Women’s Prayer Services Now Legal at the Western Wall

New court decision for women at the Western Wall; progress toward Israeli-Palestinian peace, via the Arab League; Israeli designer Elie Tahari’s unlikely journey to the heights of the fashion world; author Rachel Shukert on “Starstruck,” her young adult novel set in 1930s Hollywood; the music of Oneg Shemesh; and Dr. Erica Brown shares advice from “Happier Endings.”

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Why Hank Sent Me A Penny

Hank emails: Luke:

Was to wake you up! You’re a mensch still stuck in your head who thinks too much. You best friends are words, blogs and intellectualism. Learn how to feel. For to feel is the only way to find love.

Try to be an individual and not part of a group subject to rejection and inferiority complexity. Disassociate yourself. Live life
unconsciously and free of self awareness.The path to wisdom is to unknow thyself.

To go from porn to Judaism was but a ruse. Your first instinct was to be an actor. That is the right way for self deprecating folks who
dismiss themselves. To become someone else and then to get rich and famous for it.

We air signs are too full of ourselves. So showbiz is full of Gemini performers. Give the Torah a break and become a thespian.
Play as a player. One day you’ll thank me for that penny. It’s symbolic. For your thoughts.

I always wanted to be your friend because you remind me of myself.
When you make it an an actor, I want that penny back. With interest.

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Physical Pleasure vs Spiritual Pleasure

So in Daf Yomi (Eruvin 53B) this morning, the Talmud said that you should seize every pleasure available to you today because tomorrow you might be dead. The Hasidic rabbi hastened to explain that the Talmud clearly means spiritual pleasure, the type you get from doing God’s commandments. For the first time in about five years of daf yomi, I interrupted, “But couldn’t the Gemara (Talmud) be talking about permitted physical pleasures?” No, said the rabbi, it means spiritual pleasure, not physical pleasure.
This blew my mind. I wonder if the rabbi was giving a Hasidic interpretation of the Talmud? I thought Judaism equally embraced physical and spiritual pleasure, and did not necessarily venerate the spiritual over the physical and vice versa.

A Chabad Jew tells me: I can see how the rabbi deduces this conclusion from that (dangerous) gemorah. I would love to bring arguments to both sides but morally speaking I’d have to agree with your Rabbi. I can think of countless tragic outcome from indulging in permitted physical pleasures (Rosie O’Donnell gaining even MORE weight is just one example) But kidding aside, Chassidus explains that physicality can have an even higher spiritual value once it is used to serve G-D. So yes, there are instances where we value physical “things” just as much or even more then spiritual ones but only for their higher spiritual potential. Besides I can’t see how a person can get closer to G-D or just minimally serve G-D if he (or she, you politically correct liberal!) is constantly busy pursuing physical pleasures.

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My Fear Of Abandonment Comes From My Unwillingness To Grow Up

My fear of abandonment keeps raising its ugly head because I’d rather put my reliance on a relationship, a group, a job, a status, on anything rather than to do the work to become self reliant and self-validating. For example, I’ve joined shuls and then done almost all of my socializing with that group of people, and when I left that shul, I felt bereft. I’ve joined relationships and done almost everything with her, and when we broke up, I felt bereft. I’ve thrown myself into my work or my hobby or my schooling and when that ended, I felt bereft. I find it much easier to keep seeking out external validation rather than to take a hard look at myself and figure out why I feel such lack of ease with myself.

Through therapy and 12-step work, I’m making progress.

I’m thinking about my last relationship. I had given up on earning my living from blogging and I was in my first year of training to become an Alexander Technique teacher. I was used to getting validated by constant appearances in the news media and getting lots of fan emails. I liked walking into rooms and sensing my power. I felt people drawn to me because of my power and the dexterity with which I used words.

Then the recession hit in 2007 and I saw that I’d no longer be able to earn a living by blogging (particularly if I shied away from porny topics). I had to go cold turkey on the adulation that was holding me up.

My position in the Orthodox Jewish community was insecure. I was finishing off a formal conversion, something I’d been attempting to do at various times for 16 years. In case something went wrong, I pulled away from most people in Orthodox life. I didn’t want anything sabotaging my conversion. I no longer socialized so much with writers because I was no longer writing full-time and many of my friends who were writers had similarly lost their jobs or moved away. I had to save my money so I didn’t go out much period. I dropped my membership in the LA Press Club. I took up yoga and a quieter life.

I took up with a beautiful girlfriend and she pre-occupied my thoughts and my spare time over the next year. The rest of my life was in flux and so I only felt like a man when I was conquering her. I was poor. I was unpopular. I was struggling with a new beginning. So I put more weight on my relationship than it could stand. I kept looking to her to validate me and this made me weak and unattractive in her eyes.

All addictions spring from a desire to avoid necessary pain (aka growing up) and to avoid facing ourselves and working on ourselves to the point where we can stand on our own two feet. If you have no girlfriend, it’s easy to get stuck in porn. If you have no life, it’s easy to fantasize that a relationship will transform you. If you’re not strong enough to be on your own, it’s easy to seek fusion, enmeshment and co-dependence.

From second grade on, I dreamed that a loving relationship would heal me. There was this solid redheaded girl in my class for three years at Avondale College Primary School, Debbie Hick. She seemed so strong and handy (girls love it when you call them “handy”, it is one of their favorite compliments), I dreamed that if I could only connect with her, everything would be ok. I think I kept these thoughts entirely to myself and now that I have come to terms with what I was feeling, I can’t even find her on Facebook.

In the weeks before I collapsed into six bedridden years of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, I was taking 24 units at college and working 30 hours a week. It was early 1988 and I was walking bent forward into life, tight, compressed and pulled down. I kept saying to myself, “I’m gonna break through or break down. Either way I’ll get the love I need.” I had been working hard to get ahead with my life so I could get a hot wife and a prestigious place in the community, but I was so disconnected from other people and so emotionally bereft that part of me, against all reason, yearned for total collapse and abdication from the responsibility of being Dr. Desmond Ford’s son. I yearned to return to a helpless childlike state, to those first years of life when I had no mother, and to heal what went wrong.

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Rabbi Marc Gafni’s Wife #3 Performs A Solo Show – Babel’s Daughter

One woman’s journey from the Bible-Belt to the Holy Land….In this electric show, Chaya shares her cosmic, sometimes-comic, always-poetic, spiritual journey from the Mississippi Delta to the hills of Jerusalem. The show is entertaining and inspirational as well as interactive, offering a synthesis of spoken-word performance with audience-engaged self-exploration.This show shows you Israel. This show shows you You! It’s not just entertainment, it’s “Inner-tainment”!

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My First Pair Of Tefillin

I pick her up, put her on the washing machine, flip the switch to Spin cycle, and move the tefillin out of my eyes. It’s 1993 and I am new to Judaism.

I got my first pair of tefillin a few months earlier after passing the Beit Din (Jewish law court) for my Reform conversion. They’re an ancient ragged pair, but I’m thrilled.

I first put them on one Sunday in the fall of 1993 at Congregation Ohev Shalom in Orlando, a Conservative synagogue. The way the rabbi taught me then, I still use.

A few weeks earlier, my father had caught me in the shower with Pam*, a woman eleven years my senior who’d flown in from Orlando to stay with me at my parents’ home in Newcastle, 95658. I was 27.

In my conservative Christian home, sexual sins were the biggest sins. As my parents put things together, helped by a letter they got from Diana, my ex who detailed all the nasty things we’d been doing around the house, they realized I had been using their Jesus-filled sanctuary for “immoral purposes.”

They write me out of the will and I flee to Orlando with Pam. It’s August 1993 and I’ve been bedridden by Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for almost six years.

Our relationship spirals downhill for a couple of months until Pam can’t take it anymore. She drives off one evening and spends the night with her ex. My stuff is already packed due to our fights, and so a few days later, I move out from Pam and in with a family I met at shul.

I’m all prepared to bounce from Pam. I’ve been placing singles ads and on my first night away, I spend it with a black alcoholic who prints out for me at work a copy of my 200-page triumphant tale of my conversion to Judaism.

One of the dating sites I’m using is operated by a Messianic rabbi. I’m not Messianic but I am interested in meetings girls of all kinds.

I answer an ad placed by Paula’s mom. Paula is not Jewish. She’s nine years older than me. She’s been married twice to the same guy, eight years each time. She has three kids.

On our first date, I take her to Olive Garden (well, she picks me up in her mom’s station wagon but I pay for dinner). For our second date, I pay for us to have Shabbat dinner at my Conservative shul but an awkward conversation with the family I’m staying with freaks her out and she ditches me. I call her late Friday night and talk her into coming to shul with me the next day.

Motzi Shabbos, Paula drives me to her mom’s place and we spend our first night together. The next morning, I walk into the living room and her mom says, “She’s a tiger, isn’t she?” We barely make it to shul for shacharit.

So a couple of weeks later, after Sunday morning minyan, while I’m still wearing my tefillin, Pam helps me take my washing out to the machines in the back. We put my filthy clothes in my washer and become strangely stirred.

In the chaos of my early life as a Jew, a tightly wound pair of tefillin provides much needed security. Now I have an eager girlfriend, my second major source of strength. She’s game for anything.

As my soiled garments spin clean beneath us, I stand on my tip toes, wrap my arms around Paula, and straining against my tefillin, I choose life.

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Prayer As A Way To Meet Girls

Dear Jewish Journal: You wouldn’t believe what happened to me! I was toiling away on my Facebook when I got a message from a young Jewish yoga instructor who liked my video below. One thing led to another and we started chatting intensely about God, ultimate meaning, recovery, right and wrong, when suddenly she posted these photos of doing various tantric poses and our FB chats went in an entirely unexpected direction. She said she loved my mouthguard, my foot guards for my plantar fascitis, my CPAP for my sleep apnea, my 12 step for my emotional addictions, my poverty, my work as a secretary, my esteemed status in 90035’s Orthodox community and before I knew it, my defenses were removed and I was sitting in front of my computer in nothing but my brutal honesty and naked need.

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My Favorite FB Posters

My fave FB posts tend to come from the following persons:

* Monica Showalter
* Monica Osborne
* Lewis Fein
* Kate Coe
* Amy Alkon
* Heshy Fried
* John Leo
* Drew Friedman
* Kipp Friedman
* Clare Spark
* Jim Romenesko
* Eliyahu Fink
* Rabbi Josh Yuter
* Shmarya Rosenberg

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Lag B’Omer Parade

Dear mom: Today is the Jewish holiday of Lag B’Omer and there was a big parade and concert, closing off a main street by where I live and a thousand Orthodox Jews in attendance. I hung out for 2.5 hours, clasping a book, had a few mini conversations. I got a sun burn, first time I’ve had that in memory. Then I got home for my banana protein shake smoothie lunch and my normal solitary life on the computer writing and emailing and Facebooking.

Orthodox Judaism is good for me in the sense that there are so many ways to connect with people, but everyone is married with kids, and so I stand out as a freak in that category and many others.

Talked in shul yesterday with a guy who works with troubled teens. We hit it off. I’m a 47 year old troubled teen with typical teeny problems.

My wallet never showed up. I go to get a replacement driver’s license tomorrow and my CCs should show up in the mail over the next two weeks.

I’m paying all my bills and saving up to take another writing class when I can. It’s great having that once a week to look forward to and to show off in.

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My Dream Girl

One Sabbath afternoon in seventh grade at Pacific Union College in Angwin, CA, 94508, I’m hanging out with two male classmates Cary and Kevin. They call this girl in our class who I like, Denise, the most beautiful girl in the class, and they ask her who she likes. When she doesn’t answer, they start throwing names at her. One name is mine. I hear them pause on the line and they follow-up. “So you like Luke?” I’m thrilled. When Kevin and Cary get off the phone, I make them tell me everything.

Apparently, Denise likes three guys and I am one. I’m thrilled. I’m excited. I can’t believe I have a chance with this beauty. So I start calling her up every afternoon after school and asking her if she’s made up her mind who she likes. I’ve never called a girl before so this is awesome. I feel like I big shot, a sophisticate with the ladies.

After a couple of weeks, Denise complains to her friends about my calls and word gets back to me and I feel humiliated. I had a chance with this girl but once I started calling her, she lost all interest in me.

A friend tells me to play on her guilt, so I call her that day and say I’m sorry for bothering her and I hang up. She calls me back and say it’s ok. I didn’t bother her.

Pfft. Whatever. I killed any attraction she had for me.

One day on the playground, Cary gets mad at Denise, and yells at me, “You can have her.” As though I have a chance anymore.

A few months later, Denise and I race to the drinking fountain and I beat her and so she punches me in the eye and gets her drink first and I go around for the next day with one eye closed to dramatize how badly I’ve been hurt but once she apologizes to me, I let it go back to normal.

In eighth grade, my class goes on this 20 mile class bike ride. I’m biking along beside Denise having a great time talking to her. I notice how hard she pushes up the hill but with effort, I keep up with her. I’m not reading her signals. At a rest stop, she complains to friends and word gets back to me and I leave her alone for the rest of the trip.

In the summer before 11th grade, I start asking Denise out. It seems she always has something going, usually a horse show that she must attend, but when the baseball season resumes after the 1982 strike, I have tickets to the first game and she agrees to come along with a group of us. It’s my first date. A group of us are riding along in the back of the Toyota pick-up and playing card games and my best friend Andy’s little sister Jenny Muth-vonBlankenburg says, “Luke, you’re wearing mismatched socks.”

True.

At the San Francisco Giants stadium, I race ahead of my date to try to find our seats and then during the game, I spend much of the time making bets with Andy. Denise is not impressed and she complains about my oafish behavior. There’s no second date.

I haven’t seen Denise since June of 1984, when we graduated high school. My last strong memory is her leaping with joy into the air and out of the PUC pool that summer and she smiles and flings her hands about in pure abandon and I see in an instant that she is not perfection any more, that she does not have the greatest body, that my dream girl is chunky, that everything isn’t distributed right, there aren’t enough curves and there’s too much in the middle, and I see that life will be hard on her too.

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