Everything seems like a game of dominos to me.
One mistake leads to another,
and mistakes lead to intentional responses,
and one thing causes another and another,
but when we see the dominos fall
we can never remember the domino that started it all,
and that it was a mistake,
and that there were many choices throughout this process.
We only remember the last thing,
the crisis,
the violence,
or even the death,
and we are sure we know who is to blame,
the only one,
who is responsible for all of it.
No one believes it starts with them.
And no one wants to be
the only domino to fall.
When all the damage is done,
and the accidents are forgotten
and the responsibility is assigned
and the punishment given,
the story ends.
But only until the story begins again.
דוֹמִינוֹס
הָכֹּל נִראָה לִי כְּמוֹ מִשׂחָק דוֹמִינוֹס.
טָעוּת אַחַת מוֹבִילָה לְאַחֶרֶת
וְטָעוּיוֹת מוֹבִילוֹת לְתגוּבוֹת מְכָוָונוֹת,
וְדָבָר אֶחָד גוֹרֵם לְאַחֵר וְאַחֵר.
אַבַל, כְּשְׁאַנָחנוּ רוֹאִים אֶת הָדוֹמִינוֹס נוֹפלִים
אָנַחנוּ אָף פָּעַם לֹא זוֹכרִים אֶת הָדומִינוֹ שְׁהִתחִיל אֶת הָכֹּל,
וְשְׁזֶה הָיָה טָעוּת,
וְשְׁיֵשׁ בָּתָהָלִיך הָזֶה הָרבֵּה בְּרֵירוֹת.
אַנָחנוּ רָק זוֹכרִים אֶת הָדָבָר הָאָחָרוֹן,
הָמָשְׁבֵּר,
הָאָלִימוּת,
אוֹ אָפִילוּ הָמָוֶות,
וְאַנָחנוּ בְּטוּחִים שְׁאַנָחנוּ יוֹדעִים מִי הָאָשָׁם,
הָיְחִיד,
שְׁיֵשׁ לוֹ אַחְרַיוּת עַל הָכֹּל.
אַף אֶחָד לֹא מָאָמִין שְׁזֶה הִתחִיל אִיתָם.
וְאַף אֶחָד לֹא רוֹצֶה לִהִיוֹת
הָדוֹמִינוֹ הָיְחִיד שְׁלִיפּוֹל.
כָּאָשֶׁר כֹּל הָנֶזֶק נָעַשֶׂה,
וְהָתְאוּנוֹת נִשׁכָּחוֹת
וְהָאַחרַיוּת מוֹקצִית
וְהָעוֹנֶשׁ נִיתֵן,
הָסִיפּוּר הִסתָיֵים.
אָבָל, רָק עַד שְׁהָסִיפּוֹר מָתחִיל מְחָדָשׁ.
If you haven’t had a chance yet, please check out my novel, Yeshiva Girl, on Amazon. And if you feel called to write a review of the book, on Amazon, or anywhere else, I’d be honored.
Yeshiva Girl is about a Jewish teenager on Long Island, named Isabel, though her father calls her Jezebel. Her father has been accused of inappropriate sexual behavior with one of his students, which he denies, but Izzy implicitly believes it’s true. As a result of his problems, her father sends her to a co-ed Orthodox yeshiva for tenth grade, out of the blue, and Izzy and her mother can’t figure out how to prevent it. At Yeshiva, though, Izzy finds that religious people are much more complicated than she had expected. Some, like her father, may use religion as a place to hide, but others search for and find comfort, and community, and even enlightenment. The question is, what will Izzy find?


Life certainly is a chain of interconnected events. We usually understand this in retrospect. We hope that the next chapter will turn out better. Your poem is relateable.
Thank you!
Brilliant, Rachel
Thank you so much!
😑☹️
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you said that so well 🙂
Thank you!
So well done! I love this idea of life as dominoes. How true that the result is what we so often choose to not only remember to to almost obsess about, missing completely the beauty, or perhaps the chaos, that got us there. Beautifully put.
Thank you so much!
Disrupting the chain reaction by moving a domino or two seems to be one way to halt an unwanted process or it’s the manoeuvre someone might use to disrupt the dominoes we’ve put in place to run how we want.
Sometimes we think we’re disrupting the chain, but we’re just redirecting it.
“But only until the story begins again”. Beautifully expressed poem on our human horrors that have no winners, only losers. 🥲🙏💕
Thank you!!!!
My compliments for your wise thoughts on the domino resemblance of international and individual behavior of humans! BK
Thank you!
Me too!
😔
Though me know 🙃
Nice work. Beware the domino effect.
Thank you!
100%
Nicely written Rachel
Thank you!
I like Gary’s thought about disrupting the process by moving a domino. I’ll have to ponder that!
Such a creative, playful way to convey an important truth! 💜
Thank you!
great poem, Rachel❣️
Thank you!
💓❣️💕
A wonderful poem. Spot on!
Julie
Thank you!
Beautiful poem it’s like a chain ! Life is like that
Thank you!
💐
Wise and profound, Rachel. You’ve woven so much into this relatively short poem.