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"Know When to Walk Away"-My Last Jewish Week Singles Column

Computer_jerusalem_640x480 Well, it's done. I've submitted my last Jewish Week singles column, and it's available online now.

I wrote the thing weeks ago, but then found myself in Tmol Shilshom, a Jerusalem restaurant where the theme is books. Surrounded by the works of famous Hebrew and English authors, I finished the final column. I usually don't reprint the entire thing on my blog, but it will be the last time, so I wanted to share.

Thanks to everyone for their support for the column over the last four and a half years, as well as your commitment to this ongoing conversation.

"Know When to Walk Away"
by Esther D. Kustanowitz

How does one become a Jewish singles columnist, anyway? On recent reflection, it has occurred to me that perhaps I’ve only found myself here, an untrained sociologist Jane Goodall-ing it in the singles jungle, because of the metaphorical significance and transformative power of transit.

Several years ago, during a work trip to Israel, I had been picked up at the airport by a taxi and was traveling to Jerusalem when the driver began making Hebrew conversation. It started innocently, with a “welcome to Israel” and “what are you doing here?” and ended in a question I didn’t quite understand. “At revakah?” he asked. “Revakah?” I asked. “Revakah zeh lo nesuah (‘revakah’ means ‘not married’).”

I had never heard the word before. Most of my Hebrew was biblical, and most unmarried biblical women were referred to as betulah, which most English Bibles translate as “virgin.” Where, linguistically, could “revakah” have come from? I tried to “shoresh it out,” parsing the word and looking for a root. Since it was unlikely that the resh-vav-kuf could be read as “rock,” the best logical word origin I could find was the word reyk, meaning empty. If Genesis was right and it was “not good for a person to be alone,” then was it a huge leap to identify a person who hadn’t found their soul mate as, to an extent, empty? The Hebrew language seemed to think not. In that moment, an idea began its path of transit.

More recently, I was on a bus, spiraling down the West Coast. The sea was out of sight, and clouds sagged low over the mountains, which rolled past the windows as if they were on a conveyor belt, and I was the one who was standing still. I knew it was an illusion; the bus moved, and the scenery passed, but instead of feeling like an active participant in our progress, I felt detached and stagnant. Noticing the vast expanse of Northern California land, I felt the solitude descend, a curtain closing on a dramatic chapter.
At the end of that trip down the coast, I found myself thinking about journeys, the constant wandering of being in transit, and — because I was headed to Las Vegas — the song lyric that urged me to “know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em.” I knew I wasn’t quite at “know when to run,” but “know when to walk away” began to resonate strongly. I don’t like leaving my destiny to chance — heading off into the great unknown has never been an area of comfort for me. But it became clear that any more hands of solitaire or broken gambling metaphors, and I would risk the erosion of the parts of me that I’m most proud of, precisely the ones I’d hoped to one day share with a family.

My four years writing this column seem commensurate to an academic degree in relationships, yet somehow I’m ABD, and without the coveted “M.R.S.” degree. Perhaps I need to concentrate on field work, move beyond the theoretical into the actual. This column has been the longest relationship of my life. But I can’t marry a column. The transition will be one of the hardest things I’ve had to do, but I think that it’s time.

I don’t know what is or isn’t in the cards for me. If God is calling the shots, I’d like to believe that the Deity wants me to be happier than I am, if only selfishly, for the strengthening of my faith weakened by staying single. I’d still like to be able to contribute to the expansion of the nuclear family I’m already so blessed to have. Or perhaps I’m committing hubris — an English major’s favorite sin — by thinking that I’m on God’s agenda at all. I’m aware that my life has been a series of unique opportunities that have been both humbling and a blessing. It may make me selfish, but I’d still hoped to have more.

There has to be more than just the illusion of progress. It’s a gamble, but every change is. It’s time to put one foot in front of the other, fix my eyes on the future, and walk away from what’s comfortable, into what might, one day, be possible. I’m in transit again. Let the chips fall where they may. And next time an Israeli taxi driver asks me to define my status, whatever it is, I intend to celebrate it.

Esther D. Kustanowitz thanks her editors, readers, family and friends for their support of this column and her obsession with Hebrew. In her “retirement,” she will be working on her book about living Jewish and single, and will continue to blog at MyUrbanKvetch.com and JDatersAnonymous.com, among other places. You can always reach her at jdatersanonymous@gmail.com.

Happy 4th Birthday, JDatersAnonymous!

It's a milestone, one I forgot to mark with this blog in February (but you can always check out my archives, or the posts from my first month of blogging, here). But with second child, JDatersAnonymous, I'm remembering. For a retrospective, see this post.

Journeys and Transitions: An April Update

As we welcomed spring with taxes, cleaning, holidays and saying things like "I can't believe it's April already!" I had my eye already trained on summertime--not because it brings vacation during an academic year, or because I'm dying to sit on a beach somewhere. (My skin, in case you haven't noticed, does not tan.) But because I've been invited to participate in several special projects this summer that I think could really make an impact, I've had to make summer plans early. And since I already owed some people an update, I thought I'd share with the class.

April and May will mark a major transition for me: I've decided to leave the singles column at the Jewish Week (most recent column, "Spring Cleaning, Relationship-Style," is here--two more to go). This was an extremely difficult decision--to walk away from something that's been so much a part of my life for four years. It's often been a challenge to be the Lorax for single Jews, but it's always been a privilege. It was good for my ego, becoming the most minor of local Jewlebrities, and alternately encouraged and discouraged me to learn that the challenges I faced were also faced by others.

But it was a challenge for me personally, in my dating life, and when I was otherwise "off the clock," to not become the column. I faced the regular charge of trying to share enough personal insights so that the columns were meaningful, without giving too much (of myself or my emotions) away. I ended up watching reruns of late Season Six episodes of "Sex and the City," watching as Carrie grappled with identity within her column and how she insisted that she was her own entity, apart from the context in which people knew her. And I thought, well...sort of.

But after being seduced by the romance of--and moving her life to--Paris, Carrie was pursued by her past, and sucked back into it. A happy ending, most people thought. But I had always resented her ending--she went back to her old life, her old patterns, even the ones she'd identified as dysfunctional. I was not anxious to stand in her fictional, yet clearly uncomfortable shoes. I'm not entirely done with the subject--I'll keep writing about dating and relationships on JDatersAnonymous, and will likely use the experience in a longer, dare-we-say "book-length", venue someday--but the day-to-day focus of my writing will be elsewhere.

But wait...there's more.

Continue reading "Journeys and Transitions: An April Update" »

New Reality Show Idea: How to Solve "the Singles Crisis"

No really, just hear me out...it seems like everyone has an answer to this singles crisis thing (which all stems from the fact that Jews -- and let's face it, almost everyone else too -- are marrying and procreating later. So let's start an open application process. Apply with your idea, then we take seven winners and present them to Shmuley Boteach, who puts them through a series of challenges. The losers are dismissed with the show's tagline: "You have failed the Jewish people. But not as much as the single women in their 30s who 'chose' to stay single and could have had seven babies by now."

Too depressing? Maybe. But that's why you have the sympathetic, comforting presence of singles columnist Esther Kustanowitz to guide contestants through the process. And the top five receive guest posting gigs at JDaters Anonymous.

Crazy? Don't you call me crazy. Every morning I wake up and Bravo has a new reality show, including the latest one, "Flipping Out," which (until I saw a preview) I was pretty sure was about guys who go off to Israel to study for a year, come back home, and only eat Pas and Cholov Yisrael. So it's pretty possible.

Want to read about two more ideas for solving the singles crisis? Check out YU's latest endeavor and the Jewish Journal's suggestion, both as delivered by the JDaters Anonymous blogger.

YouTube Finds Me...

About a month ago, I was interviewed for a Canadian online TV network about dating, relationships, and whether or not I'll have a career after I get married. So you might as well hear it from me--I'm on YouTube...

If I'd had a test run, there are a few things I would have done differently (like my hair). But hindsight is always 20/20 vision. Anyway, enjoy!

That's Part 1. Part 2 is here...

JDaters Anonymous Gets a Facelift

After many threats and finally waiting out the URL-squatter who had the domain name that was rightfully mine, I have triumphed. And now, just like Jean Grey arose stronger (OK, if uncontrollably powerful) in X-Men: the Last Stand, now JDaters Anonymous has a new URL and a new look. Change your links, and come on over for posts on:

Dating via Skype
Breaking Up the Coward's Way
National Singles Week Recap
NYTimes 'Vows' Now with Video
And finally, I solve the Mideast Conflict with my formation of a new task force on "eradicating the evil process of dating."

Yeah, I know. It's major. So be a part of the revolution, m'kay? See you there...

Flawed Facebook Fornication Foucault's Fault

Blogger's being annoying, so you get the benefit of this story that would ordinarily go up at JDaters Anonymous...enjoy!

University-based social networking tool Facebook is all the rage these days for the college and recently-graduated set. And sometimes social networking gets extremely socially intimate. For instance, take this story of girl sees boy's Facebook profile and is intrigued, sends him a "poke," he pokes back out of courtesy, and they set up a date. Three Stella Artoises later, they move from the common room into the girl's bedroom to "see some of my books," she says:

But when the conversation turned to late cultural theorist Michel Foucault's interpretation of religion under late capitalism, Gold and Larson found themselves at an awkward impasse. "I was shocked when he said he believed in 'a greater spirit,'" Larson told The Herald yesterday. "I mean, how was I supposed to respond to that?" Unsure of how to move beyond the topic of God and religion, copulation of the most "awkward, perfunctory variety" ensued, according to Larson.

Well, who hasn't been there...when philosophy fails, there's always fornication. Of course, there's the awkwardness of him sneaking out the next morning, and her sending him a note asking him to be in an "It's Complicated" relationship with her, which he thinks is too much of a commitment. Why be tied down, man? Especially to someone who doesn't believe in "a greater spirit"? I mean, how would they ever raise the kids?

On an ending note, I do need to state that I believe this is a joke from the good people at Brown. The date on the story is April 3, which is close enough to April 1st to give one pause, and if you need any further convincing, check the woman's thesis title. Still, entertainingly written and conceived, and not altogether impossible in today's sexually casual but intellectually complicated world.

Wookin Pa Posts in All The Wong Paces

I've been cheating on My Urban Kvetch, and spending more and more time with my other blogs. It's wrong, I know. Forgive me. But I got sucked in, with so many amazing things to cover this week...

For instance, over at JDaters Anonymous, we're at 19 comments and growing on the subject of "Desperately Seeking Sperm-Donors," a post in response to the NY Times Magazine article about "Looking for Mr. GoodSperm." Is it creepy to effectively genetically engineer your child? Does choosing to become a single mother create the same problems and challenges experienced by those who became single mothers not by choice? Lots of voices on this subject from many differently experienced people...your two cents are welcome.

But if you really want to check out an interesting post, visit "From Simple Street Meet to Audience With the Dating Hermit," in which a chance encounter on the street inspires me to ask readers what they'd ask the dating hermit if they only had two questions to ask...which two questions would you want to know the answers to? 45 comments and counting on that post, so speak up and be heard.

And over at my group hangout at Jewlicious, I seem to have posted three times in a row. Check them all out, including my review of the upcoming release "When Do We Eat?"

But the real story, the one that hasn't been really received the way I thought it would be, especially by those horndogs over at Jewlicious, is this piece about the new Playboy book. Apparently, in the last sixty years, there have been 613 Playboy Playmate centerfolds. And you know what else there are 613 of? That'd be mitzvot (commandments) in the Torah. Coincidence? Read the piece and decide for yourself.

And hopefully, this will keep y'all busy for a bit, because I've got me some work to do.

Sorry So Sparse!

My posts have been a little sparse this week, and for that I apologize. More fresh Esther soon, I promise. In the interim, you may want to check out my other blog, JDaters Anonymous, which focuses not just on the trials and tribulations of online dating, but surveys dating trends in general.

Feel free to contribute your stories of humor, horror and humiliation, and we'll get some online discussions going...names can be changed to protect the innocent. You can post your comments on the site, or send them to JDaters Anonymous. Especially since I've just quit JDate again, at least for now, I'm going to be lacking in JDate stories, so I look to you to supplement.

Names can be changed to protect the innocent.

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