Shomer - [s1e5]
The following story is a reimagining of the themes from the Shomer episode—exploring the weight of tradition, the burden of protection, and the quiet vigil of a "guardian." The Longest Night
Ari began to recite a Psalm, his voice a low murmur in the empty hall. “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want...”
The clock on the wall ticked toward 3:00 AM. The silence of the building began to feel heavy, almost liquid. Ari’s mind drifted to his own life—the midterms he should be studying for, the girl who hadn't texted him back, the feeling that he was drifting through his twenties without a compass. [S1E5] Shomer
The fluorescent lights of the funeral home hummed with a low, persistent buzz that felt like it was drilling into the back of Ari’s skull. He sat on a folding chair in the hallway, a well-worn book of Psalms in his lap. At twenty-two, Ari was the youngest member of the Chevra Kadisha , the burial society, and tonight he was the shomer —the watcher.
As the words filled the space, the oppressive weight of the night seemed to shift. Ari realized that being a shomer wasn't just a chore or a religious obligation. It was a profound act of "Chesed shel Emet"—the truest kindness—because it was a favor that could never be returned. The following story is a reimagining of the
"It’s not about whether he can hear," his grandfather had replied, his eyes soft. "It’s about the fact that we refuse to let a person become an object. We guard their dignity when they can no longer guard it themselves."
He had spent the night guarding the dead, only to find that he had finally woken up. Ari’s mind drifted to his own life—the midterms
For the first time in months, the noise in Ari's own head went quiet. He wasn't worrying about his future or his failures. He was simply there, a sentinel at the border of life. He realized that protection wasn't always about shields and swords; sometimes, it was just about sitting in the dark so someone else didn't have to.