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JUDAISM WITHOUT APOLOGIZING - Episode 1- Reb Moshe Don Kestenbaum
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Are there more kids going off the derech these days? If yes why? Are there more young couples getting divorced today? If yes why? Are people working on themselves to become better people? If not why? Listen to this fascinating podcast to find out why.
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In a world where everyone seems to have
not just a microphone but a megaphone,
the voices of our gadm or raanim and
Russia yeshiva far too often seem to get
lost in the noise. This podcast is here
to change that. I'm your host Hillel
Eisenberg. Join me as we sit down with
our nation's leaders as they address the
Ashkoffic challenges that matter most
without the fluff and without the drama.
With truth that doesn't flinch. Buckle
up, cuz this isn't your typical podcast.
This is Judaism without apologizing.
Hello everyone. I'm Hell Eisenberg and
I'm thrilled to share with you the
Judaism without apologizing podcast.
This episode I had the great honor and
privilege to sit down with Rev. Mosha
Dunan Castm who blew me away with his
humility, his razor sharp perception of
people, his insight into some pretty
thorny issues. Ser castam has been
around the Jewish block. He was a rebby
in the waterberry yeshiva for many
years. He's now the rashiva of yeshiva
gadela or yitzk a postitist yeshiva and
pose. He's also a well-known mahan. He's
a speaker. He does parenting courses and
marriage counseling. He's also the
author of two of the most wildly used
contemporary mustarim written in the
last 30 years called Amidas and Mida.
Both of which been subsequently been
translated by art scroll. He is also the
author of two extremely popular English
books. One is called run after the right
covid and the other one is called the
heart of parenting. And he additionally
has thousands and thousands of shirum on
a wide variety of topics on Torah
anytime. And we had a fascinating
discussion about struggling teens and
therapy and marriage and divorce and
parenting and midas. And he gives an
amazingly refreshing perspective on
living a life as a Jew on fire in
today's day and age. So I think you're
really going to enjoy. Take a listen.
Thank you Rebecca Cast for joining this
podcast. Judaism without apologizing.
It's a an honor to have you on. It's to
be here. Thank you. So, I want to dive
right in. I know that you've seen the
gamut of Bahim struggling to brim
getting married to Bahim
married and now raising children. I want
to those all require separate set of
questions and I want to start from
parenting and we'll make our way down to
the world of buckerhood. Let's begin
with our our first question. Are there
more struggling teenagers nowadays than
there used to be than 30 years ago than
even 20 years ago? Is that a myth? Is
that fake news? And if it is in fact
true
what would you say are the causes for
that? And is there a sort of a fault in
the parenting? Obviously, there's a
million factors, but can you point to a
potential flaw in modern-day parenting
which has led to the the high numbers of
struggling teens? Or you might disagree
and say there are not in fact a high
number of struggling teens. It's a great
question. I don't know the numbers. You
know, the Jewish population has baram
grown so much that a lot of things are
hard to know. Do we have greater numbers
just because we have more people or
actually the percentages have risen? So
the Jewish population used to be
smaller. So it is hard to know but I
will share with you the following which
may explain why we have or maybe a few
reasons why we have greater problems
today.
tell us of that before Msiah comes
there's going to be a lot of children
today are naturally more disrespectful
than they were and it keeps on going up
and up and up and it's scary why why do
you think that is
tell us so it doesn't mean we can't
explain it say the is going to increase
why I don't have a uh I think it's a
decree from I think there's some
positive sight you know positive things
in it but that's say before Mashia comes
is going to increase when you say what
do you what are you referring to I'm
referring to as the Gumar says the
children speaking back to their parents
you know children used to be more afraid
naturally of their parents I don't know
about you I don't know your age but
there are many things I didn't think
about saying to my parents and I'm sure
my parents I don't remember they
probably told me I was pretty well
behaved but you know I would have never
thought of telling that's going to go on
like every generation everyone's going
to tell their kid I would have never
dreamed of saying that to my and it's
hard to imagine that happening with our
children today our children telling
their children I would have never
dreamed of saying that that that's
pretty scary that's pretty frightening
children today are more disrespectful
and I would say it's from and why I
cannot tell you but I think because of
that automatically we're going to have a
tremendous challenge in front of us
because many of the problems that arise
is a child is disrespectful to the
parents whether verbally or maybe even
their reaction to Yiddishkite. It used
to be people children were more
comfortable. I don't say more
comfortable. They'd be willing to go
along with what their parents told them.
They may be willing to behave in yeshiva
even if they're miserable. You had kids
probably miss years ago that were
miserable and they just went along and
did what they were supposed to even
though they were miserable. That doesn't
mean that it was a great situation. It
doesn't mean that maybe later on there
weren't problems with their Yiddishkite.
But I think there's a certain
willingness to go along a humility
subordinance. We'll go along. Okay, this
is what the rabbis say. In fact, you see
that the yeshivas have really adapted
by by force. The yeshivas have adapted
to be much warmer. Not all of them
because maybe maybe not all of them
believe it as much as they should, but I
think they forced to because if we're
not gonna be nicer, the kids are going
to rebel.
So it forced the children kind of forced
a revolution of that we have to be more
tolerant. We have to be softer. Now some
people think and you'll get me back to
where we were because I'm going to get
lost, but some people think it's the
other way around. Some people think that
the reason why kids are so disrespectful
is because parents are so liberal. And
then you have these liberal like who's
telling parents to like absorb and be
soft and be understanding and not
respond harshly to the behavior. And I'm
the problem because the kids are
responding to that softness. And if we
would just be tougher and we would, you
know, clamp down on the kids, they would
behave. They wouldn't talk that way.
Maybe they wouldn't dress that way. The
reality is, as someone who's been in the
field for quite some time, it's not
true. And my experience is with parents
that clamp down and are very tough and
don't give in and put their foot down
doesn't doesn't lead to great results.
The kids end up rebellious, running
away, not in a good situation. So how
would you balance
instilling structure in one's home but
also
not having that rebellious backfire
attitude from the child? Meaning how do
you have a balance? You can't have a
free-for-all. Obviously, there has to be
some sort of parental structure and
guidance and setting the red line in the
sand saying those things we don't do or
those actions we don't do but at the
same time allowing the child to live his
2025 life where he needs to be loved and
empowered and etc. It's a good question.
I don't have the exact answer. I
recently gave a parenting course and I
tell the parents, you know, you'll do it
your way. I don't have the exact answer
and there's not necessarily one way.
There are some rules that I think are
apply to everybody and that is parents,
you know, not becoming angry really, not
becoming angry, not taking things
personally.
But at the end of the day, my
view of is that is about teaching, not
controlling. My job is to teach my child
that he's not allowed to talk to me that
way, that he should not act that way. My
job is not to enforce
even uh we teach our children to bench.
I don't think we stand there over our
child making sure he benched making sure
she benched making sure they said every
word that is going to lead to a lot of
you know resentment towards Yiddish is
to educate is to teach not to force
parents very often think my job is to
make sure my child did everything. Well,
you can do that when your child is, you
know, three years old till maybe they're
13, 14, maybe at some point. You cannot
force them anyways. So, I think the
philosophy of teaching, not forcing,
begins at a very young age. I want to
teach my child right from wrong. And if
my child's disrespectful, I will tell
them. I should tell them. That's not how
we should talk to a parent. But I'm not
sure the approach is that I will lock
them in the room
if they do it again and force them into
position where they better be respectful
because otherwise the consequences will
be so great that they don't have a
choice because I think that will lead to
a child that's resentful. And I want to
share with you something else. I tell
this to the parents all the time in
terms of listen there's a very important
idea here in marriages. When a husband's
upset at a wife, a wife's upset at her
husband, what is a proper way to
communicate, as we're taught, you know
that you should say it very nicely. I
know you didn't mean anything, but it
really upset me when you came home 10
minutes late and you didn't tell me.
Unfortunately, and we could talk about
that, but unfortunately, most people, I
shouldn't say most, many people do not
communicate with their spouses that way.
When they are angry, when they're upset,
they let them have it. Maybe they
control it and temper it a little bit,
but it's not usually in the nicest
controlled way possible. When a child
today is disrespectful to their parents,
all they are doing is expressing their
feelings. It used to be a child was
afraid to express their feelings to the
parent, so they didn't. today not
because a parent would beat them up but
there was a certain fear of a parent
which which has been which is
deteriorating as kazal tell us so what
do we want from the 13-year-old
14-year-old or even 10-year-old what do
we want from that we want them to come
to us and say mommy I know you really
love me and I feel bad complaining
because you're always so good to me but
I have to say it does bother me when you
don't buy me enough clothing and other
girls in my class have this is that
we're expecting from a 13-year-old And
by the way, many many parents will
respond to that even if they say it
nicely, but you don't ask. Okay. So, you
can have two options. Your child, you
know, doesn't communicate to you or I'm
not sure the other option. Your child
will not communicate with you. You your
child is not going to be able to talk to
you at 13 years old the way that most 30
and 40 year olds are not able to talk to
their spouse. So the child is going to
communicate with anger because say
they're less afraid of the parents which
in my view which is a bit there's a big
here there's a big blessing here my
child can actually tell me what they're
upset about they can actually
communicate I recently in this parenting
course I told the parents that maybe
your child is angry at you and maybe
your relationship is in a bad place well
when your child yells at you and they're
actually saying something that has some
content in it. That's an opportunity.
You could just yell back. You could just
walk away. Or you could say, "I see
you're really upset about this. I want
to talk to you about it." What an
incredible lesson we teach our children
when we don't act like children. We want
to teach our children not to speak
disrespectfully. We want to teach our
children not to have the bad me of ker
bad of anger. So what do we do? Our
child yells at us and we yell back. So,
we're doing exactly what we shouldn't be
doing and role modeling exactly what
what our child is doing. We're the
adult. We have to if our child screams
at us, we should tell them. It's not
respectful, but I want to talk to you
about what's bothering you. And when
you're when you're ready to talk, let's
talk about it. And if if you're a real
sadic, you're real sadist, you go back
to the child 3 hours, four hours later
and say, you know, you were screaming me
before. I didn't like the way you're
communicating, but you're obviously
upset about this. Let's talk about it.
Wow. Wow. That's greatness. That's
greatness. In order to be a parent
today, and maybe this is why Hashem
created,
number one, to enhance the relationship
that we're able to have with our
children, but number two, you know what?
You become a big person today. If you're
a good parent, you cannot be a good
parent today without being a big person.
Because if you don't have self-control,
if you going to take things personally,
if you don't have control over your
anger, you're going to have a very hard
time dealing with your child, unless
they're a goody goody, which some
children are. Let let me interject on
that point. Exactly. Have we come to a
point in our society where our schools
are so perfect or or amazing or
systemized or fantastic and well-run
oiled machines where parenting has
become the duty of the school on a on
incorrectly
where parents on a subliminal level or
sometimes on a conscious level say these
schools are so big and their brand is so
massive and the rebay are so good and
the system is so awesome and they've got
detections for every form of educational
problem that they come in and swoop in
and help out. On a little tiny but
increasing level, the parental duties
are shifted to the school and therefore
the parents
relinquish the roles of major mashim,
the primary hashba onto the child.
Instead, it's the school doing it and
therefore the parents are sort of
exaggerated
babysitters. Is that accurate or
not accurate? And if it is accurate, how
do we sort of retain the the checks and
balances separating church and state
where the school teaches olive and bays
and the parents teach mid and proper
ethical behavior?
You know that question really
reflects a complete miss on what is.
It's not just teaching your kids how to
learn Torah, teaching your kids how to
make blessings, that's not the only part
of and if that was the only part of
teaching your children and teaching your
children to badge, then you're right.
The school does most of that. Of course,
we'll talk. There's more to it than just
telling them what to do. But the most
important part of is the love, respect,
relationship you give to your child.
Today's children that are off the d,
it's not, as people mistakenly think, a
Yiddish guy problem. I have not seen a
healthy, emotionally healthy
15-year-old, 16-year-old who did well in
school and is like philosophically I
have questions on the creation and I'm
gonna go to Harvard and and and and such
go off the d. We don't have mascul
today. It's unbelievable bar. We don't
have that intellectual people going off
the d. People going off the deaf because
they're in pain because they don't feel
good about themselves because
unfortunately they're rejected sometimes
in school because of ADHD because they
struggle academically and all types of
problems
because they feel rejected by their
parents rejected by their community.
It's all emotional health issues. Our
number one responsibility as parents is
to be part of my vernacular to be a good
mom to be a good dad. To be a good mom
to be a good dad.
I don't care. Say it like a nonju. A
good mom, a good dad who loves his child
and his child loves him and loves her
and your child is close to you.
That's number one. And that the schools
cannot do. Theim could say from today to
tomorrow, I love my they don't love
their like a parent loves their child.
You know,
we had a terrible car accident, you
know, years ago. Two precious bakram
passed away in this car accident.
The other ones that survived, many of
them were were in the hospital. Who was
sleeping in the hospital by their bed?
Their parents. They're obeying. We love
them. We visit them. We care for them.
Who's by their side? Their parents. No
one can replace a mother. No one can
replace a father. Schools cannot replace
that. Schools can teach. Only parents
can give the children the love and the
self-esteem that they need. Schools can
help. Schools can do a lot of damage.
But the most important people in a
child's life is a mother and a father.
And in terms of teaching our children
the laws, theos the midos and everything
like that. It's mostly taught by
example. We see the children see us
bench, the children see us den, the
children see us learn, etc. They're
influenced by that. But of course, and
all the teaching and all the what to do
is not half nearly as important as the
role modeling. And who are people that
going to want to role model? a mom that
they hate, a dad that they can't stand,
or a mom that they love. My mom is so
loving to me. She I love her. I love my
dad, so I want to be like him. And we're
so busy, unfortunately, Ben.
So busy with that. It's such a mistake
because if we have the strong
relationship, we don't have to be always
telling them what to do. They're going
to want to do. They're going to want to
be like us. They're going to want to
follow the beautiful ta we have. One of
the things I've seen that really bothers
me, I do some counseling on the side.
Not often, but but I get the feeling
with parents many times if their child
is having a problem, they hand them off
to the therapist. So, let's hand them
off to the therapist and the therapist
will deal with the problems and I'm
being a good parent because I'm paying
it's expensive. I'm paying for the
therapy. It's a terrible mistake on
many, many levels.
I've had parents bring me their child
and I saw quickly that the child wasn't
really the entire problem, if that the
parents needed help. No therapist
working with your child for an hour,
whether they're talking, whether he's
playing video games, whatever they're
doing for that hour, no therapist can
replace the parent. And I think it's
irresponsible, by the way, for any
therapist, barring a crazy situation, to
be working with a child and not be
working with the parents. Wow. Because
if you would help the parents, the
parents are the most necessary
components to that child's well-being.
So nice, you're working with that child.
You know, at I'm not talking about a
child who's 20 years old and the parents
are crazy and he has he has to be away
from them. But in a normal situation,
even a difficult situation,
you have to try to work with the parents
who are in the best position
to help the child. And I think yeshivas
that work with children
must feel a responsibility to guide the
parents because when you help the
parents, you will help the child a lot
more. You're the rebby, you're the
therapist, you'll spend an hour a week
with the child. If you spent that hour
with the parents and got the parents to
be more understanding, more
compassionate, and build a relationship
with the child, the parents would help
the child. What should a rebby or a
therapist do to approach the parents who
in 100% out of the cases will be in
denial of their flaws. So most so first
of all if the parents have you have to
find out if the parents have flaws in
their parenting you have to find out if
the parents are perfect and the child
has a disorder which is rarely the case
and even if the child has a disorder
it's usually imp impacted by how the
parents are reacting to that disorder.
You know, you have to find out as a
therapist, it's in my opinion, it's your
responsibility to find out how the
parents are handling the child. And if
it needs to be corrected, you need to
talk to the parents. I don't want to
talk to parents because I'm scared
they're not going to listen. Well,
that's irresponsible. You know, if the
parents don't listen, don't listen. You
tried. And then, by the way, you're in a
tricky situation, which I don't have the
the answer. But on one hand, you're
working with a child and your child and
the child is telling you, "My parents
are always yelling at me." So, what are
you going to do? tell the child, "Oh,
your parents are are right." Now, I'm
not saying therapists, there are a lot
of therapists shouldn't say a lot. There
are therapists, unfortunately, that
wedge between the children and the
parents and cause a lot of damage. And
that's not the right thing to do. A
child needs his parents and you don't
want to cause, you know, a wedge between
them. But on the other hand, you can't
lie to the child either and tell them,
"Oh, your parents are rightfully yelling
at you because you misbehaved." No, they
shouldn't be yelling. This is a big This
is a very big pet peeve of mine. It is
such a terrible crime when a therapist
keeps on working with a child and
doesn't look and doesn't work with the
parents. It's a crime. It could have
saved the kid's life. You're working
with a child an hour a week. You're not
going to very unlikely going to save the
kid's life if the kid's in a
dysfunctional relationship with his
parents, but you could save the kid's
life by working with the parents.
Barashem a number of times over the
years, I sat down with the child and his
parents and we talked things out and
I've seen miracles. I've seen such
beautiful things happen. But I will tell
you, I've dealt with two different types
of parents. Mostly the first. I've dealt
with parents that said, "Please tell me
what I could do better because I want to
help my child." And they're actually
willing to listen to me when I tell
them, "Well, if your kid says this to
you, you can't scream at them. And if
your kid needs this, you have to think
about maybe your kid does need it." And
they accept it. And then you do have
some select parents that no matter what
you tell them. No, no, I did everything
right, different right, they just refuse
to hear that they've made mistakes. And
this is why the world needs mus. This is
what
we need. We need to be willing to be
honest and admit we made mistakes.
There's an interesting thing that you
write here in I even underlined it many
years ago on that line you just said
about needing muser. Fascinating. You
say here that learning
learning muser and improving one's midas
is more important than the ke of the
actual mitzvah of the and obviously I'm
not going to get into the nitty-g
gritties of what that's not me that's
right right but I I actually wanted to
focus on an even stronger concept which
is that those that are sitting and
learning but are not actively working on
their midos they're not considered as if
they are sitting and learning It's
considered like I don't know exactly
what you want to call it but their
liotra is
not at its best or it's not the correct
fulfillment of limitra if your midos are
not being actively worked on is that a
is did I accurately paraphrase your
statement or yes no yes yes there are
many sources you know the vag says the
purpose of person's life is to work on
his mid the alter says the whole terra
was given to to perfect a person's
character. And the truth of the matter
is Tyra perfects a person's character if
the Torah is learned properly. And if we
see someone that learns Tyra and doesn't
have good meidos, that's perforce a sign
that they're not learning Tyra with the
right reasons. They're not learning Tyra
at all.
And of course, as the Gumar tells us in
Yuma, it's a when someone learns Torah
and doesn't have good meidos and it
causes of course tremendous damage in in
if a Rebi teaching Torah and doesn't
have good meidos. A parent that's
religious and certainly a parent that
even is
that doesn't have good meidos of course
is a tremendous
you know harm to to to the children to
society. So why is it that we don't see
this as an emphasis? You don't walk into
a schol at 9:30 and see 25% of the
people learning
or shar you don't muser seder in
yeshivas are notoriously empty it's just
not a focus whatsoever
and if what you're saying is is true
then the the focus and the ideal of our
lives is to perfect our midos and
learning Torah while neglecting to work
on our midos is essentially. So then why
in fact isn't it sort of on the pedestal
of where it should be? I don't have an
answer but first of all I want to share
with you you know why maybe part of why
it is this way. First of all when you
talk about certain
shuva
they're very much primarily been
so it's a little bit less midos focused.
have parts you know famous m perov about
midos but you know it's not the focus of
many of there's there's two types of
there different aspects of mus is a
broad word there's muser in you know and
there's mus
but let me tell you why I think muser is
not so popular especially
especially midos because people think
it's simple first of all people think
it's simple if you ask somebody what
does it mean to have good midos you're a
nice guy you don't scream at people.
People don't people don't realize how
complicated it is to have really good
midos.
Real good midos first of all is not just
external behavior that you don't go
around screaming at people. There's a
lot of internal work inside of you
inside of ourselves. Are we jealous of
people? Do we want good for people? Are
we angry inside? You know, as they write
in the safer in marriage, a lot of real
me does come out. And asal says, we can
judge a person's midas by how he treats
his wife. I'll add as a wife maybe
treats her husband. And because with
everyone else, you don't scream and yell
because you want to look good. But with
your spouse in privacy of your home, the
truth comes out. I'll tell you something
else. You know, I speak to my bakram
about midos. But not only speak to about
midos, you know, the last few months I
do once a week a shalom bias course. And
many of the bakham not even dating yet.
But it's valuable to hear it now because
they'll keep it in their head. Even when
I used to teach 11th grade, I would talk
about these things. And you know, one
particular uh married person um I have
in mind, he said to me that he remembers
now he's married years later. He
remembers what I taught him in 11th
grade and it's made an impact. So for
example, I I spoke to the bak a person
you you you talk about a bakar and you
say you ask for a resume. He'd ask for
I'm sorry. He asked for information. You
say what Bakar is? He's a very adidal.
He's very adak. He's very adal. He's
very sweet. So you think until I got
married a little bit. You think that if
you're a sweet guy, you're going to be a
great husband. You're a sweet guy. You
can't hurt a fly. So I told the Bakum,
yeah, he can't hurt a fly, but he wish
he could kill a few. Many of the people
that are very soft, but they're holding
a lot of anger inside. Their room is
taking things. They don't want to say
anything. Either they're scared or
because they're they think that's good
midos and maybe to some extent, but
really they have a lot of anger inside.
And then they get married and their wife
is doing things they don't like and they
have no idea what to do with it to
express it. They don't know how to
express it because when do they ever
express when something was bothering
them to hold it in? They know how to do.
But then they have anger. And when it
was with their roommate, they don't have
to be with their roommate. They just
take a walk. But their wife, if they do
take a walk on their wife, it's not very
nice. It's going to be quite insulting
and they don't know what to do. And
sometimes it comes out in anger and
sometimes it comes out with maybe even
worse is they just keep it locked in and
they're carrying a lot of anger and it's
felt and a lot of problems come out.
Being a balidos is quite
complicated and takes a lot of wisdom.
You can't just expect and we expect like
oh in our yeshiva we don't focus on
maser we don't focus on understanding
ourselves we don't focus on working
ourselves we focus on learning tyra and
of course we teach the buck to be nice
guys if if if we do that we teach them
to be nice guys and then we expect them
to get married and their wife says
something they don't like and they're
just going to be able to deal with it
and if they need to tell their wife
something they'll be able to and they
and there is a important place for
communication how how we expecting them
to do And then they have children and
their child's disrespectful and you
expect them to do what I asked them to
do. Stay calm. Understand that they're
in pain. Don't take it personally. How
do you how do you expect the person to
do that without serious work on
themselves? So So what if a 19-year-old
Baka comes to you and says, "I want to
work on my mid, but don't just tell me
to read Shar. want to like practically
like learning mus often times is just a
hissir us to the concept that I need to
go ahead and work on my mas. So what is
the practical next step of working on my
mus? Okay. So so with all arrogance and
I'm not saying my safer is the only one
but the difference of let's say amidos
of a more classical safer is in we don't
just tell you not to get angry we tell
you ideas and thoughts of how maybe to
work on yourself you know not to get
angry and and that's and that's so
important and so important. I spoke at
my daughter's seminary a few months ago
and I said to them, I ju I said, I want
to tell you it's not okay for you to
scream at your husband. It's not okay
for you to scream at your husband. I'm
not going to say it's never going to
happen. And if and if a wife screams at
her husband, the husband should be a man
and take it and stay calm and talk
respectfully back. But it's not okay for
a woman to scream at her husband. It's
anger is forbidden.
Varm is forbidden. You have an
obligation if your husband forgot
something or came home late to talk to
him about it, not scream at him and call
him names and yell at him. That's a very
basic thing. Hopefully, they're teaching
that in schools and seminaries, I don't
know, but it's a basic thing. Now, if
people at least learned alto or learned
another mus saver, it doesn't have to be
my merc saver, but if someone learned
that, that's very valuable. At least I
can look at myself in the mirror and say
I shouldn't have screamed at. I have to
apologize for screaming at him. Not
apologize maybe for maybe I'm right
about what he did wrong, but I have to
take responsibility for my behavior.
Many people, men and women, live their
whole lives. I was right for screaming
cuz they did that. There's no
responsibility like no, Hashem expects
more from us. Hashem expects us to work
on ourselves. Now that's one piece
knowing that I have to work on myself.
Yes, there's another piece you know to
putting into action but if you don't
have the first piece there's nothing to
talk about. There's so much depth in me
though. See my see listen Hashem gave me
a big gift. I wouldn't be talking to you
about this if not for my rabbi pair
itself. He gave a daily muservad for
about a half an hour every day in yeshiv
you talk about yeshivas where they're
running away by mused. First of all,
you're putting a safe in front of them
expecting to learn it. So that it itself
is maybe not as fun. But my rebi gave us
a vad a class every single day. And it
was so enjoyable. It was so gmach. He
would point out to us the, you know, the
human nature, how funny we are, how
flawed we are. And he he had just an
amazing sense of humor. So the way he
did it was just just amazing. But it was
so engaging and it was so exciting. And
it really excited me the rest of my life
and certainly the the next 10 years, you
know, after that to really be aware and
conscious and and understand myself and
pay attention to myself. So it's very
hard to expect someone that wasn't
exposed to that kind of maser that my
ribb gave to even understand its
significance and have that appreciation
for it. I would only hope as this
through this podcast and and Bar you
know is just spreading awareness that we
have to findarum
my rebi has bashm they wrote over things
from him mind over man findarum that
talk about it in a way that you find
engaging stimulating and it's a whole
world of wisdom it's a world of wisdom
so circling back to marriage for a
second let's I want to uh delve into
that are there more divorces is nowadays
amongst younger people than there were
20 years ago or 30 years ago or it's
just everyone knows everyone nowadays
more than we did did 30 years ago.
Meaning you very often hear about 24
year olds who are getting divorced. Not
saying it's a global pandemic, but it's
creeping up. Is that accurate? And if it
isn't accurate, why is it happening? And
what are perhaps steps we can take to
stop that? So I I don't know. I don't
know the numbers. Whether it's more or
whether there's more yidden and more
news goes around. I don't know.
But there are reasons to think why it
may make some sense that we could have
more problems today. Like we said, you
know, there's more today. We are It used
to be many of us can think of our
grandparents or great-grandparents. It
used to be people stayed married, not
necessarily in the perfect relationship
where they they they may be fighting and
arguing, but they loved each other and
there was a commitment to each other. I
don't know if we're as committed as we
used to be in general, just, you know,
people move from thing to thing, whether
it's because we're just used to having
things quickly. I don't know if we have
the same level of commitment that we
used to. Part of marriage, part of the
foundation of marriage is I'm committed
to this person and I'm committed to
working it out. So I don't know if we
have the same level of commitment.
People may be quicker to like it's not
working out. Maybe I don't know. I also
think there going to be many challenges
today which are going to affect
marriage. Communication.
So today communication because of phones
I think is weaker. People don't have to
communicate verbally. They could send a
text. So they can come into marriage
really not having good communication
skills. We also have challenges with
technology which may also impact whether
it impacts the man because of what he's
seen whether unfortunately during
marriage there are issues. So that also
has sure played a role in in in in
divorces. Um you know so there there's a
varied of of a variety of factors. I
will say that I believe strongly it's
our responsibility to prepare our young
men and women for marriage. We have them
barem unbelievable. We have them in
yeshiva. Most boys are in yeshiva till
they get married and many of them after.
But they're in yeshiva till they're
married and if they go to work earlier
they're still there for quite a long
time. The girls are in school through
seminary.
We have time to teach them. We must
teach them. We must teach them number
one the importance of working on your
midos,
working on yourself, getting to
understand yourself. You know, there is
more talk today about being emotionally
healthy. That's not what I'm referring
to. I'm not talking about referring to
be emotionally healthy, which maybe
overlaps with midos, but you're a
healthy person overall. But really
understanding yourself, working on
yourself, that has to be a focus in
yeshivas. I'll be honest, not everybody
is right pairs. That's all. Not everyone
could teach it.
But maybe the rashiva who the rashiva
gives an unbelievable shar on the garra
is not equipped to teach it. It's not a
it's not a flaw on on the rashiva.
Everyone has their strengths. You know
for myself who
hope qualified to teach samidas I
couldn't give the high level shir in in
many yeshivas. So everyone has their
strengths but we should recognize this
needs to be done. So if I can't do it,
do I have a rebi? Do I have another do I
have mashia of someone who could do it?
Am I looking to hire somebody who can do
it? Maybe I can bring someone once a
week who could do it. Maybe I can give
them that I appreciate or someone else
can tell me. Maybe I'm just not into
this, but I can get them to the one
second. Can I just interject? The
yeshiva's the typical ber is going to
missa and then yeshiva for three years
and then he's going to stroll and he's
going to BMG. So the time to educate on
marriage in preparation for marriage
would be that obligation would be thrust
on the Mir or Brisk or Yaga or wherever
they're going in art and then on BMG
neither institution I think is is
running to give midos
clinics maybe the mirror a little bit
but certainly not Brisk or Yang deal or
and certainly not BMG. The question is,
are you suggesting that these
institutions should in fact have these?
I mean, I know there are vomiting. No
one's listening to me. I'm risking. No,
I know. I'm saying a utopian world. I
just I'm just saying first of all, I
think we should be stressing midos in
MFA.
We There's no reason we shouldn't be
stressing midos and missa.
We should be stressing midos in
elementary school. There's a lot to talk
about this. You know, the fact that I
don't know if it still exists, but the
fact that I have a feeling that it may
exist that there's a concept of freshy
treatment in yeshiva is antithetical to
what it means good, which is you're nice
to everybody, you're respectful to
everybody. We have to be teaching good
midos and there's no we could start at a
very young age, but through massa
through base med teaching midos. So that
was the first part I was in the middle
of talking about teaching people the
importance of working on their midos.
That's probably in my opinion the most
important part. If you give me a guy,
you give me a bakar
that has been working on his midos. He's
been learning, you know, I'm sorry. He's
been learning a lot of midos. He's been
working on himself. Even if he's not
prepared for marriage, I'm pretty
comfortable with that guy. You know why?
Because he's been working on himself.
And then when he gets thrown the curve
balls in marriage, he's got some
footing. He's gonna work on it. He's
gonna figure it out and he cares to
figure it out. Most importantly, give me
a girl. You know, I feel that's one of
the greatest gave me that girls are
actually learning that girls are
actually learning because that was not
so common because they didn't learn, you
know. You know, so girls actually
learning mus
such a great that girls are learning
muser. Even if they don't know about
marriage, they're already ahead of the
game. Oh, I'm not supposed to be
screaming a husband. I have to work on
myself. That's already like we're, you
know, we're 80% there. We're we're in a
good place. Now, is it beneficial and
important to also teach specifics about
marriage? Yes. And that I would say you
can wait. If you don't, you know,
whether you'll have to decide. I would I
have no problem doing it with younger
base managed guys because I don't know
if I know what's going to happen when
they're older. So, let me do it now
while I know I can do it.
Also it is connected to regular midos
too. It's not just marriage is not in a
vacuum.
But um I think we need some specific you
know and there are in BMG vadim and this
and that but I question is are we like
something we're demanding and saying
like you have to you have to be
listening you have to be working on it.
You have to hear or it's like it's a
nice thing. It's more than a nice thing.
It's critical. Talk about children. One
of the greatest impacts as the gadylum
taught Rafam and others shalas has great
impact on our children. We have to work
on ourselves to be a good husband to be
a good wife needs work. So what advice
would you tell a pair a couple that is
trying their best to create a house of
what advice would you tell them to help
them be happy successful Jews who happen
to be living in America as opposed to
happy successful Americans who happen to
be Jews. And to specify what I mean is
very often you could have people that
they were learning in Kyle for two years
or three years and they had a wife who
went to fresh out of seminary. So
they're all inspired and then they enter
the workforce and the itch to make a lot
of money kicks in and they look around
and they see that wealthy people are
celebrated and it becomes more and more
difficult to say
is my working on my mudas is my
emotional bank account is completely
used up by the effort to attain wealth
and style and food good food, vacation,
whatever it is. What advice would you
give to somebody to
starting out to circumn to prevent that
from happening to stare in the eyes of a
society that very very much focuses on
attaining wealth and build building
bigger and bigger houses and saying, you
know what, I'm going to be okay with
making $200,000 feeding my family and
being making sure limiter is the meaning
$200,000 that's that's a lot of money.
$300,000. Whatever it is, you got uh
that's what we've come to. Meaning it's
it's it's very very This is a new topic,
right? Not really. I'm saying it in the
context of marriage because you have a
couple that was together on board ready
to build a house that's filled with
kadusha and then it sort of
peters out a little bit when they see
hey I can we can make money and okay so
first of all I really think there's a
big difference between midos and shifas
for tyra and and there is there is a
difference of course midos is a kok and
tyra and a kaok of of of growth and
being a yid. And I also want to say I
don't think anyone looks at themselves
as Americans. I think everyone really,
even if they get caught up in things,
view themselves as as yed and as Jews,
as precious yen. If a person is cares
about midos, if a person cares about
midos and a husband cares about how he's
treating his wife and a wife cares about
treating her husband and we have to
teach men and women in yeshiva that
that's their most foremost obligation to
be a good husband, to be a good wife, to
really work on yourself.
So I think that can carry through really
under all circumstances because even if
you don't have the time, even if you're
not learning as you should be and we can
talk about that and even if you're not
as focused as as you were before, but
the midos is something it's really easy
to keep focus on because you're always
interacting with people and you're
always interacting with your wife. And
by the way, one of the beautiful thing
about midos is you could keep it on you
at all times. I don't believe midos is
about learning is safer. I wrote all
amidos from a collection of 10 years of
sitting in my brain as I was dealing
with situations on the ground, not from
reading. It's from from dealing with my
own life's experiences, dealing with my
own jealousy, dealing with my own anger,
that's what's shared in there.
So if somebody works on their midos,
cares about their midos, what happens is
he takes that to work. When there's
someone else at work that he's jealous
of, he thinks about that. I'm jealous of
him. I have to work on it. Let me think
about why I shouldn't be jealous. Oh,
I'm not being so nice to him because I'm
jealous or I'm don't want him to get a
promotion. So, I'm not saying nice
something nice to the boss. That's not
good. Midos, that's not right. I have to
trust and I'm going to say something
nice. So, you bring Hashem into your
world because midos involves, you know,
typically in work, we're involved with
other people. So, really midos really
can connect us, bring kadusha into the
world, into our workforce. So I don't
think that the midos will be actually of
course if you get caught up in money
maybe it could turn into bad turn you
into having bad midos but I think the
midos could really stay strong even if
you're not as strong in the learning as
you should be in terms of how we stay
connected to our
to our values you know and not get
caught up in the in the rat race. So
first of all just to be mamas a little
bit I think a lot of people are not um I
think it's a little bit exaggerated
about everybody trying to become rich. I
think today the cost of living is so
high is everybody's trying to survive.
Now you could argue about whether you
know their standards people's standards
are too high but the cost of living even
when you try to keep things on a lower
standard are very very high and very
expensive. So, I think a lot of people
are working hard to make money, not
necessarily because they want to be
millionaires, because they're trying to
survive. They're trying to pay their
bills. Life is expensive. You know, you
throw out in passing $200,000. I mean,
if you would have told me 10 years ago
about $200,000, that's that's a rich
man. $200,000. So, so there's a lot of
pressure just to survive. You know, in
terms of a general guidance of of how to
keep the shifice, I think it's important
a person is connected. A person has to
connect himself to something. We can't
do it alone. You have to find a shul.
Either you live near yeshiva. Amazing.
But most of us don't or it doesn't work.
It's for younger boys. But we're
connected to a shul that it's not just a
shul where we come to davin. There's a
shul where they have learning going on.
And I'm connected to a kabur of people
that are growing. And we also think
about where we living. Am I living in a
neighborhood which the people
unfortunately are not so connected to to
Rrooknas? They're all just talking about
their their newest clothing. I have to
think about where I'm where I want to
live. You know where who we surround
ourselves with has a tremendous impact.
So you have been dealing with struggling
Baham for a long time. And I think that
it's fair to say that certainly in
America we've come a long way as a
society in Kalis in dealing with
struggling boys. Can one make the
argument that we've we've developed such
grand institutions
and retreats and camps where it could
almost be conceived as a path where you
have a mediocre Bakar who's in a good
yeshiva but it's traditional it's cold
it's the reamer old it's it's dark it's
intense and he looks across the pond and
his friends who he grew up with who are
struggling but are in this yesa with you
know, emotionally dynamic rebum and it's
fun and there's comeitses and there's
trips and there's whatever.
Do is there a risk that we're going to
be attracting bahim who do not need gen
that genuine who if those places weren't
plastered all over the world they would
muster up the selfm motivation to to
come to seder to learn
is that a problem is that a problem that
there's no way around it what would you
say that's an excellent question I know
there are people I don't know specific
people I was a rebi waterberry for many
years. I know people that had tinas on
waterberry because the kids didn't they
felt that the kids were not happy in
their yeshiva because they saw the
action going on waterberry and maybe
some kids left their yeshiva uh to go to
waterberry you know but I want to tell
you as follows every boy needs
and there's no reason why we shouldn't
be putting into every shiva I'm not
saying we fire old but we should be
putting into that our dynamic
that do connect with the boys that can
give the boys support
a lot of is giving
I literally just wrote an article it's
being published this week in the number
one ingredient in in my opinion the
number one ingredient in is is
giving a kid respect is making a kid
feel that he's important because he is
not because you're lying because he is
he's a Ben Hashem. She's a Basm. Most of
the kids I mentioned before that fall
off is because they don't feel good
about themselves. So the reason why many
of these yeshivas that work with kids
are struggling and are successful is
because they're giving the children the
they're giving the children the
encouragement. They're giving the
children the space. There needs to be in
my opinion different yeshivas of course
but I don't think there's a yeshiva that
should not have tremendous amount of
tremendous amount of warmth for the boys
to say that this top yeshiva where the
guys are mamish learning you know 247 to
say that they don't need the the warmth
in that other yeshiva
I wouldn't say those words I would say
they may be able to survive without it.
Of course, we do have unfortunately
fall out from the top yeshivas.
Sometimes fall out while they're still
in MFA. Some fall out when they raise
medish and sometimes fall out five 10
years into marriage leenu. There are a
lot of people that just go through the
system. They don't want to rock the
boat. They don't want to mess up their
shak. They don't want to upset their
parents. Everything looks good on the
outside. So they keep going and going
and going but there's a lot of
unhappiness
a lot of challenges that are not being
dealt with. So
if a yeshiva that has warm and has a lot
of you know is drawing and oh they want
to leave because they want that. So
learn from them in my opinion bring the
now I want to be clear here. Yes, some
of those yeshivas have a lot of
allowances and a lot of free-for-allness
that that they need to have for the kids
that they have. The kid that's learning
well in a strong yeshiva
doesn't want that. He doesn't want that.
Even those kids in those yeshivas that
are letting them dress and and and not
go to Shia and whatever it is, like I
mentioned before, those kids are in
pain. Those kids are usually fallouts
have usually been rejected from their
elementary schools from their previous
misfa often unfortunately from from
their families from their communities.
They've been rejected. So it's a big
mistake. I tell this to parents like
when they have one older child that's
struggling and they make allowances for
them and they say, "Well, my younger
child now he's going to want a
smartphone and he's going to want to do
that. He's going to want thing. So I I
can't let my older child have those
allowances because then my younger
child's going to want to." It's not
exactly the case. If a child's happy and
he's doing well, he's not looking
around. So, he's not looking around
saying, "Oh, I want to be like that kid
with long hair and doing whatever he
wants." That kid's struggling. I'm
happy. He's happy. He's happy where he
is in yeshiva. And Barashem, the kids by
the for the most part that are in the
strong yeshivas are very happy. And the
yeshivas are doing a great job. Do I
feel I don't know which ones. Do I feel
I'm sure there's some of them that need
to give the kids more
I'll tell you the problem, the challenge
I think there is in the very stark
yeshivas.
When every kid in in that yeshiva is
learning till 12:00 at night, I think
it's very hard for that child who learns
till 12:00 to feel special. And very
often he's trying to learn till 12:30 to
1:00 so he can feel special. And that to
me is tragic. How special it is a bakar
learning not till 12:00 it be 10
o'clock. however many hours how special
it is that the Bakar is learning Tyra
and I feel we have to do a better job
and I'm not pointing fingers at any
yeshiva but we have to do a better job
of making every kid feel deservedly so
that he's a wow you're a bent tyra
you're so you don't have to out compete
and unfortunately some yes suffered
terribly from this the competition you
don't have to compete it's not you're
the best bak because you got the best
you learned the most hours Every's
a star. Every's precious. I think we
have to do a better job that every
feels like a million dollars. He gets
the he needs and he won't be looking at
other places because oh, they're getting
the Rebi loves him. The Rebi doesn't
love you. That's a bro. That's a bro.
That's a bro. You have tinas on another
yeshiva because are so nice. So be
nicer. They're right. Be nice. Be nice.
What would you say to a bacher who's in
a mainstream yeshiva
but he's not the top 1% and therefore he
is struggling to find selfworth
and
he is slowly declining but not that he
wants to and not that he's struggling
doesn't have any emotional health issues
it's just he's not the top one and the
top 1% often are the ones that get the
spotlight either the top 1% or the the
top the the bottom 1% which is always in
the manal's office and gets all the
attention from the manal because he
pulled the fire alarm where he got
caught with cigarettes, right? So, it's
those two and then everyone else is like
so what do you do with a a ber who just
coasting but he doesn't want and he
genuinely wants to be he but he's
mediocre and he becomes internally a
little bit depressed. What would you say
to such? Listen, if I met with him
privately, I would try to give him a lot
of and try to explain to him how special
he is. But he would never come to the
point he would never go to a a Rebi and
express his feelings because his rebi is
70 and is a magir and not the type and
there's no second that's in his whatever
that so he's on he's on an island. Well
he said he's coming to me though. Oh
okay. So what would you looking at this
podcast? What would you tell him? What
would I tell him? I would tell him I'll
tell you. I'll tell you every year is
incredibly precious. every year is the
son and daughter of Hashem. And by the
way, that's where our self-esteem should
come from immediately. Not how many
hours I learned, not what a great I am.
My self-esteem comes because I am a
child of Hashem and I important and
Hashem values me. Hashem loves me and
I'm important and my actions count. We
just had the par of the parasite
whenever this is broadcasted. But yeah,
par doesn't see him and the repeats the
nasi each nasi's carbanis. So different
explanations but recently I have a
simple that I like the wants to tell you
you could be bringing the same carbanas.
I know the each person has different
kavanas but without that you're bringing
the same carbon he's bringing the same
carbon. The fact that he's bringing the
same carbon doesn't make your carbon
less precious.
The fact that you're learning Tyra and
he's also learning Tyra doesn't make
your learning less your Tyra learning
Tyra less precious. Your mitzvah is
precious. Your Tyra is precious. You are
precious. And you should try to find
yourselves find yourself people that
will help you feel that way and
appreciate that. H so how do we develop
individuality and
creativity and uniqueness in a world
where you have 6,000 people in your
grade you have a thousand people on your
block I'm assuming let's say you're
living in Lakewood you're living in Muny
or you're living in San Jose but you're
you're in a yeshiva that has 500 people
how do you strike a balance between
being socially with it and normal and up
to date and you know you're one of the
guys but you're also an individual and
you're you have your individuality and
your imagination your creativity which I
think are integral components of being
of achieving greatness and I don't mean
becoming a
how do someone maintain or create
individuality in a world where it's so
easy to just be like everyone else. So I
think the challenge you're referring to
is really a challenge that you know
happens in when Baham are younger,
right? If you look at people that are
married 30 years old, 40 years old, we
don't really have that question because
everyone's doing something different.
Everyone has their own family. There's a
lot of individuality. But in yeshiva,
they're all wearing their white shirts
and their hand jacket and they're
learning and doing the same thing. And
by the way, for that reason, some bakham
try to find individuality through, you
know, they can't wear colored shirt in
most yeshivas, but try to find socks.
Maybe they could sneak in a black sock
with a stripe, whatever. So I can have
my individuality. No, but that's my
point. They're screaming. So, so, so I
want to explain, but I want to I want to
tell those bakram and I want to just
share the idea. You know, I allow a
little bit more in my yeshiva
individuality with with dress, but the
individuality
clothing is a very cheap way to express
individuality.
I'm not knocking it for someone that
needs to do it, but at the end of the
day, if what makes me different than you
is that, you know, we look pretty much
right. We're both wearing black jackets,
white shirts, no ties. So we look
beards, we looks look the same. You
know, you look a little younger, less
gray hair. But you know, if our
individuality is that I'm wearing
different clothing than you, that's
pretty weak. Individuality is not in
clothing. Individuality is in our
thoughts and our actions. Now, while
we're younger, a lot of our actions are
going to look the same. But as we get
older, that thought process, that
development that you're working on
yourself, if you've been working on your
midos, for example, if you've been
working on yourself as a person, as you
get older, be hashem, you will be able
to give and offer and express and your
individuality will shine. While you're
in yeshiva, there's limited
opportunities for individuality to
shine. And if you're and if you try too
hard, it's, you know, you just stand
out. But inside yourself individuality
is found inside the person and then it
blossoms as you get older. So it's very
important you think for yourself. You
could think you know you could think for
yourself. Your shashiva gives a schmoo
on a certain topic. I get in trouble for
saying this and you don't agree you
don't like it. Individuality means that
I have a brain. My rebi taught us aes
he taught us that just because your rebi
said something you need to understand
it. You have to be responsible for it.
If your Rebby tells you to do something,
if your Rebi tells you to shoot
somebody, you have to understand what
he's telling you. You can't just walk
around, my Rebi said it. You have to own
whatever your Rebi taught you. I'm not
saying there's never a place to say I
don't understand my Rebi said it. But
you have to own it. So this Bakar who
you want individuality when the Rashiva
is talking, try to understand what he's
saying. If you don't understand it, go
ask him. If he doesn't have the time for
you, talk to some other Rebi or Rav and
say I don't I don't know if I understand
this. Even in Gumar learning so many
times a Rebi says in the t in the garra
and I don't like it. So like conforms
like okay but that's that's what the
rashiva said. No that's not Tyra Tyra is
yours. So individuality is in our mind.
We have to teach bakram to have
individuality
in their in their thoughts in their
development. It doesn't have to be with
clothing. You know every Shiva could
have its own dress code but to teach
them to be independent thinkers. That's
what my rebi taught my rebiere
was a very unique person and he really
taught us to be to think for ourselves
and that's why his tidam are quite
different but the funny thing is that a
lot of times people can actually spot us
out and say oh you probably learned by
right par because there's a unique maybe
the stands out the uniqueness but but he
taught us to think for ourselves so you
mentioned that clothing is probably the
cheapest way of expressing yourself. You
also mentioned that it typically weeds
itself out when one gets into adulthood
just because of the nature of of having
kids in a family makeup. But you you do
see so many 40, 50, 60 year olds who
they're going to wear a $5,000 tie,
which is essentially their way of
saying, "I'm going to spend $5,000 for
you to approve of me." or I am going to
spend a ridiculous amount of money on a
$500,000 car, which it's not that much
more comfortable than a $40,000 car.
It's a $500,000 you're going to spend
for other people to observe and say,
"Hey, this guy is unique. This guy is
impressive." So, it seems like a major
You disagree that it's not coming from
there. I I disagree with you that that's
their goal. Their goal is not to
establish individuality.
Their goal is to receive approval. Their
goal is to receive
and that goes back to what I said before
our job as parents and foremost I think
this the most important thing in as I
mentioned before is to build people's
self-esteem when we don't feel good
about ourselves we look for other
people's approval if I wasn't the
biggest but now I'm very successful
financially and by the way many of them
suffered when they were in yeshiva being
the and now Now they have a chance to
finally get people's approval. Now they
have a chance to get the Rashiva coming
asking him for money and be honored. I'm
not saying people get honored for this
reason. It's a big to get honored but
people want to establish themselves to
get other people's approval. I wrote a
whole English safer on if you saw it.
It's called run after the right. The
more someone feels good about themsel
the less they need other people's
approval
as well. If we really work on ourelves
ourselves, we become more intelligent.
Oh, because I'm driving a fancy car and
everyone is impressed. That's a reason
to that I should feel good about myself,
right? Isn't it like the should be
embarrassed? You should be embarrassed.
They they have to spend that much money.
You know, I'm not Listen, I'm not
judging anybody people. I'm very against
judging people's spendings. You know,
people say, you know, um why is he
flying private? Why is he spending the
money? I don't judge any people's
spendings. I don't have the kind of
money. So I don't have the opportunity
to to withhold. If I had the kind of
money and was not spending it, we could
talk. I don't judge people's spendings
and many of those people are so generous
with stuck and such giving people. I
don't judge other people's spending. I
think people only judge other people's
spending because they're jealous etc.
Unless they're a RV who's trying to be
mik his
you know it doesn't bother me. I don't
look I don't think. So I want to say
like this. I'm just saying I'm not
judging why the guy's driving his fancy
car. Is it just to get a people's
approval? etc. etc etc. But there's no
question that there's a lot of that. And
you'll say, well, isn't that shallow?
Like, you know, that this is what this
is uh this is what uh you think is is
valuable. They have a fancy car. But I
don't it's not just about the car,
right? If if I I heard this from someone
else recently, so it's not my idea, but
it's quite simple. If I'm driving
$500,000 car, then you understand that
I'm running a successful business and I
feel good about myself that I run a
successful business. So instead of
taking advertisements out there and
saying I have a successful business, my
car, my watch, my suit, my bar mitzvah,
my wedding shows that I'm a successful
person financially. But I will but I
will say that if we were giving the co
to people when they're younger, people
would have a less need for it and less
interest in it. And also there's another
thing here. if the people around us in
general weren't so listen if you had
people I'm not you know I'm not saying
I'm above gashmas but all I could tell
you is that and again obviously I'm I'm
a I'm so I'm just just giving you an
example but if everyone around a person
was like me they're not pulling up with
a $500,000 car I'll probably make them
feel good because I'm nice so it's a
it's such a nice car but the end of the
Hey, they're not bringing me the car.
Hopefully, they'll bring me a garum.
They'll give me a a vart because they
know I'm not going crazy. So, we have to
raise we have to raise people to feel
good about themselves because they're
yidden and proud Jews. And if we we were
more proud of being Jews, we'd be a
little bit less proud about things like
money. Very well said. So I want to talk
about one final thing which is a
difficult topic but in the topic of brim
who are struggling with iny kadusha
many many bakim have this issue where
they've tried everything they're on an
island because yeah they had they they
went to Walmart during second sader one
day they bought a $15 smartphone and
they could do whatever they want. They
tried to put a filter on it. they can
take off the filter. No one knows that
they have it. It's essentially an
immensely personal battle that I don't
know what percentage of Baham have to
deal with, but a lot. What advice would
you give to people bakim especially who
are for the for very often battling this
in private and in secret with immense
sadness and depression that comes along
with the pain of falling in this
tsunami of tum of tuma. So yeah, I don't
think the problem the challenge is
limited to Bakram and certainly if a
Bakr is facing challenges, it doesn't
just necessarily run away when he's
older and plenty of adults struggle. So
I think it's important that it's not
just a to point out it's not just a
bakham struggle.
I rarely talk to my own my own about
and I explain to them why and I'll tell
you what I do tell them. This is what I
do tell them. The greatest challenge of
technology is not what we see as much as
what happens to us after we see. The
atar is great after we looked at
something to tell us what a bum we are
because we looked at that. And then he
plays back every schmoo we heard since
ninth grade about what it does to you
and what type of person you are if you
look at stuff. And I don't want to be
another one of those recordings for that
bakar when he falls. So therefore I
don't talk so much about the severity
after myself but I don't talk the
severity of what I talk to bakim
primarily is about
encouragement about not giving up. When
a person feels depressed feels bad when
he that he watched something he
shouldn't have watched it's actually not
a mitzvah. It's actually a what happens
when a bakr feels bad. He may watch
again. He may wake up late the next
morning etc. And I think it's a terrible
message if ever it's said like if
someone's watching this then how could
he be learning tis or how could he be
dvening that's that's like to me that
sounds like aarsis. I mean a and mitzvah
don't cancel out and a doesn't cancel
out a mitzvah learning dvening doing
mitzvah gives us strength ultimately to
be able to push out the the zahara I I
have to share with you a great vart I
thought before then maybe it'll come up
is there a sitter there so we say we say
in we say
you should see the and remember all thee
So it's a because a pic or two later we
say again
it's amazing about ding
so many questions that we just can just
keep reading and don't notice we say
twice lantis what's going on what's the
what's the remembering twice the soperno
says something amazing the soperno if I
understand them correctly says that
lantis is not going on seeing the titus
we already did that already you saw the
tit it's a continuation ofu
Don't get distracted by all the by all
the desires
in order to focus on Hashem. The goal of
not looking and separating ourselves is
not just a mission onto itself. It's
part of the whole mission of of getting
close to Hashem. It's positive. It's not
negative. When a bucker sees something,
an adult sees something he shouldn't
shouldn't look at. I think the most
important thing is is he doesn't get
depressed. Depression is not about
Hashem. I'll prove it to you. If it was
about Hashem, so why am I sleeping late
tomorrow? Why am I why am I messing up
further? Imagine the husband always
comes up home late. He's apologized. I
feel so bad. I feel so bad. And then he
comes home later and later. If you feel
so bad that he went against Hashem, so
then why are you continuously doing it?
And why you're not dinging more the next
day? Why you not waking up early to
learn to make up? You can never cancel,
but to show Hashem, now I'm learning
more because I saw something I shouldn't
see. Now I want to learn more. So it's
not really about Hashem. It's about
myself. I feel bad. I feel like a loser.
And that's why oner people are not
depressed. People are happy because
they're doing shuva. I'm getting closer
to Hashem. It's positive, right? It's an
unbelievable thing. my favorite pia.
Hope I get the words right. So we sing
to Hashem, we are your people and then
right afterwards
and now that we sing
if someone be listening from outside and
hearing that going on
say what were you guys just saying? Uh
we were guilty, we rebelled, we stole.
sugar because we have a sim we want to
be better. It's positive. We want to be
better. Depression that bakim feel and
adults feel when they look at something
is not a mitzvah. It's it's
I wanted to say and someone told me
afterwards it says it somewhere. Maybe I
saw it. But the says
so I want to suggest
the thoughts of sin are worse than sin.
It means the thoughts after you sin, not
before you sin. The thoughts after you
sin are more difficult. They cause much
more damage than the sin. The reason why
people are torn apart today is not
because they saw things they shouldn't
see. It's because afterwards they felt
like pieces of garbage and it caused
them to fall apart. I tell my bakim, you
looked at something you shouldn't look
at. Do me a favor. Learn for five
minutes afterwards. Right afterwards,
learn for five minutes. One word of Tyra
is 613 mitzvah. You'll get thousands and
thousands of mitzvah, more mitzvah than
you got a virus. Of course, it doesn't
cancel allow you to do chuva, but at the
end of the day, you want to show hashem
you messed up. Now, I want to do
something good. If people would do this,
I think ultimately they would get clean,
too. Because I'm going to learn now. I
messed up. I'm going to go to chakras
the next day. I'm going to learn and
eventually I will push it out. It ties
back. I'm sorry, but to me like so much
of Yiddish comes down to
the person watching what it shouldn't
look at it destroys his self-c and it
shouldn't okay we could feel bad we
could regret it and that helps us maybe
not do it again but end of the day I'm
still Hashem still cares about me Hashem
still wants me to learn Hashem still
wants my ding my covet has to stay
strong my self-cov has to stay strong
most people unfortunately if they're not
told this and sometimes told the
opposite if you look at this you're this
It's funny. No one ever says about that
if you say you're a bomb. You're Russia.
You can't die. And the talks about it,
but we we don't give those shm. Why
don't we give those? Because well, I
know I say I I know struggle. I don't
get them depressed. And all of a sudden
comes to boom. Full core press. Boom.
Let's beat them up. No one says even
because you don't want get guys to like
lose their mind. you got which again you
know it's scary but
it's it's a word so we don't say talk
that way because we don't get people
depressed and all of a sudden we think
it's okay to tell that if they looked at
something people they looked at
something like that's it the end you
messed up it's not as bad as you messed
up messed up so now pick up a safer
learn for five minutes get up five
minutes earlier to shakers tomorrow if
people would do this I believe they will
get themselves out of the mess part of
the mess is the depression is the giving
up this this dispondency
there are such a there is such a thing
of addiction but I want to tell you you
know and where you define addiction
don't define addiction is complicated
but so much mental health problems and
so much addiction comes from one word to
me it's the magic word what's the magic
word cover
just that people should feel good about
themselves we should feel good we're
yidden we're precious
And by the way, it keeps the person
humble because it's not I'm only I'm
precious. Rapillo, you're precious. The
the ninth grader in your mifa and car is
four years younger than you. He's
precious. The three-year-old is
precious. Ayid is precious. This is what
we need to give over. The one message,
you know, if this is where we end with,
we don't have to end. The message I want
to give over is this is what we need to
go. the if you want to talk about one
era that we need to get going and cla
more and more and more is every is
precious every's valuable every's
important that's it if we feel good
about ourselves we also stop looking at
these things and doing these things
because I feel too good to be involved
with that excellent so just as a final
takeaway message what would you say to
the thousands and thousands of Young men
and women out there starting their
lives, whether recently married or been
married for 5 years, who want to stay on
fire as Yidden, what message would you
say to it retain their co to put to the
forefront their
unfathomable
preciousness and instead of living a
life after 120 looking back and saying,
"I just chased Narishkite my whole
life." really really focusing on the
fire of Yudishkite as opposed to the
narish guide of the rest of the world.
What parting message would you say to
help them enable them to live a life
where they're on fire? So my my thought
would be I'll start like this. I was
recently at some type of panel by a good
convention. Don't worry it was at a side
room a small thing but okay still was
still was a coveret and talk about
another time. There's real cover and
fake cover. That was a fake covenant.
Although it was a real coven that
somebody asked me, but after that it's
fake. Right. Right. Anyways, you know
what I'm saying? Someone has asked you
to be Messiah or get a braha. The one
that asked you gave you the covet.
Everything after that is is a shell.
Okay. But anyways, so they asked me this
question. How do the question was how do
you deal with technology? How do you
deal with with with social media and
everything like that? And I said that a
person who doesn't have is not busy.
Person's not busy with good things is
going to end up being busy probably with
narish. You can't tell a person get off
social media, get rid of your
smartphone, get rid of these things and
then have a void with nothing to do.
Unfortunately, today people have a lot
of anxiety. So then if they have nothing
to do, they're anxious. But you can't
leave people with voids. you know the we
just we just said you know
[Music]
don't get distracted with all the other
things
in order that you should remember in nor
should be focused on doing the mitzvah
so I would tell people to get busy we
need to be busy I started my own
learning project recently it's much
changed my life the last you know year
or so we need to be busy we need to be
busy so we have to get busy with things.
We have to be busy with with women, busy
with
find
different people may talk to us, you
know, find shim that we like, find that
we like, find projects that interest us.
We need to be busy with good things,
men, busy with learning. We need to be
busy with good things. If we're not busy
with good things, we're not busy with
good things, then I think it's
inevitable, as tell us, we're going to
end up with sin. We end up not feeling
good about ourselves. Again, we should
recognize who we are despite everything
we've done wrong in the past. I just
shared with my an incredible gar that
was who killed millions and millions of
people and it's hard to say it over if
it's a gamarra in gam
became a gad. How he was accepted, I
don't know, but he became a gadic. He
became a yid. And I think there's a
godless onrain's part. He should have
said, "I killed millions of people. It's
over. Kill yourself. You can't. It's
forbidden." Okay? So, lock yourself in a
room. He became He became a Yid. He
didn't say, "I killed millions of
people, so my life is over."
We cannot take away the past. Certainly,
most of us didn't murder anybody.
We can't take away the past, especially
if we hurt hurt people. We could do
chuva and hashem is a lot of compassion
but there's the whole present and future
but we need to be busy. We need busy
with doing good things. Thank you very
much Ra Castel for coming on and
joining. Thank you. A lot of fun.