1 Year Later

Takoma Park, Maryland

“Make new friends, but keep the old.
One is silver, the other is gold.

A circle is round, it has no end.
That’s how long, I will be your friend.

A fire burns bright, it warms the heart.
We’ve been friends, from the very start.

You have one hand, I have the other.
Put them together, we have each other.

Silver is precious, gold is too.
I am precious, and so are you.

You help me and I’ll help you
and together we will see it through…
Girl Scouts of the USA

Friday, June 14, 2024. What would have been a typical Friday. Dropping my daughter off at school. Staying for an Early Childhood (EC) Shabbat morning gathering at her preschool. But today, in a mere moment, I’m catapulted into a time machine. I drop my daughter off at her “old” school for the summer. (It is a family run daycare that has a preschool within it). She will attend from mid-June to mid-August, just barely two months. No big deal, right? It was a logistical decision really, to bridge us from one school year to the next at our new Jewish community day school, where our daughter has thrived this past school year. She’s grown by leaps and bounds. There have of course been some bumps but we have ridden the waves of transition and she has settled into a new “home.”

Finding ourselves back at the doorstep of our “old” school is like putting a mirror in front of us where I’m unexpectedly reflecting back on myself and this past year. Am I proud of what we have accomplished? Can everyone see my wrinkled forehead now? Why does it feel like we continue to ride the waves of a new family? The transitions just keep coming…

And this “old school” is the school where we first dropped our daughter off when she had barely started walking, at about 14 months old. She was known for her “babbling,” going on and on and on with gibberish before she learned to put her words together. Before she started singing Moanna lyrics and dancing to her new beats. This is where her teachers picked her up to change a diaper on the large wooden changing table and slobbered sunscreen on her before going outside. Where she had her first skinned knees. Where we learned she was a “jokester,” egging on the other students to join her in a mischievous rebellion. Where we learned from her teachers that she was incredibly bright and hard-willed. Standing in the center of the room, refusing to leave when the rest of the group was transitioning from one activity to the next. “I don’t want to X, Y, Z!” she would exclaim. Transitions have always been hard for her (and now I know where she gets that from).

Last summer when we said goodbye to her old school, she had just turned three. She was so brave and went with the flow as we moved her in July for her birthday to a new preschool room within the school and then again at the end of August to a whole new school. She looks around the room this morning, following my eyes looking nervously around the room too. Wondering perhaps, where do I put my lunchbox here? I hang my backpack on a hook and not in a cubby? My parents come inside for drop off instead of saying goodbye outside? All seemingly innocuous, trivial concerns, but in the head of a toddler, not insignificant at all.

Our daughter’s time at the “old” school last summer was a fog. A blurry haze. On June 15, 2023 I broke my ankle in a freak accident. One week later I had major surgery and two weeks later I started a new full time job. I stumbled into this school on my crutches most of the summer to do drop off. 

And today I find myself asking, what have I been present for in the last year? What has changed? What has stayed the same?

It’s now summer 2024…I’m jogging (albeit slowly) again. I’m more confident working full time again since having my daughter. I have colleagues I respect. We’ve weathered (and continue to weather) deep, deep trauma from upheaval in Israel and Gaza…the existential threats and panic it’s brought to our bodies and our people. It has been all-consuming. And yet, after a year attending a Jewish day school, our daughter can now recite the prayers on Shabbat. She hums and mumbles tunes in Hebrew, without being aware that I’m listening. My heart warms for the community she’s created and the safety and comfort of her “new” school. 

AND I can be grateful that she will be held in safety this summer too. She will step back and forward at the same time. She will continue to stretch and grow, even with the time machine we’ve placed before her. 

I stand back in awe as she points out letters on the carpet she knows and peers through the window at the gaping playground she just barely remembers climbing on as a 3 year old. “I remember that playground. I love that playground,” she says. My heart constricts and then releases. And I remember, we are okay. We have been through a lot this year, AND we are okay. 

We can take two steps forward and two steps back at the same time. This is not a contradiction. Or perhaps it is and then life is a moving target of contradictions. 

And rather than resist and make sense of all the waves intellectually, we can exhale and let go of the resistance and the constriction. I will accept that this summer will bring with it a new journey for her and for us. A new plethora of trail heads. All pointing in different directions. And our daughter will bravely explore them all. With gratitude for new beginnings and old memories all seeped into one. I’m still a bit hesitant but grateful to be welcomed back. 

Perhaps our reflections and “time travel” do not need to be projected on our children. Our waves of emotions and dizziness at times do not have to dictate their journeys. 

As I exhale and buckle in for this next chapter, I draw wisdom from this classic campfire song I started singing last week when explaining that she was going to a “new/old school” this summer… “Make new friends, But keep the old. Some are silver and the other gold.”

May we lean into each day at this “new/old school,” making new memories, built upon layers and layers of old ones, that form a foundation on which we keep moving forward.

Waves of Anxiety, through the Generations

Sometimes the most healing thing to do is remind ourselves over and over and over, other people feel this too.

Andrea Gibson
Photo by Ricky Esquivel
Stranany Cemetery, Michalovce, Slovakia, March 2011

My alarm goes off most mornings around 5:30am. I hear the familiar vibration, followed by a paradoxical “sing songy” instrument that I think is meant to be soothing. I immediately hit snooze and then proceed to do the same thing 10 minutes later, and sometimes 10 minutes after that, and so on. I know research says this is not a healthy way to start the day. According to headspace, “We add to our stress by starting our morning in a fight with our alarms, where we eventually concede defeat.” It’s a bad habit and I find myself often spending the next 20 minutes or so repeating mantras in my head in an effort to convince myself that everything is okay…That I am okay. That I am strong and brave and wise. These are also the same affirmations I tell my daughter most nights, hoping to instill what has often been hard for me to accept for myself.

What is anxiety really? It is distinguished by the American Psychological Association (APA) from fear, which is considered an “appropriate” response to “a clearly identifiable and specific threat.” Despite this distinction, I think it’s still fair to say that fear is at the root of most anxiety and that anxiety plays out in all of us to some degree. While society has made tremendous progress in terms of normalizing anxiety and other mental health conditions, it still doesn’t welcome these emotions at the proverbial “table.” It’s still taboo, for example, to talk about anxiety and depression at the lunch table, with your supervisor or at your child’s parent-teacher conference. And therefore, too many people suffer alone.

I’ve been in and out of therapy to treat anxiety for over half of my life. This is hard to admit and yet, I think important to normalize. And I know today’s youth are struggling at even younger ages. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on youth, for example, has only exacerbated an already horrific downward trend.

With the international climate aflame with strife and violence, I’ve been spending a lot more time thinking about Epigenetics, intergenerational trauma and their impact on mental health.  The idea that environmental factors or traumatic events can affect your genes and the way “your body reads and responds to your DNA” is hard to wrap your head around. And yet, I’m seeing it unpacked more and more, not just through a scientific lens, but within the arts, spiritual spaces and even counseling settings.

Now working for a Jewish organization whose mission is to fight hate and antisemitism, I’ve been spending a lot more time thinking about my own family lineage. While I’m sure my anxiety can be attributed to multiple factors, both environmental and genetic, I do wonder if my nervous system is responding, not just to perceived threats in my own life, but to those real threats that my ancestors battled with and against for centuries. How long have ancestors from within all of our communities been fighting off threats such as hate and bigotry and how does this dynamic play out in our bodies today?  I wanted to know more. And so, I turned to literature.

I recently finished the novel, The Many Daughters of Afong Moy, by Jamie Ford, and am struck by how the role of Epigenetics is being explored through historical fiction as well. An Asian-American author, Ford unpacks the role of inherited trauma through the female lineage of Afong Moy, the first Chinese woman to set foot in the US in 1834. Ford beautifully weaves together stories of Moy’s descendants, including a nurse in China serving with the Flying Tigers in WWII, a young girl quarantined during an epidemic of bubanic plague in San Francisco in 1900 and Washington’s former poet laureate, Dorothy Moy, who is raising a daughter and fighting for her mental health in 2045. In pursuing an experimental treatment designed to mitigate inherited trauma, Dorothy Moy intimately connects with past generations of women in her family tree. While the novel weaves in elements of mysticism and science fiction, it is beautiful and heart-wrenching and feels very, very real.

When I was living overseas in France in 2010-2011 in my late 20’s, I decided to take advantage of my proximity to Eastern Europe and explore first hand where my family emigrated from and why they might have left. I am the first person in my family (that I’m aware of) to have taken the pilgrimage back to the tiny town in what is now Eastern Slovakia where my family lived, before emigrating to the United States in the 1880’s. Thanks to Wikipedia and the stories passed down from my grandfather with whom I was extremely close, I know that my great-great Uncle, late Rabbi Joseph Hertz was born in Rebrín/Rebrény, Hungary in 1872. This town is presently part of the village of Zemplínska Široká in Slovakia. Hertz emigrated to New York City in 1884 a year or two after his older brother, Emmanuel (my great Grandfather) and their father, Simon came looking for better opportunities, in the face of rising antisemitism at home.

Joseph went on to become the first graduate of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in 1894 and would go on to serve as a Rabbi in New York and South Africa. He served his final post as the Chief Rabbi of Great Britain and the Commonwealth from 1913 through two world wars and until his death in 1946.

Every few years I go back and re-read aspects of his story and discover something I didn’t know before. In my latest reading, I learned that in 1920-1921 Rabbi Hertz was the first chief rabbi to undertake a “pastoral tour” of the British empire. His pilgrimage would take him over 40,000 miles and to over 40 Jewish communities around the world, including in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and Canada. Just reading this is a reminder that the Jewish diaspora is wide and nuanced, built upon waves of complexity and layers of history, going back to biblical times.

My own personal pilgrimage to the village of Zemplínska Široká in the spring of 2011 took me to a small town that was completely wiped of its Jewish population at the turn of the century. To get there, I took a 10 hour night train from Prague to Košice, a bus from Košice to Michalovce and another smaller bus from Michalovce to Zemplínska Široká. I had arranged beforehand to meet a local historian in Michalovce who was kind enough to drive me to an old, overgrown and abandoned Jewish cemetery outside of town. I wanted to see if I could find the grave of my great aunt’s grandparents who were believed to be buried in that town (hence the photos above and below). While I didn’t find their specific tombstones I did find one with the same family name I was searching for (Friedman). It was remarkable to be that close to my own family story and yet to know so little about what they went through to pave the way for my family light years away.

And here I am in 2023, raising a family of my own in Middletown, CT.  As I write these words I question if I am struggling with some existential desire to answer an unspoken cry from my ancestors. What am I in search of that they never found? What inherited trauma has been passed down to me that I must embody and then let pass through me, so that it doesn’t get passed down the family line even further. 

How does inherited trauma continue to play out in our own bodies and become experienced as anxiety?

I’m not sure where this search will lead, but I know that I must take a pastoral tour of my own, to understand why and from where our pangs of unworthiness, fear and anxiety stem. I know I am not alone. And I know that the answer lies in 1000 different places.

When I wake up tomorrow though, and find myself at battle with my snooze button, I will try and be just a little kinder to myself and lean into the strengths passed down from generations of ancestors who were likely all just trying to do the same.

לְדוֹר וָדוֹר, l’dor vador, “from generation to generation”

An ancient concept in Judaic scripture generally interpreted to mean that we have a responsibility to pass on teachings from one generation to the next.

Meditation on Parenting

“What would it be like if I could accept life – accept this moment – exactly as it is?”

Tara Brach

Accept that I do need my family’s help, a lot.

Accept that I clogged a toilet 5 minutes before signing on to a virtual meeting this morning and had to wait till after the meeting to plunge it. 

Accept that as I’m about to take my daughter out for the morning to a museum, I learn that she might have an ear infection and need to stay local and schedule a last minute doctor’s appointment instead. 

Accept that during our “local” playtime when we went to the library, my daughter showed that she definitely doesn’t fully understand the concept of sharing. (Snatched toy train cars from a child’s hands, proclaiming “mine!”)

Accept that my daughter said “mommy and daddy” as I was putting her in her car seat after the library. (She does not have a daddy.)

Accept that her lunch with egg salad was VERY messy and went all over her and the floor. 

Accept that all I could do with the dog today was a short 5 minute walk.


Accept that parenting is hard. So much of it is outside our control…in fact every tiny moment is outside our control. The more we can let go of expectations and lean into acceptance and grace the better. Perhaps then we can laugh and lean into unexpected moments of joy along the way. (photo taken that same evening when we made it to Middletown’s Crystal Lake Park)