Tashlich: Letting go of last year

During the Jewish High Holy Days, between Rosh Hashanah (today) and Yom Kippur (in 10 days), we are called to reflect, reconfigure our priorities and recommit to what matters.

There is a tradition (tashlich) of going to a body of water and casting away our sins… but the word sin in English means something very different than in Hebrew (different topic). In Hebrew, it means “missing the mark”. It is not something to feel bad about, but rather something to learn from and inspire us to do better next time.

Sadly too often, when things go wrong, we feel guilty and that can cause us to get stuck. Or we blame others and stay stuck. Guilt, shame and blame can weigh us down. And so, on Rosh Hashanah, we are supposed to throw away all that keeps us stuck in the past… which sometimes even includes religious restrictions made by human beings for purposes less than divine.

Too often we feel guilty about things that we ought to feel proud… like when we take steps forward into who we were created to be. We need to release the guilt that comes from not being who we were when we were trying to hide ourselves on order to please others…

Ultimately, I believe that the lesson of the Jewish High Holy Days is that time is short and precious… we are reminded that trying to make others happy at our own expense pleases no one… neither those we try to please, nor ourselves, nor the One Who created each of us uniquely…

And so on this High Holy Days, as I sit in front of the ocean, I pray that the waves wash away all that kept me from being me… all that keeps us all from being the best we can be… and I give thanks for a new year that gives me/us all another chance…