Lisa Niver's Blog: We Said Go Travel, page 71

June 6, 2021

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Published on June 06, 2021 22:29

Remembering our Scars, Finding our Strength with Cantor Emma Lutz

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Thank you to Cantor Emma Lutz from Stephen Wise for sharing her wisdom this past week. What she wrote really spoke to me and I asked for her permission to share it here:

MONDAYThroughout our country today we commemorate Memorial Day, a day reserved to honor and grieve those who died while serving in the United States Armed Forces. Many of us will be gathering with friends and family, perhaps connecting with circles of loved ones from whom we have been separated for many months. Let us use this time earmarked for remembrance as an opportunity to express our gratitude and to share in our bereavement for those who perished in service to our country, to heal from the many wounds of this past year, and to look to the future of our community, our country, and our world with renewed confidence and hope.

There is a Jewish custom to light a memorial candle in honor of a loved one on their yahrzeit (the anniversary of their passing) or on special days of remembrance. For those of us thinking of a loved one on this Memorial Day, or for any of us who have the intention of honoring our fallen service members today, I encourage you to light a yahrzeit candle. May these words of blessing from Mishkan T’filah for the House of Mourning, be a comfort for us all:Grant us strength to endure what cannot be escaped,
And courage to continue with no bitterness or despair.
Let us find You, God,
          In the love of friends and family,
          In the deep recesses of our being,
          In the hearts that open to us, when it seems that love has vanished.
May this candle rekindle in us strength and hope,
May this light shine with the certainty of Your Presence, O God, 
          Here and now, 
          In this home at this hour
          As we remember. 
Blessed is the Eternal One, who has implanted within us eternal life.

— Cantor Emma Lutz[image error]TUESDAY

Rabbi Sari and I both recently attended a virtual course through the Hadar Institute (a wonderful egalitarian Jewish education organization) around themes of reopening and reunion that are found in our Torah and other sacred texts. I was so grateful to have the opportunity to revisit the Talmudic story of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai—a man who spent many years in isolation—and to read it in a new light after 14+ months of pandemic seclusion and disjointed living. Here is an excerpt from Rabbi Shimon’s story, as taught to us by Rabbi Tali Adler:

Shimon bar Yochai spent 12 years in a cave dwelling in reclusion with only his son as a companion. After he re-emerged from his cave, Rabbi Pinchas ben Yair heard of his return and went to greet him. He brought Rabbi Shimon to the bathhouse to tend to his skin, because it had been terribly cracked and damaged from the dark and dry environment of the cave. Rabbi Pinchas began to cry, tears falling from his eyes at the sight of Rabbi Shimon’s great physical pain. Rabbi Pinchas said to him: “Woe is me, that I have to see you like this, my friend, with such wounds from your time in isolation!” But to his surprise, Rabbi Shimon responded, “Happy you should be to see me like this, for if you had not seen me this way, you would not have found me at all.” (Babylonian Talmud, Shabbat 34a)

I love Rabbi Shimon’s response to his friend Rabbi Pinchas: better for you to see me with all of my cracks and scars than to not see me at all, and also, these scars are a part of me now and you cannot truly know me again as a whole person without acknowledging them. It is a gift to truly be able to see another person, to acknowledge what they have been through, to bear witness to their vulnerability and their pain. We are all marked with spiritual, emotional, and physical scabs after these past fourteen months—wounds of boredom, loss, and longing. May we allow ourselves to be like Rabbi Shimon, wearing our vulnerability as our strength. And may we also be like Rabbi Pinchas, acknowledging the toll this year has taken on our loved ones and ourselves. Together, may they inspire and guide us to and through our increasing opportunities for meaningful reconnection and restoration as a holy community.

— Cantor Emma Lutz

WEDNESDAY

When I was eleven months old, my parents heard me singing along in the backseat of the car to Bobby McFerrin’s “Don’t Worry Be Happy,” and I was humming and singing long before I could speak in full sentences. I was just five years old when I danced and sang as a “lost boy” in a local production of Peter Pan and I spent the majority of my childhood and adolescence singing from both the stage and bima. In my late teens and early adult years my calling to become a cantor became clear to me, but the anthems of musical theatre (most of which have been written by Jews) still include some of my favorite melodies from any era and can offer a different medium of connection to the Divine.  

Listening to and singing music has kept me focused and hopeful throughout my entire life, this year more than ever. Amidst the discord of life during the pandemic, harmony and rhythm, creativity and repetition have been and continue to be an incomparable source of comfort and joy. Day after day, the healing pulses of my favorite melodies—musicals, contemporary, and Jewish melodies alike—gave me the energy to persist and filled me with the hope of not only one day being inside a crowded theatre hall like the Ahmanson, but to imagine my heart’s deepest yearning: to be back in the sanctuary singing live together again. Throughout this past year, singing to my daughter Ruby at home, officiating at our beautiful outdoor b’nai mitzvah with our inspiring young members, and more recently, joining back together for services outside on our campus, the music of our Jewish heritage—traditional and liturgical as well as theatrical and contemporary—continues to be a source of deep inspiration and great tranquility for me.

What were your melodies of inspiration this year? What lyrics and music of the past shape your best and most meaningful memories? What do you hope to hear more of in the months and years to come? I hope we will have many opportunities ahead to explore these motifs together.

This song, “Answer Me,” composed by Jewish-Syrian composer David Yazbek and performed by Jewish singer Adam Kantor from the 2018 Tony Award-winning Broadway Cast Recording of the Musical The Band’s Visit (based on the fantastic 2007 Israeli movie by the same name), was an anthem of mine this past year. A song of yearning and hopefulness, it’s a moving musical theatre piece with the ring of a prayer. I hope that it will bring insight and light to your day.

— Cantor Emma Lutz

THURSDAY

In 2011-2012, I spent my first year of cantorial school living in Jerusalem, which was undoubtedly the most magical and memorable year of my life (with the exception being this past special year with my daughter, Ruby). I studied and spoke Hebrew every day, enjoyed living on the rhythm of the Jewish calendar, davened (prayed) at many different synagogues enjoying a variety of musical traditions, and absolutely fell in love with the land and the people (as well as my wonderful husband, Adam, who I met that year). It was a relatively peaceful year, Jerusalem existing in its own quiet and mystical rhythm, and I was lucky and blessed to be safe walking the streets of my favorite city for eleven sweet months. Jerusalem is my forever home and a part of my heart is, as Yehuda HaLevi so perfectly put it, always in the East. 

While we are greatly uplifted by the recently signed ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, we continue to pray for the land of our People Israel and for the preservation of peace. Every Shabbat here at Stephen Wise Temple, we include in our services a prayer for the safety of the State of Israel and those who dwell in it. Today, I am honored to share an interpretation of our Hashkiveinu prayer, written by my colleague Rabbi Sandra Stock Mayo, with the special intention that her words may be a beacon of light and hope for all of us who continue to pray for Medinat Yisrael:

Help us to lie down at night in comfort, safety, and peace
May the dreams of our children be sweet tonight and tomorrow and the day after
May the future be bright for them
and for their children
and for generations to come
 
Grant us the ability to rest after long days of work and worry
Give us the chance to let our souls be at peace
and give us the grace to know how to separate from the things 
we cannot control
Allow us to quiet our bodies and our minds 
as we drift away from the mundane and enter into a sacred dreamscape
 
Spread over us the shelter of your comforting presence
Help us to know that it is okay to let go
To breathe, to be – just to be
Journey with us into our sublime subconsciousness 
and let us live in this liminal space of neither here nor there
For when we are with you
we are never truly alone
 
Guide us, watch over us, protect us
Allow us to rise in the morning with the fragrance of a new dawn
A chance to hope, to create ourselves anew 
Again and again and again.

May this be a meaningful addition to your own prayers and intentions, and may the words of our mouths and the meditations of our hearts be heard by God and our love and support felt by our brothers and sisters in the East. 

— Cantor Emma Lutz

FRIDAYוְשָׁמְר֥וּ בְנֵֽי־יִשְׂרָאֵ֖ל אֶת־הַשַּׁבָּ֑ת לַעֲשׂ֧וֹת אֶת־הַשַּׁבָּ֛ת לְדֹרֹתָ֖ם בְּרִ֥ית עוֹלָֽם׃ בֵּינִ֗י וּבֵין֙ בְּנֵ֣י יִשְׂרָאֵ֔ל א֥וֹת הִ֖וא לְעֹלָ֑ם כִּי־שֵׁ֣שֶׁת יָמִ֗ים עָשָׂ֤ה יְהֹוָה֙ אֶת־הַשָּׁמַ֣יִם וְאֶת־הָאָ֔רֶץ וּבַיּוֹם֙ הַשְּׁבִיעִ֔י שָׁבַ֖ת וַיִּנָּפַֽשׁ׃The People of Israel will keep Shabbat, observing Shabbat throughout the ages as a covenant for all time. It will be a sign forever between Me and the People of Israel, for in six days God made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day, God rested and was refreshed. (Exodus 31:16-17)  
The Sabbath is our sacred “time out,” a reminder from our tradition to stop as God did from creation, distraction, and busy-ness. I love to think of Shabbat not as a time of hindrance or limitation, but rather, a time of great abundance, a space to acknowledge all that God has given us and to give ourselves more—more love, more care, more nourishment, more family time, more prayer, more reading, more connection, more long walks, and most of importantly, more rest.    
For each of us, “these twenty five hours of more” will look and feel differently. Some of us are energized by others, and some of us are revitalized by time alone. This Friday and Saturday, how might you make space for more of what you need? Perhaps you might close your eyes, meditate on the couch, join our Shabbat study or services, sip tea in bed while reading a good book, daydream or stare out a window, dance with your kids, take a long walk by yourself, listen to your favorite music…how might you imagine more time and space for your own revitalization this Shabbat?  
My prayer is that you will find great power and transformation in Shabbat’s invitation to rest as God intended for us. I hope this setting of V’shamru, the text excerpted above as imagined here by Jewish songwriter Debbie Friedman, invites you to more rest and reflection this weekend. 
Shabbat Shalom! 
— Cantor Emma Lutz[image error]

Cantor Emma Lutz was born and raised in Walnut Creek, California where her family and community instilled in her a deep love of Judaism and music. She graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of California, Davis with degrees in Religious Studies and Music. Cantor Lutz received her Master of Sacred Music in 2015 and was ordained in 2016 by the Debbie Friedman School of Sacred Music at the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York, NY. She has proudly served Stephen Wise Temple since July 2016. 

Before attending HUC-JIR, Cantor Lutz worked as a soloist and teacher for synagogues throughout the Bay Area and was also a performer with numerous theatre companies, including Center REPertory Company, Diablo Theatre Company, and the Napa Valley Opera House. In addition, she spent time volunteering in Israel with the IDF through Sar-El, the National Project for Volunteers for Israel.

During her first year of cantorial school at HUC-JIR, she worked as cantorial intern for Kehillat Tzur Hadassah, a vibrant Reform synagogue just outside of Jerusalem. While studying at the New York campus, Emma enjoyed internships at Congregation Oheb Sholom and Union Temple, and she also served as a chaplain for Mount Sinai-Roosevelt Hospital. Cantor Lutz is the recipient of both the Rabbi Rick Jacobs Award in Innovative Worship (2015) and the Rhonda and Jerome Malino Prize in Bible Studies (2013). She is an active member of the American Conference of Cantors and a life member of Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America. 

Cantor Lutz is married to Rabbi Adam Lutz, a Los Angeles native, whom she met during her Year-In-Israel studies at HUC-JIR. Together, they are the proud parents of Ruby Mira.

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Published on June 06, 2021 09:00

June 5, 2021

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Published on June 05, 2021 10:32

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June 3, 2021

Join a Global Group of Incredible Women at LIFT AS WE RISE! #LiftAsWeRiseSummit

If we’ve learned anything over the last year and a half, it’s that our health, our wellbeing, and our lives are dependent upon each other. Join us for a weekend exploration of how we are going to move through our collective grief and into our collective future. (And keep reading for an exclusive discount code!)

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As we re-emerge from a global pandemic, it’s becoming clear that our new normal cannot be a return, but a reimagining of our collective future. And at LIFT AS WE RISE, a summer summit hosted by The Jane Club, a digital community for women, we’ll explore how our choices and actions impact our families and friends, our communities and our world—and focus on the impact we can have on our lives, in our communities and our world.

Arlan Hamilton will talk to us about Collective Wealth, and the urgency of closing the wealth gap. Anne Helen Petersen will school us on how to minimize burnout and take on hustle culture so we can access Collective Calm. Sally Kohn will get real with us about the practice of compassion in post-pandemic relationships and how we can foster Collective Connection. Imani Barbarin will speak truth about disability justice and the importance of Collective Care. Celina Caesar-Chavannes will walk us through how to foster Collective Success—by figuring out what we really want and making room for everyone to achieve their dreams. Actress and Jane Club co-founder June Diane Raphael will be your emcee, and activist and writer Brittany Packnett Cunningham will close us out with an inspiring keynote conversation.

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LAWR is a virtual weekend gathering happening June 12 + 13. Pre-summit programming started THIS WEEK! Don’t miss one second of it—the networking and community-building in our digital village, exclusive resources for attendees, and a weekend of insight and inspiration.

You do not have to be a Jane Club member to attend! But you will get the best of JANE in one weekend: We’ll hear from inspirational speakers and come together to reflect and share. Drop in on a few sessions or come for the entire time—it’s up to you.

The future we want for ourselves and our neighbors starts with us—and it starts right here. Let’s lift up each other and ourselves. Let’s rise together. Use code WSGT20X at janeclub.com/lift for free tickets.

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Published on June 03, 2021 09:00

May 31, 2021

Deepak Chopra interviewed by Lisa Niver: May News 2021

May News 2021 with Lisa Niver & We Said Go Travel:Thank you Deepak Chopra! [image error]I loved speaking with him about the divine feminine, his new 21-day meditation with Alicia Keys and his Never Alone Summit. I introduced him as Mallika’s dad since I interviewed her first!Thank you to Thrive Global for publishing my article, “Strategies for Success: Mental Health Awareness Month with Deepak Chopra

Thank you to Deepak for sharing my article across his social media!

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Grateful to @thrive for sharing this information which is vital for creating a more peaceful, just, sustainable, healthier and joyful world. 🙏https://t.co/3oqrAahJ5i

— Deepak Chopra (@DeepakChopra) May 21, 2021
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Did you love The Henna Artist? I wrote about it for Ms. Magazine and recently interviewed author, Alka Joshi, about her new book which you can pre-order NOW called The Secret Keeper of Jaipur! Watch our interview here or read it on Thrive Global, “Writing and Rewriting during COVID.[image error][image error][image error][image error][image error]Alka Joshi and Lisa Niver interview May 10, 2021[image error]Thank you to Paula Carreiro of PC Public Relations for highlighting me as a featured travel writer in your newsletter and website![image error]Thank you to Bob Wheeler and the Money Nerve Team including Anthony and Alyssa for having me on their show, MONEY YOU SHOULD ASK![image error]Thank you to Jill Cutler for her photos and help with this article on the Jewish Journal, “Thank you to those who #StandWithIsrael.”[image error]More articles on We Said Go Travel and the Jewish Journal: Congratulations Mia Schlosser, Finalist in The Music Center’s annual Spotlight programPut On Purple Day…Raise Lupus Awareness on May 21stCovid Relief to India through WHEN: World Health and Education NetworkSaint Vincent Volcano Disaster Relief[image error]WHERE CAN YOU FIND MY TRAVEL VIDEOS?

Here is the link to my video channel on YouTube where I have over 1.3 million views on YouTube! (Exact count: 1,336,692 views)

Thank you for your support! Are you one of my 3,110 subscribers? I hope you will join me and subscribe! For more We Said Go Travel articles, TV segments, videos and social media: CLICK HERE

Find me on social media with over 150,000 followers. Please follow  on Twitter at @LisaNiver, Instagram @LisaNiver and on FacebookPinterestYouTube, and at LisaNiver.com.

My fortune cookies said: “Good Opportunities ahead—set your mind to grasp the next..” “Take a trip with a friend

Stay safe and healthy ! We will travel again! Lisa

[image error]Taken April 27, 2021 in Santa Monica with my new #iPhone 12ProMax

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Published on May 31, 2021 09:00

May 30, 2021

Handmade Happiness at Hashimoto Nursery with Michelle Sakai-Hart

[image error]Hashimoto Nursery is excited to announce their collaboration with Sakai Harts & Crafts. After 80 years and 3 generations later, Hashimoto Nursery is still family owned and operated, providing quality plants and friendly service to the Westside. [image error]Sakai Harts & Crafts offers bright and bold pottery handcrafted in sunny California. Each piece is fun•ctional and designed to be one-of-a-kind!
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Michelle Sakai-Hart (she/her/hers), is an AAPI ceramics artist, educator, and ocean enthusiast. Born and raised in California, she spent most of her childhood in Aptos, a small coastal town in Santa Cruz County. Much of Michelle’s inspiration comes from her love and study of the ocean. She enjoys creating bright, bold, and colorful pieces that add a bit of sunshine to your home.

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Each planter is unique and handpainted by Michelle![image error]
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Bring handmade happiness into your home!
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Published on May 30, 2021 09:00

May 29, 2021

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Published on May 29, 2021 18:02

May 26, 2021


What an absolute joy to speak with @LisaNiver for @thriv...


What an absolute joy to speak with @LisaNiver for @thrive! Thank you for taking the time to chat about how're we're changing the equation for women in the workplace at the @femalequotient. https://t.co/FJ5DhYtnXn


— Shelley Zalis (@ShelleyZalis) May 25, 2021


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Published on May 26, 2021 09:38

Kated Travel Podcast: Stephen Bailey and Lisa Niver

Kated Travel Episode 162 – What To Do When You Can’t Travel, with Lisa Niver and host, Stephen Bailey[image error]Stephen Bailey and Lisa NiverKated Travel Podcast

What do you do when your number one passion is taken away? What do you do when you always travel, and then you can’t travel? It’s easy to be despondent during the great pause that is Covid-19. But some travellers see opportunity and positivity in the situation. Lisa Niver from We Said Go Travel brings her positive energy and great advice in today’s episode. She gives tips on how to use this time productivity and stay upbeat for when travel can return.

We talked about:

TELL ME MORE ABOUT series

Solomon Islands

YouTube Videos with 1.3M views

Galapagos Islands

Vanuatu

Lisa on KTLA TV in Los Angeles in her classroom:

Lisa on KTLA TV talking about travel–first segment about Napa Valley

Lisa on KTLA TV talking about Ogden, Utah: skiing and where the East and West Coast sides of the train met:

Lisa’s articles for Teen Vogue, AARP, American Airlines, Delta Sky, United Airlines, Wharton magazine, Smithsonian Magazine and many other places!!

[image error]Lisa Niver is a winner at the 2020 62nd Southern California Journalism Awards!Lisa wants to go Scuba diving: bucket list: Great Barrier Reef, Raja Ampat, IndonesiaJoin me at Gardens of the Queen, Diving in CubaLisa’s bucket list: Antarctica (her final continent), Brazil, Iceland and Mallorca![image error]Lisa is writing a memoir! Learn about the journey to her book on Undomesticated magazine:[image error]Lisa’s 50 challenges before 50: mountain biking, sky diving and skiing with Jennifer who is blind and diving with bull sharks.[image error]Lisa Niver working for Princess Cruises[image error]Matt Payne took this photo of Lisa Niver, founder of We Said Go Travel, in Kenya in July 2018[image error]Thank you to Stephen Bailey and Kated Travel for inviting me on your show! It was great to talk about what you can do when you can’t travel!

You can also listen on LISTENNOTES:

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Published on May 26, 2021 09:00

We Said Go Travel

Lisa Niver
Lisa Niver is the founder of We Said Go Travel and author of the memoir, Traveling in Sin. She writes for USA Today, Wharton Business Magazine, the Jewish Journal and many other on and offline publica ...more
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