Category Archives: Muse

Beginnings

Last week my daughter was married. It was an enchanting affair, a beautiful dream of a wedding. And she looks so happy.

The foundation of our married lives begins riding a wave of unbridled happiness that then lulls to shore, and takes residence in the soft white sand at the edge of the waters. We live in this euphoria for a moment, then it settles loftily about us, like the white gauzy chuppa (wedding canopy) that danced in the delicate breeze above her head, with the sides left open to all the details of life.

It has led me to think about all the beginnings in our lives, and to reflect on all of mine since my marriage all those years ago. There have been many twists and turns, and journeys in directions I could never have foreseen in the bliss of wedding vows.  As my mother would say, “I have had many lives.”

Our life stories are comprised of a succession of beginnings of one kind or another, bobbing and weaving and charting territories yet unknown.  Beginnings come like punctuations, fly off the page in a torrent of hesitations and excitements and settle into complex protagonists, as the pages turn.

Her story is about to unfold. She is embarking on her life as another woman. She will see things I cannot see, vision her life in ways that I can’t know. She will remain stitched into my life so intrinsically that I will feel all her joys and pain, and at the same time she will unbutton her coat from my front hall closet and step away to her life. This is the multi-layered beginning of our journey as mother and daughter after the wedding. It’s a waltz now, you see. There are so many beginnings.

Sixty is Nifty…or Something Like That.

This week my husband celebrated his sixtieth birthday. It was a big day for me! Astounding and humbling, to tell you the truth. I have known this man for most of my adult life. I had one of those, ‘where have all the years gone’ moments. We certainly have much to be grateful for in our lives. But, wow, fast forward in the life lane. The years they do fly by; all the adages hold true.

My birthday wish for him was that we could truly enjoy the next decade together. Take it for us, to explore, experience and live fully; If not now, when, certainly chimes with resounding certainty as well.

I gave him 6 quotes to embrace, and one for good luck, representing his six decades and the one to come. They are not my words, they are a selection of Oprah’s on the occasion of her 60th, and I like them all.

1. I don’t believe in accidents. I know for sure that everything in life happens to help us live.
2. Be thankful for what you have; you’ll end up having more. If you concentrate on what you don’t have, you will never, have enough.
3. Surround yourself with only people who are going to lift you higher.
4. The greatest discovery of all time is that a person can change his future by merely changing his attitude.
5. The thing you fear most has no power. Your fear of it is what has the power. Facing the truth really will set you free.
6. Follow your instincts. That’s where true wisdom manifests itself.
7. Breathe. Let go. And remind yourself that this very moment is the only one you have for sure.

An ahhhaaa moment. Yes, actually. Don’t wait. Live life now and enjoy every single moment. I want to wake up each morning and say thank you for this beautiful day.

Warrior Within

This is my friend Debbi Moses, and this is a painting from her Warrior series: her response to her Breast Cancer. When I received these images in my in-box I was blown away. The courage, the expression, the beauty. Debbi is a colourful, creative, embrace life kind of a girl, and she has chosen to interpret her journey through paint and photography, using both the traditional mediums and her body as her canvas.

Warrior

The result is a spectacular explosion of life washed in broad and bold hues of pink.

When I think about how much we keep inside, and the power we unleash when we accept and articulate our stories, it is truly incredible. It’s brave. It’s connecting. It triggers a response. It allows others to see that piece of us that is extraordinary. It’s our slice of the light. And sometimes it is wrapped in a package that we would certainly not have wanted, not have imagined or wouldn’t pray away if we could.

I am amazed and humbled when people have the courage to share their journeys and bare their souls. When faced with sheer honesty. When staring in to the eyes of that potent intermingling of fear and hope. It makes us still. It forces us to recognize. It turns the mirror on our own lives, and makes us think about our blessings and our personal trails. We are all warriors in some way. And, we are the champions of our own stories.

YES

It all started with the word “yes”…

A few years ago, my friend, Susy Miller called me and told me about her idea to involve the community in an evening of joke telling to raise funds for Jewish Family and Child Services. Would I like to come on board to produce the films for the event! Susy and I go way back to when we both worked at Saffer Advertising. She was an account executive and I was a producer. I was immediately in. Yes, because I thought it was a tremendous idea, and I believe in the organization, but mostly yes because of how I feel about the woman who has spearheaded this initiative with her sister-in-law Ellen Levine. Two tremendous leaders who have guided their team with a clear vision, conviction, commitment and warmth. This will be our second event together.

The dynamic duo indeed! They allow the people who they have asked to do a job, to do it. They have choreographed the two-step of stepping back and stepping in.

Enter…Jewish Folks Telling Jokes. Their leadership philosophy has translated to good will and fun, with a joy that is evident in the show. It’s a feel good night that celebrates our culture of joke telling. An evening of laughter! What could be better? Well, the show is an hour and a half, at the most beautiful concert hall, with only a couple of speeches, and no sit down dinner. Yes! I get tingles when I realize how many people from our Toronto community have come out to participate on film and are performing live on stage at Koerner Hall. Wow. It’s such a tribute to our community and overwhelming support for the agency.

So, did you hear the one about…

So much work, so much fun, and so much laughter.
You’ve heard it before – when you give of your time to volunteer you get so much more in return. I’ve been part of an extraordinary group of women, who check their egos at the door and bring support, creativity and hard work to the table. Being part of this committee has given me more skills than any job. It’s true. Because, when you are part of a volunteer team, you learn that everyone has something to contribute, and everyone has a good idea, and all are to be heard, considered and nourished. It’s the most important lesson – to listen, respect and honour.

It all starts with one small word, and blossoms into vocabulary of possibility.
Yes.

A young Jewish mother takes her little boy to his first day of kindergarten.
“Goodbye my love… My baby boo”
“Have a wonderful first day of class my little boogie-woogie shmu”
“Be good bubellah.”

At 3 o’clock she goes back to pick him up and embraces him the moment she sees him. She asks, “What did you learn today my little honey bear?”
He looks at her and says, “I learned that my name is David.”

Ba da bing! Come to the show!

May 20, 2014
Koerner Hall
For more information: www.jewishfolks.com

jacqui

I’m Groovy…

I made a sponge cake last week. I only have a hand mixer and sat on a stool by the counter for 15 minutes beating 9 eggs. I longed for one of those cake mixers, you know, those retro ones in robin’s egg blue and chrome, that I could just turn on and leave so I could continue my multi-tasking life. Instead I sat on a stool and watched the time on the microwave as the eggs turned to lemon yellow.

Have I turned in to Mrs. Cleaver? I grew up in the sixties, in the generation of peace and love. I’m groovy! Who is this woman who now sits on a stool holding a hand mixer?

It’s an interesting transition. Practical. I mean, we have children, careers, are involved in community, host family and friends, cook, and maintain the house, as well as our other pursuits. Hmmmmm – what has really changed? Some of my friends are playing bridge once a week. This was something that my mother did! We are involved with our children’s lives in a much deeper way than our parents, that’s for sure! I think that is because our life experience and theirs are so similar. We know exactly what they are doing! The Beav certainly didn’t invite Mom to the ACC to see the Stones…

In any case, it seems that our roles as women are, as they say in Thailand, “ same, same but different.”

I have gone from hippy to Boho chic, and not just in fashion, but in attitude as well that can be applied to various aspects of my life. Idealistic roots elegantly intermingled with New Age thinking, cultural trappings, and life 101. From aspirations of road tripping in a VW van to country excursions in a Mercedes sedan. The domestication of Jacqui happened so seamlessly that I didn’t realize it was happening. I’m actually really good with it! I treasure my home and family role.

The truth is that I don’t really give much consideration to my age or my role as a woman. I’ve never had to stake a claim to the feminine journey. It has all been very organic. I think that’s why I was taken aback when I noticed myself with the hand mixer and the attitude it reflected. I’ve enjoyed all the decades of my life, each with virtues and vanities.

Memories….May Be Beautiful and Yet

This week we celebrated Passover. Every family has their traditions. At the end of the Seder there is a rhyme called ‘Only one Kid’. It’s a children’s rhyme that begins when the father brings home a goat, and then sees various animals, objects and characters added on in succession. The cat came and ate the goat, and the dog came and bit the cat… you get the idea. In any case, we substitute sounds for the animals and characters as we go around the table chanting this tale. This tradition began many years ago, when my Mom was still with us, and she was quite old at the time. What took us all by surprise and delight, was that she impersonated the goat, with a joyful ‘baaaaaaa’! And she chimed in at just the right times throughout the rhyme.

The next year, we were equipped with a video and a camera in anticipation of capturing the moment, but it didn’t happen quite the same. Now, each year, we all picture that time with her as we sit around my sister’s table. It is etched in each of our imaginations, and makes us smile. We didn’t need the video or a photograph. We all shared that intimate, magical moment and we remember.

Are those memories that live only in our imagination the most powerful of all? As it turns out, according to a study by Fairfield University Psychologist, Linda Henkel, published in Psychological Science, our obsession with documenting every moment through a lens doesn’t necessarily help us remember them. Her study reveals that we actually remember things with more clarity and detail when we have experienced them first hand, rather than capturing them with a camera.

It makes me think about how we remember. There are some things I know about my childhood, but I can’t say for certain that I remember them as they actually happened, or if I know them through the photograph or the telling. Some memories are hearsay and some are absorbed. And, some are memories that we experience collectively, that remain in our psyche and our hearts that are intensely powerful. Certainly, that’s how I felt at our Seder on Tuesday night. We sat together, all the children and grandchildren that were with Mom that night, and we shared the story with her great grandchildren as well, as we continued the tradition.

Memories flourish in our experience, storytelling and personal remembrance. Memories, may be beautiful and yet…

Thought you might enjoy this live video of Barbara Streisand, 1975, The Way we Were

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-KPGh3wysw

Stories of a Lifetime

There was a time when I did not understand the need to tell our stories. I couldn’t make sense of why anyone would want to share the cherished, often tragic, sometimes philosophical, and deeply personal aspects of their lives with others. Matilda changed this for me.

She was a small pretty woman, a member of Sisterhood at my Synagogue. The one who would knit baby gifts for new mothers, volunteered in all sorts of ways, and sang in the choir. She and her husband had immigrated to Canada escaping from religious persecution in Cairo and painstakingly started over. Then she lost him, then her son, and then her daughter to Cancer, and yet she still maintained her faith. I couldn’t understand.

I talked to her about it, and she asked me to write her story. It was so important for her to leave behind an account of her life for her grandson. She wanted to be heard, her story to be told. I spent many afternoons recording her memories. I sat on her couch, surrounded by her photographs and keepsakes, with the sun streaming through the same windows she had shared with them all, as she exposed the intimacies of her life. We laughed, sat still in silence, held hands, and cried.

So much time has passed since then, and I don’t know if she is still around. But her story has remained in my heart. The inspiration of her smile and her gentle, sweet faith in life is something that had a great impact on me.

I think in many ways she allowed me to consider and confront my own life story; pieces of which I had meticulously tucked away in the top drawer. You know, the one with all the junk that never seems to get cleaned out. She taught me that when we share our lives with others we not only connect them in our narrative, but we clear space for them to share with us. It’s brave. It’s beautiful.

Joan Didion says, “We tell ourselves stories in order to live… We live entirely, especially if we are writers, by the imposition of a narrative line upon disparate images, by the “ideas” with which we have learned to freeze the shifting phantasmagoria which is our actual experience.”

We are collectors of memories and the keeper of our anguish and treasures. We all have a story. What’s yours? One that in so many ways defines us; is like the spine of our hardcover memoir, but the pages inside, well, that still awaits our narration.

 

Like the Moon and the Stars

David Hartman wrote, “ Passover is the night for reckless dreams, for visions about what a human being can be, what society can be, what history may become.”

This weekend I turned my attention towards our Passover Seder, took all my Hagaddah’s from the bookshelf, brought up the ‘plague masks’ from the basement, and looked at the envelopes of additional readings that we have supplemented over the years. What to do this year? How to honour the Seder with historical context, and modern relevance?

I actually love Pesach. That first breakfast of matzo with Tempte cream cheese is delicious! Taking out precious keepsakes like my mother’s silk, tasseled and embroidered matzo cover, the Seder plate my sister bought me from Israel. Not the cleaning, or shlepping all the dishes upstairs, polishing silver and preparing the house. I am losing more and more interest in this aspect as the years go on. But I do love the idea of our family around the beautifully table set with crystal, silver and glass, integrating blessings and story-telling into an evening laden with wine and good food.

The seed for our focus this year came from my daughter, Jesse, who said that this holiday is about story telling and we should tell of those who have journeyed from oppression to freedom. There are many. Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela, The Freedom Writers, the Ethiopian journey to Israel. Some are struggles of ideals, some of territory, and some resonate from the personal turmoil that lies within. But, we are all striving in some way for peace and freedom. Eckhart Tolle teaches, “Liberation can arise from a feeling of connectedness.”

When I am away on vacation and see the moonrise, or the three stars of Orion’s belt, and consider that this is the same moon and the same stars that my children can see, and people all over the world, it is a humbling bond. When I sit at our Passover table, and realize that on this night Jewish families everywhere are gathering around their tables weaving the stories of our exodus from Egypt into our modern perspectives of freedom, hope and dreams, I am again in awe of how we are all connected. Just like the moon and the stars. It’s quite a powerful expression. It makes me feel small, but at the same time relevant. As if what we do, the legacies we create, the stories we recite echo through generations; those “reckless dreams for what we might become.”

**The photograph, One Love, is of Rachel Saffer, published in the Toronto Star on March 23, 1992, The Anit-Racism Rally at Queens Park

 

There are Places I Remember

I read Dear Life, by Alice Munro, and I am, as is the literary world, intrigued by her last four stories, the ones she describes as “not quite stories,” because they are in fact fragments and memories from her life. I was struck by her relationship with her mother, a woman suffering from Parkinson’s, and a woman who in some ways was placed in a life to which she always felt there should be more, that she was a different woman trapped in the life she had.

It made me think about my mother. The voice of our mother remains in our heads and our hearts, regardless of the kind of relationship we had. My mother embodied the essence of that word. She was goodness. I hear my mother’s words, sense the touch of her hand, still, even after almost five years since her passing, I carry her in my comings and goings, and she is the voice that guides me.

It wasn’t all tea in the rose garden. I remember how it was towards the end. She wasn’t putting on any airs, contrary to her British upbringing, and her loving designation as Queen Mom. That was part of her metamorphosis, her struggle toward the end of her life when she couldn’t recognize herself. When the woman she had been, and still felt somewhere inside, became trapped in the agonized body of age.

But, there was always a glimpse of my mother. Her fingers, crooked with arthritis were still somehow tender. The same touch as when she sat on my bed, singing a lullaby, “….they’re lighting a stairway to heaven… sleep my little one sleep…” and she traced the shape of my eyebrows, and tucked my hair behind my ears. Her brown eyes, that grew old with flecks of green, and smiled at me. Kind, unquestioning eyes, that understood that love was the only thing that mattered. The calm when I put my hand on her chest, and her breath softened and her shoulders sighed.

We found peace in one another. We had survived the death of her husband, the death of her son, and cancer, and we held our pain like a secret that hung as a hammock between two stoic trees; it lingered, unspoken, felt, with no touch, honoured, so we could get through each day. We were a teepee – her, me, the past – fastened together with ropes and knots at the top, and individually knocked firmly in to the ground, dependent on one another to remain intact. That’s how it was.

As I arrive at her ages, I often recall what her life was like, what her experience was, and how she must have felt as a woman. I can look at these times differently now, not as a child, a teen, a young woman, but through the lens of a woman who too, has experienced love, children and the joys and aches of each passing year.

Collecting Wisdom

This is the first time, ever, that I have taken a week just to myself. No kids, no husband. Just me. I am staying with my brother and sister-in-law, so I am not alone, but I am marching to my own drum, taking the time to nurture myself. I feel like one of those reptiles that has shed layers, and emerges, the same, but different. I am stepping in to the footsteps of the woman that has resided inside of me, the one that has been trapped, and too weary to come out. Here I am.

Before I came away, I had the intention that I wanted to use this time as a sojourn, a time to heal my mind, and my body. I found a yoga studio close by, Parasutra, that seemed to fit my criteria, and when I arrived purchased an unlimited pass for the week. I am beginning to feel the energy of life returning to my limbs and spine, my heart and mind. I like the teachings that are integrated into each class. Words from Connie like, ‘just here’ resonate, bringing me in to the moment, allowing the thoughts that congest my mind to roll by, and I am ‘just here’. Another mantra I love from Sarah, ‘think with your heart’. If I think with my heart I am open, approaching daily life with love and compassion and I feel kinder to myself, and that echoes to those around me.

I am collecting these wisdoms like shells along the water’s edge. My sister-in-law has the unique capacity to make all those in her path feel DSC_0700beautiful. I have learnt many lessons from her, most notably, to surrender. To let go of all of our pre-conceived notions about what and how our lives should be, and embrace the joy of what is. It’s a daily practice. One morning as my brother and I were talking about this and that, he quoted the first line of the Prince of Tides by Pat Conroy, “My wound is geography.” I had to think about this. What does it mean? To carry our wounds wherever we go? A quest to find healing? I love that I have time to consider and ponder the weight and measure of words.

I am also using meditation to clear my jumbled mind, nourish my soul. This is corny, but one of the meditations I am using is from the movie Eat, Pray, Love. Smile. Smiling from my heart, my eyes, and my centre, I feel lighter. I use the teachings of Sakyong Mipham to guide me in focusing on the simple act of breathing in and breathing out. This has been very powerful on my walks along the ocean, with the ebb and flow of the water, like the rhythm of our breath. And now, have been introduced to the words of Eckhart Tolle and his ideas about letting go of our thoughts and living in the present moment. Yes, it’s a smorgasbord of meditation, on the road to inner peace and spiritual awakening!

In yoga the other day, Sarah talked about the idea that our own life journey is our greatest teacher. I am learning everyday. To embrace all the intricate pieces of myself, that somehow, in all their imperfections stack like vertebrae, supple, yet strong and create me.

The other week I posed the question, do we have to go away to find ourselves? I realize that as Conroy says, we carry our wounds wherever we go. But I must say, stepping away, or getting out of our own way, even just a little, creates the space to allow us to connect with a part of ourselves that we might have tucked away. For me it did take a vacation to finally take a step towards embodying my life. Emerging is beautiful. Namaste.

 

Parasutra Yoga
Click here to go to their Website.