Does She Love Me Back?

Dear Diary,

It’s been five weeks since I was here. Wow, what a long discouraging CFS relapse. Down over two months. But I’m back. I was struggling, feeling down and hopeless and alone. I gave up almost all writing. I just lay back and enjoyed life as best I could. I gave up trying to accomplish anything beyond my job. I take pride in meeting my responsibilities.

I wonder what helped me come back? Was it the B-complex I started ten days ago? The Chinese herbs for my adrenals or the herbs for my sore throat? Was it simply time and rest? This might be the first day my throat hasn’t ached for for 10 weeks.

I wonder why I’ve started sleeping solidly? I get in these cycles, solid sleep for weeks on end and then horrible sleep for weeks on end. Is it the cooling weather? Is it the herb combo?

I want to do that assignment from the book Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find and Keep Love. It’s the best book I’ve read on love.

OK, I need to list off my every relationship, write out the central problems I had in each relationship, what I did about them, how that worked, and thinking of a secure role model, write out secure responses I could’ve used.

So I had my first girlfriend, R, at Pacific Union College when I was 16. The biggest problem in our relationship (the biggest problem in all of my relationships that were to follow) was my fear that she didn’t love me back nearly as much as I loved her. After the summer of 1982 was over, I went back to live in Auburn, California, a 2.5 hour drive away. I only saw her on the occasional weekend but we exchanged letters regularly. One Sabbath at PUC, she told me she was going to a Journey concert that night with this college guy who liked her. I reacted by cutting her off. I stopped writing to her. When the next summer rolled around, I was almost a Senior, and over the previous six months, in the time I’d saved by not writing her, I had developed some awesome kissing skills. I could even handle that newfangled French stuff.

So what is a secure way I could’ve responded to her telling me about going to a concert with the college guy? I could’ve told her how insecure and jealous it made me feel. How inadequate in that I didn’t have a driver’s license nor a car (most of my peers had both). I had never been to a rock concert.

I can’t imagine having the strength to admit such things to R. I’d have a hard time admitting such vulnerabilities today. But I guess I could’ve written them out to her in a letter. And today? I could put them on a blog.

I usually date avoidants. They’re always doing this stuff to put space between us, like telling me they’re seeing other guys.

I came back to Pacific Union College for the summer of 1983. In September, I would start my Senior year at Placer High School. In June, I went to a five-day high school journalism conference at St. Mary’s College with my News Editor Chris McMaster and my Sports Editor Rob Stutzman. During that week, just before our field trip to San Francisco, I visited a drug store and bought my first pack of condoms.

I came back from the retreat, started seeing R. again, and one day, after we walked across a log over a stream, I took her in my arms and kissed her for the first time. Afterward, she said, “We could’ve done this last summer.”

But I was too scared then. Now I was a confident kisser. I knew my way around a woman. I could go to a newsstand and buy a Penthouse. I could go into a drug store and get my man supplies.

On the downside, I didn’t yet have the confidence to get my driver’s license. That wouldn’t happen until after I turned 18 in May of 1984.

I dropped R. for good in July of 1983 when she wouldn’t have sex with me. She said, “I’m not that kind of girl.” I guess I still carried a burn against her and was looking to either use her or discard her. I was confident about my future. I thought I’d have a ton of success inside and outside the bedroom. I don’t think I was ever again so confident about my prospects as that summer of 1983. My biggest source of insecurity was my lack of a driver’s license.

By the summer of 1984, I was 18. I had a driver’s license. I was living with my brother in Australia, but I didn’t have the same confidence I had a year earlier, because I was in an unfamiliar environment, struggling to find work and to make my way.

I came back to California from Australia in June of 1985 but I didn’t have the confidence of 1983 because I couldn’t find work. I volunteered all summer at KAHI/KHYL radio and eventually got hired for 16 hours a week at minimum wage and I bought a 1968 VW Bug. I had some voice trouble, I couldn’t project, and that undercut my confidence in radio. I decided to go to Sierra Community College in September.

In the summer of 1986, I started working construction but I didn’t have the confidence I had in ’83 because I was working for about $4 an hour, when I had made four times that amount in Australia two years previous. Voice trouble undercut my confidence at the radio station.

The summer of 1987 was probably the closest I had to my confidence of ’83 because I had gotten serious with my schooling, I was earning straight As, I was set to transfer to UCLA in a year to major in Economics, and I was in good health. On the downside, I was only making about $5 an hour at my job, I hadn’t had a girlfriend since the summer of 1983, and I had this nagging suspicion I was once again developmentally behind my peers. Voice trouble led me to decide to quit radio in September and concentrate on my schooling.

In February of 1988, I came down with CFS and never again had my vitality. It’s hard to be confident when you don’t feel good.

I got my second girlfriend in 1989. She was cute and cuddly, but I didn’t intend to be with her long-term. She was the best I could do while I was so sick. That went for my next few girlfriends. Their primary meaning to me was instrumental.

My next relationship with someone I wanted long-term was in the summer of 2000. What was the biggest problem in that relationship for me? I couldn’t connect with her for long. She usually felt out of reach. She said we wanted different things. She didn’t return my calls. I don’t know how she did, but I often felt like a shmuck around her.

Now I realize that I was simply try to date an avoidant. She’s never married.

I had my familiar fear that she would never love me back as much as I loved her. So what did I do? Despite feeling insecure and confused, I kept myself throttled down and didn’t do anything. I just let things run. However awkward things got, my life was better with her in it.

Then she didn’t return my call for three days and that’s when I broke things off. If I had not reacted, we could’ve had a longer run together, but there was never going to be a happy ending.

With my next girlfriend in 2002, it was pleasant but it was never going to last. She wasn’t Jewish and had no interest in converting.

My girlfriend in 2003 was my most beautiful ever. She was ten years younger. She wasn’t Jewish and had no interest in converting. Even though I knew it wasn’t going to last, I went through half a dozen break-ups with her, and then always got back together, until after a year, we lost steam. I knew it was over when I saw her blogging about her frustrations with me. I had told her that I didn’t read her blog so she was upset when I replied in her comments section.

What held us together was passion and a shared interest in reading and writing.

My next few girlfriends were also not Jewish and had no interest in converting to Judaism. Because of this, I saw we had no future and simply tried to enjoy our time together, but normal women can’t relax for long when they understand we have no future together. Neither of us got invested in the other and soon went our separate ways.

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The Cycle Of Abuse

As I reported in 2006 about Rabbi Daniel Gordis:

In 1993, Conservative legal scholar and Jewish Theological Seminary professor Joel Roth was disciplined for having an inappropriate relationship with a male student (reported in the Jewish Telegraphic Agency by Debra Nussbaum-Cohen). I believe that student was Danny Gordis. Gordis and Roth were close during the 1980s and they published responsa (answers to questions about Jewish law) together.

Danny is known for having intense intimate relationships (I am not saying they were necessarily sexual) with his favorite students, be they male or female. “He has a lot of groupies,” says a source. “Mostly women. He always seemed to have the more attractive women students really close to him.”

Now Tablet magazine reports:

On Tuesday, the Forward reported that Akiva Roth, a newly hired Hebrew instructor at Yeshiva University, pleaded guilty in 1997 to lewd conduct involving several bar mitzvah students. Omitted in that story and today’s follow-up editorial, however, was another aspect of Roth’s biography: he taught summer courses in Hebrew Grammar at the Jewish Theological Seminary just a few years after he was convicted in court.

Roth’s online resume at Radaris states:

Position: Instructor of intensive ulpan in hebrew grammar Jun 2000 to 2004
Company: Jewish theological seminary of america – New York, NY

These revelations about Roth’s prior employment, first noted by blogger FailedMessiah and subsequently confirmed by Tablet, suggest that Roth’s past conduct was either not investigated or overlooked by two of America’s preeminent Jewish educational institutions. Notably, Roth’s father, Rabbi Joel Roth, is a professor of Talmud and Jewish Law at JTS who previously stepped down as dean of its rabbinical school after allegedly making a sexually explicit statement to a student.

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Walking In Westwood

A Jewish friend was walking in Westwood. The owner of a barbershop (says he’s an Italian Jew) at 2384 Midvale Ave, 90064 waved him in, gave him a Bible and said, “Read Isaiah 53.” My friend read the chapter and said, so what? The owner said to him, “That’s talking about Jesus but your rabbis will tell you this is about Israel, but they’re lying.” The owner said this other Persian guy got a haircut and came back later asking for his money back because he didn’t like the cut.

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My Experience With Affirmative Action At UCLA

When I went to UCLA in the late 1980s, the white and Asian students came in with A averages, while many of the black and latino students got into this elite university with GPAs below a B. The academic differences were stark and created social divisions. A students typically don’t seek out C students to study with.

We had many football players at my Rieber Hall dormitory and I remember many of the black players struck me as the worst behaved students in the dorm. They’d trash the cafeteria. I’ll never forget this one group who’d deliberately drop their food on the floor for the staff to clean up. They ignored the rest of us. They were in their own world. They weren’t affirmative action beneficiaries, they were there on the special waiver provision to win games. On the bright side, the UCLA football team in 1988 was ranked number one in the nation for a couple of weeks.

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Bad Rebbe

I’d love to see a TV series or movie called “Bad Rebbe” about some imperious Hasidic rebbe who rules his followers with an iron fist, totally hierarchical and contemptuous of those below him, lives in luxury while his followers toil in poverty, and says the cutting funny things that smart confident rabbis say within their fiefdoms (an uber Rogatchover), ignores the laws of the goyim, trashes other rabbis, calls them stupid etc. Model it on Bad Teacher and The Bad Lieutenant.

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My Unrighteous Mind

In Antonio Damasio’s book Descartes’ Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain, he writes about people who suffer an injury to the ventromedial pre-frontal cortex (VMPFC) just behind the bridge of the nose. “Their emotionality dropped nearly to zero. They could look at the most joyous or gruesome photographs and feel nothing. They retained moral knowledge and showed no deficits in IQ, they even scored well in Kohlberg’s test of moral reasoning, yet when it came to making moral decisions in their personal lives and at work, they made foolish decisions or no decisions at all. They alienated their families and their employers and their lives fell apart. Damasio’s interpretation was that gut feelings and bodily reactions were necessary to think rationally and that one job of the VMPFC was to integrate those gut feelings into a person’s conscious reactions.” (The Righteous Mind by Jonathan Haidt)

In September of 1985, I smashed my head on my steering wheel after running my VW Bug into a parked school bus at 30 mph. I got about 25 stitches across the bridge of my nose.

“Damasio’s patients could think about anything with no filtering or coloring from their emotions. Every option felt as good as the other… You’d make foolish decisions too.” (Haidt)

That describes my adult life. Every option feels about the same.

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A Dodger Fan’s Death In San Francisco

A fight after a baseball game in San Francisco Wednesday night resulted in the stabbing death of a Dodger fan by a Giant fan.
The 21-year old arrested for the stabbing was released Friday night for lack of evidence to keep him in jail.
On Friday morning, without knowing much about the case, Dennis Prager convicted the suspect of murder on his nationally-syndicated radio show and said he should be executed: “This is why I believe in capital punishment. They caught the guy already, a 21-year old, he stabbed a man to death he got into an argument with because the guy wore Dodger paraphernalia. I believe he should be executed. These are the things that trigger my passion for capital punishment. It makes me sick.”
From news reports, the Dodger fans led an unexpected attack, including hitting the Giant fan with a chair, which then led to the stabbing, purportedly in self-defense.
This seemed like a big change for Dennis from the careful way he commented on Trayvon Martin’s death, saying for weeks on the radio we didn’t know what happened in Martin’s altercation with George Zimmerman.

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Sara Hassman Asked To Leave Sinai Temple

Parental alienation activist Sara Hassman was asked to leave from Sinai Temple in Westwood on the Thursday morning, the first day of Succot.

She’s had a conflict with leaders of the shul since the middle of 2012.

Sinai’s head of security, Edward Garcia, emailed Sara July 23, 2012: “Sara, I’m sorry to inform you but you will not be allowed to attend any social events at Sinai Temple. I will take the necessary measure to make sure our Temple is secured and taken care. Good day…”

On October 29, 2012, Sara emails Sinai’s head of rituals, Ralph Resnick:

Dear Ralph,

On Shabbos at 10:30am I was outside the synagogue coming to your service and security would not let me in. I had my pocketbook open for them to search and they asked my name and then told me I could not come in. I asked them why and they just said that was their instruction.

I asked them to please tell you since I told you Friday night at the APIAC event that I would be there plus I told you last Shabbos that I really needed to come back to your service.

Well, I am not allowed to come to Sinai Temple anymore, even to just sit quietly in your service and pray and hear Gracie’s questions to ponder etc. Isn’t this like what the Muslims are doing at the Temple Mount in Israel. Well, I don’t understand, since I have even made contributions to Sinai Temple and volunteered as you know since this is how I met you.

Well, as with many facets in my life, I just have to Begin Again and find my way but I know I have not done anything to warrant such behavior and will find a congregation that will welcome me and appreciate my attendance and contributions. I think you are a wonderful person Ralph and I think you run a very warm and enriching service. Please let the others know and I will not be attending the services and also the Bat Mitzvah on the 24th either. I will miss all of them and their kindness as well.

On November 1, 2012, Edward Garcia emailed:

Sara,

I just finished a meeting with Rabbi Wolpe and have sorted out all the confusion regarding you attending social events and services at Sinai Temple. Through a lengthily investigation reading over your emails through emails, I have advised Rabbi Wolpe to exclude you from any functions at Sinai Temple. The decision to not allow you to any function at Sinai, has been concurred from all departments and will continue to stand. My security staff has been advised not to allow you into the Temple for any gathering or social events.

If you have any more questions please address them with my department only or send me an email.

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Failed Messiah: LA Chabad And Orthodox Synagogues Sponsor Sukkot Celebration In Honor Of Convicted Felon Sholom Rubashkin

Luke: Accused child molester Mendy Tevel davened at Chabad Bais Bazelel over the first days of Succot.

Failed Messiah: Synagogues including Baid Bezalel, Bais Menachem, B’nai David-Judea, Chabad Israel Center, Chabad SOLA, and Mogen David Young Sephardic stage a simchat beit ha-shoeva celebration in the “merit” of convicted felon Sholom Mordechai Rubashkin, “may G-d free him immediately from incarceration!”

Rubashkin is currently serving a 27-year prison sentence for bank fraud and related crimes and has lost every appeal he has made so far – including one to the US Supreme Court, which refused to hear his case.

Rubashkin is probably best known for having a workforce of about 1000 employees, 750 of whom undocumented workers he exploited and allegedly stole from.

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Life In A Tribe

The tribal approach to life emphasizes your group over outsiders. When Jews are in trouble, such as when they were kidnapped for ransom in the Middle Ages in Crete etc, fellow Jews would rally around and ransom them while Christians kidnapped were ignored by their group. Coptic Christians are slaughtered in Egypt and their co-religionists around the world do virtually nothing.

* The typical Christian reaction to terrible medical news such as a kid is autistic or has paralysis or progeria etc is that this “is for God’s glory.” The most religious Jews also believe that everything that happens is God’s will. Most Jews, however, would not react “This is for God’s glory” to a terrible medical diagnosis. The Jewish reaction is, “Suffering stinks”, and that includes when the air conditioning is one degree too hot.

The Christian view, in large part, comes from the example of Jesus. Jesus suffered. He was crucified. We too will suffer like him.

I suspect that most religious Christians, if hit by a drunk driver and still rooted in their faith, would ascribe this to God’s will while most Jews (with the exception of the 10% most religious) would not.

* Almost all of my buddies are like me in the following ways — depressed, not working in their chosen career, trying to get their lives in gear, in therapy, trying things that don’t seem to shift their lives, single, aging, aching, struggling with their weight and with their place in community. So when we hang out, we may enjoy each other, but we hardly get inspired. I get inspired when I hang out with my married friends who have kids and rewarding work and esteemed positions in the community.

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