Thursday, March 22, 2007

Hazon 2007: Two Rides is Better Than One

The following letter I wrote 3 March 2007 22:02:37, titled "IF+Hazon 2007: The Next Live+Work Steps for Super Ben." I continue my request for your support as I prepare for not one but two Jewish environmental bike rides with Hazon this year, one for which I am the route planner.

Moments ago (when written this afternoon), while reading To Be of Use: The Seven Seeds of Meaningful Work, a recent title by Dave Smith (cofounder of Smith & Hawken), I derived the inspiration to write this letter to you. I have been lax about sending news out to friends and family for a long time. Sometime last year, my hope was that my next message would be an announcement of my full-time employment in the DC Government, where I spent three years on contract, working on a variety of environmental programs. But that never happened. In the end, a week after I returned to Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center last fall, I was abruptly asked to stop working because DC no longer had a means to pay me. Well, the story is much longer, but that is in my past now and I'd rather tell you of the exciting moments in my life since.

After a second season working for the Teva Learning Center and Isabella Freedman, I returned to Takoma Park to housesit for Michael and Esther, close friends next door to my parents, for three weeks; I continued to live in their midst for another five. During those two months, I deeply missed the friendships I'd formed and the community that became part of me at Freedman, so I set out to make an agreement about work and compensation to continue my career there. Well, there is now here, and here is where I have decided to spend 2007.

Returning as the super hero who proved his variety of skills and ability to complete tasks effectively, quickly, and without hesitation during two seasons past, I have been also named Director of Special Projects. So you'll also discover on the staff list in Freedman's 2007 Program Catalog, which will be published soon. I will continue to support the core divisions (housekeeping, kitchen, maintenance, office), offer ongoing technical guidance, and monitor energy consumption on retreat center property—which saved 30% of energy costs in 2005 over the previous year, due to my Energy Man responsibilities. In addition, I will take on any number of other projects, as assigned by Adam Berman and Ari Weller (Freedman directors).

Special Project #1 has involved the Bookstore, a second generation to the gift shop at Elat Chayyim, the Jewish Renewal retreat center that merged with Freedman last fall, becoming the Elat Chayyim Center for Jewish Spirituality. Bookstore manager Ben Appelle (ADAMAH fellow, fall 2006) and I researched half a dozen point-of-sale software packages and found one with enough features and a usable visual interface that we determined would best suit Freedman's needs of accounting, sales reporting, and general store management. We'll be setting up the store with new electronics and a working software application this week. And so begins again Super Ben's contributions to Isabella Freedman, a community that has become dear to my mind, body, and spirit.

In addition to all this, I will be participating in Elat Chayyim's summer Neshamah internship program, a Jewish Renewal learning seminar and service opportunity. And overall, I have defined 2007 as a sabbatical year for my career, during which I will be reading such books as To Be of Use and Jill Hammer's new The Jewish Book of Days, discovering new connections between environment, faith, and the paths I wish to follow in life.

You can read more about my adventures this year on my blog, To Save the Planet. [Oh, wait, that's what you're doing now, isn't it? Funny thing.]


As you probably know, bicycling has become a vital component of my local transportation. Back in the D.C. area last year, I started commuting to work daily and getting most places in the District by bicycle, spending far less time using public transit. During summer 2005, I upgraded my bicycle to Xtracycle so I could safely transport my office to work. Another repercussion was my new ability to buy a full load of groceries and prevent my consumption from being so limited anymore. And in 2003, I started participating in Hazon's New York Jewish Environmental Bike Ride, a two-day 120+ mile ride ending in Manhattan. (The 2004 Ride introduced me to Isabella Freedman and the Teva Learning Center.)

Well, just a few months ago, discussions began about having a similar ride in the D.C. area, and after many weeks of planning since then, I'm thrilled to inform you that I will be riding with Hazon not once but twice this year!, because the first DC Jewish Environmental Bike Ride will take place on Earth Day, Sunday, April 22. And you are now hearing from the route planner!

This one-day, 54-mile ride will wind its way from Am Kolel Sanctuary & Renewal Center and quiet country roads of western Montgomery County, Maryland, to urban bike routes of the District of Columbia. It will include paths following the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers and their confluence at Hains Point, and an approach to the U.S. Capitol before ending at Sixth & I Historic Synagogue.

Even though we Ride planners have such crucial roles, we are still riding, and we also need to fundraise. So, in the next seven weeks, I need to raise $800. And four months beyond that, I need to be up to $1800 for the 2007 New York Jewish Environmental Bike Ride, which will feature an entirely new route this year, between Freedman and Manhattan. Shouldn't be hard, though, with someone special like you in my life.

Half of your donation will support Jewish environmental projects in the D.C. area. The rest will go to Hazon, based in New York City, to fund other domestic and Israeli programs and help Hazon on its way as a visioning Jewish environmental nonprofit foundation. Every day, my work is bringing meaningful change to people as part of our environment, and guiding them toward new change for others yet. Because of this ongoing opportunity, and the community that surrounds it, I am happy.

Only 22 donations of $36 will bring me over $800; I need 50 to meet $1800. Will you be one of the first 22? Will you give more so others feel justified in whatever amount they can afford? Choose one of the amounts offered on my donation page or enter your own. Just know that however much you give will be a worthwhile investment in your own future. (Of course it is a tax-deductible contribution, too).

Smiles & Thanks to you for your support and love! (Chag Sameach to those in drunken celebration.)

- Super Ben
Alive (and Kicking) to Save the Planet

IF07: Snow Patrol


Like the rest of the East Coast, we've been experiencing unusual weather conditions, alternating between blizardous snows and warmth in the 50s and 60s. Last Friday afternoon I was out shoveling snow, trying to ready the property for 100+ women arriving from B'nai Jeshurun in NYC, and I could hardly tell where I had shoveled only an hour or two before. And I was out again Saturday morning, clearing paths for them to get to breakfast. The temperature was in the 20s. Skip ahead to this afternoon, though, and I was again shoveling snow but in short sleeves. In the sun, the air was at least 60° and it was easing my process of clearing walkways for this weekend's retreat.

Community life has been exciting of late. Two nights ago, the women went to Julie's room for a Rosh Chodesh observance and we four guys were left spontaneously deciding to form a men's group. I expressed my past distaste for these groups, but the context had been men much older than me, whose personal issues didn't appeal to me. This would be different, I figured, given the age similarity and the nature of our existing friendship in the context of Isabella Freedman. So, we moseyed into Bryan's room and spent 10 minutes writing (journalishly) and about four minutes each sharing.

One of the main thoughts I offered about myself was my perspective on many of the tasks I've worked on this last month. Some would consider them menial, but I make only positive, opportunistic conclusions about them. I see how a challenge builds character, deepens my sense of self, and makes me happy simply because of my progress that benefits the community. After our individual sharing, we opened to discussion and I had more than one chance to offer my optimistic wisdom to lead others to greater happiness in light of their present situations.

As I was saying, our community has improved drastically in only the last couple days. There has been wide frustration about a variety of issues, including Passover housing constraints, organizational communication (or lack thereof), and cleaning supplies. A lot of this seems to repeat a root cause of the way Freedman operates and manages staff. However, a Mishpocha (family) meeting Monday evening was an opportunity to speak from the heart and check in personally and communally about our issues/fellings, etc. It resulted in a possibly groundbreaking beginning of new, positive change at Freedman.

In the meantime, I've been hard at work in the Bookstore. Tuesday morning, we started a manual inventory of our entire stock. It's taking far longer than we originally anticipated, but it's necessary to make sure we have what our database says we have before we can order more stuff. Good thing we only have to do this once! We finished the entire "warehouse" (basement of the Synagogue) by Tuesday afternoon and as of this afternoon the audio/video section is done, too. I stayed late today to continue the books, which are probably two-thirds complete and I intend to finish them before guests arrive tomorrow afternoon. That will only leave jewelry, art, and clothing for early next week.

Also tomorrow, besides finishing the walkway scrapage, I have a meeting with Ari and Rose to discuss credit card processing. I've been corresponding with a sales rep from Axia, one of two card processors compatible with LightSpeed, who has helped me understand how the credit card industry works and whose services should help Freedman consolidate its card processing operations rather than complexify them. Rose has been reluctant to open an account with yet another of these companies as she already deals with three. Adding Axia to the mix may actually reduce that number to two, by replacing the systems used for donations and retreat registrations. So we'll discuss in the morning.

So, we had about 18 inches of snow here between last weekend's blizzard and a second storm earlier this week. And Friday evening's Shabbat service practice was really special as six of us stood together in a circle in Brown House Kitchen. The group started in L'cha Dodi and worked backward, selecting Kabbalat Shabbat tunes out of traditional order and enjoying the sparks of creativity and vocal harmony that resulted. And the weekend that followed was not terribly relaxing given the shoveling and other constraints, but still fun nonetheless.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

IF07: Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr


More to tell but just a quick update.

Woke up this morning to partly cloudy skies, windy conditions, and a temperature of –7°F (–21°C), and a windchill of –28°F (–33°C).

And don't you worry. I can hear all the wind out there. (I even have frost on my windows, from condensation after running my humidifier last night.)