Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Entering Elul with words: writing as a spiritual practice

Preparing for Awe:
High Holiday Warm-ups and Stretches

On my wedding day, almost 19 years ago, my childhood rabbi, Rabbi Andre Unger said four lovely words in his exotically thick Hungarian accent: “ani l’dodi, v’dodi li”,  “I am my beloved’s and my beloved is mine”. This is a traditional response for the bride as her brand new husband slides a simple gold ring on her finger. I was mesmerized at the sound of it; I remember it clearly, I remember not having any idea that it was written 2000 years earlier, a love poem called Song of Songs, expressing the love and bond between God and the Jewish people. I didn’t know what it meant, but felt that it said something deep, shared, and everlasting.

We are passing into the month of Elul, a month whose name has been shaped by the beginning letters of the phrase above – fittingly so, because we use this month to engage ourselves in the work of deep introspection and an accounting of our actions and relationships while we bend toward our spiritual centers and the coming High Holidays. In ancient Aramaic, Elul means ‘search’, and as the days drop away toward Rosh HaShanah, we consciously search back through the year that has passed, expressing appreciation, righting wrongs, and strengthening our ties with our community.

Just as we make vows on our wedding day, it is human nature to make vows, or set goals at these annual beginnings. I’m sure we all have long lists of  ‘resolutions’ that seemed worthy -- maybe promises to develop a new hobby, eat healthier, practice yoga, reconnect with a lost friend, tap into your creative side….and the High Holy Days reinforce that it is never too late… to repair a relationship or forgive someone, even when that someone is yourself. In fact there is a beautiful midrash that teaches that Moses ascended Mt Sinai on the first of Elul, receiving the Torah and 10 Commandments, during slichot, Rosh Hashanah, and descending 40 days later on Yom Kippur, when we hear the call of the shofar, celebrating a fuller closer relationship with God.

40 days in the desert? Climbing Mt Sinai and coming down with the Torah? Ani l’dodi v’dodi li? What can we mere mortals do here on earth to approximate that kind of transformation for ourselves.

We are very often asked how we ourselves prepare for these days of awe – and truly they are huge and wonderful, both overwhelming and magnificent in their significance as a spiritual and communal event. However, perhaps it is easier for us, because part of our preparation is spending months culling through our machzor, re-envisioning the prayer service, choosing just the right music that is a balance between the familiar and what fills your heart with glory, we are reading and writing sermons and are immersed in the themes and values of the High Holidays – that of forgiveness, and starting anew -- long before their actual arrival.

But still, we need tools, and this year we’d like to share one in particular. You may have family traditions that you hold dear, a shared meal, buying a new white dress, or calling friends to reconnect, say your sorry, or say I love you. Continue those beautiful traditions, BUT…We would like to invite you to deepen your spiritual preparation this year for the High Holidays by also engaging in a spiritual writing practice.

Mondays throughout Elul, September 5, 12, 19, 26, you will receive an email from us through our ‘constant contact’ containing a writing prompt. It will invite you to explore your own year, your relationships, goals, and growth. You are not alone in this pursuit, the prompts introduced will be reflected and revisited throughout the week at morning minyan and during Shabbat services. We do hope you’ll open the email each Monday, and simply carve out 20 minutes for yourself to sit quietly, reflect, and engage in the process of chesbon hanefesh. Keep your thoughts and your personal journey logged privately in a notebook, computer, or even dictated by voice recognition onto your iphone! Or join a slightly more public conversation at cantoralicia.blogspot.com. Either way, we invite you to prepare for the holidays this year in a different way, through deep listening, writing, reflection, and growth.

We look forward to working together to arrive at the High Holidays ready to face the days ahead, to stretch us toward a more self aware, reflective, and meaningful year.

Shana Tovah, may the changes you experience this year be good, fulfilling, and rich with friendship and love.