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So in between my jumble of a life in which I need to read and research and prepare an original study for a school project and pack up the food in the refrigerator and order a wedding cake and figure out which furniture we’ll be taking up to my son in North Carolina while on our honeymoon and plan a presentation to explain to one group of leaders at work what I do (I wish I knew!), and so on and so on and son on, I have to say that it feels right to be observing the high holidays now. As we step back from day-to-day work to go to synagogue and collectively pray, the sound of the shofar on Rosh Hashana calls us to action. Its wake-up call affords us all an opportunity to consider our coming year, how we want to live it. And so, as always, the choices we make define us. For this coming year, I choose to be more pro-active. I choose to be more helpful. I choose to try and grow.
To think before I speak. To have better control over my impatience. These are not resolutions but action plans. On while on Rosh Hashanah, our fate is inscribed in the book, we are taught that prayer, charity and repentance can avert the severe decree. For ten days, people behave more piously, look inwards, ask for forgiveness from those who they have wronged. This is a marvelous thing, one we should do year-round.
As Yom Kippur approaches, when fates are sealed, I can’t help but think how all these beginnings for me tie in so well to these high holy days. In taking stock of the values dear to me, I find kindness, thoughtfulness and the importance of family overwhelmingly important.
From these all others flow. And whether it be at work, in the classroom, at home or in the street, if we treat our fellow man as we would treat family, if we truly think about what people are saying and give as much thought to what we ay and how our words are received, we can change the world, let alone ourselves, with this dose of kindness and thoughtfulness. In our polarized world today, more than ever, this approach is needed. Whether it be homes, jobs, marriages, or simply attitudes and behaviors, now is the time to begin. Though first, I must get back to packing. Born in Brooklyn and raised on Lawn Guyland, Wendy lived in Jerusalem for over a decade submerged in Israeli culture; she has been soaked in Southern life in metro Atlanta since returning to the U.S.
Recently remarried, this Ashkenazi mom of three Mizrahi sons, 26, 23 and 19, splits her time between managing knowledge in corporate America, pursuing a dual masters in public administration and integrated global communications, blogging, relentlessly Facebooking, once-in-a-while veejaying, enjoying the arts and digging out of the post-move carton chaos of her and her husband's melded household.