I needed to pay my respects

It’s been a long time my friends.

A long time since I’ve last posted anything here. A long time since I’ve sat down and looked at myself in the mirror. A long time since I wrote the first words in this blog. It’s been a long time on my journey to this moment.

I don’t have a good excuse for my absence, besides the ever-growing normalcy of my life. I’ve traded therapy days for work shifts, occupational therapy and making mandalas for lesson plans and dry-erase markers. I’ve worked longer than I have in a very long time, and I am enjoying what I am doing. I’m a teacher now, or, at the very least I’m teaching. My days are no longer filled with group meetings, psychiatrist check-ups, and sessions; they are filled with mundane realities of life. I am becoming a normal person, or at least I’m trying to play the role of one.

I still hear them, the voices in my head. I still wake up from nightmares not knowing what is real and what are the demons of my mind. I still have a threshold for how much I can mentally take, although I think it’s getting a little bigger every day. I can smile and joke again. I can make my students laugh. I can make my wife smile. I can hope and dream again; but that doesn’t mean any of the darkness has gone away.

I think about why I still have this desire, this compulsion, to write. I’ve been writing in analog, keeping things for myself; secrets I cannot share and things I do not want you to see. Still, I must reach out, I must bare my soul, I must have this place to let some of the weight off that drags around my neck.

I don’t want this to be a place where all I write about is my mental health, I don’t want to be that person anymore. I think people are tired of hearing about it, and I’m tired of living with it. I want to refocus, remember why I started this whole endeavor. This was supposed to be about my journey here in this holy land; but it just got a lot more complicated along the way.

I wanted to come up out of hiding today because it’s Memorial Day back in the states. A lot of things have happened that I should have written about before this, and maybe I still will; but I wanted to make sure that I took the time to say something today.

I come from a military family. My father was in, my grandfather, uncles, and even more as time goes back. I never took the oath, my dad wanted something different for me; but there are many times that I wish I had served and given something to my country, especially before I left her. There is something different about military service in America that I have come to appreciate living in a country with mandatory conscription. Here, you feel sorry for the men and women who would rather be doing something else with their lives, and are instead stuck in some job given to them just because they needed something to do. The number of actual combat soldiers is small, and the number of people who may have given more to the country with their youth doing something else is large.

That is what makes the idea of service in America so different. You’re not guaranteed honor or prestige, glory or combat; only a uniform and a job to do. You volunteer solely to serve, not knowing where you may end up. You could be a truck driver, a tank driver, a pilot, a grunt on the ground, a marine riding shotgun in a Humvee, or the next general-in-the-making. That choice is what binds the members of our armed services, the idea that as masters of our own fate, they decide to give part of their lives to their country.

Which brings us to today. Sometimes it’s not just a tour that you sacrifice, sometimes it’s your last breath, that last thing you will ever see; sometimes it’s everything. Sometimes its’s not just your sacrifice, but your parents’, your spouse’s, your family’s, your children’s. Today is not just about the people we lost, but the people they left behind. It’s about the people who get that knock on the door. It’s about the buddies who leave a poured beer untouched for a comrade. It’s about children who live in the shadow of sacrifice.

I don’t believe in the glories of war and conquest, but I believe in the beauty in heroism, in dedication, in gallantry, and in sacrifice. I’ve lived most of my life during various wars, and I live in a country now where war seems to always be on the horizon. I do not glorify death, but I find meaning in loss. War is hell, battles are horrible, but giving your life to protect your fellow soldiers and your country is tragically beautiful. So much of war is beyond any one person’s control, but the decision to serve with the dangers it comes with is entirely within our power. That choice, and the sometimes tragic consequences that come with it, is powerful and must be respected.

I do not want to glorify anything that has to with war. I wish we could live in peace with one another; but I am not a fool (just a madman). Every great nation is built on sacrifice, and it’s continued existence requires that more people die so that other’s may live freely. I pray that one day, this day will only be for remembrance, that no more stones will be carved with names of those lost, and that we will be able to look back and only thank those who gave everything so that people like me could write today.

May their memory be for a blessing, and may G-d watch over those that continue to serve in our armed forces.

We can not stay silent

Long time since I posted anything to this blog. I took a break from everything: Facebook, Instagram, social media, and this project. I needed time to clear my head, time to figure out what all of this meant, what I mean, what my life means, whether or not any of it at all was worth continuing. I continue to write in my journals and for a select critic, but I have purposefully remained silent and cut off from as much of the world as I can.

However, the events of today demand that I say something.

I am not an expert in politics, and I could never claim to really know that much about the world other than what I touch with my own two hands and tread with my own feet. My life and worldview are limited by my experiences, or perhaps I limit how much of the world I see in light of how my skewed eyes see it. I am a student of history, but again I cannot say that I know more than anyone else who enjoys reading and listening about the subject. Despite my radio silence, I still check the news occasionally, if only out of routine and fear of what might happen to me.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine does not allow me to stay silent anymore. I believe that all free citizens of the world, and those who still yearn to see freedom in their own countries, must feel outraged and appalled by what is happening in Ukraine. An independent country that has already lost parts of itself to Russian predation is now on the precipice of complete conquest. Cities are falling. Civilians are dying. Soldiers are meeting their deaths defending their homeland. These are images that any sensible person must look at, must react to, and must take pause and reflect on what the world must do to prevent the further domination of a sovereign country by a hostile superpower. We must take stock of what we can do to make a dent, even as individuals.

European history has seen this happen before. A recurring pattern comes to mind. The invasion of Serbia by the Austro-Hungarians prior to the first World War, and the invasion of Poland by Hitler and Stalin prior to the second. Again, a great European power seeks to further it’s agenda by stomping on the freedoms and independence of it’s smaller neighbors. I am not saying that the world will again be dragged into a global conflict; but I am saying that the foundation is there for the conflict to expand, bring in more combatants, and necessarily lead to the death of countless more civilians, and the destruction of cultures, liberty, and the modern way of life for numerous countries. Ukraine is enough for us to all be enraged, but it alone may not be enough to quench the thirst for autocrats that seek to rebuild empires long gone.

I do not know what any of this will do, writing to you today. I d0 not if I ever reached anyone with anything I have ever done; I do not know if my typing now will ever reach past the walls of the room I sit in. If it does, if you take notice, if you read this, if you take anything from this, let it be one thing: that this blog stands with Ukraine, that I stand with Ukraine, and that you must as well if you have any respect for the ideas of freedom, liberty, self-determination, and the right for nations to forge their own path without intimidation from larger powers. May you take note that the only thing that any of us can do, or the least we can do, is make our collective voices heard. Post about it, write about it, attend a rally, write your representative, educate yourself if you do not know, and educate others if you do. The world today demands that we do everything can to fight for what is right in the face of misinformation, fake news, paid pundits, and the ever present fear of having to face that would disagree/argue with/hate us. There are people dying in this war as I type these letters, and I cannot help but feel ashamed that this is all I have done to try and change the world. I may not have faith in myself or what I write, but I have faith in the power of the human voice, in the strength of the human soul, in the enduring bravery and heroism in the hearts of those people fighting right now.

We may not be able to fight there, but that doesn’t mean we cannot do our part wherever we are. Ginetta Sagan once said, “silence in the face of injustice is complicity with the oppressor.” We cannot stay silent today, and we cannot stay silent tomorrow; we must speak/post/yell/scream until peace is achieved. I may want to say silent and in my own little world, writing about my life and my soul for no one to see; but I cannot do that today. I know what is happening in Ukraine is wrong, and you should too; G-d will judge us on what we do with that knowledge. We can remain silent and neutral, or we can speak and do what we can to change things. You would be amazed what one voice can do, let alone a chorus that sings of peace and righteousness.

We must stand in solidarity. We must stand for strength in the face of adversity. This Friday night in Ukraine, Shabbat will be brought in with candles and shell explosions, songs of prayer and the chorus of boots marching. Like so many leaders around the world say, we should pray for those lost, pray for the safety of those in danger, and pray that peace will come. After you are finished praying, say something. Do something. Anything. Do not let this world slip further into darkness when you have a chance to enlighten it with your voice. I want nothing more than to slip away, but I don’t believe I could face G-d at the end of my days if I did not say something now. You all have unbelievable power, use it however you can.

Long live Peace! Long Live Freedom! Long Live Ukraine! Слава Україні!!

They buried my friend on a Wednesday

There is no good way to start this.

This is something that isn’t supposed to happen.

In our minds we imagine a sort of order to life. You are born, you grow into adulthood, you get married, you have children, maybe even grandchildren. Then, at some unknown older age, you leave this world. Death is a subject that no one likes to talk about, but we all have it in the back of our minds as we see the people around us. We all know without saying it that we will one day bury the ones we love, like I buried my mother. We believe that there is a certain order to how lives are lived and eventually end.

This wasn’t supposed to happen.

I lost a friend recently. I learned about her passing while sitting in the computer lounge of my mental health clinic trying to pass the time on Facebook. That was when I saw that she was gone, and it hit me like a brick smashing into my heart. Her smiling face was the first thing I thought of, and then I realized that the world would never see that smile again.

There’s so many things I could say about her. I could tell you about the memories I have of her, and all the joy she brought into my life in the time that our lives crossed paths. I could tell you about how amazingly kind she was, and how she one of the few people that reached out to me when I first went through the symptoms of my then undiagnosed bipolar disorder. I could tell you about how proud of her I was, even in law school. I could tell you that she was one of those successful people you never envied because her love was so infectious. I could tell you that she had so much potential, and that I was proud that she made it so far.

I could tell you that even though we became separated by circumstance, distance, and time, I never failed to smile when I saw her smile pop up on my feed.

And now she’s gone, and I miss her, and I miss the time we could have had together. I wish that I had done more, said more, connected more, done anything; because I never would have thought that our time together in this world would have been so short.

I’ll grieve, I’ll probably cry again as I reread this, but I’ll remember her. Maybe the power and the impact she had on me is so great because, even after all this time without talking, it hurts so much to know that she’s gone. Maybe the fact that I can still remember her laugh and her smile means that I’ll be able to keep a part of her with me. Maybe the fact that she brought so much light into this world makes up for the fact that she left so soon.

Maybe.

In the end, she’s gone, and I never got the chance to say goodbye. I would have told her all of this, and how much love I had for her for being there when I needed a friend and for how much richer she made my life. I’m not going to lie and pretend that we were the closest of friends, or that we talked all the time. She was someone from my past that I only thought fondly of, and someone who’s continued presence I took for granted. Now that she’s no longer with us, I have to figure out what it means to lose a friend like this. I have to figure out how to make sure I don’t let myself lose time with others. I have to figure out how to keep her memory alive within me.

I don’t have any answers because all of this is just so much to handle, so hard to understand, so difficult to make sense of. I will never know the why, why G-d would take someone so young, in their prime, so deserving of a long and prosperous life. All I can do is cry, and hope that tomorrow I cry a little less. That, and remember her. Remember her joy. Remember her kindness. Remember her strength.

And always remember her smile, the one that I still can’t help smiling back at with tears.

Missing you, hoping to see you again one day. I’ll never forget you, our queen of the rose garden.

Reflecting on My Mother’s Yartzeit/מהרהר על יארצייט של אמא שלי

Today is my mother’s Yartzeit, the anniversary of her death according to the Hebrew calendar. It’s been nine years since she passed away, but it’s always a hard day. I still have memories refreshed and renewed every year of that day and the days preceding it. I remember the events leading up to her hospitalization, the time agonizing over whether or not she would ever get any better, and eventually tearing my shirt on learning that she had left this world. It’s a hard time, my mind is only partially occupied with anything I’m doing, the other part of me is nine years in the past and thousands of miles away.

May my mother’s soul ascend today and be bound with it’s Creator

I decided to leave my mental health program early for the day, I couldn’t focus on anything; I just wanted to go home and be alone and watch the few home movies DVDs my dad sent me a while ago. I haven’t had a DVD drive for my computer since I made aliyah, so I bought one so I could finally watch them. I learned so much just from watching them and seeing what my, or our, past was like.

Remembering Her

I asked for the videos to remember everything that time has taken from me when it comes to memories of my mom. It was a few years after she passed away that I forgot what her voice sounded like, and a few more years after that when I lost the ability to recall exactly what she looked like without having to look at photos; and for a long time even looking at the photos just brought too much pain to be worth the remembrance.

My dad’s camera wasn’t that old, but you get the idea

When I lived in Houston, I hardly had any photos of my mom in my apartment, it was too much to bear. Even though years had passed, the trauma of those final days were burned into my memory. For a long time, I could only associate my mother with feelings of loss and regret, the tragedy of her passing consumed all of the pleasant memories I had. Even when I would think about happier times, it would eventually make me realize she wasn’t there anymore. There was nothing more painful than picking up my phone to instinctively make my nighttime call to her only to realize their was no one on the other side.

Watching her through these videos I see so much of my mother, and my father and the rest of my family, that I had forgotten; as well as parts of her I would have never remembered her if not for these videos. Besides finally being able to hear her voice again, I got to see her living life in a way that was long gone by the time my furthest memories go back. I don’t remember much before my parents got divorced; and I think that my parents’ divorce colored a lot of what I remembered, as if the negative aspects pulled themselves together in my mind to dominate whatever hard drive space I have.

Divorce is not fun, and my parents look nothing like these people. Stock photos don’t capture real life sometimes.

I got to see them happy, and happy together, something I can’t remember on my own. I saw my mother’s amazing smile and heard her laugh that laugh that was so infectious. She truly lived life in the moment and to the fullest, and I can see it in how she is constantly smiling.

The other thing that I got to see from the videos was just how much my parents loved me. It’s easy for me to remember the fights and arguments I had with my parents and the ones they had between each other, but it’s difficult to remember those times when they showed unbridled love for their only son. Whether it was my doting on me at my birthday, picking up the mounds of wrapping paper from Christmas gifts, or even just bragging about the interests I had as a child. There was one video of me getting ready to take a bath (glad that wasn’t shown at my wedding), and the sheer joy my mom showed doing something as trivial as bathing me impressed on me just the sheer amount of love she felt towards me. You can see it in her eyes, how I was the most precious thing in her life.

Changing my perspective of today

Over the years, my thoughts on this day and Mother’s Day have changed and grown, reflecting both my growing maturity as well as the distance of time. In the immediate years surrounding her death, I was inconsolable on this day. I had to take the day off, because I couldn’t stop crying no matter what I was doing. The pain was just too real and recent, I dealt with the aftershocks of her passing for a long time. My therapists think that one of my memories of her in the hospital contributed to my post-traumatic stress disorder, and I remember it being the one memory that triggered complete disassociation when I was in a recall session in the hospital. Those were rough years when I couldn’t look at a picture of my mother without bursting into tears.

It took me a long time before I could look at this picture and just feel love instead of sadness.

Slowly, slowly, things have changed. It is still a hard day, but I can cry tears of joy alongside the ones of sorrow. I used to spend all of my time just missing her, wishing she was there by my side when I needed her. I passed by so many life milestones, like getting married and graduating law school, without her in the audience. In grief counseling, they told me that a person imagines their future with certain people in it, and when they pass away, the shock of that altered future shakes us to our very core. Watching those home movies, I imagined a world where instead of playing with me, my mother was playing with a future grandchild (G-d willing). I imagined her being at my thirtieth birthday party, coming to visit me in Israel. I imagined what it would be like to see what her children’s lives had become.

I don’t have to imagine though how she would feel. I know that she would be proud of me, even now in my mental treatment program, and that she would love me all the same. I know that I would stay up until midnight or later just to talk with her, but that I can really do that anytime I want. I can access her love without having to feel the pain and the despair, because her love was stronger than any of that.

My favorite photo of my mom and my family

I’m lucky that my mom got to know my future wife while we’re dating in the last few years of her life. She passed away before the wedding, but she knew that she was the one for me. When my mother was on her deathbed, my future wife (then girlfriend) was studying abroad in China. My wife ended her study abroad early and took the next possible flight to Houston once she found out what had happened. The day my mother died was when my wife saw her in that state for the first time. I was in the hospital room by her side, alone in the room, when my wife came into the room. Suddenly, a doctor called my name and I left my future wife alone with my mother in the hospital room. My wife said to my mother that she was there for me and that she was going to take care of me. My mother was completely not functioning at the time, she was barely clinging to life. Her brain had serious and irreparable brain damage. She was in hospice care, and we were all just waiting. When my wife said those words, my mother took her last few breaths, and my wife came out into the hallway to tell me that she was gone. My mother waited until she knew that someone was there for me when she was gone; that’s how strong her love was.

What lies beyond

I can’t promise myself that one day I won’t feel any pain on this day, and I think that’s all right. My psychiatrist said to me today, it’s ok to be sad, and it’s ok to be in pain; it’s just what we do on these days that matters. My mother wouldn’t have wanted me to just sit and be a wreck over missing her, she would have wanted me to smile and laugh like I did today, albeit with a tear, watching old movies. She would have wanted me to do something to honor her. So, today I donated to the Houston Zoo, a place she and I used to go to a lot and some of my better memories with her were as a kid going to the zoo with my mom, and later with my sister too. If you’d like to support the Houston Zoo, there are several ways (I adopted my favorite animal, the red panda), and you can check out the different ways to donate here. No pressure, just thought I would share.

If I could take anything from today and tell it to you, it’s first off to appreciate the time you have with people; because you never know when it’s going to be gone. However, I always say that, and I think I found something more profound today. Days like these where we remember our lost loved ones don’t have to be dominated by sadness and mourning lives lost and unlived, they can be points of light where we find new meaning in the lives of people we loved. People cannot be boiled down to their ends, it doesn’t do them justice to only remember the sad parts of their lives. Each person has so much beauty in them, and my mother was no different. She lived a life that I try and emulate, to live with the kindness and willingness to help others that she embodied. Our love doesn’t have to end in tragedy, it can go on in our memories. They are always with us, and their support is everlasting. I remember my mother’s life today, not just her death. To do anything else is unthinkable, because she wouldn’t have wanted it any other way. Always loving you mom, and thank you for the gifts you gave me.

On being an Orthodox Ally

It’s the last day of Pride month, and I wanted to share a little about what it means to me to be ally to the LGBT+ community, and specifically as someone who is an Orthodox Jew. An ally is a heterosexual cisgender person who supports equal civil rights, gender equality, and LGBT social movements, challenging homophobia, biphobia, and transphobia. I’ve been an ally since my college days. I was even president of the Allies association at Texas A&M University, marching alongside the LGBT+ community, handing out information about services available to LGBT+ students and staff, and supervising ongoing training for new Allies so that they could provide more safe spaces for students to feel comfortable opening up and exploring who they were.

I remember getting threats and jeers for marching with my kippah proudly on my head, but I didn’t care. I knew that whatever I went through was a fraction of what my fellow students had to go through on a daily basis, and I heard so many stories of people who had horrible hardships coming out to their loved ones; but I also saw the beauty and passion of the community. I saw people fall in love with partners they would eventually marry, and I saw how much joy and positivity the community added to our school and to my life personally. So much of the dialogue when I was growing up focused on the pain of coming out or the awkwardness of trying to navigate a heteronormative world; but I slowly began to realize that LGBT+ people not only deserved to be in the same world I lived in, but that they made it better. Ultimately it’s not about tolerance or acceptance, it’s about affirmation that these are whole people, not missing anything, and that they bring something to the table that no one else can.

It’s not been easy having this mindset while also remaining an Orthodox Jew. People would criticize me within my community for supporting a “lifestyle” that didn’t jive with their view of the Torah, they accused me of abetting sinners and encouraging people to stay in their wicked ways when they could be changed. I heard some of the worst kind of homophobia and transphobia from people that I shared a table with, and it boiled my blood to hear them say it. For a long time after college, I just ignored what they said and chalked it up to just ignorant people saying ignorant things.

But that is not enough.

It is not enough to sit idly by while people stereotype, defame, insult, and degrade good and loving people. It is not enough to simply be comfortable in the fact that you know you’re not a bigot, while allowing those around you to stoke the flames of bigotry. It is not enough to be an ally to your LGBT+ friends while staying silent amongst your straight ones. It takes more.

It takes action to be an ally. It means stepping out of the comfort zone you have because of your heterosexuality and cisgender identity, and taking a stand. It means having difficult conversations and answering hard questions.

As an observant Jew, it means even more. It means engaging with your community in a way that is inclusive and open. It means making sure that everyone feels safe and welcome in your home. It means grappling with Halacha, even erring sometimes, in order to fulfill the commandment to love your fellow as you love yourself. It means being understanding when people leave Jewish practice behind because they cannot deal with the internal conflicts, and working for a world where people don’t feel the need to leave. It means putting yourself out there as an example, that a ben Torah can be an ally too. You have to be able to answer LGBT+ peoples’ questions, and have good answers as to why sometimes we can flex and sometimes we can’t, all while remaining compassionate and loving.

I want someone to see me as a resource, a shoulder to cry on, a listening ear, someone to explain things, but most of all as just someone who has love to give. My kippah and tzitzit shouldn’t automatically make me an unfriendly person, and I hate that we live in an environment today where that is still the case.

Thank G-d, things are slowly changing. Rabbis are working on the issues specific to the LGBT+ community, and doing so honestly and with integrity. There are still people out there that will say the Kaddish and write off a son or daughter, but those days are numbered. Slowly, slowly, the religious community is starting to realize that these people are not going anywhere and we cannot change them. I hope one day that the inclination to grieve or to mourn over lost dreams will be replaced by the simple love we can share with one another.

The other day, I was in a very Haredi area buying a new hat, and the guy helping me out noticed my pride bracelet that I had made. He asked me if I knew what the colors meant, and I told him I did, thinking that he was going to explain to me how the rainbow was simply Jewish, and try to dismiss any connections to pride. Instead, he simply said that he liked it, and that it was nice that I made it. I’ll never know if he was being genuine or not, but his knowing smile told me that he wasn’t just pulling my leg.

I don’t want to make this post about me, because being an ally isn’t really about who you are. It means standing up for what’s right, and acting when you can to make the world a better place. As an Orthodox Jew, that’s always been my mission plan, to reveal the goodness in everything. As pride closes this month, being an ally shouldn’t stop today. It doesn’t take wearing rainbow colors or marching in a parade to make a difference, and people in the Orthodox world are in a unique position to change things for a lot of people that are suffering because of longstanding discrimination and misunderstanding.

At the end of the day, G-d is love, and He loves us all, and He made us all in His image; and He doesn’t make mistakes. Halacha will have to learn to move with the times, and we will move along with it. No one needs to compromise their beliefs, because ultimately we all should believe that everyone deserves to be treated fairly in life and that everyone has value and meaning in their lives.

I’ll still keep wearing my pride bracelet tomorrow, not because I want just showcase that I’m someone that can be talked to, but because I want to remind myself of what I stand for. I stand for a world where love is love, and G-d is ultimately understanding. I cannot change the world, but at least I can be one guy in a kippah that’s willing to listen and ready to stand up when the time comes. I don’t think that G-d would have it any other way. I don’t have all the answers, but that’s ok, no one does. All I can do is love to the fullest, and hope that love can continue to change the world.

I’ve been doing some Remodeling

I just wanted to update y’all on what I’ve been doing since my big shift in how I want this blog to exist and how I want to reach you. I’m trying to stay away from Facebook, other than my Facebook Page for this blog (which you should give a like and a follow to keep up with all my latest posts). You can even follow along on my Instagram for more photos and stories that don’t necessarily need a full on post.

Also, I’ve created a new page on the website for photos that I’ve found particularly significant for me or relate to posts I write; I hope you enjoy them. A lot of the stories I tell you just don’t have images; it’s kind of hard to take a photo of my mind in the throes of madness; but I do occasionally catch a part of life here that’s worth sharing.

Overall, I want this blog to grow to be more than just a place for me to vent and pour out my soul. In a therapy session, I thought of a great metaphor for what I’ve been doing, and how I need to change my approach. For a long time, I’ve just been emptying the vessel that contains all my sorrows and pain and putting it out on these pages. Sometimes I just shatter the whole damn thing and cut myself with the shards to remember what it was like to feel the pain.

There’s a different way though.

In Japan, there’s an art form called Kintsugi, where you take the broken parts of a piece of pottery and fill the cracks with gold. It’s part of a greater philosophy of embracing the beauty in the imperfect, in accepting the the flaws in an object. By bringing together the pieces, you can create something beautiful and unique that could never have existed if the pot had stayed unbroken. You can see each individual part and the role it plays in the whole; whereas the unbroken vessel is uniform, and you cannot see where each piece matters in its own way.

I’m probably oversimplifying an amazingly deep and culturally significant art form, but it really speaks to me. I broke myself when I was in the hospital, and I’ve spent the past six months trying to put the pieces back together. I’ve been trying so hard to make myself into what I was before; but that can never happen. I need to learn to be okay with my flaws, and even find beauty in being different.

This blog is my way of putting back those pieces, of looking at each one and seeing where it fits best. I want to devote more time to figuring out how my life goes forward from here, and I know that this medium has a role to play. I am not just writing for myself, I am writing for you, and I am hoping that you see in me the beauty in how imperfect I am.

I love to write, and this has been an amazing journey so far. I’ve reached thousands of people with these posts, and it amazes me that people care about what I have to say. I’m making all of these changes, making the site look better, adding features, and writing more because I want these posts to be the gold that binds my parts together.

There’ll be more changes ahead, and I’m looking forward to them for the first time in my life. I am afraid of what might happen to me, but I know that if I speak my truth that’s all that matters in the end. If I was gone tomorrow, I’d be proud to know that I at least left this behind. That I have more than words on some website, but that I’ve actually reached you out there, wherever you are in the world.

Keep posted on what’s coming, because I promise you things will only get better from here. Much love from the Holy Land, and here’s to hoping to see you again soon.

May I Never Forget Her

Go out and hug your mom if you can y’all. If you’re too far, do what you can. If they’re with my mom, I have a hug waiting for you.

I almost forgot it was today.

Chalk it up to the day’s stresses, or trying to get by on another day with two hours of sleep, or on living in a place where this is just another day.

I almost forgot today was Mother’s Day.

I’ve forgotten so much about my life, I could fill countless photo albums with blank pages of memories that time, my mind, and the struggle through the two that robbed me of so much of my life.

I’ve forgotten so many holidays, save for the few running jokes in my family. I’ve forgotten what it was like to wake up in my old childhood bed.

I’ve forgotten what it was like to have a childhood home.

And I’ve forgotten so many things about her.

I’ve forgotten what it was like to be around her. I’ve forgotten the smell of her favorite shampoo. I’ve forgotten what it felt like to finally get tall enough that she had to look up to give me a hug.

I’ve forgotten the infectiousness of her laugh.

I’ve forgotten the kindness in her voice.

All I have left are the videos and pictures to remind me of the most important woman in my life.

I spent so many years after her death focusing on what I lost. Thinking about the last words I said to her. Remembering the moment I saw my mother for the last time. The image of going into to the hospital room to see her finally gone is forever burned into my mind. Mother’s Days, birthdays, death anniversaries, all spent remembering what I had lost.

But not this year.

Not anymore.

I will not let myself be a slave to my grief, to my sadness.

She would never have wanted that. She lived life so fully, so in every moment, that she would never expect anything less from me.

I don’t think she would care that I don’t remember her recipe for chicken adobo; I think she would want me to remember how she would give her nights up so that she could help the outcasts and the unwanted in our city get the help they needed. She wouldn’t care if I can’t remember what she got me for sixteenth birthday; she would want me to remember the time I went to on of the roughest neighborhoods in Houston to give her something in the middle of the night, and remember how fearless and joyful she was helping others.

She would want me to remember how proud she was of me, and how much hope she had for me.

She would want me to remember how she told me that she would be happy with whatever I did in life, as long as I was happy (and not selling drugs).

She would want me to remember that she always counted on me when she needed help, because she believed I was someone that could be counted on.

She would want me to remember her not for anything she did for me, but that I gave her the greatest joy in life.

She would want me to remember that I need to live and keep on trying, just like she did when times were hard and we were alone.

So, I make this pledge:

I will remember you mom. I will remember you for more than the care and affection you gave me. I will remember you for more than the lessons you taught me. I will remember you for more than morals you instilled in me.

I will remember you because you loved me so unconditionally that I learned what it means to love someone, something, a cause, a belief, a way of life with every ounce of your body. I will remember you because you made me into the kind of person that can still write these words, that can still fight, that can still try despite everything telling him that he’s going to fail.

I may forget this day, but I will never forget you.

This day will end, but my love for you will span beyond the last of mine.

Always loving you mom.

Go out and hug your mom if you can y’all. If you’re too far, do what you can. If they’re with my mom, I have a hug waiting for you.

Sending love to you mom, and y’all out there around the world, straight from the Holy Land.

Why I Write about my Mental Health

I don’t sleep much these days; or when I do, it’s never at the right time of day. I stay awake because my mind never shuts off, not until the chemical cocktail eventually decides to kick in.

So, I write when I can’t sleep. This blog averages about a post a month, but that’s only because I’ve deleted, hidden, and thrown away countless notes, drafts, and poems I’ve been too scared to share. I’m too scared to share them because of the fallout every time I post something. For someone who so desperately needs all the extra love, it still hurts to be the object of so much care. The last sane parts of my brain yell at me to reach out, to share, to try and let others see what I’m going through and connect; but the paranoia and the demons inside tell me to hide, that no one cares, that every single thing I’ve ever been told is a falsehood/lie/flattery/lip-service/anything-but-genuine-love. One of the many horrible things about this disease is that it tells you that everyone that’s ever loved you, anyone that’s ever cared, is just lying.

It’s hard to feel loved when your mind tells you that it isn’t real.

I still have some sanity left, so I want to take the opportunity to say why I write about my mental health. It’s depressing, it’s not fun, and I know a lot of people don’t want to see it. It’s easier to pretend that someone isn’t sick if you don’t look at them. It’s not comfortable to talk about, normal people don’t experience the world the way I do; and that’s okay. I’m not special because of this, I don’t want to be a martyr, I don’t want to be a slave to this, but this colors everything I see and feel.

I want to tell you this because I’m scared that one day I won’t be here to say what I was feeling now. I’m scared that I won’t have the courage, and that I’ll have let so much of what I saw in this world be left unsaid because I was afraid it would upset people. I write because I’m afraid that there might come a time that I won’t even remember what happened to me. This is my testimony. This is my confession. This is my testament.

Testimony

I initially started this blog to tell my story here in Israel. Slowly, it became more than just writing about life here in the holy land. My life changed; but being bipolar didn’t stay across the ocean, and I relapsed. Then the pandemic came, and things got worse. My old home is embroiled in civil unrest over police brutality, and the flames only seem to get worse every day. I’m starting to question whether I should change my normal routine of reading the news every morning because it just means that the nights are spent waiting to see what hells dawn will bring from back home. I’ve been out of work for months now, trying to get better, but I don’t know if it’s getting any better. I’m taking more pills. I have to balance how much water I drink so I can stay hydrated enough to not die from either dehydration or liver failure, but not drink so much that the pills that keep me alive lose their ability to keep at least some of the madness at bay.

I have good days, but the bad ones sink me. I went outside for the first time in 48 hours just now to walk my dog, but I still spent more time in bed than out of it.

But why does any of that matter? Why am I telling you this?

What does any of this matter?

I say that to myself pretty much every day, and I don’t have an answer anymore. I used to say faith, or family, or hope; but it’s getting harder to hear myself say those when the sheer amount of screaming in my head tells me the opposite. I once wrote that someone told me that suicidal thoughts are like birds. On good days, you see and hear one, but then it goes away, and you keep walking along. On the bad days, you’re stuck inside your car in the parking lot while thousands of birds around you sit on power lines around you, yelling and cawing at the tops of their lungs to just do it, do it, do it, do it, do it. End it all. It’s deafening, it’s so loud you can’t scream loud enough to drown them out. You lose everything in your body trying to scream to hear anything but the birds but they keep cawing and cawing and cawing, telling you it’s time.

I tell you this because you need to hear it, I say it because I’m not alone in hearing the birds. Suicide is one of the biggest killers for people in my age bracket, and even more so for those that suffer from mental health problems. I’m also selfishly saying this all because I want you to know that my life is more than instagram photos on the beach, or photos of kosher restaurants, or videos on my old illegal balcony. I have to say these things because I have to put it somewhere that I felt these things, that my life existed and it hurt. I have to claim some part of the world’s history for myself to yell out that I was not living in a dream. That I am sick but that I have a voice. I have to tell you this because to not say anything would be to pretend that nothing happened. That I never lost my mind at work and had to be taken by an ambulance to a mental hospital. That I broke. That I was on the edge, but that I also had times where I had hope. I have to write these things down because I have to tell my truth, no matter how ugly or imperfect it gets.

Confession

Those that now me know that I wasn’t always this gung-ho Zionist Jewish pioneer, settling Israel one major city at a time. I grew up Catholic, and there was always was, and still is, something, comfortably appealing about confession to me. The idea that you could simply unburden yourself of all of your sins, all your problems, all your dark thoughts and ultimately receive salvation. In Judaism, we believe that forgiveness doesn’t exactly work that way. You have to ask for forgiveness from whoever you’ve wronged, and then ultimately from G-d.

But what do you do when you’re the victim and the victimizer? Both the agent and object of sin? What if you don’t feel forgiveness? What if you don’t feel anything anymore?

I like to believe that I’ve lived a relatively victimless life, but I know that’s a lie. I know that I’ve hurt my friends, my family, the ones I love, and most of all myself. I’ve ignored people, I’ve been cold when I should have loved, angry when I should have been compassionate, and hasty when I should have been patient.

And I mean all of those things for myself as well.

I know that my biggest sins are those of envy and jealousy. I look at my friend’s lives and see glimpses of what I imagine I could have had. I see smiling faces, happy couples buying their first house, parents holding their new child, and I feel nothing but absolute envy and hatred. I hate that I don’t have those things, and I hate myself for not being in a place to have them. I hate that I may never have them. I hate that I may never know the happiness I see in their eyes. I hate that there are people out there don’t close their eyes and see the montage of regrets and shame that I see, that there are friends that don’t know what it’s like to have had the noose around their own neck, that they don’t know what it’s like to have people in the back of an ambulance look at you wondering whether they’re going to have to sedate you or fight you to stay still. I write about the episodes in my life because otherwise all I have left in my life is the hate I feel for myself. Who am I supposed to ask for forgiveness for that? If hating your brother is a sin, where does looking in the mirror and wanting to punch the face you see land?

I write because I selfishly want all of the hate, all the fear, all of the pain, and all of the sadness to pour out of me and onto this page. I just want it to go somewhere. I want this screen to be my partition, and for you to tell me that all will be well and forgiven in exchange for a few words and actions. At this point, I don’t even want the forgiveness, I just want the cold embrace of the confession booth where I can whisper about every demon in my mind so that they can just leave my body and float away to go wherever it is that the things that damn men go.

Testament

Besides the ups and downs that most people know about with bipolar disorder, there are a lot of other side problems that can make life really difficult. One of them that I’ve been suffering from for the past year or so is called cognitive impairment, which is basically difficulty processing thoughts that leads to memory loss, decision-making difficulties, inability to concentrate, and learning difficulties. This past year, I’ve noticed my memory slipping, especially whenever I’m closer to or just after an episode. I have trouble recalling events in my life, people, even what I had been doing maybe an hour previously. Sometimes I lose the ability to focus on what I’m doing, I’ll forget that I’m washing dishes while I have a plate in my hand. I’ve been indecisive, but it’s gotten worse as time has gone on.

I don’t remember almost any of my life prior to college, minus the traumatic things burned into my eyes. Law school is a blur. I have to look at pictures to remember what I was doing after law school.

I don’t remember my wedding.

I don’t remember my mother’s voice.

Sometimes it takes a phone call to remember to anyone else’s voice.

I’m afraid that there might be a day that I won’t remember writing this.

I don’t know whether this problem will get worse, whether I may end up doing something in the future that makes it worse, or some kind of treatment might erase even more from my mind. So, I write these things because I want to remember what my life was like. I want to make sure that when I do forget these times, that I at least have some kind of record to remind me of what my life was like. I can only hope that if it get to that point that I’ll at least be happy, and only looking back at this to remember how far I came from.

What I Expect

Inevitably, whenever I write, I get the same kinds of responses. I know that a lot more people read than say anything, so all I can really judge it on is how people respond. I get so many well wishes, and as much I say they’re hard to hear, I really do love them. Life here in Israel, especially these days, can be so lonely. I used to make fun of all of the Anglos that came here and immediately sought out some little bubble so that they could speak English and have friends. I thought I would come here and be the conquering hero, learn Hebrew, and make Israeli friends and never be the American who’s been here 30 years and still speaks with an accent. I know now how arrogant I was. My Hebrew is ok, but what use is it if you’re stuck at home without a job and you don’t know anyone?

Honestly, I don’t expect too much from any of this. Not because I don’t believe anyone reading this doesn’t care, but because once I put it out there it’s not me anymore. Its a snapshot of what I was. Its something else. I write because I need to, because otherwise the words inside will devour me from within. I put this out there because I need some way to just let everything that’s killing me out. I’m typing this because I just want you to see it. If you choose to comment, or share it, or do anything with it, I would love it; but I do this for me. This is my testimony. This is my confession. This is my testament.

Once again, sending love from the holy land, hoping that you enjoy it, and promising that I’m going to stop throwing away those drafts.

I need to show the real me. Simply me, without any reservations.

My disappearance

I want to try and do the impossible, or at least to me; I want to try and explain what it’s like to be depressed and bipolar in a foreign country, to be in an episode as an oleh.

I don’t know what the limit is for sharing.

I’ve written posts and blogged and revealed intimate details about my life before. There are always a few people that are shocked when I reveal something personal, when I share a little about the turmoil inside; but I always feel like I’m the kind of person who wears everything on my sleeves. My face betrays me, my eyes are too open, my soul somehow whispers to others in ways I can’t silence. I showed this post to my wife before publishing, and she wondered, how is it that I can say all of these deeply hidden things to everyone and not her first? I could only respond that I feel like the world is trying to strangle me, and in the few moments when the grip loosens I feel compelled to yell out everything I can before life kills me.

A week or so ago, I posted something on Facebook about being in the middle of a depressive episode, and I didn’t hold back. The post was up for about an hour, but the feedback was immediate and overwhelming. I got calls in the middle of the night from the USA, texts from friends, messages from those people you connected with in the past but time didn’t allow you to stay in touch with; and this was all while I was deep in the middle of one of the worst depressive episodes I’ve ever had, and the worst one since I made aliyah.

I couldn’t respond. I ignored the phone calls. My wife woke up in the middle of the night because they called her, afraid of what I might have done. I told her the usual lie that I was ok, that I posted something and immediately deleted it. I overshared, or rather, I shared and was unready for the deluge of responses that sharing would entail.

So what do I say? Where do I begin? Should I even say anything at all to account for my posts and sudden disappearance?

It’s been two weeks now since that post, and I’m almost out of the episode. There are moments where I still feel depressed, where my bed calls to me as the only safe place, but I can take care of myself again. This time reminds me of how I was after I had my last real breakdown before I was diagnosed, having to get back into the habits of a normal person. Making daily goals that are achievable, but so pathetic that you hate how low you’ve sunken. Nothing is more degrading to someone who defines himself by his achievements than to have brushing your teeth, showering, and eating become major accomplishments for a day. Looking into the mirror and knowing that shaving earns a golden star obliterates one’s soul.

I’ve written before about being bipolar, or at least shared it publicly on social media, but I don’t think I’ve ever really talked in-depth about what it’s like. Therapists always tell me to say that “I have bipolar disorder,” not that, “I am bipolar.” To make me reaffirm that I am not my disease. Someone is not cancer. Someone is not diabetes. Someone is not high blood pressure. So why should this be any different?

Sometimes it’s hard to make that distinction though, even when I desperately need to. For so long, I went undiagnosed and floundering in the ebbs and flows of mania and depression. I had nothing to point to whenever the gears in my mind started to catch, when the wires frayed; I could only assume that it was just me. I molded my personality around my disorder, or maybe it was the other way around; either way, it feels like it’s impossible to separate the two.

So, I want to try and do the impossible, or at least it seems so to me: I want to try and explain what it’s like to be depressed and bipolar in a foreign country, to be in an episode as an oleh.

These past two weeks have been hard, harder than the rest of my time here so far. I don’t want to go into details as to what made them hard, to respect the privacy of those involved; but needless to say I pushed my emotional reservoirs past their capacity.

At a certain point, the stress becomes unbearable, and some hidden switch in the recesses of my brain just switches off and an entirely new set of pathways starts flickering on. The depression that I manage to keep down with all the tricks and techniques of therapy and mindfulness bursts out, and it feels like you’re a passenger in an airplane that’s just taken a nosedive. You feel like you have absolutely no control. You can’t think clearly, all of the normal ways that a person perceives and responds to stimuli change. You become paranoid, you can’t believe anyone’s good intentions, you only see the darkness that you’re barrelling deeper and deeper into. It literally feels like something is slowly sucking out all of the light in your life, and you can feel the blood in your veins growing colder and colder.

All of the suicidal thoughts that you push away, the ones that you treat like birds passing by in the sky, become billboards that get larger and larger as you go deeper into the tunnel. Walking along you would see a bird and just acknowledge it was there, but move on. You used to be able to just shift your attention, but slowly all you can focus on is the pain and whatever solution you can apply to end the sadness that’s crushing you. The single bird is now hundreds of birds on every power line around you on fall night, cawing and blaring out the message: end it, end it, end it. You look around in your car and even blaring the horn can’t drown out the growing decibel level of the hordes of birds yelling directly at you.

You signpost, you say things obliquely or covertly to try and cry for help, something to draw attention to how much you’re suffering. The problem is that when you pass the point where a friend’s message can’t shake you out of it, when you’re so deep in the hole that that almost nothing external can get you out. You ignore people, you don’t look at your friends’ messages and texts, you ignore calls from your family, you tell your spouse that you just can’t handle speaking to anyone. Their well-meaning love from thousands of miles away falls on ears deafened by the noise-cancelling headphones of despair. Every single person saying that they care, that they love you, that you give them strength feels like another person to disappoint, to let down, to make ashamed. Your warped thinking doesn’t allow you to see their love, their warmth; all you can see are people that you wish you didn’t have to bother, that you wish didn’t fret over you, that you think would be better off if they didn’t have that one pathetic friend that they have to worry about. You start to wish that you had no friends, no family, no one that gives a damn about you so that when you eventually decide to go, no one will be for the worse.

At a certain point, you’re not even sad, you just feel the absence of anything good or happy. This is where some people start to self-harm, just to feel something, anything to focus on besides the depression; better to feel the acute and distracting physical pain of a blade across the skin than the deeper existential despair of feeling like you are slowly dying. That didn’t happen this time, but it has in the past. The cuts make you feel like you can take control of some kind of pain, something immediate and obvious. Your thoughts are meaningless when confronted by the deep redness of your own blood and the physical anguish of each slice. Macabre as it is, watching the blood flow from a fresh cut and warm blood is like a blanket, something to put between your immediate existence and the existential doom around you.

You spend your days holed up in a room, stuck to your bed. You cover face with your blanket, trying to make a physical shield between you and the utter desolation that wants to smother you. You try and recreate the womb, the one place you were ever truly safe (but maybe that’s where it all started in the first place). You stop eating, or at least limit meals to when the pain becomes too much for you to say no. You stop bathing, you stop taking care of yourself. Slowly, you become closer and closer physically to the corpse that you feel like.

You feel like giving up. Whatever that means to you, whatever has to happen, you just want the pain to stop. Your warped thinking, your addled mind, pushes you to ponder extreme answers to temporary problems.

You spend days on the precipice of life and death, not knowing where you are. You feel utterly and completely lost, abandoned, and unsure of everything. You wonder, you yell, you curse G-d for what feels like a life destined for nothing but pain. You start to think that the endless cycles of sadness, normality, joy, and insanity will never end; you start thinking that the roller coaster will never end, that there will never be a moment of peace and calm. Who wants to live a life where tranquility is outweighed by the tug of war between mania and depression? Instead of the curse of knowing the day of your death, all you know is that the future is paved with more episodes of unknown length. I’ve seen many things in my life, I’ve stared death in the face, and nothing is scarier than not knowing whether the next month, the next week, or the next day will see the moment when you’re finally put into a straightjacket, hauled off to the hospital, and thrown into a padded room. It’s one thing to see the end, its an entirely different thing when you don’t know if you can even trust the things your eyes are seeing, whether the demon in front of you is really there.

Then, a small thing (it’s always a small thing), somehow manages to pierce the tiniest of holes in the dark canopy to let in just enough light to orient you. In my case, it was a few messages from a man from the East End of London texting me about my new job, and my inability to not read his texts without thinking of myself speaking in his very specific dialect. It’s a couple of emojis in a text from someone who’s only known you a week to somehow pull you out of it. You see that, and you grab for the light. You see the messages everyone else has sent and you see them for the ropes to the sunlight that they are. You slowly pull yourself up, you shake off the faulty mechanics of a depressed brain, and you start to see the light beyond the false firmament.

Just like that, you add another name to the list of people who’ve saved your life but don’t know it. Then, you add all of the names of the people that first reached out, the people you were to blinded by pain to see and add them. Slowly, the list becomes a web of names and faces of the people that love and care, the people that are there to catch you when you start to fall.

That’s where I am today, I am trying to reach for that light. I’m still not out of it, but I think that I’m on my way up. Life in Israel is stressful, aliyah is stressful, and being bipolar magnifies all of that times a thousand, but it’s not the end of my story. I will succeed in this country, I will fulfill my dreams.

Im tirtzu, ein zo agada. If you will it, it is not a dream.

I will flourish here, I will make this a better place, I will tell my grandchildren one day that their saba got through it all so that they would be able to live in Jewish country in our land. I will not let this stop me, I cannot.

I have to thank my friends and family who reached out and called, texted, and messaged me. I have to thank my spouse. I have to thank you all.

And I have to thank a man from the East End for saving my life, another hidden saint who will never know the kindness he did for me.

Love y’all.

Let’s Help Make Miracles Happen

In life, you sometimes encounter people that fundamentally change the trajectory on which you were headed, they make you take the other road at the forks of great decisions. These people can be random, they can be the guy you decided to cut off on the highway that followed you at attacked you in a fit of road rage. They can be the person you meet that you end up wanting to share the rest of your life with and raise a family with. There could be countless people that help you make little decisions that end up changing your life. If our paths are preordained, than they are the little meters upon which the paths divide and your free choice comes into play.

I’ve met a lot of those kinds of people. People who hurt me and made me run away from the things that I thought were my dreams. People who gave me a helping hand when I was just one step away from the end of the path. The person who I met sitting across from me at a BBQ ended up being the woman I wanted to spend the rest of my life with.

Than there are people like Rabbi Yossi and Manya Lazaroff. They’re shaliachs, emissaries of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson and the worldwide Chabad-Lubavitch movement. Specifically, they’re the Chabad rabbi and rebbetzin that started the Chabad house at my old school, Texas A&M University in College Station, TX. I can say, without any doubt in my mind, that outside of my parents, these two people changed my life for the better more than any other two people in the world. I love my friends, my family, and the many mentors I’ve had throughout my education and career; but I can say that I am only where I am today and the man I am today because of their positive influences in my life as both a student and former student.

I think a little background about myself is necessary to give you an idea of what Yossi and Manya has to deal with they first me. I grew up Catholic, the son of divorced parents, and later rejected the church in my teens. I looked into different religions, and Judaism just clicked for me. I started keeping some things of what I thought Judaism meant (basically I kept kosher style and read a lot), and I emailed Rabbi Yossi before I started in the fall of 2008. He said that I was welcome to come by, but I don’t think that he or Manya had any idea what they were getting themselves into when they first let me in the door.

From the first time I met them to this very moment, there hasn’t been a single day that my life hasn’t been enriched by their presence, their support, their guidance, and their unbridled love for their students. In college, they not only put up with every question I had about Judaism, they created an environment where I was welcome to explore. There were moments when things got really intense, and they were there to listen to me. Here was this kid, not even a Jewish kid, not someone that their programming or anything intended to reach, but they took care of me.

When I needed someone to speak to me in a real and truthful way, Rabbi Yossi was there. One conversation with him, and a little while of being pissed off afterwards, made me realize that I had been deluding myself and not prioritizing the right things in my life. It’s one of those few times I can point to in my entire life where one single sentence from someone changed everything. I have my life today because I took his words to heart, I found out the drive within me to really live with Torah and Judaism.

After college, my mom died, and I was completely lost. Again, Rabbi Yossi and Manya were there for me. When I was sick and alone in my apartment, Manya made sure that I had a nice container of her matzo ball soup delivered to me. They made their home open to me when I needed a framework to put my life back together. They gave me opportunities to help others and guide students that were in positions like I was. They not only gave me the tools to build my life, they taught me how to be a better man in the process. Through their examples, I learned what it meant to dedicate oneself to a higher goal, what it meant to sacrifice, but also what it takes to gently nurture Jewish souls that are hidden and lost behind the packaging of the modern world.

I promise not to do this regularly, but I want to ask for your help. Rabbi Yossi and Manya are raising money for their Chabad House, and I want you to help along with me to improve Jewish life at Texas A&M University. Please visit http://jewishaggies.com/sharechabad and join me in donating. If you look at their social media presence, you will see student after student saying amazing things about how they created a home away from home for them in Aggieland, and how they helped them discover themselves. Rabbi Yossi and Manya do amazing thing, and I can tell you that I would not be alive if not for them, I would not be married if not for them, and I doubt I would have ever made it here if not for their love and support. Some of my happiest memories involved just being with them back in school, but also the friendship that they continue to give after graduation.

I got a quick voice note from Manya before my surgery tomorrow (don’t worry I’ll be ok), and it honestly made all the fear and anxiety go away. They really care, and they really do make a difference; now it’s just up to us to support them. Again, visit the link above to make a donation and have it matched. Let’s make Chabad at A&M an even more amazing place, and I know more students lives will be enriched because of our efforts.