"Be the change that you want to see in the world.”

Mahatma Ghandi

Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

"Live in the present, launch yourself on every wave, find eternity in each moment..."


Henry David Thoreau

Hatred never ceases with hatred, but with love alone is healed.

Buddha

When nothing is done, nothing is left undone.

Lao Tzu

Only a slave to the truth is free.

Akiva Tatz

We are what we think.
All that we are arises with our thoughts.
With our thoughts we make the world.

Thomas Byron

The focus and clarity of your consciousness will determine the kind of world you live in

Rabbi David Aaron

They who long to put an end to sorrow and reach sublime happiness must firmly plant the root of faith, and stabilize their minds, in the quest for enlightenment.

Buddha

"All men die, not all men truly live."

"Braveheart"

“The only thing I know for sure is that I know nothing.”

Socrates

The difference between a dream and a goal is a deadline

Rabbi Noah Weinberg

…true pacifism is not nonresistance to evil, but nonviolent resistance to evil

Martin Luther King, Jr.

Enlightenment for a wave in the ocean is the moment the wave realises that it is water.

Thich Nhat Hanh

Strive constantly to serve the welfare of the world; by devotion to selfless work, one attains the supreme goal of life

Bhagavad Gita

We cannot change anything unless we accept it. Condemnation does not liberate, it oppresses

Carl Jung

Many people have a wrong idea of what constitutes true happiness. It is not attained through self-gratification, but through fidelity to a worthy purpose.

Hellen Keller

You are what your deepest desire is.
As your desire is, so is your intention.
As your intention is, so is your will.
As your will is, so is your deed.
As your deed is, so is your destiny.

Upanishads

Hope is a waking dream

A R I S T O T L E

Emotions consist of energy plus a story. If we let go of the story, only the energy is left

Trumpa Rimpoche

What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning…

Werner Heisenberg

Unless you feel that an infinite whole is working through you your life has no meaning.

Friedrich Nietzsche

About Me

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This is my record of my journey into the unknown. Buckle up!

Thursday, September 4, 2008

The Mask of Reality

This past Friday, August 29-30th, was a momentous occasion for me as I observed my first Shabbat of my own volition. It was not my first Shabbat, as I have celebrated the day previously with friends and loved ones, but it was different from those days in that I initiated this one (in other words, I was not just joining in on someone else’s celebration). It was truly an incredible experience, and my gratitude is directed towards the tzaddiks at Sinai Retreats whose inspiration drove me to keep this mitzvah.

But there was another greatness about this day. I kept this Shabbat at my Nana’s house in Cranberry, NJ, whom I intensely love and admire, and I made sure that I got there before sundown. I did my best to observe the rules that make this day holy, and that includes no electricity. Although I could have had her turn the TV on and change the channels for me, I chose not to violate the spirit of the law (which I believe to be more important than the actual law), and read. I read Akiva Tatz’s “Worldmask,” an enlightening look at the Jewish worldview from the mystical stance that natural reality is merely a mask that covers a plethora of meaning. This concept is very similar to the Hindu idea of lila—the world of the physical is illusory, and it’s the substance of the physical that is real. I couldn’t put the book down, and Shabbat’s conclusion coincided with “Worldmask’s.”

The book was so relevant on that Shabbat, too, because my Nana, who traveled through Europe and South and North America to escape the terrors of the Holocaust, has her doubts about the Jewish religion. “Worldmask” seemed to miraculously allow me to vocalize smart answers to her questions. One question she had was about the Jewish idea of obligation, and she specifically felt that this sense of obligation put excessive limits on a Jews freedom. She asked, “Where’s the fun?” She’s much more into the idea of rights. To me, the joy and elation I experience when I do things for reasons that are consistent with my beliefs are the most extreme sense of ‘fun.’ Akiva Tatz describes Jewish obligation in terms of giving and receiving, the latter representing the Divine world where G-d gives everything and the former representing the physical world where humans receive from nature. An obligation is diametrically opposed to a right. As Tatz says, “My rights are your obligations: my right to my property can be expressed as your obligation not to steal. My right to free speech is your obligation to allow me to speak freely. Rights are individual and more selfish, and obligations are social and more selfless. Basically, the response to her query is based on the person. My view is that when you participate in a world of obligation, you are an important connector in the stability of society, and I feel part of a whole. However, when everyone has rights to uphold, the society becomes fragmented into disparate individuals and loses the connector and therefore the wholeness. I believe that the greatest happiness occurs when you lose your separate self and merge into a unity, and henceforth I feel that obligations, limited signs of divinity, have the power to allow one to coalesce with the great unity. Tatz astutely remarks, “Only a slave to the truth is free.”

Monday, August 25, 2008

Revelation at Sinai

13 days ago I embarked on a journey to Sinai Retreats, a Jewish campsite in the Adirondack Mountains of northern NY. I left with relatively little expectation, and I figured that any time in the country and away from the chaos and madness of NYC would be very welcome. But I never could have anticipated the tremendous sense of awe and wonder that made every moment of my time in Warrensburg, NY magical.

In 1993, I had surgery for a brain tumor, and the anger I felt afterwards I directed at G-d and my parents’ religion of Judaism. However, last year (2007) I finally truly and wholly accepted my past, and with that acceptance came the ability to move on physically and spiritually. I felt that I had to fill an emptiness within me, and I sought out spirituality to help me. After searching many religions and spiritual teachings, I turned my attention to Judaism.

Amidst the majestic Adirondack peaks, surrounded by tranquil natural beauty, I dove headfirst into the vague marvels and a spectacular creativity of a religion that I never knew existed. Through expert teachings from a cadre of inspirational Rabbis, to socializing with our tutors who were kind enough to share some of their summer vacations with a bunch of baal tshuvahs, to watching the day-to-day interactions of observant Jews, gave me such a rich perspective that I now know I was lacking.

Sinai Retreats provided me with insights into the Torah, enriched my understanding of the traditions, presented me with a practical knowledge of prayer, and has compelled me to further learn and practice Judaism. Much like the biblical revelation on Sinai, Sinai Retreats bestowed upon me a breathtaking and awe-inspiring view of the meaning of existence and the miracle it is to be a Jew.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Dreams in Big Sky Country

I know its hard to believe, but the sky really seems bigger in Montana than anywhere else. I just returned from a 5-day sojourn at Camp Mak-A-Dream in Gold Creek, Montana. I went for the first ever Young Survivor's Conference, which was presented by the Children's Brain Tumor Foundation. I had a brain tumor when I was 13, and in MT I was surrounded by others who survived a brain tumor. Having a brain tumor is one experience that cannot be easily put into words, and being part of a community that understood that experience was a surreal and magnificent occurrence. It bordered on the miraculous how at-peace and comfortable everyone was, and the dialogs that ensued were ripe with authentic feeling and honesty. Everyone involved made this such a wonderful experience that will always remain in my heart.

The Wild Montana Skies were an excellent backdrop to this spectacular retreat. I arose each day to meditate to the awakening of the earth, followed that with a hike in the crisp morning air, and then partook in a day complete with information and a good share of fun. The night sky was so chock full of stars that I would be brought to stillness, mesmerized by the glory of nature. Sad to leave, but grateful to attend, we made our way from the Northern Midwest to the bright lights of New York. I must thank Stacia Wagner for both creating this amazing event, as well as putting into words that which we were all thinking: "The moment we left Montana, I began to feel anxiety and chaos creep back into my psyche."

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

The Rationality of Irrationality

I've been reading "A Brief History of Time" by Stephen Hawking recently, and it keeps reaffirming my belief that reason and truth are such limited concepts. Hawking, arguably the most brilliant man alive, noted that he disagrees with his theory that won him the Nobel Prize. Throughout the history of science, ideas have continually popped up and taken as the absolute truth only to be proven to be lacking. Then another big idea springs up, only to falter yet again. And the wheel keeps spinning. What we call rational or scientific, is only so until it is proven irrational.

But it's important to recognize that the logic of science is merely a tool designed to control and manipulate physical reality. Science cuts life into fragmented corpses, analyzes the cadavers, tests hypothesis as to why the carcass is the way it is, experiments with new Frankensteins, etc. There is no place for passion, no room for miracles, no admiration for the unmanifested. It measures the quantity of life, and throws out the quality with the bathwater.

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

In the Beginning...

Welcome one & all to my life. I initially intended to start this blog to document my travels in Israel, as at that time I was planning on living and studying at Aish Hatorah in Jerusalem, but that didn't pan out. Then, my next goal was to begin posting to the blog on my birthday (July 20th), but as you can see, that didn't work out either. But I've never liked plans much anyway. They take the spontaneity & zest out of doing. I don't know about you, but when I make plans, then it seems like I have to continually manipulate my reality in order to actualize them. But then there are just so many occasions when something happens, and my plans have to change. For instance, when I was young I planned to be a baseball star, but when, in 1993, I had a brain tumor, which left me uncoordinated, unbalanced, and with double vision, that plan died. Luckily I hadn't invested too much time and energy to my dream, and thankfully it wasn't all that important; but if I had taken the goal seriously and devoted extreme amounts of my personal time and energy towards it then I would really be pissed. Plans make you rigid & set when your world is chaotic & impermanent and one must constantly adapt to the moment. Plans take your sights off of the now, if only for just an instant. I believe that living for anything other than this moment, is an unconscious attempt to control the uncontrollable. Life moves much smoother when you can accept the unpredictability of things. The stiff tree will shatter in the wind, while the flexible tree will bend in all directions & thus survive the storm.

May all sentient beings feel peace & bliss.

Imagine

Imagine

Harmony

Harmony

Enlightenment

Enlightenment

Meditation

Meditation

7 Chakras

7 Chakras

Hamsa

Hamsa

Believe

Believe

Split Personality

Split Personality

Salutations

Salutations

Baha'i Gardens

Baha'i Gardens

Sail Away

Sail Away

The Thinker

The Thinker

Multiple Perceptions

Multiple Perceptions

Hashem

Composition

Composition

Helping Hands

Helping Hands

Mandala

Mandala

Lighthouse

Lighthouse

Thousand-petaled Lotus

Thousand-petaled Lotus

Entanglement

dolphinworld

dolphinworld

Primavera

Primavera

JC

JC

Iceberg

Iceberg

The Great Seal

The Great Seal