September 6, 2020

Aveinu Malkeinu (2020)

Matthew L. Schwartz
Liturgist

Holy, Holy, Holy!! Holy is the Great Mystery that surrounds us and calls us to atone…Kadosh Kadosh Kadosh!! Holy are the Hosts of Heaven that set and maintain the Planets and Stars, their course and movement at His holy command…balance and order, night and day.

Aveinu Malkeinu – our Father, our King – we have sinned against you: your children are hurting and screaming and we reach out to the void, the Psalmist David called to you “from the depths of my soul” but what soul have we left for you? We have provided but wickedness. What redemption can possibly come for us? Each day a new plague, a new horror, at the hands of man.

We have sinned…
We have transgressed…
We have sinned…
We have transgressed…

A thousand beats upon my chest, my rib cage bruised, and yet it would never be enough to admit my sins for myself alone…what hope is there then for the world? We have taken your gifts and the beauty that you bestowed upon us at Eden and the knowledge to us at Mt. Sinai and like dust in the wind we have allowed them to blow through our fingers.

It is written that you keep faith with those who sleep in the dust, we have left so much of it across the world that would any sack cloth be enough? Have we done anything, at all pleasing to You, in this year that could garner us favor or attention? No…I can’t see how…not this year.

Repentance, Prayer, and Charity – these are what is said to temper your severe decree! Yet year after year after year we stand before you, and here we are again, wicked in front of your presence, and even if your decree is tempered, still would I fear to feel it.

What have we done to deserve any temperence in your judgement? Does your patience with us wear thin? It must. You have made so many covenants with us, and what have we done to be worthy of them, or to keep them. After Noah you made a new one, so each of us to be judged by our individual actions…but we have failed to stop so much…and whom among us can say that we tried enough, or even tried at all this year?

On Rosh HaShanah it is written, on Yom Kippur it is sealed…and I fear the wax being placed next to my name.

What of this year, as we move ever closer to midnight? Will we even have a next year to be in Jersualem or will we end with mutually assured destruction?

There are a thousand fears that keep me awake now, in the middle of the night…and yet, in the stillness and quietness of the evening hour, as I stand before you naked yet fully clothed, you who can hear and see the innermost workings of my mind:soul:heart, I hear a voice echo back to me, a disappointed Parent…not one filled with rage, or anger…but with sadness…which is worse in a way…because here we are, You and I, here again this year, as you assure me that we’ll be together again next year, and the year after that, as you remind and correct me that plagues are never an end, but merely a beginning into Exodus.

Tear gas can be breathed in the air across the country tonight.

The First Coffee Bean (First Week of the DSW)

The first week of the first semester of the first year of the Doctor of Social Work program is in the books. To say that I’m excited is an understatement.

A good cup of coffee (espresso, which is the basis for all good coffee) starts with a single coffee bean…whichever one makes it into the hopper first. Then it’s joined by its fellow beans, and then rapidly ground and packed before water is propelled through it, to bring us its beautiful and incredible essence.

This is graduate school. Right now we’re in the phase where we’re adding the beans. Thinking, ideating, and processing adds more beans…next year we’ll get to grinding those beans up…and finally, when we’re all DSW candidates, we’ll be ready to move forward and blast the hot water through those beautiful grounds…and come up with a perfect cup.

Each coffee bean I come up with I’m adding to my Capstone research page; this week I was able to speak in larger terms about what I want to work on, how I want to work on it, and why it, and the DSW program is meaningful to me:

As someone who works in Micro Practice daily, but also loves Macro level practice (policy and history) and has an MBA, and loves entrepreneurship, and finance, and banking, and accounting, I want to work on a capstone that functions at the Macro, Mezzo, and Micro levels to benefit my agency, my patients, and the community I work in.

This week was very much about figuring out the flow of doctoral level work, while working full time, with chronic illness. I found that flow (in its entirety) over the course of the week, leveling out this morning. This means I’m ready and prepared for next week, which is an awesome feeling.

I have to say, I am also eternally thankful for my cohort, with whom I have built (and feel) a strong bond and connection to. We did a lot of work well before orientation in order to get to know one another, and I am sure that our feeling of mutual support, mutualism, and camraderie will not only grow as we go through this program, but will be integral to our success in it. I haven’t felt this kind of togetherness since my Non-Commissioned Officer Course days, so it’s refreshing!

In other news, on September 16th I begin my Certified Financial Social Worker exam for the CFSW credential through the Center for Financial Social Work, and my new couch comes on Tuesday, so that’s exciting.

I have off tomorrow (Labor Day) and I’m taking Tuesday off for the new holiday I’m celebrating in life: “Couch Day!”