SHABBAT SHALOM!
In the portion of Vayetze, Jacob flees   his brother fearing   for his life.  
At the same time,   he also fears   the unknown,     as he heads off to a 
distant land    that he had never visited before.        The story in this 
portion    is how Jacob is dealing    with his fears    so that they    will not
paralyze him.
I can relate to Jacob.  I have also been to new places – like camp – where 
I have not known a single person.    I have also changed schools a couple 
of times.    The kids are great at all three schools I have been in,    but 
very different.    For one thing,   they dress differently.    The schools 
have all different cultures.    One school had all Jews,   and the next a 
variety of people.    It was a dramatic change going from one to the next.     
And change can be scary at times.      
It’s not like   I’m always fearful, but when I do get scared,      I’ve learned 
a secret that never fails to calm me down.    
The secret is MUSIC!
Let’s just say that I REALLY  to sing!  I sing in school – and not just in 
chorus – but randomly.     I sing around the house.     I sing everywhere.
And I sing everything!   As many of you know, I can go from Adele to 
rap to Broadway Show tunes without skipping a beat.
At school my friends say “You’re really good!”    At home, my sister says:  
“Ellie stop singing!”  
When I’m not singing I’m drumming.    I’m always tapping out beats,    
especially at times I when I feel nervous or fidgety.    During the past few 
months      I’ve been doing that a lot!
Whenever I sing I feel better.      It makes me feel I can handle anything!
For instance,      I’m terrified of being on airplanes.  
But when I listen to music – no problem     (except when they say “turn 
off all electronic devices” – I must admit that once or twice I have failed 
to do so!
When I was younger and home alone in the house, and there was a loud 
noise followed by the dogs barking,    I would go up to my room and put 
on my iPod.
Even now, I play music all night long.    When I don’ have it on,    I feel 
lost.    It’s harder to sleep.     I can imagine what Jacob must have felt like 
when he lay down to sleep on that rock – before having his famous 
dream about the angels going up and down a ladder.    I wish I could 
have lent him my iPod.  I bet he was listening to one,    actually,    and 
that it was playing “Stairway to Heaven!!”
I find that music doesn’t just help me when I feel stressed.  It helps me to 
help others.    When my friend was sad recently,  I started to sing to her.  
It just happened!    I started singing “Just Whistle a Happy Tune”     -    
but of course,    at the time I couldn’t whistle.     And she started 
laughing.
 I’ve come to learn that many of the prayers in our prayer book are 
designed  to lift our spirits when we are afraid.  A great example of 
this is the Sh’ma, which is recited several times during the day, when
you wake up until you go to sleep.  It’s very comforting.
I also understand that while there are moments when anyone might be
Afraid,    I’m very fortunate to know that I always have clothes to wear 
and food to eat.        Foe my Mitzvah Project I have been helping Person 
to Person.  After Yom Kippur, I helped to organize the food donations 
that were made by congregants here.  I went to Person to Person’s 
warehouse and put food on the shelves.  Also, I’ve been collecting 
clothing here and in my neighborhood for the past several weeks and I 
will be donating those clothes to Person to Person as well.
Now that I am a Bat Mitzvah, I’ve come to realize that you should never 
let fear conquer you – but if you feel afraid, I’ll always be here to sing 
you a song – or to whistle a happy tune.
Thank You!
Author of "Embracing Auschwitz" and "Mensch•Marks: Life Lessons of a Human Rabbi - Wisdom for Untethered Times." Winner of the Rockower Award, the highest honor in Jewish journalism and 2019 Religion News Association Award for Excellence in Commentary. Musings of a rabbi, journalist, father, husband, poodle-owner, Red Sox fan and self-proclaimed mensch, taken from essays, columns, sermons and thin air. Writes regularly in the New York Jewish Week and Times of Israel.
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