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September 18, 2014 - Image 68

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2014-09-18

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68

September 18 • 2014

lmost everything is online
now, from newspapers and
books to TV shows and
community, so it makes sense that in
today's world self-reflection should go
digital, too.
During the traditional period of
reflection during the Jewish High
Holidays in September, Reboot's 10Q
project responds to online needs by
sending a question a day through
email for 10 days, offering a modern
way for people to reflect about their
lives.
The questions from 10Q, which
start Sept. 24, are not religious in
nature but are focused on life, goals,
plans for the future, relationships, our
place in the world and more.
10Q is an online effort to reverse
the trend of living only for the
moment from status update to sta-
tus update, from tweet to tweet.
Individuals' answers are sent into a
digital vault at the end of the pro-
cess and a year later the answers are
returned and the whole experience
begins again. The idea is for partici-
pants to make an annual tradition
out of answering the questions and
building a personal archive for future
years.
"In an era when what you posted
on Facebook and Twitter yesterday
has already disappeared into the
ether, there's something very beautiful
about getting an opportunity to visit
with your last year's self year after
year after year:' said playwright Nicola
Behrman, one of the creators of 10Q.
"It's a way to look from a very differ-
ent perspective at where you've been,
where you are and ultimately where
you're going:'
The project was founded in 2008
by Reboot, a Jewish cultural orga-
nization in Manhattan that seeks to
reinvent and re-imagine Jewish ritu-
als and traditions, along with writer
Ben Greenman, Behrman and Reboot
Associate Director Amelia Klein.
10Q resonates with an ecumeni-
cal, multi-generational audience with
participants ranging from teenag-
ers to grandparents. Although the
project is rooted in the Jewish idea of
ethical wills, reflection and teshuvah
(repentance) and occurs during the
10 days between Rosh Hashanah and
Yom Kippur, it has attracted people of
all backgrounds and denominations,
including Catholics, Episcopalians
and Buddhists.
To sign up, go to www.doyoul0q.
com/users .



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