Nothing to Do Tonight in NYC? Why Not Party Like a Rock Star?

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MDArockstarparty.jpgYou can still Party Like a Rock Star to benefit American Friends of Magen David Adom tonight at Marquee for the celebratory cover price of only $48! Register here, or show up at the door and mention my name…

Let’s share drinks and hors d’oeuvre in honor of a Middle Eastern democracy that will soon play host for several months to various bloggers and creative Jewish innovators…

Pssst…Wanna Buy a Frumster?

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The pre-eminent pay service for finding religious Jewish dating prospects is up for sale. According to a press release:

Frumster.com, the largest Jewish Dating-for-Marriage service in the world, has just announced that the company is for sale. Frumster recently reached its 1000th Matched milestone and has grown steadily since its inception in 2001. In the past 5 years under the management of Dr. Ben Rabizadeh, CEO, the monthly match rate has increased to 5 weddings each week – a new record established during the first 3 months of 2008.

The company will be available for sale over the next three months; information on Frumster can be obtained by contacting interim CEO Richard Hecker at rich@frumster.com.

Think You’re “In a Relationship”? Better Ask Facebook

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Anyone who’s involved in today’s tech age and is conversant in the zeitgeist of social media surely already realizes that Facebook has changed almost everything about the way people–most of them younger, but with a growing older population–relate to each other. (See “Status Symbol,” here.) Joining the program late (because if you get to a trend after the Jewish Week does, let’s face it, you’re late) is CNN, which has suddenly discovered that relationships are different in the age of Facebook.

Matt Pestinger, 18, started his group, “Your relationship doesn’t count unless it’s posted on Facebook,” as a commentary on today’s world, he said in an e-mail. “I decided to start this group to point out what our world has come to and it cracks me up,” the University of Oklahoma freshman said. His group has 468 members. “People love the group,” he said. “One thing everyone says is, ‘That’s hilarious and true.'”

A very apt social commentary. This is what it takes these days. But I’d take it further. Nothing is real until it’s on Facebook. That’s why this year’s April Fool’s Joke worked…but that’s another discussion.

Samantha Majka wants to let people know a little more about her relationship. Majka, 18, is a sophomore at Towson University in Towson, Maryland. She created the online group “Facebook relationship status options are insufficient.” The group, which has nearly 2,000 members, boasts ideas for Facebook to add to its lists of options for relationships. Some of the ideas are “Has [insert name] wrapped around his/her finger,” “Is seeing […] but sssh don’t tell” and “Is trying to figure out a way to break up with […]”

Whoa. Can you imagine logging into Facebook and perusing your status feed, only to find that your boyfriend, Josh (or something), is “trying to figure out a way to break up with [insert your name here]”? But that other one–“is seeing [….] but sssh don’t tell”–in addition to really needing a comma and perhaps one less s and one more h, is completely pointless. I mean, the nature of Facebook is to broadcast, to shout to everyone, even people you don’t know that well (or at all), “look what I’m doing!!” Adding “shh, it’s a secret” doesn’t keep it a secret. It’s already out there and people are not that disciplined.

So if you think you’re in a relationship, think again. There are all levels of declaration of intent and promises of permanence when it comes to defining yourself in relation to other people; so be wary of what you share with whom. And if you don’t know where you are, check your status.

JDA Presents: Video Vault

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A new (hopefully regular) feature here at JDA, in which we look at dating- and relationship-related videos and discuss them in an open (hopefully constructive) manner.

To kick off the series, here’s Mr. Lonely–a perfectly nice-looking Jewish guy wearing a sign that proclaims his desperation for a date, “TONIGHT!” Discussion topics after the jump.

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Who Pays? Let’s Find the Answer, At Last

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One of the most popular questions that people ask me on and off this blog is about who should pay on a first date. So let’s all just take the poll and we’ll come up with a definitive answer, once and for all. Need some help making your choice? Check out this post and see if it persuades you.

“The Panic Years” and the Singles Crisis (JW)

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When is it appropriate to panic? When your kids don’t go to law or medical school? When they announce they’re moving to Israel? Or maybe when they’re on “the wrong side of 25″ without their M.R.S. degree?

Don’t panic until you’ve checked out my new article in the Jewish Week, “‘The Panic Years’ and the Singles Crisis,” which gives you a recap on the situation and interviews Doree Lewak, an author who’s sharing her dating experiences and observations in her new book.

The Panic Years and the Singles Crisis
by Esther D. Kustanowitz

My parents’ old car (a Ford LTD sedan, as I recall) had a red button affixed near the dashboard, marked “Panic Button.” As soon as I learned what “panic” was, I asked the question: What happened if you pushed it? The answer: it was a gag button, so nothing happened. Maybe it was to remind you not to panic, because it never helps, and there’s no magic button to push to reset time and return you to your pre-panic moment.

Years later, the Singles Crisis arrives: it is the capitalized subject matter of lectures, panels and events, attended by singles, marrieds, professors, demographers and rabbis in the Jewish community. For those of you just joining this conversation, here’s a quick recap: Because today’s Jewish singles are “choosing” to marry and have children later (if at all), the Jewish people are not reproducing quickly enough. Many men claim to be ready for something serious, while their dating behavior indicates otherwise. Many women realize panicking is pointless while others panic into a desperation which frightens “the living date-lights” out of their male potential counterparts. And all of us singles are to blame, because of our choices, our sense of entitlement, our independence and self-emancipation from traditional communities and communal expectations. Never mind the Jewish creative initiatives, which may be at a possible all-time high; extinction as a people is the palpable possibility. If there is a panic button for Jewish continuity, I think we can safely consider it pushed.

From this pack of the uncoupled emerges 27-year-old Doree Lewak, an Upper West Side single (and friend of mine) with a new book about panic, beyond the borders of synagogue and academic studies: “The Panic Years: A Guide to Surviving Smug Married Friends, Bad Taffeta, and Life on the Wrong Side of 25 Without a Ring.” Once I catch my breath from reading the title aloud, and check Lewak’s Web site (http://thepanicyears.com), I feel it. Twenty-five? If 25 demands panic, what does 35 (or 45) call for?

“I can’t ignore the reality: millions of women are panicking into their pillows at night about it ‘not happening for them,’ and many comprise the sub-25 set,” Lewak says when challenged. “If someone is hardwired to panic, she’ll panic at 22 or 25 or 35,” she explains. I suppose that if you’re panic-inclined, it’s efficient to get singles panic out of the way, clearing the way for day school tuition panic in your 30s.

The Jewish community seems included to panic, early and often. But perhaps panic isn’t solely a Jewish domain. “I think that certain religions, and especially Jews, do process the panic “differently than perhaps more mainstream communities,” Lewak opines. (Panic is an entity that Lewak capitalizes throughout her book, and even in her speech, you swear that you begin to hear the uppercase letter.) The source of this pressure is “front and center,” the young author says, pointing to the first mitzvah in the Torah: “P’ru ur-vu,” she says, “‘Be CAP? fruitful and multiply’ is hard to ignore or to take lightly. So Judaism has the makings of the mantra ‘Born to panic!’ It’s as much the fault of the dating landscape here as it is women’s self-imposed pressure/imperative to marry.”

But panic should be a two-way street: who’s putting the “man” in such a “mantra”? “The Panic Years do affect men, but it’s calibrated differently for them … around 36, or when the last bottle of Propecia is recalled, and then they have no choice but to settle down,” she jokes.

Of course, we all know that panic isn’t about an open patch of pate; it’s about an open state of mind, which can be good or bad news, depending. “The key to finding a “PF” — that’s Potential Fiancé(e), in Lewak’s bookspeak — “is that open-mindedness in the search; sometimes when we cast such a narrow view for the kind of guy we think we want, it’s almost always impossible to find him.”

Because Lewak was my friend before I ever learned she was writing a dating book, I worried that her published expertise in “Panic Years” would hurt her dating prospects. “There is absolutely no shame in admitting you want to look for a serious relationship,” she assured me. “We should be able to have a dialogue about this very legitimate and widespread phenomenon without worrying about ‘outing ourselves’ as closeted panickers.

“Making yourself vulnerable and talking openly about the existence and presence of the Panic Years is the marker of strength; denying its very existence and becoming overly-defensive about it is fooling no one but you.”

Esther D. Kustanowitz sometimes panics when her laptop battery runs down too low, but knows which panic button to push (the manual reboot). You can reach her at jdatersanonymous@gmail.com.

The Week in Jewish Singles Stories: Jewish Standard Edition

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In last week’s Jewish Standard (the Jewish paper of note for Northern New Jersey which also has the distinction of having been the first place I had an organized encounter with journalism, as a summer intern), there is a series of articles about Jewish singles that I wanted to share.

The first one, “A Plea for Common Sense,” is just that, one author’s plea to the community to look at the singles crisis with a little more logic and a little less insanity (a plan that I’m totally behind, in case that wasn’t clear). But this extends beyond the regular insanity of asking for photos of the bride’s family so the intended husband can “make sure” that his wife isn’t going to get fat when she gets older. (Yes, that’s “regular insanity.” Stay tuned for “insane insanity.”)

The interview with Yehuda Salamone, author of The Shidduch Crisis: Causes and Cures, includes this gem…

“Shadchan to mother of a young woman: ‘Does she wear a seat belt in the car?’”
The answer is, as the law dictates, “Of course.” But, Salamon continues, “It seems that the young man’s family felt that if the young woman wore a seatbelt, the chest strap would heighten her physical attraction, causing the young man to lose control of himself. Of course,” he saturninely observes, “it would not be the young man’s fault but rather the fault of the young woman, who was behaving immodestly by wearing a seat belt.”

The article continues by quoting the mother of a young woman, presumably of marriageable age, who notes that once her daughters’ friends got married, they “no longer seem to know any single guys.” This is a phenomenon worthy of some sort of scientific documentation, how the wedding night seems to serve, among other purposes, as a single man eraser—I can count on one hand the number of times friends have tried to set me up, and usually even when I ask a formerly single friend of mine (male or female, it just doesn’t matter) to think of someone, they haven’t a clue. “We don’t know any single people” is sometimes the response, followed in second place by “we don’t know anyone good enough for you.” (The careful reader will note that these individual requests of an individual person are always answered in the “we,” and almost always immediately, as if the couple has some sort of mental database linkup that returns a 404 message: file not found.)

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Random JDate Shoutout of the Week

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When you think about how small a percentage of the population JDate caters to, it’s a wonder that the brand has become so ubiquitous in the popular culture. Witness this random JDate shoutout…

I’m sitting there, reading my Entertainment Weekly magazine, and flip to a pictorial cartoon titled “Jack of All Trades,” which speculates as to what Jack Bauer might have been up to during the terrorism hiatus. Among the panels are “tending to his prize-winning orchids” and “learning the Soulja Boy dance,” but the random comes in with panel #3:

Joining JDate: Oy! Did he really spend a month trolling this site before realizing it’s not for singles whose first names begin with J?

Thanks to Tim Stack at EW for that one.

“Looking Out for #2″ (JW)

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My newest column, “Looking Out for #2,” is now online at the Jewish Week website. (At least until it’s not…I understand some of you have been having problems viewing my pieces online…so I’m reprinting it below.)

“Looking Out for #2″
by Esther D. Kustanowitz

The first time there’s a major change in your life for the better, it’s always special. The many little surprises, and the elation of participating in something completely and utterly new. Even if you try to recapture the magic of that first experience, and even if that second time is really good, your expectations are so high that they’re near impossible to reach.

Parents profess that all their children are equal in potential, as well as equally loved. But the purity of that first experience, in which the first child is the unique center of a fresh new world of chaos and wonderment, cannot be duplicated. Child No. 2 is emotionally welcomed and loved, no question, but the fanfare and hullabaloo seem reduced. No wonder second or middle children often feel as if they’re being given short shrift.

Of course this is unfair to No. 2. But there’s no avoiding it. Parental attention is now divided between new baby-related tasks and the responsibilities to the pioneer child. Even the community may not think to support the birth of No. 2 the way they did the birth of No. 1. The first-born may have inspired sonnets, or presents, or in my family’s case, singles columns. But from the first second of life, No. 2 is most likely wearing hand-me-downs. How to ensure that the second child feels unconditional love, within limited time and split attention?

The most important thing is to try to duplicate some of No. 1’s pivotal experiences. If No. 1 got a kangaroo to sleep with, then No. 2 should also have a special stuffed animal designated for his use. And if Doda Esther happened to write a singles column about No. 1, how could she possibly excuse herself from writing about No. 2, and waxing similarly rhapsodic about her hopes for the boy-then-man that this swaddled lump will become? “You don’t have to,” the Mommy assured me. “No one expects you to.” Except I expect me to: I’m looking out for No. 2.

But as an oldest child, my sympathies are not only with the cute, cuddly newborn No. 2 and his “middle child syndrome,” but also with No. 1. I remember what it was like to have to share the spotlight with a sibling. My brother was small, didn’t do much, and was a boy. That was all new to me, which was cool. I gave him a brush for his non-hair. And while placid, sweet moments were captured on still and moving film, I realize now that many of them might have been staged. As he grew, and did more, he managed to do more to annoy me. We developed a sibling rivalry, and our parents developed a system to keep our academic lives independent of each other. He knew I was good in English, and I knew he was a math and science kid. But we never knew what grades the other was getting. My parents didn’t even let us share our SAT scores.

After the arrival of No. 3, and later when we grew up, my older-younger brother and I managed to make our way back to a relationship that has become warmer than anyone observing those early fights could have expected. I went through college, meeting people who truly despised their siblings, and knew I was lucky. Our tension never included loathing; competition wasn’t always healthy, but it wasn’t hatred, either.

I observe No. 1 and his relationship with No. 2, now just a month old. The second is new, and little, and doesn’t do much. The first knows he has to be gentle with No. 2, and that as an older brother he is supposed to share. I hope to teach both of them to leave themselves open to the other, even as they are working to define themselves as individuals. I hope to help them avoid competition with each other, to help them share space and negotiate their differences positively, and help them realize that even if they disagree, they can still do so from a place of love.

I’ve been living alone for more years than I can count (like I said, I was never good at math). But someday, I’m going to have to let someone else into my (literal and emotional) space. It’s going to take adjustment. I’m going to have to consider that person’s needs, and accept that I’m not my own boss—my decisions will now affect someone else’s life, too. It may feel like a home invasion, like I’m giving up my stuff (or identity) by sharing it with someone else. I was here first. But being the pioneer in this space of myself and in the future family I hope to have, also means being the first to say, “Welcome home.”

Esther D. Kustanowitz is the proud doda of Gil Aviad and Dov Yair, and, even if pressed, knows better than to pick favorites. You can reach her at jdatersanonymous@gmail.com.

Oddly Enough: Jewish Singles Edition (JW)

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Oddly Enough: Jewish Singles Edition
by Esther D. Kustanowitz

While the Internet brings us many wacky news stories, my favorites are usually from a section on the Reuters.com Web site called “Oddly Enough.” Here I find stories about the guy who mailed himself home to Texas as cargo so he could save on airfare, or the Japanese man arrested for trespassing at a high school while dressed in a girl’s uniform and a long wig. And because of stories like these, I have a blog category called “World of Weird.” Some of these stories, of a Jewish or secular nature, also seem to have bearing on singles and relationships. So, because everyone loves a list, here are five of my favorite recent odd singles-related stories.

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