“You Want To Start Us Off?”

Tuesday, 26. January 2010

I returned to California last Friday, nearly six months after the funeral and sitting shivah. It’s rained a lot over the past week, which, if you want to read biblical meaning into the weather, you can interpret that as a good sign. Water often equals life, and as I visit with my dad I see a man whose come to terms with his loss. He brings thick, whole-grain Artisan bread, which he calls “the fountain of youth,” to friends and his doctor’s nurses as gifts of appreciation. He laughs. He enjoys talking on the phone. He even went to a dinner party last Saturday night, leaving me home alone.  In short, he’s engaged in life again, including new projects.

One is renovating an old house in front of a rental housing development he built in 1962. He also purchased the office building his property management company offices are in, offices he rented for many years, and he’s excited about owning the building and senses that he’s invested in a good opportunity.

Also, as mentioned in the last post, my daughter, Rachel, has moved to San Francisco, where she plans to live and open a Rolfing practice. Until she moves into her apartment in the Mission neighborhood in mid-February, she is living in the East Bay with my dad/her grandfather, or Zaida, as his grandchildren call him. Needless to say, he loves having her stay with him. They are getting to know and appreciate each other like never before. All good.

To say Kaddish, I returned to Beth Jacob Congregation in Oakland for Shabbat last Friday night and Saturday, and I’ve gone back each morning so far this week. When I arrived Sunday morning, about five men were sitting around schmoozing, waiting for the service to begin. Jeff Shachat, the gabbi, or person at Beth Jacob who assists in running the service, saw me. Knowing I was a mourner, or an ahvel in Hebrew, he wanted to give me the opportunity to lead part of the service, a custom and honor in the Jewish tradition.

“You want to start us off?” he asked.

As I’ve said before, I’m comfortable at my shul, Beth El Temple, in West Hartford, a Conservative one. But leading services at an Orthodox shul triggers feelings of insecurity about my prayer skills. After all, for many of those in attendance, they can chant the service with a fluency that sounds like they’re natives to Hebrew and the prayers. We at Beth El, skip many of the early prayers of praise or Psalms that most Orthodox daveners chant. And though I’ve been attending services more frequently at Beth David Synagogue, an Orthodox shul in my neighborhood back East,I’ve never led services there. Instead I’ve sat in the comfort of my seat, joining in, which is easy and safe.

So when Jeff asked me if I wanted to start the minyan off — no big deal to him — my gut instinct was to demur. ”Maybe tomorrow,” I said, though a part of me wanted to rise to the challenge. I put my tallit or prayer shawl on and wrapped my teffilin around my arm and head, when Jeff had approached me again,  a prayer book in hand.

“Why don’t you just do up to Baruch She’amar?” he offered, which meant leading the first few prayers, the preliminary part of the service. He turned the pages. ”You do this,” he said, pointing to a prayer I knew. “Yeh,” I said. I can do that. “And this,” he said. turning the page. I nodded, feeling more comfortable. “And this,” Again, I nodded OK.

I walked up to the bima, and started chanting the initial morning blessings of gratitude, facing the ark, my back to the congregants as they filed in. I reached the point where I was to pass the baton to someone else.

“You’re doing great,” Jeff said, standing next to me at the bima, announcing page numbers during the service. “Why don’t you continue.” I did. I reached the next section of the service, the heart of the service, where I again expected to be relieved, and Jeff told me to keep going. I kept going.

I reached the last section of the service. As is custom to let mourners, or avvayleem,  lead, he asked another mourner to finish up. “Take your victory lap,” Jeff said to me, as I walked down from the bima.

I felt proud. If this all sounds like too much inside baseball talk, like a geek into prayer, let me pull the camera out for a long shot. What I’m talking about is the intersection between a dream, a desire, a want and that obstacle — whatever it is — that tends to trip us up. When there’s something you want to do, something your heart delights in imagining and that point when the rubber hits the road. We looked early on at one of the concepts of Kaddish, the idea that as you learn more, as you commit to something, suddenly you see an enlarged world. In theological terms, the rabbis were saying the result of that exercise is to experience a greater concept of God.

And so, I would suggest, when I said yes to the simple question, “Do you want to start us off?”  I was expanding my world, my life experience. I was stretching myself to open up to even greater experiences. And I’m wondering, maybe this is  one aspect of what saying Kaddish is all about.

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A Busy Month With the Kids

Tuesday, 12. January 2010

I know the blog has been quiet of late. Weekly posts instead of the earlier pace of three times a week. Part of the reason may stem from the ritual I’ve come to adopt. How much can one write about going to shul daily, morning and late afternoon or evening without repeating one’s self?

But another reason stems from how busy we’ve been over the past month. Around the same time that a new girl arrived into the Felson family, that being our niece, Ayala Pearl, the one born in Jerusalem Dec. 4, Julia and I were on our way back from an overnight trip to Rochester, N.Y., where we picked up a 14-month Wheaton Terrier named Darla. It turns out she and our six-year-old Wheaton, Sammy, have the same father, Abe, so they’re siblings. IMG_2396I had managed to scout out shuls before hand, and the timing worked out perfectly. Well, for me, not for Julia and our new pup, who sat in the car for too long while I said Kaddish at Congregation Beth Hakneses Hachodosh.

Then a couple weeks later, our middle-son, David, 23, arrived home, after spending the last year working in Washington, D.C. at various internships – unpaid and then paid – and at a Farmer’s Market, where he worked as market manager one day a week. Like many his age, it’s been a tough year to find full-time work. But he’s landed a job through a D.C.-based organization -– actually, a paid year-long fellowship in Bolivia of all places. He leaves this Friday.

A few days after David arrived home, our son, Ben, 20, returned home from a semester abroad, coincidentally, also in Bolivia. The story gets even more bizarre. Until Ben left for Bolivia late last summer, none of us had ever heard of the city he was studying in, Cochabamba, though it boasts a population of more than 500,000. Now it turns out David will be stationed in – yep, you guessed it – Cochabamba as well.

The same day, Ben flew into JFK from South America, our daughter, Rachel, 27, was flying East from Boulder, Colorado, where she had just completed an 18-month program to become a certified Rolfer. She came home to spend a few weeks with all of us before flying back to the Rocky Mountains. Yesterday she packed all her belongings into her Subaru wagon and embarked on the next chapter in her life: Moving to San Francisco to live and start her new Rolfing practice. [By the way, she’s still looking for a name for the practice and her soon-to-be announced website.]

Ben returned to college before New Year’s Day – he too flew back to the Rocky Mountains, as he’s a junior at Colorado College. So this past Friday night, among those sitting at our Shabbat table were Rachel and David. We sang Shalom Aleichem, chanted Kiddush over the wine, said the blessing over two loaves of home-baked challah and then dug into a lovely vegetarian meal: Moroccan Yellow Split Pea Soup, Israeli Couscous with Curried Vegetables, and Butternut Squash with Cranberries, Toasted Walnuts and Maple Syrup.

The next morning as I was walking to shul, it came to me what was missing. There’s a tradition on Shabbat Evening for the parents to bless their children. I have to admit, we usually don’t do it, not because we don’t wish them a life full of blessings, but because it’s just a tradition and ritual which with neither Julia or I grew up.

But as I was walking last Saturday in below-freezing temperatures, the sun shining on the frozen snow, I was regretting not having bestowed blessings on both of them on their latest journeys in life.

Besides saying the traditional blessing, I would have said something like: May you live this new chapter in your lives fully. May you feel the courage to do what might feel frightening. May you be open to what unfolds. May you remain curious. May you take risks, but be careful. May you feel joy. And stay in touch..

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Mom’s Birthday

Monday, 4. January 2010

Today would have been my mother’s birthday. She would have been 88. I’ve written a few checks today and besides having to remember to write 2010, the date rang with a certain familiarity every time I wrote it or looked at a calendar. Funny how the mind works. It knew that I no longer had to make a phone call to wish her a happy birthday.

It also knew that I didn’t need to be reminded weeks earlier to buy and then mail a card so it arrived on time. That’s something, I must say to be honest, I did not learn from my mom; she was terrible at getting cards to us on time. She might buy them in advance, but she just would rarely remember to mail them or to mail them days in advance to arrive on or just before the birthday date. That’s an especially critical skill when you have family that lives on either end of the coasts. When they did arrive on time, it was an event worth noting.

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