Cigar Asylum Cigar Forum  

Go Back   Cigar Asylum Cigar Forum > Non Cigar Specialty Forums > Misc > General Discussion

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 05-20-2009, 11:11 PM   #1
TomHagen
Rabbinic Consigliere
 
TomHagen's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Tattejuaje
Location: NY
Posts: 601
Trading: (12)
Bolivar
TomHagen will become famous soon enough
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Emjaysmash View Post
Good Question!

If you had to be any animal, what would it be and why?
I would have said a bear when I lived on a Native American Resevation, but now I would probably go with a cow or fish.

One of the few foods I don't like is fish. But they just seem so fresh, flexible and natural - kinda tapped in - living and breathing in water and connected to their environment. They strike me almost like vegetation but moving all the time freely.

Cows just seem to chill. But they don't look up, so that kinda stinks.
__________________
Cigar Asylum Minyan///Corona Gorda Comparison Thread
Do Acts of Goodness and Kindness!!
TomHagen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-20-2009, 11:17 PM   #2
Fishbeadtwo
Another nut j0b
 
Fishbeadtwo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Charlie
Location: Washington, the state
Posts: 1,175
Trading: (9)
Bolivar
Fishbeadtwo will become famous soon enough
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

How about a favorite meal menu? Awesome thread BTW!
__________________
This white coat is a little tight...?
Fishbeadtwo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-20-2009, 11:45 PM   #3
TomHagen
Rabbinic Consigliere
 
TomHagen's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Tattejuaje
Location: NY
Posts: 601
Trading: (12)
Bolivar
TomHagen will become famous soon enough
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fishbeadtwo View Post
How about a favorite meal menu? Awesome thread BTW!
Another good one!

La Aroma De Cuba Edicion Especial or Illusione mk (Lighter smoke)
Dirty Vodka (or Sapphire) Martini
Asian Beef Salad
Minestrone Soup
Appetizer:
Eggplant Rollatini (parve) or something Mexican/avocado-y
Main Course:
Prime Rib (or Steak au Poivre or Certain cut Delmonico) (w/ a potato and a seasoned grilled tomato)
Wines: Aged Yarden Cabernet or Galil Yiron or Le Connelle
Something Cuban: Bolivar RC or a good Monte#2
Chocolate Ice Cream (parve) or Dulce de Leche & Cream Cake (parve)
18 year old Laphroig Single Malt
Something strong & long: Tatuaje Cojonu 2003 or Pardron 1926 #1
a good chair & book

__________________
Cigar Asylum Minyan///Corona Gorda Comparison Thread
Do Acts of Goodness and Kindness!!
TomHagen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-21-2009, 07:18 AM   #4
ActionAndy
Dayman, Master of Karate
 
ActionAndy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
First Name: Andy
Location: Saratoga Springs, NY
Posts: 671
Trading: (7)
HdM
ActionAndy will become famous soon enough
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by TomHagen View Post
I would have said a bear when I lived on a Native American Resevation, but now I would probably go with a cow or fish.

One of the few foods I don't like is fish. But they just seem so fresh, flexible and natural - kinda tapped in - living and breathing in water and connected to their environment. They strike me almost like vegetation but moving all the time freely.

Cows just seem to chill. But they don't look up, so that kinda stinks.
I always say Sabertooth tiger (smilodon). Usually takes people by surprise and some of them actually try to argue that it's not a vlid choice--as if whatever genie is turning me into an animal is limited by a species being extinct.




I would spend all day hanging out on a rock, surveying my territory. Then I'd spot something and absolutely rocks its face.
ActionAndy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-21-2009, 07:45 AM   #5
TomHagen
Rabbinic Consigliere
 
TomHagen's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Tattejuaje
Location: NY
Posts: 601
Trading: (12)
Bolivar
TomHagen will become famous soon enough
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by ActionAndy View Post
I always say Sabertooth tiger (smilodon). Usually takes people by surprise and some of them actually try to argue that it's not a vlid choice--as if whatever genie is turning me into an animal is limited by a species being extinct.




I would spend all day hanging out on a rock, surveying my territory. Then I'd spot something and absolutely rocks its face.
Cool choice. I just would prefer not to be extinct before I even exist....
__________________
Cigar Asylum Minyan///Corona Gorda Comparison Thread
Do Acts of Goodness and Kindness!!
TomHagen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-21-2009, 09:22 AM   #6
smokin5
Have My Own Room
 
smokin5's Avatar
2
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: On the Mountaintop - AZ
Posts: 2,002
Trading: (69)
Bolivar
smokin5 is just really nicesmokin5 is just really nicesmokin5 is just really nicesmokin5 is just really nicesmokin5 is just really nice
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

Whoops on the "non-secular" slip! Thanks for the correction.
Maybe I should have written dis-non-secular?

OK, let's get this back on track:

I presume from some of your comments that you were not religious for a good chunk of your life, & then experienced a spiritual awakening.
What caused you to embrace Judaism with such fervor?
Where & when did you pursue your rabbinical studies?
__________________
Pobody's Nerfect.
smokin5 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-21-2009, 09:26 AM   #7
Emjaysmash
The Hebrew Hammer
 
Emjaysmash's Avatar
1
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: M.J.
Location: Milwaukee, WI
Posts: 7,025
Trading: (76)
Emjaysmash is a splendid one to beholdEmjaysmash is a splendid one to beholdEmjaysmash is a splendid one to beholdEmjaysmash is a splendid one to beholdEmjaysmash is a splendid one to beholdEmjaysmash is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by smokin5 View Post
Whoops on the "non-secular" slip! Thanks for the correction.
Maybe I should have written dis-non-secular?

OK, let's get this back on track:

I presume from some of your comments that you were not religious for a good chunk of your life, & then experienced a spiritual awakening.
What caused you to embrace Judaism with such fervor?
Where & when did you pursue your rabbinical studies?
Good questions!
__________________
Emjaysmash is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-21-2009, 10:05 AM   #8
TomHagen
Rabbinic Consigliere
 
TomHagen's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
First Name: Tattejuaje
Location: NY
Posts: 601
Trading: (12)
Bolivar
TomHagen will become famous soon enough
Default Re: Ask The Rabbi!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by smokin5 View Post
Whoops on the "non-secular" slip! Thanks for the correction.
Maybe I should have written dis-non-secular?

OK, let's get this back on track:

I presume from some of your comments that you were not religious for a good chunk of your life, & then experienced a spiritual awakening.
What caused you to embrace Judaism with such fervor?
Where & when did you pursue your rabbinical studies?

I would really need an ice-cold bottle of vodka and an 'A' vitola cigar to go into all the details...

But, since you asked, I'll give some background info.

I grew up in a very secular/Reform household. Temple 2-3 times a year, no Kosher, No Shabbos, Nary a Mezuzah etc., didn't know what those things really were, but I grew up in a very warm, thinking, open-minded, moral, caring home. So I had that foundation. As I got older, I guess you could say I became a full-fledged 'hippie', although my environs were the LI suburbs, and eventually I left for college in Ann Arbor, I was kinda able to let my 'freak-flag-fly' and I was totally out there. I worked in the music industry throughout college. Lived a pretty psycedelic existance. I also studied different Cultural Literature extensively in college - Native American, Chinese, Latin American, Tibetan and of course Jewish literature - much of it mystical. I also studied religions and ethnobotany, in addition to my coursework in English Lit and Anthropology. This might be another foundation I built upon. During and after college I was always seeking, exploring, traveling etc. From Native American reservations to the Hawai'in rainforest etc., I was into the supernatural through au naturale. Eventually, I started having more of an awareness of my Jewish identity, meeting random, very diverse Jewish people, still reading etc. and came to the conclusion I needed to check out Judaism and see if I could find a more 'real' 'true' and 'vital' Jewish spirituality then the one I was raised with. After all I was a Jew, so I definitely owed it to myself to try to reconnect to that, in the midst of all of my other explorations. If it was to suit me, satisfy my spritual, intellectual cravings, and be a practical, vital way of life, great, if not, on to the next thing (which was going to be getting a horse and riding the length of S. America starting in Durango, Mexico ). Alas, I met a whole diverse group of Jewish people from all walks of life at the national Rainbow Gathering in Montana. After I returned from Hawai'i by way of SanFran, I took a stripped and refurbed giant school bus, with wood-burning stove, electrice generator, oven and range top, couches, beds, foutons etc. with 21 friends out from Eugene, OR to the Continental Divide in Montana. There was a "Jerusalem Kitchen", the whole Rainbow is made up of different "kitchens"/camps (Jazz Kitchen, the Texas Kitchen , the blahblahblah kitchen etc... 30,000 people total) where you could find delicious food and every type of Jew you ever could imagine. I was pretty blissed-out and decided to stay in touch with some of the people I had met, learned from, gotten books, did the Shabbos thang, put on Tefillin and thought about going to Israel. Alas it didn;t come to fruition. I had moved back east to NY for family reasons, and two days before I was supposed to leave for Israel, the intifada broke out, and my parents asked me to at least postpone my trip (also, I did not have the understanding then of solidarity with the people living in Israel). So I did. I felt stuck back east, and began exploring different synogogues, you name the Jewish sect, I have been by their temple, or hung out with, learned from them. I met this pretty famous actor in Manhattan, who asked me about my funky hippie, Jewish look, turned out to be interested in his own Jewish background and he gave me his West Village apt. for as long as I wanted. I said great, moved in and began learning Torah part time in Hadar Hatorah yeshivah - the FIRST Yeshiva EVER for Jewish men who are as yet unobservant, with little or no Jewish knowledge. It was started by the Lubavitcher Rebbe in 1962. Why I decided to go there? No, not only because Bob Dylan would go there for a spell often, but after all my searching, I felt (and feel) that Chabad-Lubavitch Chassidus is the deepest, most spirtual and simultaneously real and practical for of Judaism on the face of the earth. I found that they follow Jewish Law 110% without compromise, follow and ACTUALLY LEARN OPENLY, in depth, Jewish mysticism also without compromise (aka Kabbalah (- not Hollywood style)) and do not isolate themselves from the world, but rather constantly engage the world (Jew and Non-Jew) and try to make it a better place. We are accepting of all Jews no matter their level of observance - non-judgemental. After learing in Hadar Hatorah for 2 years, I went to the central Lubavitch yeshiva at 770, world lubavtich hq and began learning for Rabbinical ordination, 2 years later I married my wonderful wife, learned for 1 year more in Kollel (yeshiva for married men) and then went to start a Chabad house on a college campus and taught Judaic studies as a professor there as well. We have 3 kids, B"H. phew...
__________________
Cigar Asylum Minyan///Corona Gorda Comparison Thread
Do Acts of Goodness and Kindness!!

Last edited by TomHagen; 05-21-2009 at 10:13 AM.
TomHagen is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 04:17 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All content is copyrighted jointly by Cigar Asylum and the content provider.