Alef: The NEXT Conversation




Sitting Shiva in the Land of Oz


By Stephanie Spiegel

Wizard of OzBack at the hotel, flipping through the cable channels, I stumbled upon a favorite movie from childhood – The Wizard of Oz. In spite of my grief, I watched the film and my thoughts become a bit more focused.

Sitting in my aunt and cousin’s home, where my uncle’s death had left my family with an overwhelming sense of loss, I realized that we seek the same things that Dorothy and her three friends did on their journey to Oz:

As a scarecrow without a brain, we try to comprehend, but cannot.

As a tin-man without a heart, our hearts are heavy and torn.

As a lion without courage, we are weakened and feel powerless.

As a traveler without a home, we feel loss but search for comfort.

As we seek to fill the spiritual void, we look to that ultimate wizard. He/She/It, whatever you may subscribe to, tells us to sit shiva, say Kaddish, and reflect on the good times, to once again emerge into light and normal life. At that moment, I felt “there was no place like this home,” to be here with my family and for my family during this time.

Dedicated to my uncle, Edward ‘Ezra’ Spiegel (my father’s brother and best friend); my cousins Beryl, Jason, and Jared’s father, and my aunt Elissa.

Photo by Fabio Ikezaki, licensed under Creative Commons.

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To Mom With Love


By Ruth Bregman

Ruths-Mother-005My mom, Margie, was in her forties when I was born, very unusual for those times. So she was much older than all of my friends’ mothers. I clearly remember when she began to be forgetful. It happened shortly after my father died – they had adored each other and she just couldn’t deal well with living alone.

The forgetfulness started when she was in her late eighties. At first it was an occasional lapse, but gradually became more pronounced. Finally, my mom’s doctor made it a reality. He diagnosed her with dementia, probably Alzheimer’s.

I was forced to face the truth and deal with the many problems that followed. Almost immediately, she began a long stay in the hospital due to a serious lapse of memory, her decreasing ability to deal well with reality, occasional hallucinations, and her need to begin medication and to have it regulated properly. But when the time came for her to leave the hospital, I had to argue with the hospital social work staff and administrators who insisted that she belonged in a nursing home. I refused because I knew she wouldn’t do well in a nursing home, and I had also promised my dad never to allow that to happen.

I won that fight and was able to take her back to her apartment on the Lower East Side, but it meant hiring 24-hour aides to “ensure her safety.” My mom adjusted to the aides, and had a complete personality change which often comes with this disease. She became extremely attached to me and also more demonstrative as the dementia increased. This was not what I’d been accustomed to growing up, and proved to require a big adjustment on my part. However, it also proved to be an unexpectedly positive change. It was actually very nice to be hugged and kissed whenever I came over to visit.

Watching over her was a big responsibility. I had to check up on her and the aides every day at first, gradually cutting back to three to four times per week, and eventually (at the insistence of my friends) two to three times per week. Before I realized what was happening, my life consisted of full-time work, telephone calls to mom twice a day, and visits to her, which seemed to make her happy. Then there were trips to the cleaners, laundry to be done, grocery shopping, picking up prescriptions and distributing them in weekly dose containers, and all the other tasks that needed to be taken care of for her.

Mom’s health deteriorated with time, and after three more years at home she passed away in her own apartment. It was not unexpected, but still a shock. The funeral was small, with only the rabbi, family, and her aides (who had grown to love her) attending. In her nineties, when she died, she didn’t have many friends who were still alive and well enough to come to the graveside burial.

It took over two months for me to stop picking up the telephone to call my mom to say hello. And it took almost as long for me to feel comfortable planning outings with my friends and family after being unavailable for such a lengthy time. But it always made me feel gratified to have done the best I could for my mom in her final years, and to have been able to fulfill my promise to my dad not to put her into a nursing home. Maybe best of all, I had been the recipient of her outpouring of warmth and love over her last few years.

Finally, although it’s become much more common nowadays than it was when I was born, it makes me smile to think about the negative feelings many people have regarding “older people” who have babies and never live long enough to see them grow up. Boy, did my mom prove that theory wrong! She was able to see her only daughter and her two grandchildren become productive and happy adults.

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Clear


By Ari Averbach

HeartMy whole family was sitting on the black and white couch. That couch was so ugly, but so comfortable, and we all had our favorite spots where we always sat. My brother and sister would fight for the “good seat” in the corner. One Thursday night, my sister won so I let my brother have “my seat” while I sat between my mom and dad, which was usually the dead zone (there was no place to put your feet when you sat there).

We were watching ER, not talking. We were only allowed to talk, use the bathroom, or grab another chocolate sorbet popsicle during commercials. You see, we took ER very seriously. This is back in the George Clooney days when people actually watched the show.

During the second act of the show, as someone was yelling “clear!” for the tenth time that episode, the phone rang. It was my grandmother.

“Hi Sammy, I need to talk to your mom now.” She always got me and my siblings’ voices confused on the phone, which made us laugh. But we didn’t laugh that night. I could tell that there was something else going on.

“Here.” I passed the phone to my mom. ” It’s grandma.”

We half-watched the television as my mom stepped into the hallway to take the call. She looked serious. Worried.

“Zane, we have to go. Zavi – watch your brothers. We’ll be back in a few minutes. We have to run to Grandma and Grandpa’s.”

If we were worried, we didn’t show it. We still had another 40 minutes of ER, and Grandma and Grandpa lived right down the street, maybe five minutes by car. As my grandparents were getting older, these trips became more frequent. One of them would lose their pills or glasses or teeth. Or worse yet – the remote. One time they couldn’t turn off the oven. My grandfather was lazy, he would sit at the messy kitchen table and just stare into space. My grandmother was a little too helpful, except she had polio at a young age and had recently taken a nasty fall, so she was very slow to move with her crutches.

I don’t know why my grandparents ever got married. Growing up, I had only heard them fight. My grandma was beautiful and had the most wonderful singing voice. We have film, real film, from decades ago, of her singing “Sunrise, Sunset” at someone’s wedding. Even as a child, I remember her voice being so heartbreaking it would make me cry. In our eyes, she could do nothing wrong. We knew how much she loved us. Grandpa scared us and always seemed to be yelling at her, calling her “Booby” – a bastardized version of the Yiddish term of endearment.

My parents called to tell us to go to sleep and that we would see them in the morning.

Later, we found out that my grandfather had died that night. He had a massive heart attack. Soon after my parents arrived, the medics showed up. They probably rubbed those paddles together and yelled “clear!” as we had seen so many times on ER. They were probably calm. Routine. “I’m not going to lose this one!” someone may have shouted. In my mind, it was very melodramatic. But somehow, Grandpa was revived, although he was never the same after that. A piece of him definitely went, but he made it.

Two years later, my grandmother died after a long battle with leukemia and a cadre of other diseases. She fought hard. Then my mother was diagnosed with lymphoma – Stage 4 (there is no Stage 5). I buried a young cousin. I said Kaddish for a health-obsessed uncle as well as for an uncle who was using Fen-Phen. I went with my childhood friend to chemo and helped him with his homework. Another friend was run over by a Pepsi truck. My favorite high school math teacher died suddenly. I lost one of my best friends. My paternal grandmother also succumbed to cancer. I became jaded, numb to the recitation, “Yitgadal v’Yitkadash Shemay Rabah.”

In the following years, my grandfather had a few more heart attacks. He had complete kidney failure. His diabetes rendered his legs useless; his dementia rendered his mind useless. It became routine to get a call from the doctor saying that this was it, that they would not administer any new meds. Yet my grandfather still lived. We went to visit and never thought of it as tragic, this was somehow funny. His non sequiturs were classic: “Sam, you’re not funny – you’re fat.” “Sam, you’re handicapped between the ears.”

The poem “If” by Rudyard Kipling has really shaped my life in various ways. One line always makes me think of my grandfather:

“If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew to serve their turn long after you are gone
And so hold on till there is nothing in you, except the will which says to them ‘Go on’…”

The lines of poetry may seem out of place, but somehow I see my grandfather’s body forcing itself to move forward for another day, for no other reason than because that’s because what bodies are supposed to do.

For the fourteen years between when my grandfather died the first time and the last time, I often thought that I had all the answers. Today is Grandpa Jack’s first yahrzeit. Today I realize that life is never that clear.

Photo by Dev Null, licensed under Creative Commons.

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05: Death and Tragedy


This week we introduce Issue #5: Death and Tragedy

CandlesIt may seem strange to have the first issue of the new year focus on death and tragedy. The beginning of a new year is typically a time for excitement and enthusiasm, an opportunity to create new beginnings and improve ourselves through resolutions. But the American New Year, or in general, the secular observance of the new year in the Gregorian calendar, is a moment in time, a clock striking midnight. In that second, one year is completely gone and a new one is suddenly upon us. This concept, however, sits in stark contrast to our observance of the Jewish New Year – a period of 10 days between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur that serves as a time to embark on a process of repentance, reflection, and renewal.

While it is nice to imagine that a singular instance can bring about all the change that hope for, the reality – and particularly the Jewish reality – is often not so simple. While this is the perfect time to start over or try again, it is also a time to ponder what we have lost and learned, and to use the lessons from our lives to help us become better people for the coming year.

We have all experienced loss. Many of us have lost grandparents, parents, or friends. As Jews we are also affected by the vastness of our collective historical death and tragedy, underlined most violently by the Holocaust. Just as the Jewish New Year is a 10-day stretch that takes us from one of the most joyous Jewish holidays (Rosh Hashanah) through to the most somber (Yom Kippur), grieving, healing from that grief, and growing from it, is all part of a very similar process, one that isn’t an instantaneous transformation, but is rather one that takes time.

In this issue, we explore death and tragedy as a way of reminding ourselves that, as Jews, we have a responsibility to remember those who have come before, even as we celebrate the possibilities inherent in the concept of a new year. We’ll look at how death has affected some us, maybe changed us, or in certain cases, not affected us at all. Although this is an incredibly vast topic, we hope these stories will shed light on how we experience death and tragedy through a Jewish lens.

- Alef

Photo by jpc101 licensed under Creative Commons.

Death and Tragedy Posts:
Grave Recollection
Clear
Inglourious Basterds
To Mom With Love
Sitting Shiva in the Land of Oz
My Jewish Jeanne
January 14

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