Luke Ford

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The World Frightens Me

Posted on May 20, 2013 in Personal

I was in shul watching a siddur (prayer book) about to fall off a shelf and I felt physically sick, my stomach wrenched, as I waited for its fall (it didn’t, someone grabbed it). When I watch the same thing on TV, I get this same feeling in my stomach, similar to a fear of heights, like I’m falling from a great way up. I wonder what this is called? When I walk down the street, I often see car accidents about to happen, which never do, and my stomach gets knotted up similarly. In the wider world, people seem so reckless and careless and it frightens me.

* A young attractive female friend was telling me about attending an Eyes Wide Shut style party in Beverly Hills where the women were raffled off for some worthy cause.

* I wonder why I tend to date women who were abused in childhood and have fathers who are perverts.

* Whatever you experienced intensely in childhood, you’re going to want to marry.

* There are a lot of people who die from auto-asphyxiation while chasing greater highs… One of them I interviewed extensively — the actor David Carradine.

The difference between “addiction” and a healthy drive is the role it plays in your life. Addiction means the reward centers in your brain operate in a way that don’t allow you to make good decisions in an area. I’ve long operated in ways that were not to be my benefit. For instance, I keep trying to recreate the trauma of abandonment I experienced before the age of four when my mother died so I seek out relationships and communities that will abandon me.

Love addict was my self-diagnosis (and one therapist thought I might be, another therp thought I was not), but it doesn’t mean much to me, it’s just a route into the benefits of 12 step work. I could’ve done it for my over-eating or other problems.

* All of his life, a man will have an internal dialogue with his mother.

* How do you know if you have a good therapist? If you are seeing how you play a significant role in your own misery (Stephen Marmer).

* I have paid off two credit cards in full, just five to go (about $43,000). I’ve reduced my CC debt by about $6,000 in the past year. And I’m getting needed dental and physical therapy work next week. I’ll be able to pray to HaShem out of a pure mouth and lithe body!

* Judaism is comfortable with the natural passions (sex, money, power, prestige, honor, attention, etc) and so Jews tend to be more raw about these things. The Seventh-Day Adventists I grew up with tiptoed around the daffodils.

* In my passionate relationships, we typically break up a dozen times over the course of a year. Every break-up makes our connection weaker but our reunions more intense though mournful.

* Neediness = too high expectations of others.

* I love referring to women as “broads.” I know this is wrong and I want to stop (at least in public).

* When I think about most people I know dying, I primarily feel relief because I won’t have to negotiate with them anymore. I won’t have to shudder about awkward things I’ve said and done, or that they’ve said and done.

* I just assume that cable TV shows will be more interesting than general interest tame network fare. I do look forward to the return of 24.

* I just want to be quiet and to listen to what life is telling me. If I can only let down my defenses and listen, I can get on the right track.

* The angrier I make people, the happier I get (in the moment, not in the long run). Provoking people does not make for my long-term happiness. An easy laugh can lead to a permanent rupture with people I want in my life.

* I’m dragging myself through therapy tonight when I got onto the topic of how much joy I get out of provoking people. I feel so empty much of the time until I get on Facebook and start outraging. What do I get out of provoking people? It makes me feel powerful to see others incapacitated with anger over things I say. I enjoy the attention. It’s an outlet for my anger. It is an imitation of my father. I was always the class clown in school and people weren’t laughing at my gentle humor. In every joke, there’s a victim. Humor is disguised hostility. If only I could make money with it and get a wife.

If I got half as much joy out of helping people as I do out of provoking people, I’d be ahead of the game!

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Family Tree Counseling

Posted on May 19, 2013 in Abandonment, Psychology

I love FamilyTreeCounseling.com. Here are some highlights from their podcasts:

A better way to say Fear of Abandonment is crazy jealousy issues, when someone over-reacts when they perceive you backing away from them. They react emotionally, not rationally. It’s probably the most painful issue people have to deal with.

Someone with abandonment issues is emotionally little on the inside. There was some form of abandonment in their childhood. Having a healthy relationship is going to be difficult because there’s going to be a lot of drama and reactivity in their relationships.

When your abandonment issues come up, try not to react. The goal is detachment.

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Love Is Supposed To Hurt

Posted on May 19, 2013 in love

Therapist Mark E. Smith says: Love is Mother Nature’s tool to force you to go back and work on unresolved issues from your childhood.

I wished that Christian faith healed emotional wounds and made people emotionally healthier but it’s just not true. Your sincere Christian faith is not going to erase the wounds of your childhood.

The cure is sticking in your marriage and not vilifying or scapegoating your spouse, but working hard in therapy… When people come in and present themselves as a victim, the therapist’s main order of business is challenging how they think and shifting the focus away from the spouse to the real problem, the family of origin.

We pick the right person so that we can re-enact the unresolved issues of our childhood.

When new people meet, there’s anywhere from two to seven years of grace where everything is fun and easy.

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First Legal Women’s Prayer Service at the Western Wall in Decades

Posted on May 17, 2013 in Articles

Protest gets violent at Women of the Wall’s first prayer service at the Kotel after landmark court decision; will conflict escalate in the Middle East after Israel’s strike on Syria?; Meredith Ganzman speaks to Jewish celebs at the Drama Desk awards nomination ceremony; and Israeli teens bring science to the streets of New York with The Sci-Tech Schools’ Street Labs.

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Converting To Judaism

Posted on May 12, 2013 in Conversion, Personal

From a series of my FB posts: The ethnic tribal national peoplehood component of Judaism took me the longest time to get (as compared to the Torah and God components, which seemed self-evident). I remember walking into temple for the first time and I had never been around so many fat short people who appeared to descend from the in-breeding and horrible conditions of the ghetto. They didn’t have that hale hearty handsome WASP look I was used to. They looked squashed.

Another big shock in my journey into Judaism was meeting all the Jews who had no allegiance to Judaism, Jews or the wider society. They were the proverbial rootless cosmopolitans. They cared neither for Christian mores, Jewish mores, or American mores. Instead, they worked in media or dodgy enterprises.

Another thing that surprised me in my journey into Judaism was the lack of pieties in regular conversation. Nobody wished me to have a nice day. Instead, they asked for my tax returns.

Judaism in practice turned out to have as much in common with Christianity without Christ as the ways of the ethnic Chinese or Japanese I’ve met (focus on family, education, surviving as a minority culture and preserving your heritage).

In my journey into Judaism, I couldn’t get over how nobody but freaks cared about what I believed about God. No normal Jew gives a damn about theology or salvation into the next world. I grew up in a Seventh-Day Adventist world where theological controversy was the main thing and friendships were dissolved over it, all by people illiterate in the original languages of the Bible they were arguing over.

I discovered in Jewish life that what you believe about God is a private matter, while whether you keep a particular level of kosher, such as cholov yisrael, is a communal matter that separates or joins you to your fellows.

In my first few years in Judaism, I was so concerned about whether my fellow Jews believed in God. I wanted to rule them out of normative Judaism if they didn’t. Eventually, I learned it’s almost the cool thing to say in Orthodox life that you don’t believe in God, so long as you observe the commandments and preserve the community. Atheism or agnosticism are considered lovable eccentricities. Even Orthodox rabbis have confessed it to me.

In Jewish life, I found that people cared far more about what I did than what I said. It was hard to fool the Jews. I got exposed right quick.

The rabbis were willing to convert me to Judaism after a length of time and stringent tests, but at no point did they ever give over the slightest sense that I was doing them a favor by joining the Jews. No Jew ever gave me that sense. Christians bayed for my soul, Jews could care less about my soul.

I’ve never met a Jew who was exorcised by the great sin of fornication while that was considered about the greatest sin in my upbringing, the true determinent of whether or not you believed in god. Jews don’t seem to get angry about prostitution either. There might literally be a whore house next to their shul, as there is in 90035, and it doesn’t matter to them. Me? I can’t pray to God while imagining the Asian ecstasy available next door for just $120.

You walk into a Jewish home and you get this barrage of questions and instructions, “Don’t go in this room, don’t touch this, this is milkich, this will be fleishig, you ate by whom, who converted you, why you still single, what you do, are you gay?, do you know eli, he’s from Australia? Do you mind a zaftig girl?”

Jewish life bestows many gifts and makes many demands. It’s an intense way to live. I was new to Orlando and to its Conservative shul Ohev Shalom in 1993 and this complete stranger was introduced to me and asked me what did I need? Did I need a job or a car or what? I asked for a recommendation for a doctor for my Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and he got back to me with that (I never saw the doctor, I figured I couldn’t afford him). I’ve slunk away over the years from many of the gifts/demands of Orthodox Jewish life.

I’ve found Jews a difficult people to con. I’d go to minyan and afterwards, half the crowd would just sit around and complain about the rabbi, the chazzan, the shul, the goyim, with this relentlessly negative and bitter and corrosive attitude. The rabbis advised me to stay away.

I would just sit there trying to learn about Judaism and Jewish life, and these Jews were just so critical of everything.

I grew up watching my dad preach and people getting deeply moved and I thought, hmm, how can I do something like this?

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Israel Increasingly Ensnared in Syrian Civil War

Posted on May 10, 2013 in Articles

Reactions to Israel’s strike of Syria; Jewish community unites against sex trafficking; Jewish billionaire-philanthropist Michael Steinhardt auctions off Judaica collection at Sotheby’s; and The Acting Company turns 40; and novelist Maggie Anton sits down for an interview about her new book, “Rav Hisda’s Daughter.”

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Random Thoughts

Posted on May 8, 2013 in Los Angeles, Personal

* One of the first Jewish traits I took on (inspired by Dennis Prager) circa 1991 was to finish my conversations with, “Be well.”

* New Yorker: “Be prepared, Easterners: L.A. traffic is calm except in the Hollywood and Beverly Hills, which are islands of suitably East Coast sclerotic impatience among the placid sea of the rest of L.A.” They’re also Jewish areas. Patience is not a typical Jewish trait. We want moshiach now!

* It has not worked out for me to tell my girlfriends, “Google it”, but I find it so insulting to be asked questions that can be answered through Google, such as “Why don’t Jews accept Jesus as the Messiah?”

* I just saw a Chinagirl. She said I looked different with the beard. Was it a Jewish holiday where you can’t shave? Yes, I said. She said that we have similar occasions in the Chinese calendar.

* I’m proud to be 1/16th Chinese because I’ve always felt a great kinship with the Chinese people. My great great grandfather on my dad’s side was 100% Chinese and had to be buried outside of the regular cemetery in Townsville, QLD, with the Jews. My lofty ancestor suffered greatly for his race, running smack dab into the Australian policy that two Wongs don’t make a white.

* If you have kids, you’re going to want to locate them in a like-minded moral community. So married people with kids are the most likely to be religious and single people the least likely.

Trying to practice a religion by yourself is like trying to speak a language by yourself. (Mary Ebertstadt)

* “While you were out having a good time, I was busting my ass. I missed out on fun for years in law school and now I can just write a check and get something. I don’t need to make payments. People call me counselor, they don’t say, ‘Bring me a rivet gun.’” (Life advice)

* How is it one can usually tell the Americans in a group? It’s not race but there are distinguishing characteristics such as vitality, freedom, happiness, openness, loud, generosity, great tippers… I’m reaching here. Help me.

* I tend to bully and verbally abuse people when I can get away with it (because that is how I was raised). I prefer to be around those who won’t let me get away with any of this. I don’t like myself when I’m abusing people. On the other hand, I let a lot of people in my life verbally abuse me. I don’t stand up for myself. Instead, I abandon myself. I don’t like being around pathetic people and I’m not thrilled with myself when I act pathetic.

* Good opening lines for meeting women at yoga:

* Great class!
* This was my first class!
* I feel so free and open.
* Man, I’m sore/tired/aching/challenged.
* Where do you go to shul?
* Was that an earthquake?
* I’m supposed to put my foot where?
* You look like you’re a yoga pro.
* This sure beats church.

* There aren’t many TV shows aside from Mad Men where you can revel in bigotry, so I have to go to shul to meet my needs.

* About three years after I submitted it, my favorite professor at UCLA and one of the inspirations for my conversion to Judaism, Russell Roberts just accepted my FB friend request. Everything he ever told me in 1989 about wanting to accomplish, all the books in his head, have now become a reality. I read them and I remember where we stood talking at UCLA when he told me about this idea.

* How can I leverage my Klout score of 64 (and my groundbreaking decade of blogging on an entertainment genre) into real money?

* A Persian just asked me, “How come you don’t put on cologne? I’ve never seen an American guy put it on.” You hang around Persian men and the air is rich with scent. I hope you don’t have allergies. Some of my non-Persian friends get headaches and avoid certain shuls because of this.

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Professor Yitzhak Kerem Denied Entrance To Only Orthodox Shul In Central Berlin

Posted on May 8, 2013 in Yitzchak Kerem

Yitzhak Kerem emails: On Friday April 5, 2013 at 7:00 p.m. I was denied entrance to the only Orthodox synagogue in central Berlin called Adass Yisroel (TUCHOLSKYSTRASS 40, BERLIN MITTE 10117, TEL: 49 30 28 13 135 fax: 49 30 28 13 122) . I was told in perfect Hebrew by the Gabbai Bruno Offenberg (apparently the corrupt swindler who sequestered the synagogue legally) that he can do nothing for me. Only elderly Russian Jews were allowed to enter. Also a confused Jewish male tourist form Britain was allowed to enter. I was told by the German police guards that I had to leave. Bruno didn’t want to hear anything I said. I had written by e-mail numerous times to the synagogue to say I was coming and was answered in writing by someone named Levi. From what I learned afterward is that Bruno wants no one to enter so no one will uncover his devious heinous deeds. The Jewish community claims no responsibility and the adjacent restaurant has no communal kashrut certification. Former community presdient Andreas Nehama told me Bruno is problematic and no one can stop him. I understand that the Hildesheimer family sued him unsuccessfully for seizing the property. I also learned from an Israeli woman who is Tzipi Livni’s first cousin that Bruno receives a salary from the Berlin Senate. So what do we have here? – a corrupt Jew paid by the Berlin Senate and protected by official German police (maybe sons or grandsons of German Wehrmacht or SS) stationed there to deny Jews entrance. My grandfather Charles Weingarten left Berlin in the 1920s.
what a disgrace? Anyone want to help me protest or spread the word?

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Dennis Prager is slow to take offense

Posted on May 6, 2013 in Dennis Prager, Shmuley Boteach

While he fights for what he believes in, Dennis Prager doesn’t indulge in feuds. He doesn’t say ugly things in private that become public and embarrass him. He’s never been caught in flagrantly unethical behavior. He’s never had a scandal. He’s never ranted out of control publicly. He doesn’t sign showy public letters condemning this and that. He’s not touchy. He’s solid.

Contrast the great offense that Prager’s friend Rabbi Shmuley Boteach took at Canadian provocateur Michael Coren with Dennis Prager’s consistent love for Coren. “He is a very important part of the Canadian media,” said Dennis May 6, 2013.

It’s hard to imagine Dennis Prager walking out of a speaking engagement after getting a request to step farther away from the mic as Rabbi Boteach did Feb. 19, 2012 at LimmudLA. It’s also hard to imagine Prager calling out an institution over its low speaking fee offer as Rabbi Boteach did with the American Jewish University in December of 2010. Dennis avoids these types of conflicts.

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Her One Alexander Lesson

Posted on May 6, 2013 in alexander technique

I just had a conversation on Facebook with an opera singer who regarded the Alexander Technique as a cult.

Emma Stace Darling luke. i went to an alexander person once….they said relax and i did. they said. my god i have never known anyone who can turn on and off that quickly and completely.
19 minutes ago · Unlike · 1

Emma Stace Darling i hope you shaved that nightmare beard cos you look dishy without it n it makes you look like a vegan
18 minutes ago · Unlike · 1

Luke Ford Why did you have only one Alexander lesson?
18 minutes ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling erm…i think i just explained that. i do it al right naturally.
17 minutes ago · Like

Luke Ford so you didn’t discover anything from your lesson?
17 minutes ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling that i was doing it all fine. i am naturally placed well. no problems. and how extortionately expensive it is. and a bit hippy for me. a bit ….smug
16 minutes ago · Like

Emma Stace Darling i never met one who wasn’t superior. or who had any money thought they charge the earth. and i never met one who i felt comfortable with and in the world of opera EVERYONE takes alexander technique. i know all about it i assure you.met the weirdest people.
13 minutes ago · Unlike · 1

Luke Ford Interesting!
11 minutes ago · Like · 1

Luke Ford I love your feedback on my profession! Hilarious!
10 minutes ago · Like · 1

Luke Ford How much were people charging and what did you think would be a reasonable charge? What did you do in your lesson? What was taught to you in the lesson?
9 minutes ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling i went to meet 6 practitioners. and knew two out of work. all the same. ALL THE SAME… i consulted one who made me pay £100. and told me i was fine. nothing wrong. i moved naturally perfectly. he siad he could fine tune but i thought i would spend the money on jewellery instea
9 minutes ago · Like

Luke Ford All smug and superior!?
9 minutes ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling i learnt nothing. told you how much charge was. no it was too much for one 4o minute session
9 minutes ago · Like

Emma Stace Darling he taught me how to stand up. said i did it perfectly well. the best he had ever seen in 40 years. i said thanks. and learnt f*** all.
6 minutes ago · Unlike · 1

Emma Stace Darling i know a lot of ppl who like alexander, but you know the fact is, i dont like all the birkenstock wearing floaty trousers stuff. i dont like nose rings and goaty beards and eating seeds i all felt very like a sect to me. and it ruins its image too.
4 minutes ago · Unlike · 1

Luke Ford Alexander Technique is something I devote my life to, so it is interesting to see how the Technique came across to you.
4 minutes ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling yeah all smug n superior.
4 minutes ago · Like

Emma Stace Darling yes i know that. so i am kindly giving you my views on it to help you. its like a cult so i know it wont put you off it. you’ll dig your heels in (in perfect balance ) even further.
3 minutes ago · Like

Luke Ford Hilarious! I can wait to tell my Alexander friends.
3 minutes ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling you meant cannot?
3 minutes ago · Like

Emma Stace Darling there you go. my alexander friends. like a cult.
2 minutes ago · Like

Luke Ford That’s awesome! Even some Alexander teachers have asked if we are a cult? I did some videos and blog posts on just this theme.
2 minutes ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling bet they all wear flat shoes and the girls have long flowing hair and nose studs and eat organic
2 minutes ago · Unlike · 1

Emma Stace Darling you see how you put yourselves across? no wonder none of you are rich! even with your charges
2 minutes ago · Like

Luke Ford http://yourmoralleader.blogspot.com/2011/09/is-alexander-technique-cult.html

Luke Ford Emma, you are awesome!
about a minute ago · Like · 1

Emma Stace Darling i can feel you getting angry underneath so i will go. but i just wanted to share. you have such a cute face dont EVER do that beardy things again. reel em in dont put em off! god bless you n yours dear luke xx

Emma Stace Darling cool…well done you. as i say, a lot of my (least favourite and slightly smug) friends praise it. when i say a lot i mean you know, a good amount. 10%.

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