Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    DATING AND RELATIONSHIP ADVICE

    Dear Rabbi and Shira,
    My parents don’t understand me. I understand many teenagers or young adults say that, but in my case it is true and is having serious repercussions on my
    future. I went to “all the right schools and seminaries”, never “stepped out of line” and now I’ve arrived at the point in my life where I’m looking to get married.
    My parents have been accepting shidduchim for me that are not appropriate. I am looking for guy who will be “kovea itim” but goes to work. They are accepting
    suggestions in which the man in question wants to learn for 5 years or more, and I’m not interested. Baruch Hashem my parents are well off and can support my
    future family for many years. However, my parents didn’t raise us in that lifestyle, and I am not interested in pursuing it. -Missing the Point in Midwood

    Dear Missing the Point,
    We’re sorry that you are experiencing
    these problems. Consider, the following,
    have you discussed with your frustrations
    with your parents? You said that you had
    “always gone to the right schools” and
    “never stepped out of line.” How open
    are the lanes of conversation with your
    parents? Do you often talk about life
    decisions and hashkafa with them? Are
    these suggestions coming out of the blue?
    Or have you always agreed with your
    parents without much discussion about

    your thoughts and your plans for the
    future? Have you been clear with them
    about your thoughts and feelings about
    your prospective spouse?
    Have you discussed their thought
    process why they are setting you up with
    men of this direction and background?
    Are they living vicariously through you
    out of a sense of lost opportunity? Are
    they assuming that as you are a “good girl”,
    these suggestions are in their eyes or the
    eyes of their social circles, the prototypical
    “good guy”? Is it possible that these are the

    values that they have always subscribed to
    but never discussed with you? Maybe they
    felt the institutions which you attended
    shared these values and they were instilled
    in you.
    Regardless, always preface these
    conversations with gratitude and respect
    for all they have done for you, as well as
    with confidence in the way that they have
    raised you to be able to make these very
    important decisions in your life.
    Hatzlacha and Gmar Chasima Tova,
    Rabbi Reuven and Shira Boshnack.