Dazed and confused? Not me. I’m just Lost in the Cheese Aisle.

Monday, October 1, 2012

A KINDA SORTA BIRTHDAY

Lulav and Etrog
The lulav (palm branch with myrtle and willow) and etrog (citron), symbols of the Feast of Tabernacles.

Today is the first day of the Jewish festival of Sukkot, the Feast of Tabernacles.

No, tabernacles are not those crustaceans that grow on the hulls of old ships.  They are, rather, the little booths that observant Jews - the kind that don’t write blogposts on holidays - construct in their back yards during this festival, there to partake in meals and even, weather permitting, camp out.

Sukkot is also known as z’man simchateinu, the season of our joy.  It makes sense: in the Old Days, the broiling hot summer would be over, the fall harvest would be in, and it would be time to traipse off to Jerusalem for eight days of barbecue.

For me, Sukkot is a bittersweet holiday.  It’s the harbinger of the cooler autumn weather and the changing leaves, and the coda to the challenging moral introspection of the High Holidays.  The eve of the holiday is the yahrzeit of my beloved Uncle Phil, who passed away two years ago.  And the first day of Sukkot is my birthday... at least, according to the Hebrew calendar.

Which means, by Jewish reckoning, I am sixty years old today.  Hoo-hah!

And, since my Hebrew name is Simcha, what better time to be born than on the kickoff day of z’man simchateinu?

(As far as the civil calendar is concerned, I still have three days to go.  Might as well enjoy the last waning moments of fifty-hood while I can, eh?)

3 comments:

Kevin Kim said...

Happy hwan-gap! In East Asian reckoning, one's sixtieth birthday marks five rounds (hwan = round) of the twelve-year zodiac cycle-- a major accomplishment in olden times. Considerate relatives fĂȘted the ju-in-gong (birthday dude/dude-ette) with lots of food and plenty of grandiloquent speeches.

BobG said...

Happy birthday; may you have many more.

Rahel said...

Happy birthday, Simcha Steve Elisson Krodman, and many, many more -- till at least 120 in good health and joy.