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Latest The Mix
LifeLines
C. Saphir
Double Take
Rochel Samet
Second Thoughts
Rabbi Emanuel Feldman
Encounters
Peshie Needleman
Cut ‘n Paste
Esther Shaindy Leshkowitz
A Summer Well Spent
"To see how 'I' and 'me' are just ways to say ‘us' and 'we'; to expand yourself to include others"
Yosef Herz
A Summer Well Spent
"It was all part of being there, showing the unaffiliated that bnei Torah can be fun, normal, and serious about Yiddishkeit at the same time"
Yosef Herz
Moonwalk
I wonder if the path is as lonely as I’ve been imagining, after all
Rochel Samet
Moonwalk
Wait, since when do I joke about these things? What’s happening to me?
Rochel Samet
Podcast: Ask Sarah Chana
LISTEN: How can we hold on to the positive aspects of the quarantine existence?
Sarah Chana Radcliffe
Podcast: Ask Sarah Chana
A mother asks Sarah Chana how to react when her defiant teen refuses to comply with the community lockdown.
Sarah Chana Radcliffe
Match Quest
Rules are a lot like clichés. They came about for a reason. And like clichés, sometimes they apply and sometimes they don’t
Sara Eisemann
Match Quest
I discovered two significant patterns regarding the women who were “skipped”
Sara Eisemann
Life Lab
Decision making is exhausting. What if I get other people to make them for me?
Esther Kurtz
Life Lab
Could I adopt my husband’s habits for a week — and survive?
Esther Kurtz
More The Mix
10 Questions

Ethan Addess is an air traffic control specialist at Miami Air Route Traffic Control Center in Miami, Florida

By Rachel Bachrach

On Site

Watch: Follow Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz on a virtual tour around the sites at Caesarea!

By Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

Second Thoughts

There is great encouragement to be found in the defeat of the pollsters. We are not robots. It is in our power to change our habits and our thinking

By Rabbi Emanuel Feldman

LifeLines

Trying to pay Bubby’s bills, I ignited a civil war

By C. Saphir

On Site

Climbing on the ancient ruins of Caesarea

By Rabbi Ephraim Schwartz

Cut ‘n Paste

I tried, I really tried, but in my heart I knew I could only find happiness in Ponevezh

By Rabbi Yosef Sorotzkin