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Showing posts from September, 2020

First Grade

“Don’t cry,” my mother tells me. I am in first grade, with a pretty knapsack and a lunch she packed me, and first grade always made me cry. “But I want to stay with you.” It was, to my five-year-old self, the most dramatic thing that I had to spend the whole day away from her, and I didn’t understand it. “You’ll be home soon.” -- “Don’t cry,” my mother tells me. It’s a habit that, as a twenty-something year old woman, I pretend I had grown out of. I’m sitting on her couch writing poetry – a piece from San Francisco that would one day become a friend’s housewarming present – and airplanes always made me cry. “I’ll just miss you, that’s all.” “You’ll be home in a few months.” None of us could have predicted a fucking pandemic that had probably already started, or known the next time I’d come back would be almost two years later. -- “I told you not to cry,” but I know she is also crying. She has stage four colorectal cancer, and we both wrote a piece with the exact sam...

On Yom Kippur

I climbed down to the river and said tashlich in the creek. Tangled in the weeds and wondering if I could beg forgiveness of myself this year, or if that defeats the purpose. For all the moments I misjudged, and the weight I placed upon them. The chances that I took for given. For that day - was it last year, truly? - when I looked into the river but saw your eyes instead, and saw the things I should have said but wasn’t brave enough to say them. They taste like earth, and smell like rain, and they will always, always carry connotations. I know I made you cry that day. Forgive me. * Perhaps Yom Kippur holds the answers I’ve been looking for. Perhaps they’ve been here all this time. A legal prayer set to annul our vows. So, our words hold enough power to require a special prayer just to nullify them. Enough power for the things we miss to require nullification. It makes sense, after all. G-d created with words, also. And yet. There is space to recognize that even gra...

Judgement’s Counterpart

What is a new beginning? I found it last year. I chose my own city and snuck out of shul to drink bourbon for breakfast (along with the rabbi). I moved into an Airbnb at 2 in the morning and wondered, for the first time, if eye contact was enough to save the life of the person who lived there. (I believe that it was, at least in that moment.) I signed my first lease on a stranger’s front doorstep, and started clean. It’s the dichotomy. Making space for things that feel like they can never fit together. The still, small voice of the shofar that follows a blast profound enough to frighten the angels - and yet that small voice means more, and perhaps holds the most. G-d as our beloved, as we stand before Him in judgement that holds both fear of what we stand to lose and awe of the potential for what we can build together. A communal new beginning, as it was for centuries, that we embark upon from the depths of solitude. This time last year? We were dancing barefoot on somebody’s roo...