Monday, July 5, 2010

Friendship

(as published on my Facebook page)

I just read a great article in the NYTimes, by Todd May, about friendship. I thought some of the lines were particularly powerful and describe how I feel about the people I surround myself with. I've often repeated the line that "a man should be judged by his friends" and am a firm believer in this philosophy. If you associate yourself with quality, then, naturally, you will become a better person. So many of my friends have had a profound influence on me, that I couldn't even begin tagging people in this note... so, rather, I offer a collective "Thank you!"

I share this with the Facebook world because in theory that's what Facebook is supposed to be about... a network of friends (although clearly Facebook has evolved into something far more ranging and complicated than that and as the author describes,"we ... collect friends like shoes or baseball cards on Facebook).

Some of my favorite quotes:
"There is much that might be said about friendships. They allow us to see ourselves from the perspective of another. They open up new interests or deepen current ones. They offer us support during difficult periods in our lives."

"Friendships worthy of the name are different. Their rhythm lies not in what they bring to us, but rather in what we immerse ourselves in. To be a friend is to step into the stream of another’s life. It is, while not neglecting my own life, to take pleasure in another’s pleasure, and to share their pain as partly my own. The borders of my life, while not entirely erased, become less clear than they might be."

"Friendships, although lived in the present and assumed to continue into the future, also have a deeper tie to the past than either of these. Past time is sedimented in a friendship. It accretes over the hours and days friends spend together, forming the foundation upon which the character of a relationship is built. This sedimentation need not be a happy one. Shared experience, not just common amusement or advancement, is the ground of friendship."

"Of course, to have friendships like this, one must be prepared to take up the past as a ground for friendship. This ground does not come to us, ready-made. We must make it our own. And this, perhaps, is the contemporary lesson we can draw from Aristotle’s view that true friendship requires virtuous partners, that “perfect friendship is the friendship of men who are good.” If we are to have friends, then we must be willing to approach some among our relationships as offering an invitation to build something outside the scope of our own desires. We must be willing to forgo pleasure or usefulness for something that emerges not within but between one of us and another."

"In turn, however, it is friendship that allows us to see that there is more than what the prevalent neoliberal discourse places before us as our possibilities. In a world often ruled by the dollar and what it can buy, friendship, like love, opens other vistas. The critic John Berger once said of one of his friendships, “We were not somewhere between success and failure; we were elsewhere.” To be able to sit by the bed of another, watching him sleep, waiting for nothing else, is to understand where else we might be."

Here's the link to the article: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/04/friendship-in-an-age-of-economics/?hp

Monday, June 7, 2010

How I Know I'm Israeli

It's time the world wakes up and stops living the double standard of how other countries are treated and how Israel is treated.

I do not agree with all the actions of our government. In fact, I downright do not like the makeup of the current government, led by a man who failed his first time as Prime Minister and somehow got to try again. Our foreign minister is a disaster and a racist and doesn't understand that the main thing to being a diplomat is diplomacy. Avigdor Lieberman gives us a bad name and should go, but for the time being we're stuck with him. I agree with the opposition chair, Kadima leader, Tzipi Livni (who I did vote for and who got more votes than any other candidate), when she says that the "current government of Israel is not representing the state to the world."

The Israeli public is in an internal upheaval about the operation that took place on the waters off Gaza's shores a week ago. The logistics should have gone down differently, however, they didn't.

The IDF Navy commandos who boarded the ship are no strangers. They are our brothers, fathers, sons and cousins. They are not murderers and didn't land on the ship with the intention of killing anyone. However, when they came aboard, they were not met by peace activists, but rather terrorists who were interested in nothing short of martyrdom. To our great dismay, nine of the terrorists succeeded in that mission and we are now paying the heavy political price. Let there be no misunderstanding though: our soldiers bravely carried out their mission and only resorted to using their weapons when they were forced with the choice of survival.

We have a right to defend our borders and protect our population. People absolutely have the right to disagree with our actions and question our policies, but it is unacceptable to think that we do not have a fundamental right to protect ourselves from the terror structure that rules in Gaza, Hamas. They want our utter destruction and we are going to make sure they do not succeed.

This whole incident got me thinking about my life, my moving here and my identification with my fellow citizens. It's been almost three years since I made aliyah and immigrated to Israel. Today, I stand as proud as ever with that decision and with my country. I am proud because even in some of our most difficult moments, we are able to disagree and at the same time support each other. I take pride in the nameless and faceless individuals that protect us, understanding full well that without them we wouldn't be here. There are a great many things that I don't know, but one thing I know for sure, I know I'm Israeli.

*Friends who are tagged: If you so desire, please feel free to redistribute this post.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Life is short, live it well

Lately, I've been having revelations about what's important, where I want to go and what I want to do. Dave Matthews might sing it, but the idea of "eat, drink, and be merry" has much older roots. One must plan for the future, but not forget to enjoy the present.

Isaiah, Chap 22, verse 13: "Eat and drink, for tomorrow we die!"

and

Ecclesiastes, Chap 8, verse 15: "For the only good a man can have under the sun is to eat and drink and enjoy himself. That much can accompany him, in exchange for his wealth, through the days of life that God has granted him under the sun."

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Swim out past the breakers

Go get in the ocean. Swim. Keep swimming. Forget your limits. The rocks are ahead, get to them. Keep going. Fine, tread water a bit. Ok, swim harder. Heart racing. They're approaching. You see the boulders, they're yours. Climb on the algae covered rocks. Turn around. What a view. Is there any better place to live?

.... that's pretty much my thought process as I swim out to the breakers that protect the beaches of Tel Aviv. I don't always climb on the rocks, but I at least push myself to watch the waves crash into them from the other side.

Free membership at the local swimming hole. Who needs Club Med when I've got the Mediterranean Sea?

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Sitting quietly in class

By nature, I am not a quiet person. My rabbi, Stanley Davids, said it best at my Bar Mitzvah, "Many words can be used to describe Evan, but shy is not one of them." This, of course, was met with great laughter and a large smile broke across my face on that day 14+ years ago.

Yet, in Israel, I am quiet. I used to be the person in class who was the first to raise his hand, to actively participate in a discussion or to break the ice by asking the first question. I am no longer. Due to the language barrier, I sit quietly as the lecture progresses and concepts are discussed. I understand so much more of what goes on in class, but I am still hampered by not knowing exactly the topic or failing to fully grasp the point. Thus, my true nature, my essence, remains hidden. My contribution to the class is muted due to my lack of communication.

However, the situation has drastically improved over the last year. Now, at least, I can sit in class and somewhat understand. The Hebrew language and culture is slowly merging in my mind and I return to my more outward and outgoing personality. The responsibility to thrive and develop is mine and I'm getting there. One day, this year, I pledge to write a blog entry בעברית, in Hebrew. I will learn the language so I will not remain quiet, but instead will be heard.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Turning the page

What does it mean to turn a page? Do you begin reading a new chapter in a book? Do you turn to another section in the newspaper? Do you start blogging again after a very long hiatus?

In my case, it means that I should be turning the page.... of my studies! I've gone back to school to get my masters in nonprofit management at Ben Gurion University in Be'er Sheva, Israel. I love traveling down to the desert (nothing like seeing a few camels along the way) and momentarily leaving the life of the big city behind. This semester I'm taking primarily business prerequisites including finance, marketing, and also behavioral science in management. I find the courses interesting and also very challenging. My Hebrew is way better than it was last year when I took one class, but I still have a long way to go...

Anywho, in an effort to improve my writing (work related), I'm going to do my best to write freestyle stuff here as well. Let's see if I stick to it:-)

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Definition of Success

I often get caught up in what it means to succeed and lead a good life. At times like that, I turn to others who have written and inspired. I wish to share with my fellow blog readers the following from Ralph Waldo Emerson:

Definition of Success

To laugh often and much;
To win the respect of intelligent people
and the affection of children;
To earn the appreciation of honest critics
and endure the betrayal of false friends;
To appreciate beauty;
To find the best in others;
To leave the world a bit better whether by
a healthy child, a garden patch, or a
redeemed social condition;
To know that even one life has breathed
easier because you have lived;
This is to have succeeded.