzat?

Hard because ignorance is bliss.

Truly: harder not to

Thanks to David on the Lake for his inspiration in the new genre
What do the impending High Holidays mean to you?