So here's my new blog.  My aliyah blogs have done their jobs, introducing you to the lunatic world of aliyah and all of my various foibles,  which,  as you can imagine, will continue unabated for years to come.

So I'm turning to another passion - writing non-scholarly thoughts about spiritual stuff. And be warned - I'm not a complex person.  I like simple thoughts.

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DISCLAIMER:  I have very little Torah education.  I went to Hebrew school and the Baltimore Hebrew College, was in NCSY, but as far as formal Torah learning, not much.  I am speaking from my heart. I also think that sometimes we couch "feelings" in so many quotations and references that we forget what the simple truths are.

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My husband was sick, back in 1999-2001.  He had a form of cancer and went through a very tough couple of years but thank G-D came out of it and so far so good.  During that time we were also raising three kids, our daughter got engaged and I was organizing her wedding, and we had a son graduating high school and a younger daughter just over Bat Mitzvah age.

Our family life was thrown into chaos with treatments, emergency hospital visits, etc etc.  No need to deal with those details, suffice it to say that I was personally terrified and so were my kids but my husband was sure he would recover and was amazingly calm the whole time.

There were a few times I was beyond terrified - I wasn't sure he was going to make it through the next day and I was at a loss as to what to do. 

What if he died?

How would the rest of my life go?

Would I have enough money?

Should I sell the house?

How would the kids be, growing up without him?

How would I be?

One Friday night, I was lighting candles, for some reason I was home alone, and I lost it.  I mean I'd lost it many times driving to and from the hospital, in the car by myself, but this time I really broke down.  And I decided to have a talk with G-D.

I just sat down and talked to Him.  Like He was sitting there in front of me listening.  Like a father, a friend, a caring neighbor.  I asked Him questions.  I wondered out loud how He'd answer me.  I asked him to send angels to help me, to walk with me, to hold my hand.  I had no idea if I was doing the right or wrong thing, theologically.  I was just pouring out my heart.

The next day I went to the hospital and my husband had turned the corner medically.  The nurses were astounded.  I was not.  I knew that somehow my words had gotten through.

And that's when something hit me - so simple it made me laugh.  God is waiting for us to talk to Him. Not pray to Him, which we already do, but talk, like person to person.  It's kind of like your mother, who took care of you all your life, sees you go off to college, then complains when you don't communicate, "You don't call, you don't write..."

G-D has led us into life, He gives us life every day.  And he wants to hear from us, in our own words. In my non-scholarly mind I feel like He's wondering, "Where are they?  I hear them praying but why can't they just talk to me?"

I have no halachic basis for this, or rabbinic wisdom to quote from.  So if you want to argue with me don't waste your time. And if you want to say "well, so and so says that in sefer so and so" - that's not the response I'm looking for.  I want to know what you think of this idea, that's all, not some rabbinic genius.  You. (ooh, sorry if you ARE a rabbinic genius, no insult intended)

So....my suggestion to whoever cares to listen - sit down at home, by yourself, and talk to Him. He's waiting.