The Connections Warren-Watching Edition Sep/Oct/Nov 2020

But the aftermath, after the shock, the steady flow of people there for support, is the loneliness … that lack of connection to the person who is gone, all that is left unspoken, the terribly harsh reality. My wish is that will make the loneliness a little less painful, and we will always open our hearts again. Perhaps the emotion that can create the most sadness is the feeling of being lone- ly. Different than being alone, being lonely feels as if there is a part of oneself that is missing, a sense of loss, a sense of floating without a tether. It breaks my heart when I think of the pain loneliness causes. I imag- ine not simply walking into a room that is empty but walking into a room where there is no connection to anything or anybody. As many of my readers know, it has been a difficult period for my family and me. We had to say goodbye to my nephew, as well as very close friends, all within a few months. Their deaths came quickly, reminding me that life is fragile and we are vulner- able. We are enculturated to believe that “this, too, shall pass,” and it does. But the aftermath, after the shock, the steady flow of people there for sup- port, is the loneliness … that lack of connection to the person who is gone, all that is left un- spoken, the terribly harsh reality. Some say to leave on a light, a radio or television for sound, and that can certain- ly help the need for company. Filling the room with life, energy, music, is a positive, creating the feeling others are there with you. But in reality, it isn’t the absence that is felt, I believe, but the presence of the one who is gone, their presence felt in every corner and crevice of the room. It is the in- ability to reach that loved one that causes the agony. When I was a college student living in a new city, I felt sad to see someone din- ing alone in a restaurant. My very active imagination assumed that person was without … nobody to fill their life. I would create scenarios in my mind of star- crossed lovers that had families deter- mining their fate, Romeo and Juliet-style. Or marriages gone bad, anger lurking in the salad and breadsticks on their plate. As I matured, I realized it was my fear that caused such a reaction, such a projection. Loneliness is not being alone. Loneliness is the agony of loss. My friend told me recently that reach- ing out in the middle of the night to sim- ply touch his deceased wife felt like an arrow to his chest…the knowledge she was no longer there. The same action he had performed for decades now brought such pain. Oh, how I agonize for him. There is no acceptance; no understanding that makes it acceptable to be with- out. Or the reaching of the phone to text or call one’s child and know it will not be met with an answer. How do we move on, move past, move forward? Needless to say, I have no ability to pro- vide an answer. Mere mortals, all of us, we know of no way to explain loss, loneliness, acceptance. Religion, faith, belief, hopes all salve our brittle nerve endings, per- haps propelling us through our days. But the nights seem to be endless when one is suffering, the thoughts putting up a screen between sleep and the harsh reality. Finding ways to embrace memories, keeping the eternal flame of love alive, celebrating accomplishments, and ded- icating actions to those we loved and lost may mollify the tearing of the heart. And knowing in our hearts that however, we embrace the memory of the one we mourn, is the right thing. My wish is that will make the loneliness a little less pain- ful, and we will always open our hearts again. LONELINESS IS A HEART BREAKER S lice of L ife By Ellyn Mantell THE WARREN-WATCHUNG CONNECTION PAGE 12 SEPT/OCT/NOV 2020 theconnectionsnj.com SPECIAL DUES PROGRAM for New Members includes High Holiday tickets Contact: membership@ckibbnj.org Rabbi Stephen Wylen 229 Mountain Avenue, Bound Brook Cantor Eddie Roffman 732-469-0934 info@ckibbnj.org Rosh Hashanah Sept. 18: 7:30 pm Sept. 19 & 20: 9:30 am Services are open to all on Sept 20 — no tickets required Yom Kippur Sept. 27: 6:30 pm - Kol Nidre Sept. 28: 9:30 am WORSHIP WITH US AT OUR ONLINE HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES CKI’s RELIGIOUS SCHOOL offers individual Bar/Bat Mitzvahs where your child can shine! Contact school@ckibbnj.org for more information and to register for the 2020-21 year. Please contact the temple office for details PARTICIPATE IN OUR ACTIVITIES FROM YOUR HOME ! 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