Wednesday, February 4, 2015

february 4th, 2015

Wow, dear ones, hello.

It is February. This post is a sprinkling of everything, because life is… so full and multiple and even in the warmth and holding of Tu B’Shvat, the new year of the trees, in Tel Aviv, there is a chill in the morning and evenings that gets into your bones. It has February-ness in it, so please be gentle.

This morning, on my way to class, I saw city-hired workers cutting dead branches off of some large palm trees that line the highway. How interesting… cutting trees on Tu B’Shvat. I thought about how when I was trying to grow my hair out to donate, my mom kept on saying, “You need to trim it to let it grow.” And of course it is Tu B’Shvat, and of course, now almost five years ago, I stood up in front of many of you to talk about my mom’s “tree-ness,” and e.e. cummings gives voice to the deepest secret, this secret that is still a mystery to me (full poem here).

here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart

i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)

the sky of the sky of a tree call life… A little research on Tu B’Shvat seders led me to this text that (I tweaked pronouns, but full resource sheet here): “The Tree of Life supports the Whole Cosmos. I am the one that planted this tree, for the whole world to delight in; and I hammered out all with it, and I called its name ‘all/hakol’, for all depends on it, and all comes from it. And all need it, and they look toward it and wait for it. (Sefer Bahir, sec.22)That whole-ness, “all,” is a tree called life.

When I woke up yesterday, we heard news that a member of our community here, in his fourth year, had passed away. Not someone I know personally, but the ripples… He apparently and tragically took his own life. And, as the director of my program said, “the details are not what matter – what matters is how big his heart was, and now, how we are here for each other.”

I felt like she was referring to this concept of how we are each part of a whole, and we are each whole.

Something I have been struggling with in the past few weeks as I have begun spending hours in the anatomy lab each day is… explaining what I am doing and experiencing. I just read a book called “Body of Work: Meditations on Mortality from the Human Anatomy Lab” by Christine Montross. One of her main topics is the “resocialization” of the medical student to become accustomed to handled a dead body, and the contradictions within medicine, specifically -- the beginning of training to be a physician by “dismantling the dead to heal the living.” I have grown “close” to my body (when I say my body, I mean, the dead body which I am dissecting). We have not named him, though we sometimes call him, “our guy”. He was a veterinarian and died at 99 years old. In the book, Montross talked about the intimacy she develops with her cadaver, who she calls Eve – the first woman. “With Eve, I feel an odd kind of intimacy. I try to remain tender with her, and respectful, even when the actions I perform seem to be a violation. She and my group members and I have a kind of shared history –we knew her when she was whole.” Wholeness.

Amidst the heaviness, a new friend reminded me that the full moon last night/today is in Leo, and as mysticmama tells us: “The best part of Leo is the inner child. You are to nourish and protect your childlike innocence. You are to be open to new ideas and fresh perspectives. Be curious about life. Be engaged in the magic of the moment. Be in your heart.”

The magic of the moment… every moment. Look at the moon! And lastly, Mark Nepo…


"A FEW TURNS OF THE MOON 

From the balcony of this restaurant, I watch 
a hundred lives below: burrowing and laugh- 
ing and finding their way. And perhaps because 
I’ve lost my father and our beloved dog in the 
last year, perhaps because at sixty-three, I see 
over the final hill more clearly, I also see the 
hundreds on the other side, still burrowing 
and laughing and finding their way. I don’t 
know if this is alarming or a comfort: that 
we go on the same, that the gleam pressed 
out of every hardship is the jewel of existence, 
here and on the other side. So I spoon my 
soup and sip my wine, knowing the balcony 
is the gutter and the gutter is the balcony, 
that the dark waits all curled up in the light, 
and the light, thank God, waits all curled up 
in the dark. 

A Question to Walk With: Describe a moment in which you have felt the irrepressible force of life coming through. 

For all the hardships that life throws at us, I have always felt that life keeps living. Perhaps not in the same form or in a way that is recognizable. But life keeps pulsing under everything. And no matter the pain or confusion I face, something in me keeps reaching for that irrepressible pulse. This poem comes from my reaching."

May we continue feeling and being sure of that irrepressible pulse – that light that is curled up in the darkness. A full moon in a dark sky… 
All my love, and gratitude, and blessings,
Einat



Tuesday, February 3, 2015

My turn! My turn!

Beloveds,

How cool is it to have a 3-year long archive of February Projects to show for ourselves?

Just had to say it, but ok, now for the good stuff.

First, I think this poem and its title is a way we all feel about our own lives. Take this as an affirmation:


I Will Not Die an Unlived Life

I will not die an unlived life.
I will not live in fear
of falling or catching fire.
I choose to inhabit my days,
to allow my living to open me,
to make me less afraid,
more accessible;
to loosen my heart
until it becomes a wing,
a torch, a promise.
I choose to risk my significance,
to live so that which came to me as seed
goes to the next as blossom,
and that which came to me as blossom,
goes on as fruit.


-Dawn Markova-


Second and in homage to warmer times and climes, a small video of jumping into the crystalline, sapphire, so-cold-they-reboot-your-soul waters of Santa Rosa Blue Hole in New Mexico on a HOT day in May. I visited this very special place on my solo, cross-country woman journey. If you ever find yourself driving across I-40 in middle/Eastern New Mexico, I highly recommend you stop here. This little video captures one of the highest, most triumphant moments of that trip.

(there's no thumbnail for this one, but click play; it works.)





Lastly, a small video of QUEEN BEY performing at AT&T Field in San Francisco last August. 

IT WAS ALL SO OVERWHELMING MY FACE ALMOST MELTED OFF MY FACE.

To achieve the full effect, I urge you to view this video in full screen with the volume ON. 






Life! Life! Life! 


I love you all,
Allie





Monday, February 2, 2015

Hey friends,

New York city is covered in ice and snow and...I'm not having it.


Winter is hard. So here are some things! Yay for the February Project!

1. I learned a new word recently: Murmuration. Check out the coordinated, wonder-inducing movement of a flock of starlings.

2. Laughing helps. I've been into this web series recently. The episodes are short and each one is its own world of fun/absurdity.

3. As many of you know, I have a baby niece named Shula, and it is the best. Some of you may not know that the picture Zoe put in the previous post is of her when she was brand new. Aw! To close out, here is a video of her expressing sheer delight at pretty much nothing. A reminder that there is so much light out there and in here, even in February!

Love,
Nomi

Sunday, February 1, 2015

February First

F ebruary is here again, and again we
E mbark on a project that
B oth comforts and consoles, supports and surprises,
R evisits and reconsiders and remembers and redeems.
U have all checked back in so that we can be together
A s we face the blizzards and valentines and short short days,
R esting for a moment the heaviness of this month
Y earning for solace in the warmth of our wide and deep community.


Welcome back!


Midway through January, I sent Ruthie a totally out of context email to ask about the February Project. I had forgotten about it (spring, summer, and fall can make one forget) and then a cold spurt hit Boston and I thought, Ugh, Fuck February, and then I REMEMBERED. So with my totally pre-emptive enthusiasm to get the Feb project up and rollin again, Ruthie offered me the coveted first post spot. What a kavod! What a month.

I looked back at what I posted here last year, and I just can’t believe how sad I was. I was so sad. I’m not sad anymore. But even with the passing of sadness, still always a little speck of sadness remains; the scar tissue; the threat of sadness again, at some unforeseen unanticipated moment; the crumpled up piece of paper that can never be fully smoothed out again no matter how you press it. Which is of course, the point of the February Project. We had a very bad February five years ago. Some of us have had very bad Februarys since. And all of us will have a very bad February again.

Am I stronger now, having gotten through a year of sadness? Maybe. I think sometimes I just feel more tired. But I do know that when I laugh, I laugh a little deeper, even amidst the ever-present little twinge of despair that now accompanies me. Laughs are rare and sacred. Make them big.

So, you all, far and wide, some of whom I know, and many of whom I don’t, those with whom I share the experience that brings me to this community, and those of you whom I don’t, all of us who are reading and writing:  Thank you all so much for being here. I am grateful for your wisdom that adds to our collective toolbox called “How To Face February.” Hopefully, together, our combined pain can be communal armor. I’ll show you mine if you show me yours.

This is the place.
And I am here, the mermaid whose dark hair
streams black, the merman in his armored body.
We circle silently
about the wreck
we dive into the hold.
I am she: I am he 
whose drowned face sleeps with open eyes
whose breasts still bear the stress
whose silver, copper, vermeil cargo lies
obscurely inside barrels
half-wedged and left to rot
we are the half-destroyed instruments
that once held to a course
the water-eaten log
the fouled compass
We are, I am, you are
by cowardice or courage
the one who find our way
 back to this scene
carrying a knife, a camera
a book of myths in
which our names do not appear.

Saturday, January 31, 2015

[post zero] january 31, 2015 -- the deets

dear ones,

i am so honored, thrilled and excited to be embarking on this journey with you again. thank you for agreeing to participate again for our third year of creating february magic together and for one another. if this is your first year, WELCOME. we have been waiting for you. read on (whether you're new or not!) for all you need to know. 

1) where, when and how to post: i am inviting each of you to be an author of OUR blog. the address is thefebproject.blogspot.com. if you have issues with posting, let me know! please post by 8pm eastern standard time on your assigned day and include your assigned day and date in the title of your post. 


2) if they day(s) to which you are assigned do(es) not work for you for some reason - and remember, it will just take a couple of minutes for you to post to the blog, you can even prepare it on a day on which you have more time - you can switch with someone else. i'm going to discourage it, for logistical reasons, but if you decide to switch, just send me an individual email so i can keep the schedule up-to-date. also, most people have only one day to post, but some have two. if you have two and want one, or have one and want two, you can switch and let me know.

3) the list! 

1 Zoe
2 Nomi
3 Allie
4 Einat
5 Aleeza
6 Alma
7 Megan
8 Sarah
9 Nat
10 Tali
11 Mordechai
12 Anna
13 Ruthie
14 Sophie
15 Jana
16 Lizzie
17 Jonah
18 Tricia
19 Ruthie
20 Sam
21 Benj
22 Micah
23 Caroline
24 Tali
25 Allie
26 Nomi
27 Zoe
28 Einat

4) what to post: the thing is, this can really be ANYTHING. the idea here is that every day this month, each of us will know that there is something waiting for us. that something might make us laugh, might make us think... maybe it won't be something that will make us cry, since there has already been lots of crying in february, or at least...it won't be something the poster posts as a "this is so meaningful and sad you'll definitely cry" and if we're in a crying place, maybe we'll still cry. i think you all know what i'm getting at. basically, i think it really CAN be a silly youtube video, and it can also be a beautiful poem. anything any of us shares will be perfect, ya know?

again, thank you...for being part of this, for being part of so many meaningful and wonderful things, for being. i can't wait to see what we do together.

with tremendous love, gratitude and admiration,
ruthie