Seeing into the Life of Things: Imagination and the Sacred Encounter

Seeing into the Life of Things: Imagination and the Sacred Encounter

Seeing into the Life of Things:

Imagination and the Sacred Encounter

Practice with Rodger Kamenetz

January 14 – February 11, 2026

Five online sessions Wednesdays, 2:00 – 3:15 PM ET

January 14, 21, 28, February 4, 11

Plus access to a dedicated WhatsApp group for sharing blessings, perceptions, and dream moments.

Cultivate a daily gratitude practice by leaving the world of negative emotions and reactivity

Renowned author and poet Rodger Kamenetz (author of the classic bestseller The Jew in the Lotus), will offer a five-week program of imaginative spiritual practice based on his new book: Seeing into the Life of Things: Imagination and the Sacred Encounter.

Do you find yourself grappling with the anxiety and uncertainty of our times? How can we engage our five senses to develop a gratitude practice that purifies an afflictive state of mind? In this 5-week course, you will embark on a journey that entwines our senses, dreams, and imagination with the sacred by:

  • Engaging the healing power of “feeling into images” in memory, perception, and dreams.
  • Cultivating a mindset of “counting blessings” and integrating this blessing practice into the traditional Jewish morning prayer practice.
  • Connecting inner feelings with the outer world, evoking images from our dream life. 
  • Developing greater empathy and a shift in consciousness toward what Kamenetz terms “the Great Opening.”

This course includes access to a dedicated WhatsApp group for discussion and a restorative curriculum that:

  • Introduces the modeh/modah ani as a gratitude practice.
  • Enhances your morning prayer practice with counting blessings.
  • Cultivates your senses and the hidden role of imagination in everyday perception.
  • Introduces dreams as the laboratory of imagination.
  • Contemplates images in dream and how dreams can bring us to a cosmic religious experience.

Participants are strongly encouraged to purchase Rodger Kamenetz’s book, Seeing into the Life of Things: Imagination and the Sacred Encounter. Available at booksellers everywhere, including Barnes and Noble, Bookshop.org, and Amazon.

Discover for yourself what Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel called “radical amazement”

Components of the Course

Week 1

A Challenge from the Dalai Lama

A Challenge from the Dalai Lama: How do you purify afflictive states of mind?

The neglected power of imagination. The role of imagination in memory.  A simple visualization practice. Introduction to the modeh/modah ani as a gratitude practice.

Week 2

Counting Blessings

Counting Blessings

A visualization practice for cherishing moments of blessing. Adding counting blessings to morning prayer practice.

Week 3

Imaginative Perception

Imaginative Perception: “What we half-create and perceive”

The hidden role of imagination in everyday perception. Exercises in cultivating your senses. Finding infinity in a wildflower. Imaginative perception and Heschel’s “radical amazement.” The sacred encounter in waking life. The cosmic religious experience.

Week 4

Memory and Dream Images

Memory and Dream Images: Deep Memory; Spots of Time

Introduction to dreams as a laboratory of imagination. The power of contemplating formative memories. Distinguishing imagination in dreams from the story-telling of the ego. Distinguishing feeling and reaction to purify afflictive states of mind.

Week 5

Sacred Encounters in Dreams

Sacred Encounters in Dreams

How dreams can bring us to a cosmic religious experience, encounters with the angelic /archetypal in dreams. Contemplating images in dreams.

Testimonials

With his profound knowledge of poetry, and decades of experience in dreamwork, as well as Hasidic studies, Kamenetz offers not just a deep investigation of the power of images to open up a more connected and engaged life, but a path of practice to help reconnect us with our authentic self and the vivid life of the soul. I don’t know of a book that so richly brings together poetry, dreams, imagination and the spiritual life. It needed to be written, and needs to be read, now more than ever. A real gem.”

—Henry Shukman, author of One Blade of Grass and Original Love

“This book is a harvest of living wisdom, a ripening of the garden Rodger Kamenetz has been cultivating for decades. Tenderly and with lucid insight, he walks us through the gates of poetry and dreams, of Jewish mysticism and Zen Buddhism, of science and art. Not only does Kamenetz celebrate the power of the imagination to open our souls, but the abundance of images he scoops up from his own life and offers to us with outstretched hands cannot help but transform our ordinary lives from a set of tasks to be accomplished into an ever-unfolding sacred encounter.”
—Mirabai Starr, author of God of Love and Ordinary Mysticism

“Rodger Kamenetz opened a new side to our congregation that many of us didn’t know was there. Rodger helped people explore a spiritual depth that inspired and encouraged many to live more boldly and with greater intention and compassion. Unlike some Scholar in Residence experiences, which are nice but afterwards, we all carry on as before, Rodger left our community with much to explore and build upon. I can’t recommend him more highly as a scholar or artist in residence.”

—Rabbi Laurence Rosenthal, Ahavat Achim Synagogue, Atlanta GA

Register Now

IJS is pleased to offer this course at three tuition levels.
We encourage you to pay at the highest level you can, which will enable more students to participate.

Abundance Level

$349

Basic Level

$249

Reduced Level

$149

Meet Your Instructor:

Rodger Kamenetz

Rodger Kamenetz is an award-winning poet, author and teacher. Of his 13 books, his best known is The Jew in the Lotus, the story of rabbis making a holy pilgrimage through India to meet with the Dalai Lama. His account of their historic dialogue became an international bestseller, prompting a reevaluation of Judaism in the light of Buddhist thought. Now in its 37th printing overall, The Jew in the Lotus is a staple of college religion courses. The New York Times called it a “revered text.” A PBS documentary followed, and a sequel, Stalking Elijah, was awarded the National Jewish Book Award for Jewish Thought. Kamenetz’s Burnt Books, in Schocken/Nextbook’s Jewish Encounters series, once again crosses boundaries, between literature and religion. It begins as a dual biography of Franz Kafka and Rebbe Nachman, who each asked his best friend to burn his books. It ends with Kamenetz on his own pilgrimage to Kafka’s Prague and to the rebbe’s grave in Ukraine.

Born in Baltimore, Rodger Kamenetz has degrees from Yale, Johns Hopkins and Stanford. At Louisiana State University, he held a dual appointment as a Professor of English and Professor of Religious Studies and founded the MFA program in creative writing and the Jewish Studies minor. He retired as LSU Distinguished Professor and Sternberg Honors Chair Professor. He lives in New Orleans where he now devotes himself to his work with clients who seek spiritual direction through dreams.

The Shevet Reset: Jewish Meditation Challenge for Young Adults

The Shevet Reset: Jewish Meditation Challenge for Young Adults

The Shevet Reset

Jewish Meditation Challenge for Young Adults

Join our FREE Jewish meditation challenge!

February 2 – 17, 2026

Live sessions:
Launch Party February 2
Celebration Party February 17
5:00 PM PT / 8:00 PM ET

Start the year from the inside out with a two-week Jewish meditation challenge designed for folks in their 20s and 30s seeking clarity, motivation, and authentic connection. Each day of the challenge, you’ll receive a piece of inspiration directly into your inbox, including guided meditation practices, sparks of Jewish wisdom, journaling prompts, beautiful music, and a “deep dive” resource. There will also be two live parties (via zoom) to launch and close the journey together.

A simple, supportive, and doable challenge, uniquely grounded in Jewish mindfulness, spiritual resilience, and the power of a collective fresh start.

Set a personal goal, track your progress, and cheer on a community of peers who are beginning again right alongside you. Join us to deepen your connection to Judaism and awaken a new sense of presence, purpose, and possibility for the year ahead.

Come out of the challenge feeling inspired by Jewish wisdom, strengthened in your Jewish meditation practice, and connected to others in our IJS 20’s and 30’s community (Shevet).

Components of the Challenge

Daily Inspiration:
Each morning, you will receive a short, meaningful practice directly in your inbox. This might be a guided meditation, a spark of Jewish wisdom, journaling prompts, or a piece of uplifting music to ground and inspire your day.

Community Accountability + Personal Goal Setting:
You are invited to choose a personal intention or habit for the two-week journey, track your progress, earn milestone awards and cheer each other on through our group challenge platform. Yael Shy, your guide, will also answer questions and drop daily cheers and bits of inspiration into your portal along the way.

Two Live Sessions:
We’ll launch and close the challenge together with two Zoom gatherings that include setting intentions, community connection, live practice, and a celebration of the commitments you’ve made.

Simple, Flexible Structure:
The entire experience is designed to be doable in just 10 minutes a day, while providing enough depth, Jewish grounding, and community support to spark meaningful long-term change.

Daily Content

  • Feb 2: Intentions/Kavanot
  • Feb 3: Presence
  • Feb 4: Transitions
  • Feb 5: Movement
  • Feb 6: Shabbat/Deep Rest (part one)
  • Feb 7: Shabbat/Deep Rest (part two)
  • Feb 8: Eating
  • Feb 9: Authenticity
  • Feb 10: Blessings
  • Feb 11: Listening
  • Feb 12: Compassion
  • Feb 13: Awe (part one)
  • Feb 14: Awe (part two)
  • Feb 15: Joy
  • Feb 16: Return
  • Feb 17: Celebration and Next steps

Meet Your Challenge Host

Yael Shy

Yael Shy

Yael Shy has been using the transformative power of mindfulness, rooted in her 20+ years of study in Judaism and Zen Buddhism, to support herself and others through the pressures of life. It is her life’s purpose to support individuals and collectives uncover their inherent worth and capacity for deep joy.

Yael is the Founder and CEO of Sefira Wellness, where she teaches and consults on mindfulness for universities, corporations, and private clients around the world. She is the author of the award-winning book, What Now? Meditation for Your Twenties and Beyond (Parallax, 2017), and the founder of Mindful NYU, the largest campus-based mindfulness initiative in the US.

Yael is a graduate of the IJS Jewish Mindfulness Teacher Training Certification. She teaches for New York University, Columbia School of Law, the Institute for Jewish Spirituality and Or HaLev. She has been featured on Good Morning America, CBS, Fox 5 News, and in Time Magazine and the Harvard Business Review. She lives in Stamford, Connecticut, and you can find her online at www.sefirawellness.com and on instagram @yaelshy1

 

This Challenge will also feature the wisdom of Institute for Jewish Spirituality and Shevet teachers:

Jordyn Steifman, Ariel Hendleman, Alison Cohen, Rabbi Josh Feigleson, Yoshi Silverstein, Rebecca Schisler, Rabbi Zvika Krieger, Kohenet Kashira HaLev Fife, Kohenet Shamira Chandler, Jack Leopold, Aviva Chernick and Rabbi Miriam Margles

Sitting with the Sefirot: A Kabbalistic Journey for Deepening Your Jewish Mindfulness Meditation Practice

Sitting with the Sefirot: A Kabbalistic Journey for Deepening Your Jewish Mindfulness Meditation Practice

Sitting with the Sefirot:

Sitting with the Sefirot: A Kabbalistic Journey for Deepening Your Jewish Mindfulness Meditation Practice

February 9 – May 31, 2026

17 Sessions, Live on Zoom

This course will help you take your daily meditation practice to the next level through the Kabbalah’s mystical sefirot—lenses to help us channel, focus, and reveal the sublime light of our own Divine nature. The Kabbalah’s mystical sefirot provide a systematic structure and spiritual framework for deepening our meditation practice skills and cultivating virtue, all while connecting to Jewish wisdom. 

We will explore each of the seven lower sefirot as a foundation to:

• Expand your capacity to feel and extend love

• Strengthen your discipline in practice

• Develop greater attentional balance

• Stabilize your meditative concentration

• Cultivate devekut, connection with the Divine

• Shift into nondual awareness

• Take your practice into your daily life

Meet Your Instructor:

Rabbi Sam Feinsmith

As Senior Core Faculty at the Institute for Jewish Spirituality Sam directs the IJS Clergy Leadership Program and serves on the faculty of Gates of Awareness, a training program for aspiring teachers of Jewish mindfulness meditation. He is one of two lead teachers for our online course on the fundamentals of Jewish mindfulness meditation, The Gift of Awareness, and has written the IJS year-long Hasidic text study offering for a number of years running. After close to fifteen years teaching contemplative practices grounded in mindfulness to teens and educators, Sam originally came on board at IJS to develop and direct the Educating for a Jewish Spiritual Life Program, which brought these practices to hundreds of Jewish day- and religious-school educators and their students.

Mindful Jewish Leadership in the Face of Antisemitism: Trauma-Informed Practice for Healing and Wise Response

Mindful Jewish Leadership in the Face of Antisemitism: Trauma-Informed Practice for Healing and Wise Response

Mindful Jewish Leadership in the Face of Antisemitism:

Trauma-Informed Practice for Healing and Wise Response

 

A program for Jewish Clergy and Professionals

Practice with Rabbi Miriam Margles and Rabbi Caryn Aviv, PhD

February 4 – March 25, 2026

Eight online sessions on Wednesdays

Opening Retreat: Wednesday February 4, 2:00pm-5:00pm ET

Weekly Live Sessions: Wednesdays, February 11- March 18, 3:30pm-5:00pm ET

Closing Retreat: Wednesday, March 25, 2:00pm-5:00pm ET

As Jewish leaders, how do we respond mindfully to the corrosive impact of anti-Jewish contempt, bigotry, and bias during these challenging times, attending to our own wounds while discerning wise action and healing our communities?

The experience of being a Jew in the world has radically altered since October 7, 2023. The demands on Jewish leaders have been overwhelming – to be sources of stability and comfort, moral guidance, public voice, leaders in community organizing, conflict resolution, and intergenerational healing.  While supporting our communities, few Jewish leaders have had the support or space to process our own grief, anger, fear, betrayal, and moral anguish. 

Many leaders express feeling exhausted, isolated, and ill-equipped to address the complex challenges we face – including surging antisemitism in North America and around the world. There is a deep and unmet need to understand and heal  the corrosive impact of present-day antisemitism and intergenerational Jewish trauma on our minds, hearts, and souls, and on the Jewish people as a whole.

Now more than ever, it’s essential that Jewish leaders cultivate mindful, spiritually grounded, and agile leadership.

Join us for an innovative program to support you in responding to the complexities of this moment with greater wisdom and clarity. Instead of living in perpetual alarm, defensiveness, numbness, or reactivity, you can learn to settle your nervous system, nurture inner stability and self-awareness, surface curiosity, and find grounding in Jewish sources of strength, connection and resilience. 

The course will begin and end with 3-hour retreats for immersive practice, learning and building relationships. The closing retreat will focus on empowering participants to model and teach these tools and approaches in our various communities. 

Now more than ever, it’s essential to cultivate mindful, spiritually grounded, agile, and effective leadership.

Jewish leaders and communities can learn the concepts and practices to access greater wisdom, agility and compassion to respond mindfully while rooted in our values.

Trauma-Informed Holistic Approach

In this unique program integrating theory and practice, you will explore: 

The Dynamics of Anti-Jewish Oppression

    • Understand the culturally pervasive dynamics of anti-Jewish oppression in the context of other systemic oppressions.

The Dynamics of Ancestral Jewish Trauma

    • Understand the dynamics of internalized ancestral Jewish trauma and vicarious trauma. 
    • Identify how intergenerational wounds and survival strategies are at play within us and those we serve. 
    • Recognize and soothe Jewish anxiety habits related to safety, worth, and belonging.

 

Share your struggles, questions, and uncertainties in a cohort of trusted colleagues.

Mindfulness-Based Practices for Self-Awareness & Emotional Regulation

    • Pause from the urgency, overwhelm, and isolation of needing to constantly respond, strategize, solve, and support.
    • Learn how our brains and bodies respond to the specific triggers of antisemitic rhetoric and behavior.
    • Strengthen nervous system regulation; develop greater capacity to be present with and metabolize intense and difficult emotions rather than react or blow our pain onto others;

Jewish Spiritual Practice

    • Explore Jewish wisdom, mindfulness-based Jewish spiritual practice to cultivate inner stability, vitality and spiritual grounding; deepen the middot (Jewish spiritual qualities) of clear perception, equanimity, curiosity, compassion, and resilience.
    • Engage in contemplative prayer and song, ritual, and spiritual wisdom from a range of Jewish sources to draw on the inheritance of ancestral Jewish strength, creativity, joy, moral courage, love, and community.
    • Explore ways to integrate insights and practices into our communities.

 

Trauma-Informed Holistic Approach

Participants in the pilot for this program (run in Winter 2024) had this to say:

 

“It gave me a chance to be sad for myself and grieve. That is a rare thing: our community encourages us to be advocates. Hearing the texture of everyone else’s hard time gave me the space to describe my own experience. It was a gift to be able to be witnessed by this group.“

2024 Pilot Program Participant

“It was significant seeing how responses to antisemitism from within Jewish community create real stress and challenge. No matter what we do, we’re upsetting people. It’s very fraught and leaders need support to be wise and grounded and not reactive.”

2024 Pilot Program Participant

“I was self-aware enough to see it happening— I know about my lack of resilience, feeling weathered, how I anticipate conflicts, and stew about what I would say. But now I have tools to manage myself. The workshop has given me an offramp and it’s worked. Rather than dwelling on a negative confrontation, I am spending less time stewing.”

2024 Pilot Program Participant

Register Now

IJS is pleased to offer this course at three tuition levels.
We encourage you to pay at the highest level you can, which will enable more students to participate.

 

Abundance Level

$349

Basic Level

$249

Reduced Level

$149

Meet Your Instructors:

Rabbi Miriam Margles

Miriam has a long and rich association with IJS, having taught on various retreats and programs over the years. She joins the Institute as a Senior Core Faculty after over a decade as the rabbi of the Danforth Jewish Circle in Toronto. Her career has included service as a founding faculty member at the Romemu Yeshiva, serving as a fellow with the Rising Song Institute, co-founding Encounter – the award-winning educational program working toward informed, courageous and resilient Jewish leadership on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and recording her original Jewish music with the Hadar Rising Song ensemble. Miriam’s album, Zeh HaYom – this is the day, is available at: https://miriammargles.bandcamp.com/

Rabbi Caryn Aviv

Rabbi Caryn Aviv, PhD

Rabbi Caryn Aviv serves as Rabbinic director at Judaism Your Way in Denver, CO. She’s a recovering academic in sociology and Jewish studies, and (mostly) formerly anxious Jew. She creates spaces, rituals, and practices that offer safety, healing, equity, compassion and justice for Jews, our loved ones, friends, and allies.  Caryn recently published Unlearning Jewish Anxiety: How to Live with More Joy and Suffer Less (Monkfish, 2026).  

Wise Aging Through Jewish Mindfulness

Wise Aging Through Jewish Mindfulness

Wise Aging Through Jewish Mindfulness

Practice with Rabbi Marc Margolius and Karen Frank

February 12 – March 26, 2026

6 Live Zoom Sessions

Thursdays, 4:00-5:15pm ET | Feb 12, 19, 26, March 5, 12, 26

How can Jewish mindfulness help us extract and expand the wisdom of the latter stages of our lives? Based on Wise Aging, the now-classic book by Rabbi Rachel Cowan and Linda Thal, this six-week program will immerse participants in a community of ongoing mindfulness practice, reflection, and connection. Together, we’ll explore how meditation and mindfulness can help us meet physical and emotional challenges, learn to grow in acceptance of ourselves and others, deepen our friendships and familial relationships, live with greater joy, gratitude, and resilience, and shape a legacy for the future.

Learn how Jewish mindfulness practice can help you embrace aging as a spiritual practice, enabling you to access your deepest wisdom.

  • Learn tools and practices for exploring – and celebrating – the latter stage of our lives.
  • Connect deeply with others on the same trajectory.
  • Nurture your capacity to counter the “declinist” view of aging – the ageism that pervades society and which we too often internalize.
  • Cultivate equanimity about the aging process.
  • Clarify your understanding of your essential, most authentic self.
  • Develop your capacity simply to be, rather than to seek meaning only in productivity and accomplishment.
  • Identify those aspects of your life and identity which no longer serve you
  • Strengthen your ability to release these to the past.
  • Celebrate and Share the wisdom which you have developed over a lifetime.

Components of the Course

Week 1, February 12: Obstacle Ahead: Countering the Declinist View of Aging with Mindfulness 

Week 2, February 19: Cultivating Nourishing Relationships as They Change

Week 3, February 26: Meeting our Bodies with Wisdom: I Am My Body, I am Not My Body

Week 4, March 5: Forgiveness and Reconciliation: Releasing That Which We No Longer Need

Week 5, March 12: Living with Loss

Week 6, March 26: Cultivating Patience, Gratitude, and Humility as We Age

Wise Aging

Register Now

IJS is pleased to offer this course at three tuition levels.
We encourage you to pay at the highest level you can, which will enable more students to participate.

Abundance Level

$399

Basic Level

$299

Reduced Level

$199

Meet Your Instructors:

Rabbi Marc Margolius

Rabbi Marc Margolius is a Senior Core Faculty member at IJS and  serves as advisor for overall programming for IJS. He directs programming for lay leaders and Hevraya, the alumni of our Clergy Leadership Program. He hosts the “Daily Sit,” IJS’s online daily mindfulness meditation sessions, and teaches several courses, including Awareness in Action: Cultivating Character through Mindfulness and Middot, our online program in tikkun middot practice, integrating Jewish mindfulness with attention to core middot, character traits.

Previously, Marc served as rabbi at West End Synagogue in Manhattan and Congregation Beth Am Israel in Penn Valley, PA, where he pioneered a Shabbat-centered model of congregational engagement.

Karen Frank

Karen Frank has been a congregational nurse to several synagogues in New Jersey and a facilitator for Wise Aging since the early 2000s. Additionally, she, Rabbi Rachel Cowan z”l, and Dr. Linda Thal trained over 600 facilitators for the Wise Aging program nationally. She ardently believes that participating in the program encourages equanimity, mindfulness, and contentment in the aging process. Her work as a pastoral care nurse, Wise Aging facilitator, meditator, and Jewish Spiritual Director meld beautifully to assist people in aging, confronting disease, and coping with the challenges of our time.

Karen holds degrees in psychology, nursing, and certification in Jewish Spiritual Direction. She lives in Denville, NJ, is widowed, and is the mother of four adults.

Falling in Love with the World Again: Finding Our Way When Everything Feels Broken

Falling in Love with the World Again: Finding Our Way When Everything Feels Broken

Falling in Love with the World Again:

Finding Our Way When Everything Feels Broken

Practice with Anya Kamenetz

February 26 – March 26, 2026

Live Session Dates | Feb 26, March 5, 12, 19, 26

Thursdays, 7:30 – 8:45 PM ET

Meet the onslaught of the world's crises with courage, calm, and even joy.

It is easy to feel helpless, angry, and overwhelmed with the enormous amount of news that provokes fear and uncertainty. The many emotions we feel about climate disasters, authoritarianism, violence, and the relentless news cycle can be deeply uncomfortable. But when we let them in, they also can be energizing, connecting, and even reorient us to our own strength and purpose.
Join us for a five-week program with Anya Kamenetz, an award-winning author, former NPR reporter, and expert on climate change and mental health, to examine our collective emotional responses to the crises of our time and learn to find inspiration even in the depths of despair.

In conversation and in practice, Anya will take us on a journey that explores our emotions with curiosity – building resilience and working with the energy within our bodies. Together, we will:

  • Map our collective pain for the world: identifying the spiral and the wheel
  • Discover the healing alchemy: transforming your grief, rage, apathy, fear and despair
  • Call In your resources and refuges: exploring body and breath, relationship and community, nature and the sacred, ancestral mentors and deep time 
  • Practice each week: grounding ourselves in guided meditation, creative exercises in movement, art and writing, and group work 
  • Study the wisdom: tuning into prophets, rabbis, lamas, mystics, Indigenous sages, neuroscientists, ecologists, and activists.

Testimonials

“I wanted to say a deep, profound thank you…for the talk you gave at New York Insight on The Wheel of Climate Emotions….

I almost backed out of attending the talk — it all felt so overwhelming to even try to hold. But I am so very glad that I was able to come and gain an entirely different perspective on experiencing and appreciating the variety of feelings I move through regarding climate change. 

I have been putting so much of what you shared into reflection, practice, and meditation, and I just cannot say how incredibly grateful I am to you [and Jay] for helping to open up my eyes.”

“I supported your work because I need guidance on how to do The Work. I do not want to be lost in despair or overcome by fury. Instead I want to turn grief and anger into action so that we all have a joyful future to look towards. Looking forward to continuing to read and DO. Thanks, Anya <3”

Register Now

IJS is pleased to offer this course at three tuition levels.
We encourage you to pay at the highest level you can, which will enable more students to participate.

Abundance Level

$299

Basic Level

$199

Reduced Level

$99

Meet Your Instructor:

Anya Kamenetz

Anya Kamenetz speaks, writes, and thinks about thriving and caring for others on a rapidly changing planet. Her newsletter on these topics is The Golden Hour. For NPR, she co-created and co hosted the podcast Life Kit: Parenting. Her last book was The Stolen Year: How Covid Changed Children’s Lives, And Where We Go Now. Kamenetz currently advises the Climate Mental Health Network, working on new initiatives at the intersection of well-being and climate change. There, she created the Climate Emotions Wheel, which is being used all over the world to help people understand their climate feelings. She worked with the eco-spiritual teacher Joanna Macy producing her last project, the podcast We Are The Great Turning. Her next book, forthcoming from Bloomsbury, is about how to cope with the world right now: the emotional landscape of polycrisis.

Text Study 5786

Text Study 5786

Text Study 5786

Deepen Your Experience with Torah

Full Year Program

Begins October 12, 2025

Studying and interpreting Torah is one of Judaism’s oldest and richest forms of spiritual practice. At IJS, we approach text study holistically – both as an intellectual experience and as an opportunity for experiential, heart-centered, practice-based spiritual growth and development.
This year, we bring you two new text study streams with extraordinary Torah teachers, both of whom provide rich material for contemplative study. These programs will support you in finding personal meaning, expanding your spiritual awareness, and deepening your inner life and mindfulness practice. We encourage you to sign-up for a chevruta/study partner or take the course with a friend in order to deepen your learning and practice.

Bring the transformative light of Torah and Hasidic wisdom into your daily life.

For All Learners

A Healing Journey

Through the Torah

Trauma, Resilience, and the Tree of Life
with Rabbi Lisa Goldstein
In this text study, Rabbi Lisa Goldstein will take us on a healing journey through the Torah, which has been called “Etz Chayim—the Tree of Life” for giving strength and hope to Jews for millennia. During troubled times like these, we yearn to heal ourselves and to grow, and the stories of our ancestors grappling with their own hardships can provide a guide.

We will examine each Torah portion through a trauma-informed lens so we can draw upon its wisdom, find the potential for growth within ourselves, and cultivate resilience and open-heartedness to help us navigate the days ahead.

This offering is designed to be accessible to all learners – no prior experience with Torah study or mindfulness is required.

Rabbi Lisa will also offer monthly live Zoom sessions for practice and Q&A.


In this text stream, every week you will receive:

  • Teachings drawn from the well of ancestral wisdom and resilience, including exploration of Torah, midrash, mystical texts, and other sources from Jewish tradition.
  • Cutting-edge insights into the ways that different kinds of trauma (intergenerational, attachment, complex, shock, etc.) impact our lives and how healing takes place.
  • A trauma-informed lens to mindfulness practices that can support resilience, personal growth, and self-harmony, even as challenging events continue to take place. (Growth doesn’t have to be “post-traumatic”!)
  • Instructions for personal practice and chevruta discussion that can deepen integration of learning and experience.
  • Access to an archive of all texts and materials from previous weeks’ teachings.

Monthly Live Sessions will be held on Tuesdays from 3:00-4:00 PM ET on the following dates:

2025: November 4, December 2
2026: January 6, February 3, March 10, April 7, May 5, June 2, July 7, August 4, September 1 and September 29


Here’s What Rabbi Lisa’s Students Have to Say About The Impact of Her Teaching on Their Practice:

“Rabbi Lisa is a gifted educator who makes our community members feel as if they are learners and teachers. She uses a strengths-based approach to bring people into text, and to foster spaces that invite constituents to be vulnerable and open. We have benefited deeply from the way in which she transmits and elicits knowledge.” – Claire Nisen

“Rabbi Lisa is notably attentive to creating inviting and peaceful atmospheres for learning. She skillfully reads the temperature of the room with care and her invitations for participation are genuine invitations. She provides clarity and guidance to her students while holding their energy, spirit, and needs with utmost sensitivity and consideration. She is a true gift to each student fortunate enough to learn with and from her.” – Abby Mintz

In this text study, Rabbi Lisa Goldstein will take us on a healing journey through the Torah, which has been called “Etz Chayim—the Tree of Life” for giving strength and hope to Jews for millennia. During troubled times like these, we yearn to heal ourselves and to grow, and the stories of our ancestors grappling with their own hardships can provide a guide.

We will examine each Torah portion through a trauma-informed lens so we can draw upon its wisdom, find the potential for growth within ourselves, and cultivate resilience and open-heartedness to help us navigate the days ahead.

This offering is designed to be accessible to all learners – no prior experience with Torah study or mindfulness is required.

Rabbi Lisa will also offer monthly live Zoom sessions for practice and Q&A. (recorded for those unable to attend live)

In this text stream, every week you will receive:

  • Teachings drawn from the well of ancestral wisdom and resilience, including exploration of Torah, midrash, mystical texts, and other sources from Jewish tradition.
  • Cutting-edge insights into the ways that different kinds of trauma (intergenerational, attachment, complex, shock, etc.) impact our lives and how healing takes place.
  • A trauma-informed lens to mindfulness practices that can support resilience, personal growth, and self-harmony, even as challenging events continue to take place. (Growth doesn’t have to be “post-traumatic”!)
  • Instructions for personal practice and chevruta discussion that can deepen integration of learning and experience.
  • Access to an archive of all texts and materials from previous weeks’ teachings.

Monthly Live Sessions will be held on Tuesdays from 3:00-4:00 PM ET on the following dates:

2025: November 4, December 2
2026: January 6, February 3, March 10, April 7, May 5, June 2, July 7, August 4, September 1 and September 29

Here’s What Rabbi Lisa’s Students Have to Say About The Impact of Her Teaching on Their Practice

“Rabbi Lisa is a gifted educator who makes our community members feel as if they are learners and teachers. She uses a strengths-based approach to bring people into text, and to foster spaces that invite constituents to be vulnerable and open. We have benefited deeply from the way in which she transmits and elicits knowledge.” – Claire Nisen

 

“Rabbi Lisa is notably attentive to creating inviting and peaceful atmospheres for learning. She skillfully reads the temperature of the room with care and her invitations for participation are genuine invitations. She provides clarity and guidance to her students while holding their energy, spirit, and needs with utmost sensitivity and consideration. She is a true gift to each student fortunate enough to learn with and from her.” – Abby Mintz

For Seasoned Learners

Awareness in All Things

 Rebbe Nachman of Breslov on the Weekly Torah Portion
with Rabbi Sam Feinsmith
In this new IJS course—Awareness in All Things: Rebbe Nachman of Breslov on the Weekly Torah Portion—Rabbi Sam Feinsmith will guide us through the powerful teachings of the charismatic Hasidic master Rebbe Nachman (1772-1810) and his principal student, Reb Noson (1780-1844).

During his lifetime, Rebbe Nachman inspired the revival of the Hasidic movement, drawing thousands of followers on account of his unparalleled piety and erudition; practical, down-to-earth, joyous spirituality; and his emphasis on cultivating a personal, unmediated relationship with the Divine. His prolific, original teachings continue to provide practical wisdom that remains highly relevant in our time.

Each week, we will ground our work of cultivating spiritual awareness and refining our character in a single teaching from Rebbe Nachman on the Torah portion, available in Hebrew and English. Rabbi Feinsmith will translate each teaching into a contemporary idiom with an original, mindfulness-inspired commentary, reflection questions for journaling/chevruta study, practice instructions, and guided audio meditations.

This course is for seasoned students of Hasidic text and mindfulness practice who wish to draw inspiration, deepen their contemplative practice, and expand their knowledge of Kabbalah and Hasidic spirituality. Though the teachings of Rebbe Nachman and Reb Noson are widely available, this year-long offering supports us to work with them in an accessible, immersive, and transformative manner and explore their profound relevance for our times.

Rabbi Sam will also offer monthly live Zoom sessions for practice and Q&A. (recorded for those unable to attend live)


In this text stream, every week you will receive:

  • A carefully-selected piece of commentary on the weekly Torah portion, excerpted from the original Hebrew text
  • An annotated English translation of the week’s text along with a summary of key points that pertain to spiritual practice
  • Reflection questions designed to support you in discovering authentic connections between the text and your lived experience
  • Detailed instructions for mindfulness practice
  • Access to an archive of all texts and materials from previous weeks’ teachings

Monthly Live Sessions will be held on Mondays from 3:00-4:15 PM ET on the following dates:

2025: November 10, December 15
2026: January 12, February 9, March 9, April 13, May 11, June 8, July 6, August 10, September 14, and October 5


This offering is best suited for seasoned students of Hasidic text and mindfulness practice, and it will also provide rich content for those who wish to develop sermons and teachings for their congregations.

By participating in this course of study and practice, you will:

  • Grow your knowledge of key Hasidic terms, ideas, views, and practices
  • Deepen your mindfulness practice
  • Deepen your awareness of God’s loving presence within and all around you
  • Cultivate habits of heart and mind that nurture greater balance, well-being, and resilience during difficult times
  • Gain access to new materials for developing sermons and teachings for your community
  • If studying with a chevruta, develop a deeper sense of spiritual intimacy and kinship as you practice and study together and explore the relevance of the teachings to your spiritual growth
In this new IJS course—Awareness in All Things: Rebbe Nachman of Breslov on the Weekly Torah Portion—Rabbi Sam Feinsmith will guide us through the powerful teachings of the charismatic Hasidic master Rebbe Nachman (1772-1810) and his principal student, Reb Noson (1780-1844).

During his lifetime, Rebbe Nachman inspired the revival of the Hasidic movement, drawing thousands of followers on account of his unparalleled piety and erudition; practical, down-to-earth, joyous spirituality; and his emphasis on cultivating a personal, unmediated relationship with the Divine. His prolific, original teachings continue to provide practical wisdom that remains highly relevant in our time.

Each week, we will ground our work of cultivating spiritual awareness and refining our character in a single teaching from Rebbe Nachman on the Torah portion, available in Hebrew and English. Rabbi Feinsmith will translate each teaching into a contemporary idiom with an original, mindfulness-inspired commentary, reflection questions for journaling/chevruta study, practice instructions, and guided audio meditations.

This course is for seasoned students of Hasidic text and mindfulness practice who wish to draw inspiration, deepen their contemplative practice, and expand their knowledge of Kabbalah and Hasidic spirituality. Though the teachings of Rebbe Nachman and Reb Noson are widely available, this year-long offering supports us to work with them in an accessible, immersive, and transformative manner and explore their profound relevance for our times.

Rabbi Sam will also offer monthly live Zoom sessions for practice and Q&A. (recorded for those unable to attend live)

In this text stream, every week you will receive:

  • A carefully-selected piece of commentary on the weekly Torah portion, excerpted from the original Hebrew text
  • An annotated English translation of the week’s text along with a summary of key points that pertain to spiritual practice
  • Reflection questions designed to support you in discovering authentic connections between the text and your lived experience
  • Detailed instructions for mindfulness practice
  • Access to an archive of all texts and materials from previous weeks’ teachings

Monthly Live Sessions will be held on Mondays from 3:00-4:15 PM ET on the following dates:

2025: November 10, December 15
2026: January 12, February 9, March 9, April 13, May 11, June 8, July 6, August 10, September 14, and October 5

This offering is best suited for seasoned students of Hasidic text and mindfulness practice, and it will also provide rich content for those who wish to develop sermons and teachings for their congregations.
By participating in this course of study and practice, you will:

  • Grow your knowledge of key Hasidic terms, ideas, views, and practices
  • Deepen your mindfulness practice 
  • Deepen your awareness of God’s loving presence within and all around you
  • Cultivate habits of heart and mind that nurture greater balance, well-being, and resilience during difficult times
  • Gain access to new materials for developing sermons and teachings for your community
  • If studying with a chevruta, develop a deeper sense of spiritual intimacy and kinship as you practice and study together and explore the relevance of the teachings to your spiritual growth 

Course Tuition

IJS is pleased to offer these courses at three tuition levels.

We encourage you to pay at the highest level you can, which will enable more students to participate.

 For All Learners:

A Healing Journey Through the Torah

 For Seasoned Learners:

Awareness in All Things

Meet Your Instructors

Rabbi Lisa Goldstein is a teacher, consultant, and Master Practitioner of NARM, a modality of healing complex trauma. She consults in the fields of education, trauma healing and spirituality for organizations including M2 Institute for Experiential Jewish Education and the Covenant Foundation. She also works one-on-one to support people in their journeys of healing and spiritual growth.

Educated at Brown University and Hebrew Union College, Rabbi Goldstein has almost 25 years of executive experience, having served as the executive director of the Institute for Jewish Spirituality and Hillel of San Diego. She teaches a wide variety of courses, both online and in person, with an emphasis on spiritual wisdom, prayer and meditation, and the teachings of R. Nahman of Breslov.

Rabbi Sam Feinsmith

Rabbi Sam Feinsmith has been immersed in Jewish contemplative living, learning, and teaching for over twenty years, conducting Jewish meditation workshops, programs, and retreats for children, teens, Jewish educators, clergy, and community leaders. He’s passionate about practicing and teaching meditation and making the spiritual teachings of Hasidism available to all. He received an MA in Talmud and Rabbinics from the Jewish Theological Seminary, and rabbinic ordination from YCT Rabbinical School. He also trained as a Jewish mindfulness meditation teacher with the Institute for Jewish Spirituality Jewish Mindfulness Meditation Teacher Training Program. Sam lives on the land of the Council of the Three Fires – the Potowatami, Ojibwe, and Odawa tribes – currently known as Evanston, IL with his wife Sarah-Bess and daughter Elanit.

The Gift of Awareness

The Gift of Awareness

The Gift of Awareness

Cultivating Mindfulness Through Jewish Meditation

Discover the Jewish Practice That Wakes You Up to the Magic and Meaning of Your Life

When is the last time you remember being fully present – not worrying about the past or anxiously planning for the future – just available to appreciate all the goodness of the moment?

It’s probably easier to recall the last time you arrived at work and then didn’t remember driving there. Or finishing a meal not having tasted a single bite.

Or being so preoccupied during a conversation with a friend, spouse or co-worker that you couldn’t really listen to them or remember anything they said.

If so, you’re not alone.

Today most of us regularly experience being so lost in our thoughts, distracted on our phones, and caught-up in our never-ending to-do lists that we aren’t really experiencing our lives in the present moment.

We have a tendency to think – and our culture reinforces – that doing more and achieving more is what will bring our lives into alignment with our core values and what matters most to us.

Access a More Relaxed, Restorative Way of Being That Offers a Deeper and More Meaningful Life Experience

You Can Start with Just 5 Minutes a Day

You may already recognize that you need some support managing your stress, being more present, reinvigorating your connection to Judaism, and skillfully navigating the challenges in your life and in the world.

You’ve likely heard mindfulness is helping others, but may not have figured out how to make it work for you. And you may not realize that you can practice mindfulness within a Jewish context . . . in a way that makes mindfulness accessible, familiar and perhaps even more meaningful to you—in addition to potentially creating new and possibly unexpected connections to Judaism itself.

That’s why the Institute for Jewish Spirituality, a global leader in teaching Jewish mindfulness and spiritual practices, has created The Gift of Awareness: Cultivating Mindfulness Through Jewish Meditation a first-of-its-kind, self-paced, online Jewish meditation course that offers new access to expanded awareness to support you in becoming more consistently who you want to be in the world . . . all from the comfort and convenience of your own home.

Here’s how it works . . . during The Gift of Awareness, mindfulness educators Rabbi Sam Feinsmith and Rabbi Jordan Bendat-Appell will expertly guide you each step of the way through establishing a Jewish mindfulness meditation practice that can support you in:

  • Showing up non-reactively in your life
  • Finding ways to deal skillfully with your inner critic
  • Finding an anchor of peace and positivity in stressful situations
  • Reawakening or deepening your connection to Judaism
  • Being a powerful example of resiliency, empathy and connection in your life and in the world

With regular practice – even for just 5 minutes a day – you can gain access to an inner refuge or sanctuary that you can take with you wherever you go . . .

So that no matter the circumstances you may find yourself in, no matter how stressful and strenuous your responsibilities may become, you can always discern a subtle quality of awareness hovering in the backdrop and permeating your experience of body, heart, mind and world.

Here’s What People Who’ve Established a Jewish Mindfulness Meditation Practice Tell Us About How It’s Transformed Their Lives

“Before I came to IJS and took the course, I thought my yoga meditation that I practiced before classes was all that there was to meditation. During the course, I experienced a deeper inner look into myself and was surprised that feelings of loss that I had suppressed surfaced. Now that I’ve experienced The Gift of Awareness, my life is calmer and I realize that I can live at a bit of a slower pace, be more aware and present, be a better listener, and still get the things done that matter to me.”

Marlene Aron

“IJS has changed my life. I know it sounds dramatic. But I want everyone to know what I now know – our Jewish Hassidic wisdom has deepened my prayer, my meditation and my mindset. Even more essentially, because of IJS I have changed the way I speak to myself, which has changed everything.”

Aliza Kline

“Jewish spiritual practice has made me so much more spiritually alive. It inspired me. Refreshed me. Many of us go to yoga, meditate and are looking for spiritual practices to help us in our lives. What I didn’t know is that I could do all of that within the context of Jewish prayer and tradition—and that it would be so much more meaningful as a result.”

Rabbi Rachel Timoner

The Gift of Awareness
A Session-by-Session Course Overview

Here’s a closer look at everything you’ll cover:

Every module is between 30 and 45 minutes in length, and includes:

  • Video teachings with Rabbi Jordan Bendat-Appell
  • A text study with Rabbi Sam Feinsmith
  • A guided meditation
  • A mindful life practice
  • Reflection questions and discussion forums
  • A supplemental handout

Each session builds on the next so that you feel relaxed, inspired, and confident in each new skill before moving onto the next.

Module One:

Waking Up to Your Life
From Automatic Pilot to Intention

Module Two:

Strengthening Attention
From Distracted to Present  

Module Three:

Listening to Your Body 
From Thinking to Sensing

Once you have finished the first three modules you may notice . . .

  • You’ve begun moving through your life more intentionally, instead of being on automatic pilot
  • You find it easier to anchor your attention to be more present
  • You’ve become better able to notice your mental habits and unsupportive thought patterns that habitually move you into reactivity and away from feeling calm and centered.

Module Four:

Turning Towards the Stream of Your Emotions
From Reactivity to Responsiveness

Module Five:

Working with Difficult Emotions
From Avoidance to Approaching

Once you have finished Modules Four and Five you may notice . . .

  • You’re better able to identify emotions in your body, such as “Oh, I must be feeling sadness because there’s sensation in the pit of my stomach” or “My face is flushing, which means I’m feeling angry.”
  • You’re more in tune with your emotions and able to know precisely what you’re feeling moment by moment, instead of having only a vague sense of ease or uneasiness.
  • You’re more able to cultivate non-judgemental attention to your own emotions, allowing you to be more responsive instead of getting stuck in emotionality and reactivity.

Module Six:

Befriending Your Own Mind
From Conviction to Curiosity

Module Seven:

Cultivating Your Loving Heart
From Judgment to Compassion

Module Eight:

Resting in Shabbat Mind™
From Doing to Being

Once you have finished Module Six you may notice . . .

  • You’re more able to be the observer of your thoughts and the student of your habits instead of believing those thoughts and habits are what define you.
  • As you realize more clearly that you’re not actually your thoughts and mental habits, you become more in touch with who you really are.

Once you have finished Module Seven you may notice . . .

  • You’re better able to cultivate loving emotions when you need them — the kind of emotions that open the heart and leave the mind feeling spacious and connected.
  • You’re better able to skillfully handle emotions (like anger) that distort your ability to see clearly.

Once you have finished Module Eight you may notice . . .

  • You’re better able to de-stress, regulate and strengthen your attention, and practice emotional self-regulation.
  • You feel more resourced, restored and supported as you do your work and live your life.
  • You’re able to meet others (and yourself) with a deeper quality of love, compassion and acceptance.
  • You have access in any moment to what Shabbat represents — peaceful awareness that you need to do nothing else or be anywhere else.
  • That practice grounded in Jewish wisdom has changed your relationship with Judaism and possibly even God.

Course Materials and Resources

When you register, you’ll get access to everything you need to take full advantage of the self-paced course, including:

  • 8 self-paced video teaching sessions, guided meditation “practices” and reflection questions – that you can access anywhere, anytime from your computer or mobile device.
  • Downloadable handouts for each module – so you can reference these powerful teachings anytime.
  • An online meditation timer you can load with your favorite guided meditations from the course – so you can practice them again and again.
  • 8 “Mindful Life” practices – designed to help you integrate the course teachings into your everyday life.
  • A personal online journal – your own personal space to record your reflections.

The Gift of Awareness

Course Tuition

$249

Purchase to get access to everything you need
to take full advantage of this self-paced course

About Rabbi Sam Feinsmith

As Senior Core Faculty at the Institute for Jewish Spirituality, Rabbi Sam Feinsmith directs the Clergy Leadership Program and teaches on the faculty of a variety of IJS programs. Previously, he taught Judaic Studies at Chicagoland Jewish High School, Illinois, and the Heschel School in NY, where he spearheaded initiatives to foster teen spirituality, mindfulness, and wellness. He is a co-founder of Orot: Center for New Jewish Learning, a center for contemplative Jewish learning and living. He served as a Kol Tzedek Fellow for American Jewish World Service, volunteering in Cambodia with their Volunteer Corps.

About Rabbi Jordan Bendat-Appell

Rabbi Jordan Bendat-Appell is a teacher of Jewish mindfulness and has spent years leading retreats and immersive experiences for adults in various settings through the National Ramah Commission, Orot: Center for New Jewish Learning, and the Institute for Jewish Spirituality. Jordan was the founding Director of Ramah Beyond and was Director of Camp Ramah in Canada from 2019-2022. Previously, he worked for the Institute for Jewish Spirituality (IJS) as a teacher of Jewish Mindfulness and as Director of the Jewish Mindfulness Meditation Teacher Training. Jordan also taught meditation to rabbis and cantors through IJS’ Clergy Leadership Program. After being ordained in 2008, Jordan served as a congregational rabbi outside of Chicago and co-founded Orot: Center for New Jewish Learning. Jordan is a recipient of the 2014 Covenant Foundation Pomegranate Prize. He and his wife Yael live in Toronto and are the proud and grateful parents of three.

About the Institute for Jewish Spirituality

Since 1999, IJS has been a leader in teaching traditional and contemporary Jewish spiritual practices that cultivate mindfulness so that each of us might act with enriched wisdom, clarity, and compassion. These practices, grounded in Jewish values and thought, enable participants to develop important skills while strengthening leadership capacities, deepening their inner lives, and connecting more meaningfully with others, Judaism, and the sacred. As a non-profit organization, IJS is able to provide programming and resources to the community thanks to the generosity of our donors.

Awareness in Action

Awareness in Action

Awareness in Action

Cultivating Character Through Mindfulness and Middot

Registration Now Open

Learn The Jewish Spiritual Practice

That Helps You Show Up More Often as Your “Best Self”

In challenging times like these—marked by political turbulence, rising antisemitism, war, and the climate crisis—we all can be reactive and defensive rather than our best selves. Flooded by our emotions, too often we may regret our words and actions, wishing we might have paused and responded more wisely.

Judaism has a spiritual practice specifically for times like these: tikkun middot, an ancient Jewish practice for developing desirable character traits and aligning our actions with our most deeply held values. Tikkun middot practice integrates basic principles of Jewish mindfulness with close attention to essential character or “soul” traits like loving connection, humility, gratitude, and the discipline to set wise boundaries. Each of us possesses these traits, but our innate spiritual and ethical qualities can become blocked, causing us to behave in ways that miss the mark.

The Institute for Jewish Spirituality invites you to join Awareness in Action: Cultivating Character through Mindfulness and Middot, a self-paced online course to help you uncover your authentic best self and be the person you wish to be.

In this course, you’ll learn skills that can be applied in both the small and large actions of daily life: in difficult conversations, in interactions with family and friends, in traffic, and in meetings—whenever life is particularly challenging. You’ll learn to access and practice eight core character or “soul” traits (middot), each of which builds upon and integrates those that precede it:

 

    1. Loving connection (chesed)
    2. Setting wise boundaries for yourself and others (gevurah)
    3. A balanced self – taking up appropriate space and time (anavah)
    4. Energetic response – so you can get started and keep going (zerizut)
    5. Gratitude (hodayah)
    6. Righteousness – developing your capacity to do what is appropriate and just (tzedek)
    7. Mindful speech (sh’mirat hadibbur)
    8. Trustworthiness (emunah)

Practice your soul traits to bring mindfulness practice more deeply into your life.

 

Expert instructors Rabbi Marc Margolius and Rabbi Lisa Goldstein will guide you each step of the way to establish a tikkun middot practice that can support you in:

 

  • Growing in self-awareness and gaining better insight into your deeper motivations and habitual patterns
  • Becoming less reactive and more responsive—better able to access the innate wisdom in your body, mind, and soul
  • Developing the freedom to choose how you want to act
  • Experiencing Jewish spiritual practice as a path to personal transformation.

Here’s what participants have told us about the difference this course made in their lives

“I’ve heard the phrase, “living an examined life”, many times. But not until I began to participate in tikkun middot practice with IJS did I truly recognize the wisdom of this worldview, and gain the tools to put it into action. Now I am constantly surprised by how often I notice situations arising in which I apply middot to my experiences and responses. And this knowledge has a cumulative effect: the more middot I internalize, the more it enriches my life — personally, professionally, and communally.”

Dan Kaplan

Evanston, IL

Tikkun middot practice weaves Jewish wisdom through my day to day life, helping me meet situations that I used to find baffling and confusing. It may sound like hyperbole, but now that I’ve been practicing regularly, I experience miracles everywhere. Consistently, no matter what presents as a challenge in my life — from the simplest irritants to the most triggering situations — this practice helps me regulate my internal chaos and remember that my awareness is within me, a light that never goes out.”

Cantor Meredith Greenberg

Montclair NJ

Awareness in Action
A Session-by-Session Course Overview

Here’s a closer look at everything you’ll cover:

Every module is between 30 and 45 minutes in length, and includes:

 

    • Video teachings and guided “real life” scenarios with Rabbi Marc Margolius, Rabbi Tamara Cohen, Kohenet Keshira haLev Fife, and Rabbi Aaron Weininger.
    • A teaching from a related Jewish text with Rabbi Lisa Goldstein
    • A professionally recorded chant and sample “focus phrases” (a reminder to practice during the day)
    • A supplemental handout with reflection and journaling questions

Module One

Loving Connection: Chesed
Open up to loving connection, especially in challenging situations.

Module Two

Setting wise boundaries: Gevurah
Being loving and generous—but not to the extent you are doing a disservice to family, friends, colleagues, or yourself.

Module Three

Centering in a balanced self: Avanah
Taking up the right amount of space in the world—neither too much nor too little.

Module Four

Channeling an energetic response: Zerizut
Accessing the energy you need to either get going—or keep going.

Module Five

Experiencing gratitude: Hodayah
Accepting life on its own terms and rejoicing about what is true at this moment, just as it is.

Module Six

Letting Righteousness Flow: Tzedek
Developing your capacity to do what is right and just—with compassion opening new channels through which righteousness can flow.

Module Seven

Mindful speech: Sh’mirat Hadibbur
Applying mindfulness to all of your communications so that they reflect your best self.

Module Eight

Generating Trustworthiness: Emunah
Consistently showing-up for yourself and others.

Once you have finished the eight modules you may notice . . .

  • Some of the eight traits (middot) have been easier for you to incorporate into your life than others. There is plenty of time to go back and focus on the ones you found more challenging. In fact, we encourage going back through all eight.
  • You are learning which support tools are most helpful for you… is it humming a chant throughout your day; posting a “focus phrase” on your refrigerator or laptop screen; and/or checking-in with a practice partner three times per week.
  • You’re becoming more skilled at noticing when you are about to go down a habitual path that is out of alignment with how you want to be in the world—and sometimes doing something different. (It takes practice!)
  • You’re increasingly able to meet others (and yourself) with a deeper quality of love, compassion and acceptance.

Course Materials and Resources

This course is appropriate for beginners as well as more experienced meditators and mindfulness practitioners. While the concepts and practices are framed in Jewish terms, no prior Judaic knowledge is assumed or necessary.

When you register, you’ll get access to everything you need to take full advantage of the self-paced course, including:

  • Eight sets of self-paced video teaching sessions – that you can access anywhere, anytime from your computer or mobile device.
  • Eight guided “Mindful Life” practice scenarios – designed to help you integrate the course teachings into your everyday life.
  • Eight teachings from Jewish texts – that will provide a Jewish frame and additional insights into the character trait (middah).
  • Eight downloadable chants – one for each module, professionally recorded by Cantor Julia Cadrain with Elana Arian or Rabbi Sam Feinsmith, to help you integrate the character trait (middah) into your life through music.
  • Downloadable handouts for each module – so you can reference these teachings anytime.
  • Additional resources for each middah, including poems and playlists.
  • A personal online journal – your own personal space to record your reflections.
  • Online study/practice partners – so you can share your experience with like-minded others on a similar path.

 

Awareness in Action

IJS is pleased to offer this course at three tuition levels.
We encourage you to pay at the highest level you can, which will enable more students to participate.

Abundance Level

$399

Basic Level

$299

Supported Level

$149

Meet the course instructors:

Rabbi Marc Margolius

Rabbi Marc Margolius directs programming for lay leaders and alumni of the IJS clergy leadership training program, as well as the Tikkun Middot Project, which integrates Jewish mindfulness with middot (character trait) practice. He hosts IJS’s daily mindfulness meditation sessions and teaches an online program, Awareness in Action: Cultivating Character through Mindfulness and Middot. Previously, Marc served as rabbi at West End Synagogue in Manhattan.

Rabbi Lisa Goldstein

Lisa is a master teacher of Jewish-based mindfulness practices. She first came to IJS as a participant in the rabbinic leadership program and meditation teacher training. She served as the Executive Director of IJS, where, in addition to management responsibilities, she also taught at retreats and meditation programs. Educated at Brown University and Hebrew Union College, she previously served as the director of Hillel of San Diego, where she was recognized as an “Exemplar of Excellence.” Lisa She lives in New York City with her husband and foster son.

Rabbi Tamara Cohen

Rabbi Tamara Cohen is an educator and liturgist who has been using innovative ritual and feminist creative practice to bring Jews and their fellow travelers into deeper connection with themselves, their communities, Judaism and the Sacred, for over twenty-five years. As a partnered queer white anti-racist parent of two boys and a senior leader at Moving Traditions, a national organization that works to support the thriving of Jewish adolescents and their families, she brings a keen awareness of the spiritual challenges and blessings of daily life for people who care for others within their own families while also being engaged in and committed to the need for the larger systemic changes that would make care and repair easier to center and access. Tamara’s writing can be found in The Journey Continues: The Ma’yan Feminist HaggadahSiddur Lev Shalem and ritualwell.org. She is blessed to live with her family at the edge of Carpenter’s Woods in Philadelphia.

Kohenet Keshira haLev Fife

Kohenet Keshira haLev Fife (she/they pronouns) sprinkles sparkles, disrupts expectations, and offers blessings wherever she goes. She serves as Oreget Kehilah (Executive Director) of the Kohenet Hebrew Priestess Institute, Founding Kohenet of Kesher Pittsburgh and Program Director of the ALEPH Kesher Fellowship and also enjoys working with Keshet and Beloved Builders. Additionally, she delights in serving as a davennatrix (shlichat tzibbur), life spiral ceremony/ritual creatrix, teacher, facilitator, liturgist and songstress. Her work in these realms is informed by her lived experience as a queer, bi-racial, Jewish Woman, her belief that Book, Body and Earth are equal sources of wisdom, and the quandries she encounters as a scholar of the Orphan Wisdom School. Keshira received Kohenet smicha in 2017 and earned her BS 2000 and MS 2001 at Carnegie Mellon University. After many years of traveling and living in Australia, she and her beloved once again make their home on Osage and Haudenosaunee land, also called Pittsburgh, PA.

Rabbi Aaron Weininger

Rabbi Aaron Weininger joined Adath Jeshurun Congregation in 2012, upon receiving rabbinic ordination and an MA in Hebrew Letters from the Jewish Theological Seminary. He holds the Berman Family Chair in Jewish Learning. Aaron earned his BA at Washington University in St. Louis. In 2007 he became the first openly gay person admitted to rabbinical school in the Conservative movement of Judaism. That experience taught him the power of listening at the margins rather than pulling people into whatever the center is at that moment, and he is attuned to the spark each person brings to Torah, prayer, and acts of kindness in the warmth of community.

Meet the musicians and vocalists:

Elana Arian

Musician and Vocalist

 

Cantor Julia Cadrain

Vocalist

 

Rabbi Sam Feinsmith

Musician and Vocalist