Tuesday, September 30, 2008

happy new(ish) jewish year

We’re into the first day of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year. L’Shana Tova!

As we welcome the year 5769 in the Hebrew calendar, I readily admit I have no idea what I’m doing. Unfortunately, this means I’m defaulting to doing nothing.

I’m a New Jew — or so I’ve dubbed myself. I’m still in the midst of a lengthy process of conversion to Judaism, which is happening steadily in fits and starts (if such a thing is possible), and is full of enthusiasm, doubt, determination and a fair amount of wondering what the hell I’m doing and why.

Many of the Jews I know — and admittedly I don’t know all that many — are taking time off of work to attend services, be with their families and otherwise observe this time of reflection and introspection. Rosh Hashanah marks the creation of the world, and the birthday of Adam. Or so I’m told. I’m still learning.

This is the time for considering the wrongs we have committed against others, the days when the Book of Life and the Book of Death are opened, when we make amends to one another — and hopefully also to ourselves — so that by the time Yom Kippur rolls around, we’ve secured a place in the Book of Life for ourselves in the coming year.

I’ve got a great essay I want to write about this. I’ve been thinking about it for a good six weeks now, but I’ve not yet done it. It may well be too late, though technically I suppose I’ve got a few more days if I’m looking to submit something to a newspaper in time for Yom Kippur.

But this just emphasizes to me that I’m not really doing anything out of my normal routine to mark the turning of the year. I’m still working. I’m here at my desk as I type this, with a story deadline tomorrow, and a few others I need to get a jump on. It’s uncertain as to whether this qualifies me for stoning.

I’m not at temple, and honestly even if I were, I’d have no idea what I was doing. I don’t know what to expect, having never celebrated or observed the High Holy Days, even from a distance — other than my obligatory fast last year at Yom Kippur, even though I spent most of the day either napping or reading at Borders. I did wear light colored clothing — I don’t own much in the way of white garments — and was careful not to wear leather shoes, but I wasn’t praying and I wasn’t spending time in Jewish community. At some point, I think I did slice up some apples for myself and drizzle them with honey, for what it’s worth.

If I did head downtown for services, I imagine I’d feel uncomfortable and lost, and probably bored and fidgety as, historically, any service of any kind that goes on for more than about 20 minutes leaves me feeling like I’ve got some kind of rash or stinging insect infestation on the inside of my skin. Yet I’m still disappointed with myself for not even giving it a try.

So I sit here at my desk, ostensibly working on these article deadlines, and feeling conflicted about the onset of the Days of Awe. I want to find my own path within Judaism, something that brings who I am to these centuries-old traditions, and vice versa. I feel very much on my own with this. I was not born Jewish. I’m not especially close to anyone who is Jewish. I live alone and don’t have a family framework for observing holidays, much less Shabbat. I will blaze my own trail, and there will no doubt be mistakes made and pitfalls encountered along the way.

I just hope that not too many more cycles of holidays will pass me by in the meantime.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

11 September 2008

I’m hesitant to post my thoughts on this anniversary, given how much “remembrances” are filling the news media today — and how far too many outlets are capitalizing on grief. A Twitter acquaintance of mine has referred to this as “emotional pornography,” and I don’t think he’s too far off the mark.

But what I’m remembering here this morning is the total disconnect I saw in my community on 11 September 2001 and in the days that followed.

I was working that morning, sitting at my computer in my home office, with NPR’s morning coverage on the radio in the background. First there was a report of a single airplane crashing into one of the World Trade Center towers. Either they weren’t giving details — or I wasn’t listening too closely — because I thought they were talking about a small aircraft like a Cessna or something. I thought it sounded tragic, and assumed it was some kind of pilot error. I kept working.

When reports came in about a second plane crashing into the towers, it still didn’t occur to me that something more deliberate was at work. Again, I assumed they were talking about small aircraft. I started wondering if there might be some magnetic or electrical interference with the planes’ instruments.

NPR cut away from New York to a reporter who was at the Pentagon, covering some meeting or military initiative. Something like that. I don’t remember. I do remember that during the man’s report, sirens sounded in the background. The NPR host asked what was going on, and the reporter responded that the Pentagon was on fire. Both men laughed nervously, as if they were thinking, “Great. What next?” It was such a crazy morning, with so much going wrong, and the pieces weren’t being put together yet.

By the time I flipped on the television, it was obvious that the United States was under terrorist attack.

Like so many other Americans, I was glued to the television and radio, trying to make sense of what was happening. There were frantic calls between me and my mother as we tried to reach my sister, living in New York City. I heard military jets screaming through the skies overhead, scrambling out of Langley and headed north.

When I finally reached my sister, she described the surreal experience she was having. Standing in her office’s conference room, she could look out one window and see smoke billowing from the World Trade Center area, and then glance out another window to watch runners and families in Central Park, going about their business as though nothing extraordinary was happening.

After several hours of panicked television coverage — and endless replays of footage of the second plane slamming into the tower, and of the towers collapsing — I knew I had to get out of the house. I turned off the television and the radio, and I sat outside for a while. But the military jets were still streaking overhead every so often, so I went to the grocery store in search of comfort food. I drove to my local Ukrops, parked my car, and stepped inside.

The place was absolutely silent. It was full of people, shopping in a kind of haze, on automatic pilot. There was some small talk here and there, forced laughter. But no one was talking about what was happening. No one mentioned the attacks, the planes, the towers, the deaths, the fear.

I got angry. I don’t know why my reaction to other people’s silent shock and confusion would be anger and frustration, but it was. I very nearly broke out into the “Star Spangled Banner” in the middle of the produce section — one, to give some hope and to remind myself and everyone at Ukrops that we’re Americans, dammit. We’re resilient and strong and can come back from just about anything. But I also wanted to jolt people out of their disorientation, to wake them up from auto-pilot and get people to start talking to each other, to embrace and weep if they had to. To get them to come together and stop insulating themselves in their individual bubbles of fear.

But I didn’t start singing. Everyone deals with trauma in his or her own way. I had no right to force my process on anyone else. So I paid for my groceries — probably some green beans and Goldfish crackers — and went home.

On Friday, 14 September, a nationwide candlelight vigil had been organized — light a candle at 7 p.m. and keep it lit for one hour. All across the United States, Americans were lighting candles and putting them in their windows. They were lighting candles and sitting on their porches and gathering in front yards and on sidewalks and in community green spaces to come together as neighbors and support each other through anger, grief and grasping at understanding.

I lit a candle and carried it out to my front steps. I settled it down beside me and sat down on the bricks. And waited.

No one else in my neighborhood — at least no one within sight of my house — lit a single candle. A few cars went by. A few people made appearances at their doors to pay for pizza delivery. Other than that, my community was shut up tight. After an hour, I carried my candle back inside.

Over the next year, I noticed a lot of six- and eight-foot-high privacy fences going up in my neighborhood, where three-foot chain link fences had sufficed before. There were more bickering voices behind closed doors, more anger and apathy in the community at large.

With the relentless airing on television of footage of the attacks, we became an entire nation dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder. We retreated into our homes in fear, stocking up resources and supplies against possible future attacks. Our military bombed Afghanistan, lashing out in a mostly futile attempt to vent the anger and panic roiling inside us all. We were desperate for someone, something to blame, and we found and even invented scapegoats aplenty.

Our president led us into a holy war, drawing a line in the sand and challenging the rest of the world to declare their allegiance: “You’re either with us or against us.” Such an uncompromising stance doesn’t allow for healing, or for really anything other than more division, more fear, more suspicion…. Pretty much setting the stage for more violence.

As someone who’s dealt with her own trauma and victimization, I recognized what was happening. These were classic attitudes and behaviors in the aftermath of outrageous violation — similar to what survivors of rape and domestic abuse experience — but it was happening on a national scale.

And it still is. We’ve not given ourselves any real room or pathway for healing. As a nation, we’re still setting ourselves at odds with the rest of the world, when in reality it’s a relatively small (though powerful) fundamentalist organization that has targeted us. The United States’ response has been way over the top, and it has trickled down into communities across the country.

I moved from Virginia to Oregon in 2004, and I’ve seen evidence of this lingering PTSD on both coasts. We want to come together, but we’re still afraid. We want to rise up as one, to repair the damage to our hearts and souls, but we’re often too busy being self-righteous and miming confidence. And so we bicker amongst ourselves. Communities and neighborhoods that were already strong and tight before 11 September 2001 have come through this even stronger and tighter and often more optimistic and proactive than ever. But others are falling apart at the seams.

We’re disconnected as a nation, as communities, as neighbors and as human beings. And we’ll remain that way until we take the courageous step to heal, to take fearless inventory of our own shortcomings and contributions to the residual crisis, to make amends for our actions and behaviors and to make the choice to see the world differently, so that we can all together experience a world that is not fiercely pitted against us but which is a global community — with its own troubles, differences and strife — that is waiting to welcome us with open arms.

Friday, September 05, 2008

NaNoWriMo 10th Anniversary

Yep. 2008 marks the 10th anniversary of National Novel Writing Month.

They've got special t-shirts and everything.

What?! You've not yet participated? Why the bloody hell not?

You keep saying you want to write that story you've been mulling over for most of your adult life, but you never seem to get around to putting pen to paper or fingers to keyboard. Here's your opportunity, and it comes around every November. Imagine that.

50,000 words in 30 days. It sounds intimidating. Impossible even. But it can be done -- novelists all over the globe make it happen every year. Hell, I've done it every year since 2004. I've found it a challenge every time, but well worth it. You can write 1667 words per day, every day. Or you can write 12,500 words every weekend and take the weekdays off. Or you can procrastinate most of the month and not even start until November 23rd, and still get it done. Whatever floats your boat.

It's hard work, and it's its own brand of literary insanity. It's tremendous fun, and at the end of the month, you've actually accomplished something -- even though this is a first draft, and all first drafts are crap. Really. It's true. Take my word for it.

One of the most popular features of the NaNo website is the online forums. They've got a discussion group for pretty much everything in there, and threads on topics you'd never dream up on your most colorful acid trip. Need an expert to tell you the how to test the age of primitive artifacts carved from igneous rock? Chances are there's another writer on the boards who is also a geologist or archaeologist. (I had this exact problem back in 2005, and I had no fewer than ten fellow writers jump in to help.)

Made a funny typo -- or just wrote something that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever -- and want to share it? There is a HUGE thread devoted to these "Nanoisms," and reading these postings often leaves me in tears, I'm laughing so hard. And surfing that thread is a great way to procrastinate doing actual writing.

Want to challenge your writing buddies? Make a pact that whoever gets to the 50,000-word goal last has to scrub everyone else's toilets. Or sit down together to write, after you've each drunk two liters of Mountain Dew, and whoever has to get up to use the bathroom first has to streak across the parking lot shouting, "I am a Greek God!" at the top of his/her lungs. Or find a funny character or phrase and challenge your buddies to include that in their plots. I successfully met Terri's challenge last year of including the word "gastronomically" in a story about vampires; I'm still waiting for her to throw a couple of were-monkeys into one of her tales.

Want to get together with fellow NaNo'ers in your area for a write-in at a local coffee shop? They've got these going on all month, all over the world. Portland, Oregon, has its own forum, and we historically have one of the largest writer contingents on the planet. If your city or town doesn't have its own forum, start one.

So, tell me again why you're not jumping in to do this? Afraid you might not make it? Well, of course you won't, not with that attitude. Plenty of writers try and fail each year with NaNoWriMo, and they're back again the next year, and the next. The point is committing to it and giving it an honest shot.

You won't be sorry.

You've got almost two months to prepare for this. Go find a copy of NaNo founder Chris Baty's "No Plot? No Problem!" -- a great guide for writers in general, but specifically geared toward NaNoWriMo.

And when you sign up on the NaNoWriMo website, let me know. I'd be happy to add you as one of my buddies.