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Ever tried to pack too much into a day? We did on Friday.
And although it required sophisticated pre-planning, we thought we had it all
under control.
Our To Do List for the day:
‘dropping by’ after dinner
on whether everything runs smoothly…and one never knows what can happen in a
day.
station. We had our son’s bike on the roof rack as he wanted to pick it up
later and ride to the beach to catch a few waves. (He was not planning on
coming to Tsfat.)
race, the train was leaving in five minutes and, uh, oh, everyone else in the
parking lot was wearing the same marathon shirt as us. We were swarmed by
hundreds of other runners who also decided to take the train—and there was only
one stressed-out man at the ticket booth.
one and did not want to be late for the starting line, jumped over the stile
along with about 100 other frantic runners and disappeared down the stairs.
happy to take the next train. We made it
to the race just on time. Music was blasting. People were stretching, chatting,
jumping, shaking out their limbs. With 40,000 runners packed in to a small area,
we only realized the race had begun when the mass slowly surged forward. The
road was so dense with people, we had to constantly dart and dodge between
runners. This race felt like a cross between bumper cars on Nikes and a massive
street party.
sipping café lattes in outdoor cafés and cyclists carrying baskets brimming
with flowers and fresh produce from the market.
teenage girl with Cerebral Palsy accompanied by three watchful youths who
protected her on each side. The Israeli National Speed Walking Club was out
there strutting their stuff while Hareidi women, covered in black long sleeves,
ran past girls in skimpy pink tops. I felt as if I were part of one united,
healthy, happy nation.
We ran past a rock band, thumping away, strumming a fast beat to encourage us from the middle of an intersection. A few kilometers later, a full
choir belted out tunes from a park. It was all so invigorating, fun, lively.
And since we were running at a good pace, it was likely that we would be
heading home soon.
We were about eight kilometers into the run so I ignored it.
It rang again and I ignored it a second time. My husband’s phone rang and he picked it
up as we jogged along.
turnstile- jumping-overly-eager-determined-to-win son.
but could not remember. Fainted? Collapsed? After many years of living in
Israel, I still could not comprehend the important stuff. But what I did understand was that my son was in the hospital.
other than follow the crowd to the finish line. The dancing and music at the
end meant nothing to me as I made a beeline to the exit; I knew I had to find
my son, but first needed to find my car or the train station or a cab.
at my watch and decided there was no reason to be frazzled as I was not going
to Tsfat. The cabbie, in true Israeli-philosopher cab style, told me not to
worry, that all was good and it could have been worse and ‘ze lo Nicaragua.’
in the Middle East surrounded by enemies. But since cabbies in Israel are
modern-day prophets, I took this as a
special message reminding me to be calm and grateful.
back to Tel Aviv. But since many roads were closed due to the marathon, we
could not get to the hospital so easily.
The clock was ticking.
My husband
jumped out at the emergency ward of Ichilov Hospital and I decided to park the
car. So I entered the underground parking lot.
steering wheel. I got out to investigate and saw a gnarled bike squished into
the metal rack like the peanut butter and jelly sandwich I recently found in
the bottom of my son’s back pack.
into metal, I cannot lift a bike off this rack. And now? No one was around in
this deep, dark garage. Sweaty, tired from the race and stressed out about my
son, I just wanted to curl up in the back seat of the car and cry. But I did
not. I pulled and tugged and extracted the bike, then shoved it into the back
of the car. By this time, my husband and son were outside waiting for me.
there was no person at a pay booth. All you needed to
exit this dungeon was a credit card. But I, unprepared in my sweaty running clothes, had
nothing on me but a 100 nis bill.
I parked the car and ran inside wildly, looking for someone who could guide me
out of this dark abyss.
with cash. I paid then exited into the garage, but could not find my car. The nightmare continued, spiraling me into stress. Of course my
phone was at one percent battery. So I gave in and panicked, running around the parking garage like a mad person,
jogging up and down the lanes and ramps, cursing my bad sense of direction.
Forget about Shabbat in Tsfat, I thought. I will be spending my Shabbat in this
parking garage. And with my nearly dead phone, I would not even be able to tell my husband
where to rescue me.
out, ducking my neck under the low concrete ceilings, afraid the entire car roof would cave in over me.
my husband and son, who, it turned out, was OK. He just needed to learn how to
use his brain more than his feet while running. I decided he should stay in sight close by my side for the next decade.
doorstep at 1:30, exactly three hours behind schedule.
pulled food out of the fridge and freezer, stuffing it into plastic bags. No time for a shower or eating or
packing Shabbat clothes. Not this time. We jumped back in the car, picked up my daughter who had been
waiting at school three hours for us and hit the highway.
was teary; grateful that my son was healthy; relieved that we made it here safely and on time; ecstatic that I
had Shabbat in my life and thrilled that I was here in Israel, ‘lo Nicaragua.’
Before me lay a full 24 hours of pure, divine, timelessness. If I did not have Shabbat, I know how complicated and fast paced my life would be. Just imagine what my To Do list would look like.
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