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Elul 5785: Elul 9

Elul IX: High on Love

 

To God: A love poem for Elul

 

For My Love, I want to be my best self

Because when I am my best-self, You are Your best-self

And when Our best-selves come together

there is nothing better

We can take on the world; its possibilities are

                    endless

 

I returned to You out of fear, once

Not fear that You would harm me if I left You,

The opposite – fear of losing You

Fear that You would turn away from me,

from the ugliness of me at not-my-best

 

But no sooner had I returned to You, did You remind me:

Your love is unconditional.

Even at my not-best

Even when I am being ridiculous – You still love me

You might even love me more, for all my faults and frailties

You enfolded me like a broken bird and held me until I was healed

 

And when you opened your hands to let me fly, strong and free

the love We felt for one another in that moment

                    – Your pride and My gratitude –

was intoxicating

An incomparable high.

 

It is that love which calls me back now,

stronger than a fear of losing what cannot be lost

A longing to feel that kind of love again

                    the headiness of reunion

the relief of feeling close to You again, after being estranged

the comfort of coming back into Your presence,

knowing You are just as glad to have Me back

as I am to be back in Your loving embrace

once more

 

For this, I return

For this, I can forgive

For this, I can do the work

For this, I can be better

                    if this is my reward              

 

For my love,

I can be my higher self

 

Writing Prompt: Our sages teach that there are two types of teshuvah, a turning/returning that is compelled by fear, teshuvah m’yirah, and a turning/returning that comes from a (higher) love, teshuvah m’ahavah. . . the repair and repentance that we do out of fear is fine – it gets the job done, but the teshuvah that is compelled by love, that is what we aspire to. R’ Toba Spitzer describes teshuvah m’ahava as a “teshuvah that comes from a desire to make close that which has been far off, to return to a state of intimacy with all that is Godly within ourselves and the world around us.” . . .  I wonder if it is possible to give voice to a desire for intimacy; to write a love poem to yourself, to the world, to the Holy One of Blessing. How can you tap into the love that is the foundation of this work?

Elul
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