Sunday 27 March 2016

LOL

 My first job was working in an Orange Juice factory ,
     but I got canned . I could not concentrate .


2. Then, I worked in the woods as a Lumberjack,
     but just couldn't hack it  - so they gave me the axe.


3. After that, I tried being a Tailor, but wasn't suited for it
    --mainly because it was a sew-sew job, and people liked to hem and haw about the price.



4. Next, I tried working in a Muffler Factory,
    but that was too exhausting.


5. Then, I tried being a Chef - figured it would add a
    little spice to my life, but just didn't have the thyme.


6. Next, I attempted being a Deli Worker,
    but any way I sliced it.... I couldn't cut the mustard.


7. My best job was a Musician, but eventually found
    I wasn't noteworthy.


8. I studied a long time to become a Doctor, but
   didn't have any patience.


9. Next, was a job in a Shoe Factory.
    I tried hard but just didn't fit in.


10. I became a Professional Fisherman,
      but I couldn't live on my net income.


11. Managed to get a good job working for a Pool
      Maintenance Company, but the work was just too
     draining.



12. So then I got a job in a  Workout  Center ,
       but they said I wasn't fit for the job..


13. After many years of trying to find steady work ,
      I finally got a job as a Historian - until I realized
     there was no future in it.


14. My last job was working in Starbucks,
      but had to quit because it was the same old grind.


15 . SO, I TRIED RETIREMENT


AND I FOUND I'M PERFECT FOR THE
JOB ---



Every Last Moment


EVERY LAST MOMENT
This morning, I said Kaddish for my father for the 333rd time

by Anndee Hochman 
March 19, 2016
I said it on our deck, in the early morning, while the coffee maker hissed. I said it in a pocket park on West 56th Street in Manhattan. I said it while standing calf-deep in Atlantic surf, eyeing the gray seam where ocean was soldered to sky.
And this morning, I said Kaddish for my father for the 333rd time.
It's the Jewish custom, when someone very close to you dies, to say the mourners' prayer daily for eleven months, beginning at the burial. Then you stop, cold turkey, and recite the prayer again on the yahrzeit, the one-year anniversary of the death. You're supposed to say Kaddish in a minyan—that is, a group of at least ten Jewish adults—but when I voiced my reluctance to head for the nearest Conservative synagogue with a daily service, my rabbi suggested I could say Kaddish anywhere. "Let the trees be your minyan," she said.
I took her literally. In those first ragged days after my father died, I slipped outdoors each morning to murmur the prayer under the dogwood and lilac branches that arch over our deck. I needed a cheat sheet back then, a handy card from the funeral home that had the Hebrew on one side and a transliteration on the other: Yitgadal ve-yitkadash sh'mei raba …
I couldn't get through the prayer without sobbing.
The lilac buds uncorked into purplish blossoms, the dogwood flowers sprang open, lasted a lovely little while, then flecked the ground like confetti. The next-door neighbor told us she was pregnant. My daughter graduated from middle school, and we celebrated with a sushi lunch. An arborist's crew mixed up their work order and chopped down the dogwood tree; the stump wept sap for days. Every moment ached with my father's absence.
I kept saying Kaddish, a skein of words to steady me as I wobbled through weeks, months. After a while, I didn't need the little card anymore, and I whispered the prayer wherever I happened to be, at whatever time of day I thought about my dad: while braiding challah on a Friday afternoon; while running past cornfields near Canada's Lake St. Clair; while raking leaves and yanking out the wizened tomato vines. Y'hei sh'mei raba m'varakh l'alam u-l'almei almaya.
The birch leaves turned the color of lemon custard, and the Kaddish became my walking prayer, my swimming prayer, my scrubbing-caked-flour-off-the-cutting-board prayer, braided more and more into the weft of each day. Sometimes I forgot to say it until evening; I'd turn out the kitchen lights and stand at the back door, staring into darkness, unable to see where our yard ended and the neighbors' yards began.
I said Kaddish when winter licked frostily under the doors and my daughter bundled herself in my dad's gray cashmere turtleneck. I said it while cross-country skiing down the block after an epic January storm, and the next day, while shoveling crusty snow from the foot of the driveway.
And as winter yielded to a crazy-warm spring, I began to count backward: Twenty-one more days of saying Kaddish. Fifteen. Six. Three. One.
At college graduation, we toss our tassels from right to left, a gesture of finality and commencement. I remember the ultimate moment in my first apartment, giving one last, grateful glance to the 12'x17' room that had been my home for two years, and the metallic ting of the trunk on my red Nissan just before the old couple from Forest Grove drove it out.
But most of the time, last moments become "last" only in hindsight. I had a guitar lesson on a Monday night in February, and eight days later, my teacher dropped dead of heart failure. The night of the lesson I didn't know would be my last, I opened my teacher's unlocked front door, said hey to his dog and bumped my guitar downstairs to the grubby basement studio.
In retrospect, it all quivers with meaning—the Lucy Kaplansky song I was muddling through, with its chorus of, "Ohh ... it's time to go/It's a dirty trick/this growing old"; the way Richard scrounged for a pencil to chart the chords. I'm pretty sure I said goodbye—I hope I said "thank you," too—as I handed him the check.
My father has been gone nearly a year; my guitar teacher, less than two weeks. The lilac is in bud again, and the dogwood sapling the arborist planted to rectify his mistake is stretching its thin arms toward a seamless blue sky. The neighbors had their baby, a boy they call Ellison. This morning, I ran to the Wissahickon woods, two miles from our home, and said Kaddish for the last time amid the tik-tik of a woodpecker, the creek water sighing toward ocean.
In a story by Donald Barthelme, about a grade-school class that suffers a rash of calamities, including the deaths of class pets, parents and fellow students, the kids ask their teacher, "Is death that which gives meaning to life?" The teacher responds, "No, life is that which gives meaning to life."
Any moment could be—no, is—the last of its kind. You'll wash those dishes again in 24 hours, but you'll be a day older, altered minutely or profoundly in a world revised, ever so slightly, by your presence in it. Today is the last day you'll scrub the plate exactly like this, with the sun arrowing through the window so hard it hurts to squint into the morning-soaked back yard, in this kitchen where you once paced with your infant daughter footballed under your arm, where you twisted the cork from the chilled bottle of Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc your father had just carried into the room, where you sat on the tile floor while your partner cooked and played guitar for the sheer joy of it, as your teacher taught you, the only reason to take up music in middle age.
You know you can't live like this, seething and heartbroken and ecstatic and aware, so aware, that every passing second whispers farewell. One day, you'll notice and cherish; another, you'll buzz through and forget. And then something—a sip of wine, a word, a chord, a death—will pierce through and remind you.
When the rabbi suggested I could skirt daily service attendance by calling the trees my minyan, she wasn't telling me to make the prayer more expedient—just more expansive: Life is holy. Grief is everywhere. Love is always.
Oseh shalom bi-m'romav, hu ya'aseh shalom aleinu v'al kol Yisrael, v'al kol Ishmael, v'al kol yoshvei tevel v'imru amen.



 

Teachers


Heartwarming Story

By Rabbi Eisenman
 
Bigger and Holy Group
 
A pilgrimage to Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Hospital is a prerequisite for anyone considering a career which involves Chessed.
On second thought, it is a prerequisite to being a compassionate human being.
 If you are looking for a model of compassionate care and unconditional acceptance of all, spend an hour at “Sloan”.
On Friday morning February 12th with the temperature struggling to reach double digits, I returned to the place where so many people from all over the globe turn their hopes and their prayers.
On this day it did not look like a world class cancer center that it is; rather, it was akin to a third world field hospital.
There were patients on gurneys lining the halls.
 Many of these patients had spent the night in the hallway.
This was because the hospital never turns anyone away.
 They were functioning at 118% capacity as every single bed in the hospital was occupied!
I saw nurses patiently attempting to communicate and calm patients whose mother tongue was Hindi, or Punjabi; the nurses struggled to make themselves understood and to help the patients.
The fellow who I was visiting informed me that he would be staying over Shabbos.
 When I inquired as to what he would be eating, he said there was nothing to worry about as there are Shabbos rooms stocked with supplies, Chulent and Kugel.
He also mentioned that Satmar Bikur Cholim provides individual Shabbos containers including a silver-like Kiddush Becher, a small table cloth and disposable hospital approved candles.
I marveled at the Chesed the Bikur Cholim societies provide to Jews they don’t even know.
On the way out I noticed the Shabbos rooms and could not resist taking a peak to see for myself.
I was awed.
In the refrigerator were individual portions of Gefillte fish with small individual containers of horseradish, mayonnaise, and many other dips.
I was impressed by the care put into making each serving just right.
There were stacks of newspapers in Hebrew, Yiddish and English; all for the taking.
Suddenly I realized I only had one hour on my meter and as anyone in New York knows: never be late for your meter!
As I reached the vehicle I noticed a policeman removing his large ticket issuing device from his back pocket.
As I approached him he said, “I’m sorry; however, your time is up.”
However, before he actually wrote the summons, he eyed me in a strange sort of way.
 He was looking at my beard and studying my face. Suddenly he asked, “Hey, are you one of those guys who work for the “Bigger and Holy Group?”
I had no idea what he was referring to; so I asked him, “What is the Bigger and Holy Group”?
“You know, the group of people who look like you with the beards and hats who visit the sick and distribute food to those in the hospital and their families; they always tell me they are the ‘bigger holy group’”
I slowly said to myself, ‘bigger and holy….. Bigger and holy…? What could he mean? When suddenly like a light bulb I began to hear myself say, “Bigger n’ Holy…. Biggur n’ holim… Bikur Cholim!!!
“You must mean the Bikur Cholim group!” I said.
The officer looked at me and answered, “Yes, that’s what I said, the Bigger and Holy group!”
“No, sorry, I’m not part of the “Bigger and Holy group; however, I’m familiar with their work.”
“So even if you are not an official part of the group you are still “one of them”, isn’t that correct?”
“Yes officer, I know what you mean, I am one of them”
“Well in that case, you can go. No ticket for you today.”
“Officer, I don’t understand. What does the “Bigger and Holy Group” have to do with my not getting a summons?”
The officer explained, “This morning, when it was about 9 degrees, a guy approaches me who looked like you; you know- big guy with a big hat and a big beard? And he says, “Excuse me, it’s very cold today please take this thermos of hot coffee and these Danishes.”
“I said, “You know I’m not Jewish; why are you giving me this food?”
“He says, “All of us, Jew and non-Jew are created in G-d’s image. (See Avos 3:14) It’s freezing outside, you need to stay warm; please take this.”
“If he could do that for me on a cold day like today, I can do a nice thing back to one of his friends; no? After all, we’re all connected.”
I looked at the policeman and thought back to the hospital full of people of all religions and ethnicities and of the equal and compassionate care they all receive, “Yes officer you so right, we are all connected.”
 
C

Great lesson


🌷Viktor Frankl, one of the great psychiatrists of the twentieth century, survived the death camps of Nazi Germany. HiViktor Frankl, one of the great psychiatrists of the twentieth century, survived the death camps of Nazi Germany. His little book, Man’s Search for Meaning, is one of those life-changing books that everyone should read.

Frankl once told the story of a woman who called him in the middle of the night to calmly inform him she was about to commit suicide. Frankl kept her on the phone and talked her through her depression, giving her reason after reason to carry on living. Finally she promised she would not take her life, and she kept her word. 

When they later met, Frankl asked which reason had persuaded her to live?  

"None of them", she told him. 

What then influenced her to go on living, he pressed?  

Her answer was simple, it was Frankl’s willingness to listen to her in the middle of the night. A world in which there was someone ready to listen to another's pain seemed to her a world in which it was worthwhile to live.

Often, it is not the brilliant argument that makes the difference. Sometimes the small act of listening is the greatest gift we can give.s little book, Man’s Search for Meaning, is one of those life-changing books that everyone should read.

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