L'61-1ANA TOVAII! Wishing our friends, family and community a happy and healthy New Year! corner then... Unplug during Yom Kippur to connect in a whole new way. I Joy Fields Interfaithfamily.com M ost Jews, be they secular or devout, practicing or not, can agree that we have enough rules. We have 613 command- ments, for crying out loud. Actually, I scanned the list and crying out loud has no associated commandments, but practically everything else does. "Shahs" and "shalt nots" for dressing, eating, praying, relating. Everything from criminal justice to dermatitis is covered. The point is, we probably have enough ancient wisdom to follow without adding modern rules, but I am proposing one more for Yom Kippur. On this Day of Atonement, there are five traditional No-Nos: • No eating and drinking • No wearing of leather shoes • No bathing or washing • No anointing oneself with per- fumes or lotions • No marital relations I would like to add a sixth thing to this list: Unplug. Yes, everything. Including the phone. I'm a reasonable person. It can be in your purse or glove compartment to turn back on in case of emergency. But unless your tire blows out on the way to synagogue or a passenger goes into labor, keep it turned off. Not silenced. Not set to vibrate. Off. Yom Kippur is a day to reflect on your soul. You do not need to know what Groupons have become avail- able. You do not need to know who else liked your picture or what George Takei is thinking. You can catch up on all of that tomorrow. Provided you are inscribed in the Book of Life for another day. Today, it's time to pray. Stock prices, sports scores, tempera- tures, recipes and shark attacks can all wait a day. You don't need those for reflection or atonement. If you must, spend the day before Yom Kippur setting up brief messages on your voicemail, email and frontal lobe micro- chip, alerting the public that you will not be responding to them the nanosecond after they send you a message. Then take a deep breath and turn it all off. The Earth will continue to rotate. Change Of Focus On this holiest of holy days, you have no appointments, nor are you making future ones. Your music will be cantorial, your commentary rab- binic. Your cloud is on the bimah. You will remain Tweetless, bumpless and pokeless, while sharing in the old-fashioned sense of the word. Look the stranger next to you in the eye and smile. Maybe even nod and greet them. They will not follow you tomorrow. They will not detect your address and judge your house/ neighborhood/traffic patterns. They may even smile back at you without knowing your job title, alma mater or potential for providing future employment and/or purchases. You might find yourself liking them, even though no computer program suggested you might. During breaks between services, you can have conversations uninter- rupted by darting eyes and tapping fingers. You can listen to and convey complete thoughts — sentences, even. You can glance around the room during lulls and see if you need to welcome a stranger, assist an elder, guide a child away from a potential disaster. You can drive home paying com- plete attention to traffic signals, the car in front of you, pedestrians. Maybe even roll down the window for a breath of fresh late summer air. I would dare suggest prolonging the techno silence into your post- Yom Kippur breaking of the fast. Concentrate on enjoying the food, the company. Your friends don't need to see a picture of Aunt Irene's faux chopped liver. It wasn't really funny last year, either, by the way. I think you'll find your day has been more serene, your reflections more intense and your anxiety reduced from spending the day with less interruption. You'll look forward to unplugging again one day. Maybe even set aside one day a week for unplugging and relaxing. I think there may even be a commandment about that, too. &ill on the corner now! Specializing in: Custom Designed Jewelry Rings of Marriage Appraisal Service Jewelry Repair Estate Jewelry Jewelry Recycle Fine Costume Jewelry ...since 1922. David Wachter On the Corner in Birmingham! BEST OF HOUR Voted Metro Detroit's BEST Custom Jeweler Follow us . on Facebook ❑ Joy Fields is a writer and CPA living in Kingwood, Texas. 248.540.4622 I 100 South Old Woodward, Birmingham, MI 48009 wachlerjewelers.com September 5 • 2013 49