"Where You Come First" I THE PLACE FOR SMOKED FISH I Kosins BAGEL DELI AND PRODUCE Uptown Searching For Meaning SouthfieLd Rd. at 11 1/2 Mile • 559-3900 . Continued from Page 45 Big & Tall Southfield at 10 1 /2 Mile • 569-6930 6088 W. MAPLE AT FARMINGTON RD. West Bloomfield 851-9666. MON. THRU SAT. 9 to 6 PROFILE SUNDAY 8 to 5 THE PERFECT HALL FOR THE PERFECT AFFAIR FINEST SMOKED FISH TRAYS & HANDCUT NOVA LOX • Bar/Bat Mitzvahs • Socials • Meetings • Etc. Zionist Cultural Center 18451 West 10 Mile Rd. ° Southfield°, MI 48075 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354-6060 ..-,,, •*.0 4.. .,„:„ . ,. Reasonable Rates Phone Barbara 569-1515 • ,: .. , 4) 0., . . 1, 4,1 ' .:'..„:•.•. - • kxbIkvx, : '. ,... - skw\t„.• '- ‘•,, A.‘,. ..__ . ft • - .. ...,, ..,: ..: ,..: , •.,,, :ks:.,,,,,:-- , 4 •:,,,..... .- . • ›. =ab•mbx•we,...vm...,...• eift:>..,. . -,,..T.N Rabbi Harold Kushner: His books draw heavily on personal experience. Jumbo Size PEPPERS ..... U.S. #1 CUKES .4/99c .41/99c NEW CABBAGE 19c ,„. Large Size MANGOS 79c each LIEBFRAUMILCH WINE . • • 2 1/5ths /$ 5 Borden's z. • 2% MILK . 1 /2 • • • . . • • . • ■ • • •79c 1/2 gal. liter bottles FAYGO POP .. • • • • • • • 69 /8 pack + All Specials Good Through August 13th, 1986 56 Friday, August 8, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS dep. what he preaches. He has rad- ically restructured his life. "The best thing I ever did was, three years ago, to go to the leadershcp,of my congregation and say can't go on like this any more. It's not fair to you or to me,' " he explains. "I cut back to half time and salary, and arranged for them to bring in a second full-time rabbi." The arrangement gave him time to do the things which make his life more meaning- ful, among them, to spend more time with his family. One of his regrets is that he did not spend more time ear- lier with his daughter, Ariel, now 19. "I was flying all over the country, telling people how to cope-with tragedy, and my daughter had no one to help her with her algebra homework, etc.," he says. It was wrong." The sad thing, he says, is that "a lot of people come to this conclusion when their children are teenagers. They go to them and say 'I've been selfish, I've spent too much time on myself, but now I'm ready to spend time with you,' just when their children are getting ready to say I've got other plans.' " He has been very happy to spend the past 20 years in Natick and looks forward to another 20 there, but he is glad to have the opportunity to go south in the winter, to have time to read a lot, go to the cinema, exercise more and fol- low sports. "For all my nega- . tive comments about sports, I'm a sports junkie," he laughs. "I will watch anything where people keep score." He is especially glad to have more time for public speaking and the "regenerative" occu- pation of teaching. "Authentic teaching represents a really human connection," he says. "You're really touching an- other human soul." He has come to terms with middle age. His favorite quo- tation from his book is from Agatha Christie, who was married to an archeologist. Asked what it was like she re- plied "It's wonderful. The older I get, the more interested he is in me." "You don't have to be an ar- cheologist to feel that way," asserts Kushner. "The older we get, the more interesting we become." "Jung," he reminds us, "said that the second act of life should not be a replay of the first. After 40, you should go back and fill in the spaces you left empty as you were grow- ing up." He firmly believes that achieving, or failing to achieve one set of goals, does not mean that there is nothing left. "There is no such thing as an ordinary life," he says. "Every human being is a unique story, never before told and never to be repeated." And a mature palate, he has discovered, brings to the eat- ing and drinking even more gladness and joy.0