Rabbi Ben Zion Sobel Arrested

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Background.

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Have I Ever Known The Love God?

Pastor Jim Fitzsimmons in Australia emails: hi Luke, I wonder if you have ever known The love God? The love that caused Him to send Christ for you on Calvary. The love that sent His Spirit to speak with you, in the things of God? When you were a child, I met you with your Dad, on a bush track in Avondale college. Cute, bright and intelligent. Since then, I have often thought about you, and what became of you. Often prayed for you and your soul.

It’s well known your journey has taken you on a path that challenges most Christians. It is clear from your activity that you are in rebellion against Christ. You know it, but can’t face it. You have a grudge against Him for no other reason than His enormous love for you regardless of your life of sin and shame.

So the easy way is to break free from your Dads beliefs, the Adventist message, and the Word of God. Your messed up, confused, and you have resorted to acting instead. All you have ever done is in response to living in the shadows of your famous and loving father. That’s probably explains why you crave fame. It helps you to cope with your deepest anger and jealousies.

Satan has triumphed through you. It is his evil breath you have been breathing for a long, long time. Without the presence of the Holy Spirit, Satan is more than a match for any man. His genius is to deceive. You are guided daily by a legion of evil spirits directly under his express orders. You are doing a work for Satan, of the same ferocity that controlled the lives of Karl Marx, Adolf Hitler and a cast and crew too numerous to mention. These spirits crowd around you by day and by night, for they see in you a special prize.

Your past is painted by fallen angels. Your future is a day, where you will have to stand before Christ, look him in the eye and….confess on your knees your hate and anger. But it will be too late. You will then see how much you have been controlled by Satan’s power. What a loss. What a fool. What a jerk you will feel then. But all that’s left will be to be punished for your evil and bitter dislike for The Lovely Christ.

But I believe, that if you turn to Christ now, he will forgive and forget all your many sins. Because that’s how his grace works. It’s not religion you need Luke, it’s Christ.

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A Frum Jew Takes Charge at the White House; and Did You Know There’s an Official Rabbi of JFK Airport?

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How legendary record producer Tony Visconti became an Alexander Technique teacher

Barry emails: Luke:

Here is a short passage about Alexander Technique which I found in the autobiography of legendary record producer Tony Visconti.
Visconti was a London-based American who now lives in New York I believe. He was instrumental in launching the careers of David Bowie and Marc Bolan of T Rex amongst many others. He has also worked with Paul McCartney and many other famous names.

I include two PDFs of the relevant passages from his book. Might form the basis of a posting for your blog, of which I’m a keen reader I might add.

From: Tony Visconti: The Autobiography: Bowie, Bolan and the Brooklyn Boy

Since my twenties, I had been having problems with my lower back, all too frequently putting it ‘out’. I’d trusted chiropractor ever since one had cured me of bedwetting when I was eight years old. In my teens I had migraine headaches and another very gifted chiropractor not only cured them instantly but, as a side project, also turned me into an agnostic. In the 1980s I went down with full-blown sciatica and received treatment from an acupuncturist and osteopath. I accepted that I had a ‘bad back’, a situation that all my therapists confirmed. I noticed that since I had started Tai Chi my back always felt great during my sessions, but I could never connect that feeling to every day walking around. In 1991, when moving house from New York City to New City, I lifted a heavy box of CDs and felt a rip in my lower back; I was in agony and had to go to bed but no amount of rest brought relief to the pain. May called a local chiropractor and made an appointment for the next day. It took almost 45 minutes to crawl from the bedroom to the car. I spent six slow months in recovery at the hands of the chiropractor and got progressively better, but something was gnawing at me. I didn’t really believe I had a ‘bad back’, but felt I was doing something ‘wrong’ whenever my back went ‘out’.

On a trip to London, I was browsing around Foyles, the huge bookstore on Charing Cross Road. I bumped into a pile of books and one fell on my toe. It was a book on the Alexander Technique; I’d heard about it before but had written it off after my Tai Chi teacher gave it a bad rap. Leafing through the book, I saw what I had been thinking: back injuries are a result of not using the mechanics of the body correctly. I bought the book and finished it on the plane journey home. I mentioned it to my masseuse, Rhonda Care, that I would love to learn the technique and she told me she studied singing with an Alexander Technique teacher. A few days later I took my first lesson with Martha Bernard in her home in Chelsea, New York City. Within five minutes I was beginning to have ‘eureka’ moments; it all made perfect sense. I could clearly see the mistakes I was making when I lifted heavy objects. I took a total of 20 lessons with Martha and by the sixth I had become evangelistic about ‘the work’ (as it was named by F.M. Alexander). I knew I wanted to become a teacher myself. When I told Martha, her eyes rolled.

“Tony, my training was very hard and I am now doing graduate training with a second teacher. Are you sure you want to put yourself through all that?”

I insisted I did and at another lesson she told me that there was a sudden vacancy at her teacher’s school. Soon I was being interviewed by Thomas Lemens, head of the Institute for the Alexander Technique (IFAT) in Katona, New York. I passed his requirements and even took a lesson from him. As wonderful as Martha was, I could tell the difference; if this was a martial art, then Lemens was a ‘grandmaster’. I started school in September 1992. Normally at other schools 1,600 hours of training were required to get certification; Lemen’s standard was much higher and expected 2,400 hours of training with him. And that’s what I did for four years.

…We trained for three solid hours, no breaks. In the first year of training I wasn’t permitted to do hands-on work until the last month or so, Thom and the senior students would work on me. In the fourth year I was not only working on my fellow students, I was also teaching volunteer members of the public who came in for lessons, we called them ‘bodies’. Strictly speaking the Alexander Technique is not a therapy, it is an education, learning to apply the natural mechanics of the human body intelligently.

…My back never went ‘out’ again. Quite simple it has been life changing.

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Can You Teach Alexander Technique Via Skype?

I did a radio interview last week with Debi Dali in Dallas. She asked if I taught Alexander Technique via Skype. So far, I do not, but many leading Alexander teachers do, including Robert Rickover, Mark Josefberg and Sharon Jakubecy.

This is opposed by some of the older teachers who fear that teaching via Skype dilutes and distorts the Technique.

The New York Times reports on music teaching via Skype:

Skype and other videochat programs have transformed the simple phone call, but the technology is venturing into a new frontier: it is upending and democratizing the world of music lessons.

Students who used to limit the pool of potential teachers to those within a 20-mile radius from their homes now take lessons from teachers — some with world-class credentials — on other coasts or continents. The list of benefits is long: Players of niche instruments now have more access to teachers. Parents can simply send their child down the hall for lessons rather than driving them. And teachers now have a new way to build their business.

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Detroit Medical News Features The Benefits Of The Alexander Technique

Dr. Susan Adelman writes for the Detroit Medical News:

Oddly enough, no medical school or residency teaches the Alexander Technique, even though this technique has many potential uses in medicine. So, what is it? My first exposure to the Alexander Technique came when I tried to make my husband’s cousin tell me about a strange
technique that she had studied for years in England and was getting ready to teach. Her initial attempt to explain it sounded like my idea of Jewish exercise – you lie still and think about exercising.

However, when my bad knee did not respond adequately to physical therapy, she suggested that this technique would help. Her husband was pleased with the results of his Alexander lessons after arthroscopic surgery failed to relieve all his symptoms. She located a teacher in
Michigan, and I began to study. I found out that Mr. F. Matthias Alexander had been a thespian who, in Australia in the late 1800s, developed progressive hoarseness in the course of a performance. When doctors had little to offer him he decided to solve the mystery himself. Using three mirrors, he saw that he habitually would puff out
his chest and throw back his head whenever he delivered his beloved Shakespearean orations. These movements compressed his trachea, and he would become breathless.

Numerous experiments over several years taught him that the positions and relationships of the head, neck, and back were of critical importance, and this was not just for making speeches. Throwing the head backward causes the back to shorten and lessens the mechanical advantage that the back and neck need in order to perform most body movements with minimum muscular strain. A qualified Alexander Technique teacher guides the student repeatedly through more
desirable ways of moving the body, first through sitting and arising, later in walking, standing to write or even swinging a golf club. Mr. Alexander found that he had established, habitual ways of performing the acts of daily living. Nevertheless, while in possession of the knowledge he needed to change and despite his high motivation, it was
extremely difficult for him to adopt unfamiliar patterns of movement—even if they were easier and more tensionfree. When our old habits are so ingrained, new ways of moving will feel wrong. The old, wrong, ways feel right. Our perceptions turn out to be unreliable.

Mr. Alexander then developed the unique insight that it is necessary to stop, inhibit the habitual pattern of movement, then repeat the following instructions: “ keep the neck free, head forward and up, back lengthened and widened, out and away through the upper arms…” while performing the new pattern that the teacher has shown the student.
With time, the student can learn new, almost strain-free movements of impressive ergonomic efficiency.

George Bernard Shaw and other famous members of the British theater world invited Mr. Alexander to England, and there he began to teach his techniques to an ever widening circle of students. Aldous Huxley, Prof. John Dewey (the famous educator) and other luminaries of the day became enthusiastic proponents of this work. These techniques
became established in several centers in Australia and the British Isles, and then they spread through the theater and dance community in England. After Mr. Alexander came to the United States, the technique travelled to both coasts. The Julliard School of Music has long required
training in the Alexander Technique. Athletes, dancers and instrumentalists have reported relief from strains, cramps and sprains through the technique.

Patients with scoliosis, problems with the back, joints, neck, and even with migraine headaches, improve with lessons in the technique. Stutters learned to control their stuttering when Mr. Alexander trained them to relax their neck and facial muscles. Violinists learned to hold their instruments so that their neck cramps went away. Alexander was pained to see, when he explained his techniques to some medical doctors, that these medical specialists maintained such poor posture and moved so inefficiently that he despaired of their ever being able
to transmit his techniques to patients unless they went through a lengthy training period themselves. However, those physicians who did take the time to learn from Mr. Alexander wrote erudite recommendations to their professional organizations urging the incorporation of his techniques into British medical education. John Dewey wrote extensively about the need to introduce these
techniques into the education of children.

The father of one trained Alexander teacher was a dental surgeon with
a long history of backache. He was a doubter until he learned a basic
maneuver of the technique: to lie on his back on the floor for twenty
minutes once a day, legs bent at the knees, a telephone book under the head and hands on the chest. During that time he was instructed to sequentially scan all the muscles that were in contact with the floor and “ask them” to let go, to release. His pains went away.

Until his death in 1955 Mr. Alexander was frustrated by his inability
to disseminate his techniques widely through the medical community.
After taking 10 lessons, I would opine that part of the problem lies in
the time commitment necessary to truly change one’s personal habits
and practices. Until a practitioner can reliably incorporate the new,
more desirable ways of posture and movement into his or her daily life, it is unlikely that he or she will be successful in transmitting this knowledge. My husband’s cousin studied for six years.

Still, books on the subject cite examples of highly symptomatic patients who have found great relief from just a few lessons. Mr. Alexander felt strongly that, with respect to a wide variety of conditions, a doctor who simply treats an ache or pain without addressing the faulty ways in which the patient stands or moves is making a mistake just as
grave as that made by any doctor who treats the symptoms of any disease without diagnosing and definitively treating the disease itself.
For further information, a number of websites provide descriptions,
YouTube footage and references for the technique. The most authoritative information is on the site of the Society of Teachers of the Alexander Technique (STAT). The American Society for the
Alexander Technique (AmSAT) website provides an extensive book catalogue.

Mr. Alexander wrote several books, including The Use of the Self, and
others have summarized his books, including Edward Maisel, who edited
The Alexander Technique: The essential writings of F. Matthias Alexander.

So, you might ask, how am I doing? My back is almost entirely asymptomatic in spite of its underlying structural problems. My knee? Put it this way: it is less of a factor in my life than it was after working out for several years at LA Fitness, either with or without a trainer. My Alexander lessons have added to my comfort and diminished my
symptoms. Further, a bad shoulder that I had been ignoring for years now is markedly better. The one thing the technique has not done is make me any younger.

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I’m Doing Alexander Technique On My Own!

It’s easy as a student to get hooked on the delicious hands-on nature of Alexander Technique instruction. As a student for three years at the Alexander Training Institute of Los Angeles, I had the privilege of receiving daily lessons from some of the best teachers in the world.

Luckily, the primary thing they taught was how to use my mind to notice my habit patterns and how to let go of the ones that don’t serve me.

I haven’t had a lesson in a month but I’m still making progress. My TMJ problem has largely gone away. After struggling for years to let go of needless tension in my jaw, these days I’m noticing my habits of compression and letting them go. As a result, my jaw no longer hurts.

As I walk about my day, I frequently notice myself compressing or pulling down. That’s human and that’s inevitable. With my training, I’m now able to release these patterns of gratuitous tension and to teach other people how to do the same.

I know I have the ability to use my hands to make people feel amazing — to feel light and poised and expanded and released. But what will people do when they leave my office and go about their day? If they don’t change their thinking to notice their habits and let the bad ones go, the benefits of my lesson will wear out within a couple of days.

So I spend most of my teaching time helping my students to learn something about themselves that they can then take with them into life and apply on their own.

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Am I Inflammatory?

I never think about whether or not what I am about to say is inflammatory (unless I am in close quarters on a regular basis, then I am more careful).

The other day, Martin Luther King’s name came up while I was talking to Orthodox Jewish friend. One railed against King as a degenerate (for his widespread womanizing, his plagiarizing of his PhD thesis, his socialism). The other friend was pro King.

So I posted today on my FB: “How are you celebrating Martin Luther King? Not a big day for most of my Orthodox friends.”

And a friend responded by saying I was inflammatory.

That never crossed my mind. What concerns me is truth, not whether or not somebody is going to be offended by what I say.

Modern Orthodox Jews generally wish to be a part of the wider culture and for many of them, Martin Luther King Day has significance. For traditional Orthodox Jews, the wider society doesn’t matter much to them and they don’t care about Martin Luther King.

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Do You Feel Anxiety When You Lose Facebook Friends?

Well, that was weird.

I had somebody I know (met her twice) friend me on Facebook and then after I accepted her friend request, she deleted me.

And we have about 40 friends in common — on Facebook and in life.

So how do you react to Facebook anxiety? When you log in and notice you have two fewer friends, what do you think? Do you assume people have deleted you? Do you feel anxious that you have lost friends? Do you want to figure out who it is that has de-friended you?

The more you have going on in your life the less anxiety you’ll feel about these Facebook matters. The more secure you are, the less you’ll worry about Facebook nonsense.

It’s all about differentiation (as spelled out in the great book Passionate Marriage).

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How To Get A Job

I told my therapist I might need to get a part-time job while I build my Alexander Technique practice.

I asked him to be my coach for five minutes.

He said I should check out craigslist. I should walk my neighborhood and look for help wanted signs. I should talk to people at shul. I should ask myself, what do I do well?

Do I have friends who own businesses? Where do people in my life work?

Update my resume.

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