Day 9Aaron Small blogs for Jewlicious as well as on his personal blog, Life in Samsonite. A veteran of the Jewish communal world, he inexplicably just can’t stay away from the Jews.

Israel. Land of bizarre advertisements and taglines, over stylized jeans my metrosexual cousin won’t even wear, cosmopolitan aliveness of Tel-Aviv, and center of a global conflict. For all the nice things I could say, let me start off with the bad - if we’re lucky, we’ll end up at some happy point where you’ll consider making aliyah.

Ha. Just kidding. I’d never put you in such an awkward position. (Unless you were my girlfriend)

My first few weeks in Israel were nothing short of euphoric: gelato, cafe beaches, the shuk, chocolate and pistachio halva, girls and the already-discovered-yet-still-profound realization that they were ALL Jewish (even the hot ones) and if I believed in the tenets of polygamy -hell, there’s only one I’m talking about- I’d be in heaven right now, the living breathing polluted space that is Tel-Aviv…Eventually though, the euphoria wears off, the masks are removed, and I started to see the other side of Israel, the side the outreach agencies fail to tell you about. And I was filled with questions.

When you’re in a club, why do Israelis feel it necessary to bump you with your shoulders, knocking your drink out of your hand, then looking at you like you got in their way? You see that I’m standing in line, waiting to pay for my Prigat juice. Do you really think you can sneak by me and pay first? We’re ALL getting on this bus! Okay Haredi: your pushing, isn’t helping now, is it? And of course: the Dizengoff bus over there, coming up now. Think it’s gonna blow up today?

When my family told me that living in Israel is hard, like an idiot I brushed all warning aside. And then one day, all the madness clicked. It is a struggle to live here. The pushing, the shoving, the competition, the fights over shekels, the adoni! can’t you see I need to move this refrigerator at 1 in the afternoon there is no other time this is why I need to block the entire street - I didn’t see the point in staying. For anyone. I went to the desert right as I hit my breaking point, and had a lovely time gardening, building with mud, playing with ideas of permaculture and sustainability, becoming a soldier in the eco-movement. I miss that place tons: the slowness, the quiet, the tranquility, the overall SIMPLICITY of everything. (If you want to read about it, check out life in samsonite and search the earth tag)

But after all the madness, there is still a yearning for that place, the bumping breathing space that is Israel. Israel truly is alive, and not like NY alive or LA alive or Amsterdam alive. It’s a breed entirely of its own, the fusion of Japanese restaurants, hippie festival goers, Carlebach evangelists, Thailand date pickers, nerve wracked taxi drivers, and teenage war heroes. If you find anything that comes close to that, send me the coordinates and I’m buying the ticket.

Till then, I can only say that Israel is Israel, and I love it.

The 60 Bloggers project is co-production of Jewlicious.com and the Let My People Sing Festival. It is published daily for 60 days to celebrate Israel’s 60 birthday.