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    THIS COUPLE ALMOST DIDN’T GET MARRIED DUE TO ONE WORD: WEIRD

    Labels can cause
    real damage.
    Name calling in
    politics is nothing new.
    America has a long
    history of presidential
    candidates hurling insults at one another,
    going all the way back to the 1800 race
    between Thomas Jefferson and John
    Adams. And yet, it often feels like we
    manage to reach new lows.
    When those who are competing for the
    presidency on both sides engage in juvenile
    name calling instead of focusing on
    differences in policies, it is not only
    demeaning to the position they seek but it
    helps launder this behavior for the general
    population, and makes name-calling
    permissible, acceptable, and even
    admirable. Children who call others names
    are called bullies and it is no less wrong
    when the same behavior is coming from
    adults.
    Labeling a person can damage someone
    socially and financially in real and lasting
    ways you may not even appreciate in the
    moment.

    David and Elisheva (names changed) are a
    fantastic couple in our community. They
    are building a beautiful family together, but
    their wonderful marriage almost didn’t
    happen.
    Elisheva was moving to the West Side of
    Manhattan and went to meet up with a
    friend to see a potential apartment. She got
    to the building early and while waiting in
    the lobby, noticed a guy who looked, in her
    words, “Jewishly observant and normal.”
    Always on the lookout for her potential
    bashert, she asked the friend, “What’s the
    story with the guy who was in the lobby
    before?”
    Oh, that guy? He’s totally weird, he is
    always talking to the doorman.
    The friend made a face and said, “Oh, that
    guy? That guy is totally weird, he is always
    talking to the doorman.”
    That comment embedded itself deeply in
    her mind and created a mental block, a
    narrative that David was “the weird guy
    who talks to the doorman,” someone she
    should never be interested in.
    Elisheva moved into the building and,

    over the course of the
    next couple of years,
    crossed paths with David
    at Shabbat meals, speed
    dating events and,
    naturally, the lobby of
    the building. They made
    small talk and at times it
    even felt like they were
    making a connection, but
    whenever they
    interacted, Elisheva still
    heard the voice of her
    friend telling her that
    David is the “weird guy who talks to the
    doorman,” and she of course had no
    interest. Who wants to go out with someone
    weird?
    Two years after Elisheva moved in, David
    was scheduled to move out and leave New
    York. On his last Shabbat, he ran into
    Elisheva and told her that he was leaving.
    They had a great conversation, and it even
    felt to him like for the first time, she had let
    her guard down. So, he thought to himself,
    why not, why not give this a shot and ask
    her out directly.
    When Shabbat ended, he called her.
    Elisheva thought to herself, You know, he
    is a nice enough guy, and even if he is
    weird, he deserves an A for effort. I’ll go
    out once just to be nice. It will be a ‘one
    and done’.”
    When they went out, Elisheva discovered
    that David often talked to the doorman
    because he lived on the first floor, worked
    from his apartment, had limited
    interactions with people, and enjoyed
    stepping out to connect with someone
    who was often lonely himself. David
    wasn’t “weird,” he was actually
    wonderful.
    A few months later they were engaged,
    and the rest is history.
    Had the friend not attached that label of
    “weird”, they could have avoided two
    years of dating the wrong people and
    “wasting” their time.
    Reflecting on their story, Elisheva says
    had the friend not attached that label of
    “weird” and planted that mental block,
    they could have avoided two years of
    going down the wrong paths, dating the
    wrong people and “wasting” their time.
    Recognizing that while everything has a
    reason and God clearly decided they
    needed to date for two additional years
    after first seeing each other, she still says
    the friend was unkind and unfair using
    that term “weird” and it could have
    caused her to pass up her soul mate

    altogether.
    Tu B’Av: Come Together
    This coming week we observe Tu B’Av.
    The Mishna characterizes Tu B’Av as the
    happiest day of the year, a day that the
    women of Jerusalem would dress up in
    white and would draw attention to their
    interest in finding a husband and building a
    home.
    But why this date? The Talmud (Taanit
    30a) identifies several events that happened
    specifically on the 15th of Av, including the
    day young men and women were allowed
    to marry among the different tribes. It was
    also the day the tribe of Benjamin was
    welcomed back into the Jewish people after
    the sordid episode with the concubine in
    Givah detailed in the Book of Judges, the
    day those who travelled through the desert
    stopped dying, the day the guards who
    blocked the roads to Jerusalem were
    removed, the day those martyred in Beitar
    were allowed to be buried.
    What emerges from this seemingly
    disparate list is that Tu B’Av is the holiday
    of bringing back together that which was
    apart. Tribes were divided, the Jewish
    people were alienated from God, and on Tu
    B’av the pieces of the puzzle that belonged
    together were put back in place to form the
    most beautiful and unified picture.
    Tu B’Av is the holiday of unity and
    oneness, of parts becoming a whole.
    We can only go from Tisha B’Av, a day
    commemorating the tragedies and
    calamities that come from being divided, to
    Tu B’Av, a day of unity and togetherness, if
    we are careful with our labels, words, and
    the way we describe one another. There is
    nothing weird about loving every Jew and
    seeing the best and the positive in them.
    The next time you are asked about
    someone for a date, a business deal or as a
    reference, be honest and truthful. But also
    be thoughtful and judicious in what
    adjectives and labels you use. One word
    can be the difference between happiness

    and loneliness.