My Frightened Defiant Response To Authority

I’d react identically if my father or my rabbi or my God or my boss posted on my FB page. I’d be frightened that I’d been naughty.

It’s weird to me that all my reactions to authority are identical.

I only feel this way about Orthodox rabbis. Non-Orthodox rabbis don’t frighten me. But when an Orthodox rabbi calls me into his office, I am scared to death. I become defensive. I dissemble. I lie. I make promises. I’m dying to get out of there. I take refuge in the thought that at least I can write about all of this. He may run the shul but I run my blog.

The word “Petty” (an extension of “pet”, not the adjective) scares me to death. I knew I was in trouble whenever I was called, “Petty.” Punishment was sure to follow. I only got called “Petty” after I was bad. “Petty” meant that he sensed I was headed for disaster and he wanted to save me from destroying myself and others.

It’s like when my rabbi called me “Luke.” 99% of the time, he called me “Levi”, but when I was bad, he called me “Luke.”

A friend in shul calls me “Luke Ford.” He says, “I don’t accept your conversion.”

A friend at work describes me as “endless defiance.”

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Who Do I Frighten People?

Why do I frighten people? Is it my brusque disregard in the pursuit of my ends? When you think about others, you can’t be enraged and you can’t frighten. (Stephan Poulter)

Seduction is the most intoxicating thing in the world to me. I just love the splash of fresh hair on my pillow. It’s addictive. There was such a change for me when I went from my first partner to my second. The connection stopped being sacred. It became sporting, therapeutic, a process that took away my anxiety and loneliness.

Seduction is addictive. You get caught in the rush and you try to find it again and again. You become a user. You lose sensitivity to life and to others. You lose empathy. You lose your soul. You use everyone to meet your addictive needs.

Judaism and 12-Step and anything transcendent represent the opposite of this type of using. It is salvation from the tyranny of the self.

That’s my battle — between doing what I want and doing what God wants for me (to be happy, healthy and free). Part of me yearns to connect to other people and part of me is frightened by this intimacy. I ride this roller coaster. Intimacy is so hard for me. That deep connection exhausts me.

“Do you want to push people away? Do you want to scare people? What does that do to you? How do you react? How do you respond? Where does that take you? What do you do when someone says that? What’s inside? Is it nervous laughter? Why is it absurd? How do you make sense of it? These extremes and paradoxes. What is it that mesmerizes some people and creeps out others? The honesty? About yourself or about others?”

I have a filter. I’ve never been in a place where I felt like I had to say everything I was thinking. I just don’t like acquiescing to pieties unless I’m getting paid good money at a job. Other than that, I don’t like to listen to false pieties.

* My Chuan Xiong Cha Tiao Pian finally arrived and I’m sleeping again after a ten day interruption. I love this website for the lowest priced Chinese herbs.

* How would you react if your partner/fiance asked you to delete all of your opposite sex FB friends? And if he got to keep his because he “inspired” them with his posts?

I can see asking a partner to delete her FB friends she’s had sex with. Still, it would be coming from insecurity and would likely bring about the very thing you’re trying to prevent.

Does Judaism demand that a married person remove all opposite-sex FB friends?

* Have you ever met a single woman over say, 42, who was not bitter and full of anger against men?

* May 2013 be the year we all finally figure out how to make good money off of the goyim. I think we need to focus on the Chinamen, who have the money. I will be doing online seminars in which I explain the secrets of the Jews to the Chinese. “Learn the secrets of the Jews from a Christian who became one.”

* I’m working on a new book called, “How The Goyim Think: A Guide For Jews To The Non-Jew.” I need your suggestions on topics to cover.
* For the goy, love is always good, tradition and ritual are bad.
* For the goy, the next world is more important than this one.
* For the goy, much study makes you unmanly. Intellectuals are to be suspected.
* For the goy, pride is a big sin and compliments are to be deflected.
* For the goy, what someone believes or does not believe about God is more important than what he does.

* The abuse of religious authority (aka clergy who molest) pushes my buttons more than anything. I also loathe false pieties (such as when Orthodox Jews go around quoting the Chofetz Chaim book as though it’s the Jewish standard on proper speech, as though the Rambam’s 13 Principles are “the last word in Jewish theology,” see Marc Shapiro’s book The Limits of Orthodox Theology). I hate listening to lame sermons. I hate it when people give me some lame self-help story I’ve already heard 50 times. I hate it when people treat me as unintelligent.

Lewis Fein: Note to self: “Patient exhibiting increased aggression and displays of egomania. Recommend continued treatment and revocation of weekend furloughs.”

* I was telling a friend that I’d take Landmark Forum if somebody else paid. She replied: “I’d take it if someone else paid” is something that you do not need to state at this point, about anything.

* I feel like my FB page is my Landmark Forum. I sit in a room and have people tell me what’s wrong with me. It’s all about me! Sure, it hurts, but it’s intoxicating. And it’s healthier for me than porn.

* When I started with Kundalini Yoga in January 2009, I fell in love with it. Then, a few weeks later, after I had suffered some serious injuries requiring expensive physical therapy, I decided to Google the matter. I ended up on Rick Ross’s site and was taken aback that it was described as a dangerous cult. I read everything, much of it multiple times, but continued on with the yoga for as long as I could afford it (two years) because I loved it and I love the people there. I think “cult” is usually used a put-down for a new religion.

* My father never seems to need anything. He’s the most self-sufficient guy I know. By contrast, I drip with need. Just before my 40th birthday, my ex-GF Holly said, “What do you get for the guy who has nothing?” I think that denial of all need and dripping with need are two sides of the same coin, just like yearning to rescue or to be rescued.

* All of the girls I wanted in high school? I’m looking them up on Facebook and I no longer want any of them. It scares me to think that the woman I marry will get ugly, old and fat. Some women look good into their 60s and that is what I want. I want her to try to look good for me.

* Two is the biggest number. When you’ve only been with one woman, it seems possible to imagine going your entire life with only her. But once you’ve sampled someone else, you’re off to the races.

* Kristy K. was my obsession in ninth grade at Forest Lake Christian School. She was tall and elegant. She’s now a probation officer with gun and bullet proof vest.

Girls are just amazing things. They’re the ultimate drug. Sure glad I’m sober now and able to relate to them as human beings.

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The Dark Lens

I remember my Seventh-Day Adventist childhood at Avondale College through a dark lens.

The following paragraph is 100% emotionally true for me but not always 100% fair and 100% factual.

Breaking the Sabbath! Big sin! Whack! Listening to the Beatles! Big sin! Whack! Eating between meals! Big sin! Whack! Eating candy! Big sin! Whack! Chewing gum! Big sin! Whack! Playing cards! Big sin! Whack! Smoking cigarettes! Big sin! Whack! Swearing! Big sin! Whack! Drinking water with your meals! Big sin! Whack! Interracial dating! Big sin! Whack! Masturbation! Big sin! Whack! Girlie mags! Big sin! Whack! Everything fun in life! Big sin! Whack!

My teachers at my Adventist school would hit me so hard with rulers that they would sometimes break. Mrs….would hit me from out of the blue when it was about a week before her period and I’d go flying across the room, smashing into furniture.

I always get the big sermon before my spanking (for setting fires and telling lies and eating candy between meals) and then I have to pull down my pants to make the humiliation complete, and then I’m told to kneel, and then he’ll tell me that he’ll hit me longer and harder if I cry and then the whacks begin and I whimper and they don’t end until I can’t sit down for a day or two. But the most painful part of all for me is to look in his eye and to see how I have hurt him, let him down, and turned away from God. It’s for my own good. We can’t let the Devil win.

And you be the Captain
And I’ll be no-one
And you can carry me away if you want to
And you can lay low
Just like your father and if
I tread upon your feet you just say so
‘Cos you’re The Captain, I am no-one,
I tend to feel as though I owe one to you

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How Bad Would It Have To Get?

If you know you’re a narcissist, why wouldn’t you get psycho-therapy? I guess the pain has to become so intense that you finally seek help. Changing religions, geography, jobs won’t affect a deep-rooted problem like narcissism. While it may not be curable, you can learn some empathy. I’ve gone through my life frightening people, but when you’re thinking of others, you can’t be enraged and you can’t frighten (Stephan Poulter)

How bad would it have to get for you to get help? How many jobs would you have to lose for speaking inappropriately to your co-workers or for looking at porn at work or the like? How many times would you have to get arrested for soliciting prostitutes or for beating your girlfriend? How much pain would you have to get in before you’d take a look at your addictions and compulsions?

I have a lot of lawyer friends who are sex addicts. They bill out at around $400 an hour. When they spend several hours a day on their addiction, on sexual and porn fantasies and strip clubs and liasons, they’re costing themselves at least a $1,000 a day to feed their addiction. It’s like they’re snorting a gram or two of coke each day.

There is no human security. There is always someone or something that can take you out. By learning to live with insecurity, by facing your demons, by recovering from your addictions, by developing a vision, your brain functions at a higher level. The recovered addict has learned to deal with stuff that most people never work through. Addiction can be a pathway to enlightenment. (Patrick Carnes)

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I Grew Up With All The Signs Of Becoming A Serial Killer

According to Dr Phil’s signs of a future serial killer, I pretty much have them all (Kendra Jade was the first person to point this out to me, she had a great fascination with serial killers and read many books on them and she recognized their characteristics in me):

1. Over 90 percent of serial killers are male. Check.

2. They tend to be intelligent, with IQ’s in the “bright normal” range. Check.

3. They do poorly in school, have trouble holding down jobs, and often work as unskilled laborers. Check.

4. They tend to come from markedly unstable families. Check.

5. As children, they are abandoned by their fathers and raised by domineering mothers. Check.

6. Their families often have criminal, psychiatric and alcoholic histories. Check.

7. They hate their fathers and mothers. Check.

8. They are commonly abused as children — psychologically, physically and sexually. Often the abuse is by a family member. Check.

9. Many serial killers spend time in institutions as children and have records of early psychiatric problems. Check.

10. They have high rates of suicide attempts. I never did anything, but constantly thought about it.

11. From an early age, many are intensely interested in voyeurism, fetishism, and sado-masochistic pornography. Check.

12. More than 60 percent of serial killers wet their beds beyond the age of 12. I think I stopped before age five.

13. Many serial killers are fascinated with fire starting. Check.

14. They are involved with sadistic activity or tormenting small creatures. Check.

In accordance with the teachings of the Seventh-Day Adventist church’s prophet, Ellen G. White, I am kept out of school as long as possible (until second grade).

I spend my days wandering around the bush outside our home at Avondale College (two hours drive north of Sydney).

An absolutely miserable kid (due to genetics and living in more than a dozen homes from age one to four while my mom was dying of cancer), I learn to escape from my surroundings by fantasizing that I am a great person having marvelous adventures. I tell myself that I’ll grow up to be the equivalent of Winston Churchill, Abraham Lincoln and George Washington.

I go out in the bush every day and I pretend I am conquering the wild west. I chop down trees. I blaze trails. I make mud pies. I rip the wings off flies and hack up insects and then I open up an animal hospital in our backyard and try to fix them. I try to stick their parts back together and dab water on their wounds, without much success. None of them get healed. Kinda similar to some of the people I blog about. I hack ‘em up and then try on occasion to patch them back together.

When I am about seven, I develop a fascination with matches. I learn that if you wrap them in tinder from matchboxes and then stepped on them hard, you can set off a small explosion. One day, I want to matter. I’ve heard so many stories about the evils of lighting forest fires. Ha! I want to set off a conflagration. I want to feel powerful. I light a fire in the dead grass outside our home. My adrenalin races as I run away. I feel alive. I’m like God. I’m deciding people’s fates. When I look back, I see the flames catch and spread. I feel powerful. I feel like I matter. I feel like I am transforming the world outside of me into the mirror image of the world inside of me. I love fire! I love power! I love importance! I love messing with people! Here is something huge that I’ve made.

A neighbor catches the fire before any damage is done. When I tell my friend Wayne what I’ve done, he says that he will tell on me if I ever do it again. And so I don’t.

I understand people who make fires and viruses and wars. You think happy people set fires? We want the outside world to match our inside world. It makes you feel powerful to create destruction and to change lives. It makes you feel like God. Who will live? Who will die? Who by fire and who by water?

I don’t commit arson anymore, but I love to light fires online through my Facebooking and my blogging. I love to set off flame wars. I love to polarize. I love to provoke. I love to watch people go nuts. I love to be incendiary. It makes me feel powerful.

If I’d grown up a Palestinian, I probably would have become a suicide bomber. With my social isolation, the promise of being cool and doing something great and bringing honor to my family would’ve been irresistible.

I’m susceptible to cults. Anyone who takes me in and tells me, “Yay Luke, we love you,” well, I’m willing to give them my every penny. I’m willing to give them my life. I just want to feel a part of things. I just want to matter. I desperately want to feel important.

I think a lot about suicide. I just make sure to never make the first step towards it. I never take a knife out of a drawer to run over my wrists. I never get a rope out to experiment with hanging myself. I don’t dawdle beside cliffs. I never allow myself to act on my suicidal impulses.

Aside from my two attempts at lighting fires, I never allow myself to act on my homicidal tendencies.

I might inadvertently be painting a picture of my oh so difficult childhood, but it is nothing compared to what my parents endured. They give me something far better than what they had. Compared to what they had, my childhood is a paradise.

Mom hits me spontaneously while dad is very disciplined. He gives me a little talk before the spanking where he says that this will hurt him more than it will hurt me but that he is only doing it for my own good. That sometimes we only learn through pain.

In my conservative Christian upbringing, sexual sins are the biggest sins. Sins like pre-marital sex, adultery, and reading nudie magazines. So out there in the tobacco plants, I did something horrific.

In case you are wondering what the Seventh-Day Adventist church’s position is on pornography:

“Seventh-day Adventists deem pornography to be destructive, demeaning, desensitizing, and exploitative.
It is destructive to marital relationships, thus subverting God’s design that husband and wife cleave so closely to each other that they become, symbolically, “one flesh” (Genesis 2:24).
It is demeaning, defining a woman (and in some instances a man) not as a spiritual-mental-physical whole, but as a one-dimensional and disposable sex-object, thus depriving her of the worth and the respect that are her due and right as a daughter of God.
It is desensitizing to the viewer/reader, callousing the conscience and “perverting the perception,” thus producing a “depraved person” (Romans 1:22. 28, NEB).
It is exploitative, pandering to prurience, and basally abusive, thus contrary to the Golden rule, which insists that one treat others as one wishes to be treated (Matthew 7:12).
Wise, indeed, is the counsel of Christianity’s first great theologian: “If you believe in goodness and if you value the approval of God, fix your minds on the things which are holy and right and pure and beautiful and good” (Philippians 4:8, 9, Phillips).”

This public statement is released by the General Conference president, Neal C. Wilson, who one day will end my father’s brilliant Seventh-Day Adventist career.
I get so scared about the magazines, so scared by my fascination with what I saw, so scared that my desire for this material is stronger than I am, that it violates God’s will, that even though porn is what I love most in the world, it’s the single most exciting thing, I don’t look at it again until I am 16.

Porn and suicide are two of my darkest drives. I allow myself to feel them intensely but always refuse to act on them.

From 1980-1982, my family does a lot of traveling and I spend many hours at newsstands in airports, reading magazines about my favorite football team, the Dallas Cowboys. Sometimes I look over the shoulders of men checking out Playboy and Penthouse. My heart pounds.

At the beginning of my Junior year, I stay with friends for a week while my parents are gone. Away from Rainy’s wholesome influence, away from Adventism’s wholesome influence, away from my parent’s wholesome influence, I buy an erotic novel and one afternoon all alone on the couch, I begin pressing on myself while reading it…
I am so scared by what happened, so scared by the pleasure and the humiliation and the mess. I resolve to never do it again. I know that masturbation is Satan’s typewriter. In a vision, Sister White “saw imbecility, dwarfed forms, crippled limbs, misshapen heads, and deformity of every description as a result of the solitary vice. Cancer is inflamed and commences its eating, destructive work. The mind is often utterly ruined and insanity takes place. Those who masturbate are just as surely self-murderers as though they pointed a pistol to their own breast, and destroyed their life instantly.”
My dad when he looked at his students could tell with just a glance who was masturbating. Their sallow complexions gave them away. When I was a kid, dad warned me against spending too much time down there. A little cleaning and that’s it.
The next afternoon, I am right back at it. I don’t know how to do it right so I roll my penis between my hands like I am hoping it will catch alight, and along with the pleasure of playing with myself, the skin rubs off and my penis bleeds and the pain builds but I keep rolling until I receive satisfaction. After a few weeks of this, I learned that a gentle tugging motion is much less damaging.

As a teen, I am not successful in employment. Until age 16, I am fired from every job I take.

I become busy, work insane hours, get good grades at college, eventually straight As, get accepted into UCLA to major in Economics and then boom, I’m laid out by illness.

When I get into Judaism, I decide to become holier than Dennis Prager.

I believe in Judaism’s ideals about sex and everything else, but when I can’t live up to them, I just say, “I’m not there yet. I haven’t spiritually evolved to that place yet.”

When I do temp work in offices from 1995-1997, I am fired from about five different jobs for inappropriate speech. With a Tourettes-like regularity, I’d say nasty sexual things that would cause great offense.

When I get the diagnosis of “eroticized rage” in 2011, it feels like a great relief to have my illness named. I start to see how my drive to transgress is holding me back in life. My sexual fantasies are all about transgression. No big deal, except that this rage keeps seeping into my life in the inappropriate things I say, in my writing, my work choices, my relationships. I’m all about rage and breaking the rules and this destroys any chance I have at a normal life and normal friendships and normal relationships.

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The Thrill Of Gambling

In ninth grade, as an outgrowth of my fascination with sports, I learned the thrill of gambling. I learned that if you put a few dollars on a game, it immediately assumed great importance in your life. It filled you with excitement. Everything bet on became more significant. It was like you were upping the amplitude of life. You were imbuing life with meaning by betting on it.

At Placer High School, I became a bookie, taking action on as many sporting events as I could. I studied books and articles on betting.

My Journalism teacher, Robert Burge, would not let me make bets in his room. He said it was wrong to learn to take advantage of people. So I took the bets outside of the classroom.

The bets made my life more interesting. The excitement helped paper over my lack of significant relationships.

I was a winner. I was ahead of the game. At one point in my Senior year, my friend Oscar owed me several hundred dollars. Then my luck turn when Oscar figured out how to play the horses. I don’t know how he did it but I got consistently schooled. By the time I graduated high school in June 1984, I owed Oscar about $1200. I think I paid him about $150. I was leaving for Australia. He accepted the limited payback. I’d been gentle when he owed me big bucks.

The experience of losing over $1,000 in theory shook me up and I determined to not gamble again. I’ve stuck to that (except for a couple of times when people gave me money to bet, I’m fine with playing with others money, I just won’t gamble my own).

My experience with gambling also convinced me that I had an addictive personality.

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Heavy Petting

Do Jews talk about heavy petting? That was an obsession in my Christian childhood, how very wrong it was. Then I left the church at 18 and I never heard anything more about heavy petting. Are children these days sufficiently aware of the dangers of heavy petting?

I just searched “Adventist heavy petting” and this is the first result that came up:

20. How many Seventh Day Adventist girls and young and older unmarried women and females are having petting… and she still claims to be a Virgin and TJCG was very handsome and popular with the girls and young and older women and females when younger and did this with plenty of Seventh Day Adventist girls and young to older unmarried women and females and more than enough were ready and willing and some were very experienced at out of sacred wedlock and marriage and premarital sex and is sex and still had the hymen in tact for some and some were not in tact and played games or lied or had excuses about her horse or motorcycle riding broke it!!!

21 You are FOOLS and IDIOTS to think that this is not an enormous problem and is why the Seventh Day Adventist have an extremely difficult time retaining their young people that grow up in this church and fornication presents chinks in the armor where Satan and Demons go after them EXTREME.

22 This is TJCG and told loud and clear why do you think that certain SDA Boarding Academies were closed?

23 Fornication is KILLING the young people and getting many KILLED and TJCG is TOLD we do have a system of SAVED and LOST and if TRUE and not everybody is uploaded and can be harvested by The JUDGE and can be resurrected then this is getting too many KILLED.

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What If Rainy Walked Into Starbucks?

I had a solid morning of writing. Now I need some human connection. I’ll get some mint tea, veinte, for $2.45 and sit in the corner by myself and write.

I got a couple of hours of good sleep with my CPAP until I got frustrated and took it off.

That was an important Skype conversation Sunday. I’m learning to negotiate, to listen to others, and to take their feelings into account. Negotiating relationships is not natural to me. I tend rather to cut them off.

The shrink in 2000 said that in relationships, I’m only looking for mirroring.

January 1, 1983. That night was a turning point in my life. I learned to kiss. It was the first time I made out with a girl and liked it. It made it easier that we wouldn’t have to keep running into each other. It made it easier that there weren’t messy emotions. It was just a Saturday night and we met at the party and we went into the loft and one thing led to another.

Making out is so much more pleasant than getting spanked by your parents. It’s a whole different type of touch. I knew that touch could be pleasant but I hadn’t really experienced that until January 1, 1983.

I wonder why my parents converted to Seventh-Day Adventism as teenagers? I wonder if they had many of the same motivations I did when I converted to Judaism?

I know my dad was profoundly touched by the kindness shown him by the first Adventists he met. His mom didn’t like his direction, so she ordered through the mail a book against the church. Dad read it, was not convinced, and got himself baptized at age 16 as an Adventist.

I suspect that the Anglican church he was raised in was boring. He was looking for high intensity religion. His home life was miserable, he wanted to transcend his problems and lose himself in the Lord.

My mom was boarded out with Seventh-Day Adventists in Sydney so she could get a good education. She liked her Adventist high school, liked the Adventists she knew, and converted (along with her mother some time later).

I wonder if the yearning for God and religion is genetic? I heard there’s a 17th Century Ford ancestor who writes in a style similar to my father. I suspect that religious extremism runs in our genes along with dispositions towards addiction and melancholy.

My dad’s mom was a sex and lovely addict, making his life miserable by moving around the country chasing after various men. She was a selfish woman, much like myself. She used everyone and everything in her life to meet her addictive needs.

My father became a man who denied needing anything. I became a man who wears neediness on his sleeve. Our two extremes meet somewhere I can’t quite see.

My father has lived his life in service to others. I’ve lived for myself.

On the cover of my mother’s book, Fireside Stories, is a drawing of a koala bear in a gum tree. He looks like he’s found his place in the world. That was probably my mom’s wish for me.

The death threats I used to get frightened me, particularly when the policeman said to call back if the guy came to the door. I was operating in a realm where the buses don’t run no more. The ordinary rules didn’t seem to apply. Police wouldn’t help. Friends couldn’t help (except to tell me to get out). I had to rely on my wits.

I suspect that many people thought I’d run away. I didn’t. I have a backbone. I looked at everything logically and just kept trucking with my blogging.

I knew that much of the blowback I got was my own fault. I had carelessly disregarded the rules of attribution and not attributed many quotes in my usenet postings. I had stepped on toes and then people retaliated.

Remember that girl in Starbucks who had a thing for me? That was 2007, 2008. I wonder where is today? Last I knew, she was at Santa Monica Community College. She’s probably 23.

Remember the old rabbi I used to meet here? I owe him. I tried to give his wife a ride once but she took fright at my vehicle.

It’s frightening how easily I slip into my father’s writing style, tying together long quotes with short segues. Like him, I enjoy controversy too much. I don’t have to make the same type of choices he did.

What would happen if my first love, Rainy Jackson, walked in here right now? I’d definitely smile and wave her over. I’ve maximized my chances of meeting her by leaving the house and putting on clean clothes. Whatever happened to her? I don’t think I’ve seen her since that summer of 1983.

I think our conversation would be easy. We never fought head on. We always avoided difficult topics.

Seeing that well-dressed Orthodox woman reminds me of all the stylish Orthodox Jews I’ve met and we somehow lost connection. I sit here at Starbucks and see all the connections I could’ve had if I had made different choices.

No matter what group I join, I always find ways to isolate myself.

At least I have not been crippled by life. I stand taller than ever. I move more easily. Few possibilities in life are closed off to me. I’m poised for greatness.

In 2000, the shrink said I had poor identity integration. Not any more. All the parts of my life work together. For the first time in memory, I am not at loggerheads with myself.

How I would love to see … walk through the door. I’d light up like a Christmas tree. And she’s always so nice. She’d have a polite conversation with me and then move on.

What’s God’s reaction to me? He’s OK with me. He’s not thrilled. He thinks I can do better. He understands me.

How does my 12 step work affect my Orthodox Judaism? For my first few months in the recovery program, I felt like it was a competing religion. I only have so much time. Sometimes I was going to meetings instead of something Jewish.

Then I did some research and went to more meetings and came to saw the program as a para-religion. It wasn’t competing with my Judaism, it was complimentary. It was removing impediments from my practice of my religion. It is reconfiguring the reward centers in my brain so I can make better decisions.

What does it mean to turn your life over to God? That’s steps four through twelve. The first three steps are just simple affirmations that your life has become unmanageable, that there is a force that can restore you to sanity, and you make a decision to turn your life over to God. Doing the Third Step doesn’t turn your life over to God, it’s just a decision to do so.

The work begins with the Fourth Step, the complete and fearless moral inventory. Everything else follows from that. You identify and decide to ask God to help you to remove your defects of character. You make amends to those you’ve wronged. You take stock every day and when you are wrong, you promptly admit it. And you work at increasing your daily contact with God.

Am I just going to sit here and sip tea until I have a genuine connection with somebody or can I go now and make dinner? I’m going to boil some soup. I want to watch Netflix. Connection can wait.

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Rabbis Talk Differently To Other Rabbis

In his fourth lecture on Rabbi Shlomo Yosef Zevin, history professor Marc B. Shapiro says:

Wikipedia has everything you need.

In the rabbinic world, you don’t have book reviews [like what Rav Zevin did in Sofrim U’Sefarim]. It’s not part of the culture.

I have this whole theory that the Talmud is a document designed for rabbis by other rabbis and it never occurred to them that the masses would be studying it. Certain things said, criticisms, rebuke, insulting comments about other rabbinic figures, I can’t imagine that they would want the masses to know this. The same goes for Rishonim. The way they criticize other rishonim, they would never use this language if they were speaking to the masses.

There’s a new book out about Rabbi Meir Simcha of Dvinsk (a Hungarian rav), who says:

At weddings, we tell the bride and groom to rejoice like they’re in the Garden of Eden.

We don’t have long rabbinic speeches at weddings any more. We give our rabbis may be two minutes. In Hungary, the rabbi often gave long speeches instead of the leaving the married couple alone and the rabbis destroy the whole simcha. That’s why we wish the couple to rejoice like in the Garden of Eden where there are no rabbis around to ruin the party.

Rabbi Meir Simcha of Dvinsk calls the Hasidim in his village “ignoramuses and troublemakers. It was difficult for me as a rabbi to have anything to do with them, to sit with these ignorant uncouth people.”

Meir Simcha complained about when Hasidic rebbes would come to town and the davening would go on and on. He’d have to sit at a meal with them and it would go on for hours and he’d have to listen to the songs and the banging on the table and the dancing without any Torah talks. And that’s not to mention the pushing. At the end of the singing, the Hasidim would turn into “animals and would jump on the food.”

“The Hasidim would speak to me and I would try to teach them Torah and they had no interest.”

Posted in Hasidim, Marc B. Shapiro, Rabbis | Comments Off on Rabbis Talk Differently To Other Rabbis

When Should You Ask A Date About Her Credit Score?

On the first date?

I think a credit score, better than any other score, approximates somebody’s character.

Mine is about 720.

The New York Times reports:

The credit score, once a little-known metric derived from a complex formula that incorporates outstanding debt and payment histories, has become an increasingly important number used to bestow credit, determine housing and even distinguish between job candidates.

It’s so widely used that it has also become a bigger factor in dating decisions, sometimes eclipsing more traditional priorities like a good job, shared interests and physical chemistry. That’s according to interviews with more than 50 daters across the country, all under the age of 40.

“Credit scores are like the dating equivalent of a sexually transmitted disease test,” said Manisha Thakor, the founder and chief executive of MoneyZen Wealth Management, a financial advisory firm. “It’s a shorthand way to get a sense of someone’s financial past the same way an S.T.D. test gives some information about a person’s sexual past.”

Posted in Dating | Comments Off on When Should You Ask A Date About Her Credit Score?