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  • CAJE 33: August 8-14, 2008
    Look Who's Teaching? I'll be doing a few sessions about online community and blogging. This year in Burlington, VT.
  • PresenTense Institute: June/July 2008
    The PresenTense Institute begins this June in Jerusalem. Check out the site for details.
  • ROI Summit: June 2008
    The summit of Jewish innovators in their 20s and 30s is coming this June to Jerusalem. Stay tuned here and to ROI120.com for updates.

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Tagged in TA: Defining Yourself at the Pulver Networking Breakfast

Tagged_esther_and_lindsayIt's embarrassing that it took me so long to post about attending this networking breakfast in Tel Aviv, but I guess better late than never.

Who am I anyway? Am I my resume? That is a picture, of a person I don't know? It's always hard to define yourself to other people, but at Jeff Pulver's networking breakfasts, they've found a way: name tags with your mantra or motto on them, and additional smaller tags that work the way tagging does on the internet.

At the breakfast, I met a few interesting people, including some whoseTel_aviv_08_045 names I knew but whose faces were new. Of course, there was Jeff himself, plus Israluv, Brian Blum (whose blog I read back before I was a blogger, if you can imagine such an epoch), and of course, Nir Kouris networking at the event with another one of his young CEOs from ecampIsrael.

Want a closer look at the whole tagging situation? Another photo plus additional explanation after the jump.

Continue reading "Tagged in TA: Defining Yourself at the Pulver Networking Breakfast" »

"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.

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" »

I Am My Blog, and She (They?) Is (Are?) Me

I was just at a simchat bat (a brunch party held in celebration of a new girl baby--mazal tov to Jer!) and I got a shoutout mid-ceremony--not because I was that important in the scheme of that child's life thus far, but because I had connected in person with someone who had been only a virtual friend up to that point. Jer loves this kind of stuff, so we were able to give him that as a birthday present--give the gift of Jewish geography...it always fits.

While some people think I'm a natural networker, the reality is that it takes work to build the network, even using the net. One of the things I struggle with is how to promote my self, and my blogs, and my general ability to produce a certain work product, without creating an overinflated sense of my own importance.

This anecdote from SXSW (South by Southwest, a music, film and tech conference held annually in Austin, TX, to which I've always wanted to go, and never seem able to afford) takes self-promotion to a whole new level. Someone asked a question of one of the presenters: what advice do you have for aspiring vloggers?

"What's your name?" asked panelist Lindsay Campbell of the online news show Moblogic.tv

"Brian Agosta dot com," said Brian Agosta.

"Yeah," said Campbell, her main piece of advice illustrated: "Promote yourself." 

(via LA Times' Webscout blog)

So, henceforth, I shall be known as: EstherKMyUrbanKvetchJDatersAnonymousJewliciousBeliefnet'sIdolChatterPresenTenseandvariousothers.com.

Lyrical, ain't it? Just rolls off the tongue, almost as well as Esther Kustanowitz. No way that's going to fit in the "name" box on the SAT's, though. And if I get married, hyphenation is going to be hell on the kids.
I guess we'll cross that bridge some other time. Hopefully, after I've been to SXSW.

Missed Mishpatim? Catch the 'cast

If you missed my presentation at the Skirball Center on Parshat Mishpatim, you can download the entire lecture (including the mini-community-theater feature) on iTunes or here at the Skirball website. Enjoy, and I look forward to your comments!

Almost Famous; Still Grateful

Israelityposter Wednesday morning, I leave for the adventure of a journalist's life and something I never dreamed was within my reach--going on a West Coast tour with a hip-hop act. OK, so it's an Israeli hip-hop act, Subliminal and the T.A.C.T. Family, and we're accompanied by hip-hop/funk band Coolooloosh and "Rosh Hashanah Girl" Michelle Citrin. Still, Subliminal's Israel's #1 hip-hop artist, so think of it as me being on tour with Eminem. (Sort of.) Sponsored by Birthright Israel, the tour hits seven cities for the Israelity Tour, Where West Coast Meets Middle East. You can follow all the action on our blog, buy tickets here, and read about us in the JWeekly here.

Before I go on the road and make all the hip-hop artists sing "Tiny Dancer" on the bus (see clip below), I just wanted to thank those of you who came to my presentation at the AfterWords session (the podcast is available on iTunes, and should shortly be available on the Skirball Center website).

The session provided me with a chance to delve into last week's Torah portion from a position of real inquiry, unfettered by fears of what my teachers would say in response to my questions; and also, coming in a week right after I lost a friend very suddenly, it was an honor to be able to dedicate my learning to his memory.

And although the class isn't happening till tomorrow night, I received word that the Improv for Daters session at the JCC is sold out. So if you wanted to join us and didn't reserve a spot, let them know you'd like to see me back on the calendar for summer or fall...and thanks for the support!

So unless I get subsumed into the T.A.C.T. Family as an MC--hey, you never know what can happen on the road--I will continue to blog, at a somewhat reduced rate here, but certainly in other places. Stay tuned for an exciting two weeks!

And now, that clip:

AfterWords: The Flyer

Next up, AfterWords the Motion Picture. AfterWords the lunchbox. Etc...

Remember, RSVPs get comped admission. Yes, it's been confirmed. But you have to RSVP to me by Thursday early afternoon...

Where You'll Find Me: Events at Skirball and the JCC, Plus Israelity Tour

This Thursday at 7, I'm honored to be part of the Skirball Center's series on the weekly Torah portion. Titled "AfterWords," the series features writers, teachers and other Jewish thought leaders leading lecture and discussion about the Torah portion. My luck: I have parshat Mishpatim, which is best known for containing some of the most boringly inscrutable laws of the Torah. I will take the best of Mishpatim and present it to you on Thursday night. So see what I do with that challenge...show up on Thursday for an hour and see if I sink or swim. The class is $10. But if you RSVP to me, I'll see if I can get you a discount. (No promises...)  More information about the Skirball Center is here.

Next week (my last week in tour before I leave for the Israelity Tour--check out our frequently updated blog here), I'm doing one of my "Improv for Daters" sessions at the JCC, February 5 at 7pm:

Join us for this improv comedy meets singles mixer designed to improve your dating and relating skills. Singles columnist and improviser Esther D. Kustanowitz will teach you basic improv techniques and games that will make the process of dating easier and more fun. You don't have to be funny, just a single guy or gal willing to listen. Light refreshments provided; post-event mingling encouraged and inevitable. Registration limited; sign up early! ($15 members, $20 for non-members--register here!)

Come and participate; at this event, there will be no spectating--everyone improvises. Don't worry; you've been improvising your whole life and you didn't even know it!!

And if you're reading this on the West Coast, I'm winging your way soon, with the Israelity Tour, bringing great bands (including #1 Israeli hip-hop artist Subliminal and his T.A.C.T. Family; Israeli funk hip-hop group Coolooloosh and singer/songwriter Michelle Citrin) to seven West Coast cities from February 6-18--starting with Seattle, ending in Las Vegas, and hitting most of California in the middle. For precise dates, locations and to buy tickets, see the Israelity Tour section of the Birthright Israel website.

Hope to see you locally, or on the road!

Shameless Post-Hanukkah Post

In case people still wanted the information about how to find my Amazon wish list, it's here.My Amazon.com Wish List

The Week in Clips

Because I'm going to be busy most of Wednesday, I wanted to take this chance to post links to some other places where I've been writing these days--enjoy, and leave comments!

Looking for the Perfect...Shul (Jewish Week--new column!)

The Moment It Dawned On Me That Being Jewish Is Important (The Jewish Journal, L.A.)

Battle of the Beneficent Beverages (Jewlicious)

Amy Winehouse's Mom's Plea to Daughter (Beliefnet)

Your Season's Greetings: Too Generic? Or Too Personal? (Beliefnet)

You're An Old One, Mr. Grinch (Beliefnet)

Italian Priest Bans Red Bull Commercial (Beliefnet)

Could "Vacation" Be a Best Foreign Oscar Contender? (Beliefnet)

Follow the Brick Road to Central City: "TinMan" Revisits the Classic (Beliefnet)

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