Parshas Chukas-Balak: The Wrong Rock
Last year, during Parshas Balak, I published a letter to camp staff about connection vs. discipline. It included a postscript—a memory from twenty years ago I’d almost left out entirely—about a staff member who slapped me across the face one night before lights out. I was fourteen. At the time, I assumed that writing it down had closed the chapter. The story had been told. The lesson had been extracted and shared. Whatever needed to be processed had been processed. Apparently not. Last week, I came across an article that unexpectedly brought the memory rushing back to the surface. The article wasn’t about camp, and it certainly wasn’t about me. But it was written by someone whose last name I associated with that story. As I read it, I found myself thinking about something I’ve been wrestling with a lot over the past year and a half. Much of my recent work has involved revisiting old stories about myself. Stories about who I am. Stories about where I struggle. Stories about things...