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Fractured Soul October 28, 2006 |

A fractured soul
Exists on earth
As lost souls do in purgatory

Not quite in this life
And not quite in the next

I have learnt
The hard way

That the physical body
Has nothing to do with the essence
Of ourselves

Bodies are vessels
Cocoons
Intent on taking us where our souls demand

I feel ripped in two
Or maybe even more pieces
Maybe so many pieces I have
Lost track now

A body here
A heart there
As my fractured soul floats above
Waiting for me to find myself

Solid Gold Dancing in the Holy Land gets a facelift! October 20, 2006 |

Welcome to the new and improved Solid Gold Dancing in the Holy Land.
Yes, it is official: I am a complete web geek who is far, far beyond help and recovery.
I hope you enjoy the fruits of my addiction.

T x

The Utter Fatality of Objects October 15, 2006 |



Like a still lake
Ennui
I hear its melody
In this vast cold room
The nuance of the light seems eternal
Everything is simple
And I admire the
Utter fatality of objects
The servant brings
His master a bowl
In the silence of the house


Dora Maar

I had scribbled this beautiful little poem on a scrap of paper that I found the other day when I was clearing out my wallet. I recently went to the Picasso exhibition that was on in Melbourne at the National Gallery of Victoria and although I loved the whole exhibition, it was this little poem that obviously left the deepest impression on me.

Dora Maar was just one in a long line of women in Picasso’s life, but she was with him during possibly the most turbulent part of his life – personally and politically. They were together for more than a ten year period that spanned the Spanish Civil War and World War II. It was also during this time that Picasso painted one of his most famous and enduring works Guernica.

I must stop myself now. This is not a blog about art history. It’s easy for me to get side-tracked: partly because I am a bit of an art fanatic and partly because I feel that my brain is currently in a constant state of chaos. Side-tracking is becoming my new best friend.

Dora’s poem has taken on new meaning for me lately. On a daily basis now I am weighing up my objects and contemplating their fate: ship, sell, dump.

I am thinking a lot about what makes us feel complete as human beings. Do we define ourselves by our stuff and are we in turn defined by our stuff? While I would hope I am not what you would consider a “materialistic” person, how can we, in the West, be anything else?

We are forever in a state of constant upgrading and acquiring. Where does it all end? When will we finally sit back, breathe out deeply and say to ourselves; Enough. I have enough.

Mind you, saying all this does not make it any easier to divide my belongings into one of three piles. At this point in time, mainly due to miniscule finances, for an item to be on the “ship” list it must satisfy a number of criteria, but the most important one is: do I love it so much that I would never forgive myself for letting it go? Unfortunately, I seem to have quite a few of those “things”!

It’s amazing how some objects in our lives come with so much emotional baggage. I have come to realise that it’s not just us human beings that are laden with it. The things I have set aside to sell are going like hotcakes. This is great on the one hand (less to stress about), but utterly tragic on the other.

There goes my beloved sofa that took the best part of a year to pay off. There goes the dining table that I spent days sanding back and varnishing until it was restored to its original glory. Have to stop. This is going to make me cry.

I suppose that whether we like it or not, to a large extent we are our stuff. They are a reflection of who we are. It’s an extension of our personality. And to then suddenly get rid of some of that stuff, is in effect, getting rid of a part of ourselves. It is all at once, cathartic, freeing and terrifying.

I am a bit of a compulsive scribbler. A writer friend once told me, “Never leave home without a notebook and a pen. You never know when inspiration might hit”. It was the best advice about writing that anyone ever gave me. I am forever scribbling down little things in my tiny notebook. A few weeks ago I wrote this: “As I fill my notebooks, I realise that they track a journey, a moment in time and it reminds me that my life is on a continuum – that life is not about a bunch of unrelated, separate moments in time haphazardly strung together by a thing called co-incidence.”

The journey ahead is a little bit murky. It’s a little bit scary, but it’s exciting too. I hope that in the not too distant future I will be able to stand barefoot in the grass and let it joyfully grow tall around me. I will be happy and I will say to myself...

Enough.

Yom Kippur October 05, 2006 |


This time of year always makes me feel pretty vulnerable.
Sitting (although I seem to remember the standing bits more) in shul on Yom Kippur I struggle with myself internally every year and say to myself, I will get into the whole davening (praying) side of things. I will read the words in the machzor and read the Haftorah and finally THIS year I will gain some G-dly insight into things that I never saw before. Finally this year I will be swept away by some spiritual passion and deep meditative spirituality that by the end of it all will make me feel satisfied that my personal sealing of the year ahead is air-tight.

Except that’s not generally how things seem to work for me. Instead this is the reality. Here is a glimpse into the frightening thing that is my brain:

1. I woke up in the night with a coughing fit and had to have a sip of water from the sink in my bathroom. Have I just ruined my fast?

2. I am in shul and suddenly I find myself creating a to-do list for work the next week (bad, bad bad!).

3. I peer over the balcony and spy the cute guy I met recently. He smiles at me and my heart skips a beat and… crap… back to the praying woman!

4. How many pages until I can sit down again?

5. How many hours until I can eat and drink again?

Maybe to some readers I am sounding too flippant and maybe to other readers I sound like I am being too harsh on myself. After all Yom Kippur is a time of self-reflection and I can’t deny that I spend many, many hours contemplating on my year that has been and the big black hole that seems to be the year ahead.

I don’t remember a year that has flown by at such a frightening pace. I seem to have spent most of the year wishing it was the end of the year. When I decided I wanted to move back to Israel, I just wanted the year to end and for me to “be there already!” Now it is almost the end of the year and it seems reality has finally caught up with me. In some ways it seems like a lifetime ago that I worked out when I would need to give notice on my apartment. It seemed like a million years ago when I made my mental list of what I would ship to Israel and what I would sell.

Well. That million years ago is now today. I have to give notice on my apartment in a week and I have to start seriously sorting my stuff (and myself!) out. I think this realization hit me at work the other day and it’s a wonderful thing that I have such caring and supportive colleagues and friends there. I needed to vent big time, and have a teeny bit of a cry, but hey, that’s ok. I am only human.

Sometimes I feel like my life is on constant repeat – playing out the same scenarios again and again. I am reminded of something I wrote exactly three years ago – almost to the day.

“All this moving about is making me tired. Making me feel old. I wish I could be like other people. Happy in one job. Happy with one person. Happy to live in one place. Happy just… well... being.

Why do I need to make my life so complicated? It’s like I have this genetic pre-disposition to upset my internal applecart. Just when things were getting settled, bam! There go them apples…”



And here I am again, three years on, about to do it all over again. I am sure that every time I uproot myself, I tell myself it will be the last time. The move to end all moves, so to speak. But so far I don’t have the best track record. The joke about being the “typical wandering Jew” is wearing pretty thin to be honest. I wear the number of cities, countries that I have lived in like some badge of honour.

I’ll tell you what I prayed for in shul at Yom Kippur this year. (I don’t think it is like sharing the wish you made over your birthday candles – I am pretty sure this doesn’t negate my prayer!) I prayed for peace. My inner peace. I prayed that the year ahead will finally allow my feet to stop moving faster than my head and my heart.

I am still not a hundred percent sure exactly what it is I am going halfway round the world to find, but I sure as hell hope I recognise it when I get there.

Shana tova everyone.

All about Solid Gold Dancing in the Holy Land

I started this blog in April 2006 essentially on a whim because I was bored one day (big mistake). As time went on and the countdown to my return to Israel really began, the blog began to take shape, form and meaning (some of the time). I realise that it has become an outlet for my many varied and often jumbled emotions, but most of all it is tracking the adventure of a lifetime. Bookmark me and come along for the ride!