Bruce Springsteen gave the keynote address at the just ended South By Southwest (SXSW) Music Conference and Festival in Austin. The Boss’s remarks focused on the meaning of music in his own musical development. His entire talk can be found here at NPR. As I listened I heard him say something that gave me pause […]
Change Is Hard
It has been a busy week here at the JCC as we have watched the emergence of spring! Many of the classes have been out and about in and out of the JCC, and many others are observing and discussing all of the changes that they are seeing with the bloom of spring time. As […]
Reaching Kitah Gimel: Creating Raashanim (for next Purim)
What do vitamin C, fish oil, and calcium have to do with Purim? No, Esther wasn’t a health nut and Ahasuerus definitely favored wine and merrymaking over multi-vitamins! In Kitah Gimel, my students enjoyed making raashanim (groggers/noisemakers) out of plastic vitamin and nutritional supplement bottles.Here’s how:Materials – empty plastic vitamin and supplement bottles; construction paper […]
Long, Long Ago, In A Castle, Far, Far Away
Kings and queens, villains and heroes, beauty pageants and hangings – it is no surprise that the Purim story is compelling to our children! While we have many stories in our tradition with dramatic elements, our Purim story is the most like a fairy tale. In this story we have the quintessential fairy tale-like characters: […]
Reel Prayer
I know prayer is difficult for many modern people. We often feel like we’re at the far end of a disconnected pay phone. Yet I still feel the enormous power of prayer to re-orient the self, to help us connect to our deepest, wisest and noblest wishes for the world. At least it helps me. […]
Connected Coaching – Adventures in Cloud Based Learning
A little over a month ago, I started taking an online course called “Connected Coaching” offered by Powerful learning Practice- Professional Development for 21st Century Educators. I discovered this learning opportunity in a tweet posted by Caren Levine (@jlearn20). It’s making quite an impact on me because when I started the course I had no […]
Report on the Economy: Does Being Rich Make You an A-Hole?
Everything I need to know about Economics I learned flying First Class last week.
#1: There was one bathroom at the front of the plane for the exclusive use of the 8 First Class passengers sitting in Rows A & B.
#2: There were two bathrooms at the rear of the plane to be shared by the remaining 141 passengers in Rows C – Z.
#3: From my vantage point in seat A1, this was great!
From this experience I learned two vital lessons:
#1: Economic inequality is all around us in today’s America
#2: It’s only a problem if you’re poor
Usually, I’m a proud member of the disgruntled poor. Hell, I work in the theatre- we put the “non” in “non-profit”. In my field, the 1% refers to people earning a living wage or the award-winning playwrights that own dishwashers (Albee sold his for gin.) After all, if you work in a building named for a rich person you’re a broke motherfucker yourself. So, on a plane, you’d expect to find me jammed in a middle seat in Broke Motherfucker Class (not even Broke Motherfucker Plus) reading a torn Sky Mall Magazine and dreaming of the massage chairs and air purifiers that I’ll never own, and knowing that while the half-bottle of water and micro-bag of pretzels I was allotted by Cheapskate Air isn’t quite enough sustenance to “keep me alive,” it is exactly enough to make me go to the bathroom, which means I’ll have to shake loose the blood clot forming in my leg, machete my way out of my row, and slog to the back of the plane so I can wait with all the other Broke Motherfuckers for my 30 seconds of solitude pooping in the fluorescent blue water of despair.
This time, though, it was different. This time, when my wife and I were checking in online we realized that we aren’t in fact Broke Motherfuckers and we could afford to spring for the First Class Upgrade. This is partially because I’m one of the very lucky few who actually does earn a living in the theatre, partially because we’ve spent our money wisely and haven’t blown it on frivolities like gym memberships and children (not even those really cheap African ones you can buy on TV for one cup of coffee a day- and I mean a regular cup of coffee, not even a Latte- hell, that would buy you a whole fly-swatting family for a month ) but mostly because my wife isn’t a theatre professional and actually works in the real world (did you know that some companies have these things called BONUSES where just they like, just give you extra money for no reason??? It’s crazy right? I mean, sure we have bonuses in theatre, like finding leftover cheese from the Opening in the green room fridge a week later- but free money, I mean, hell, that’s even better than crusty old brie and stale crackers*! (*depends on the crackers- those little melba toast thingy’s are no fucking joke.))
Reaching Kitah Gimel: Syllable Sharks Fishing Game
Something’s fishy in Kitah Gimel! To review prayer vocabulary, students are going to fish for “Syllable Sharks.” This game format can be used to review vocabulary in Hebrew or English associated with various topics of study. In the case of “Syllable Sharks,” the points scored are determined by the number of syllables in the words […]
Nurturing Our Picasso’s and Pushing To Try Other Things
“I am not a science person,” my eighth grader declared this past week. Despite high grades and positive feedback from her science teacher, she had placed herself, as many of us have, into the “humanities box.” Like all of us, my 13-year-old has an emerging sense that some subjects come more easily, feel more natural, […]
A Jew on Ash Wednesday
Today was a holiday in my neighborhood. Not a Jewish holiday, of course, but one I admire nonetheless: Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, a 40-day period of fasting and repentance before Holy Week and Easter. What I admire about Ash Wednesday is its AWESOME ritual: the smearing of a cross of ashes upon the […]
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