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How do I know that's actually real? You
can't measure it. You have no physical
evidence to support your theory.
>> I would rather do everything I can in
the intervention world, whether it's
getting him a tutor, right, and getting
him, you know, maybe a basketball coach
and working on his diet. All of that are
interventions, of course, to avoid the
not good choice of medication.
>> Every parent can try whatever they want.
[music] If you see your kid's confidence
starting to flag, you must intervene.
Welcome to the Learning Curve podcast
brought to you by Mishbaka Magazine.
[music] We're raising children in a
changing and challenging world.
>> So, let's tackle the important issues
[music]
facing families today. I'm Rabbi Rhiel
Garfield Manal of Yeshiva Terosis in
Houston and I love talking about
>> I'm Rabbi Ari Shfeld Manal of Yeshiva
Katana Manhattan Meister of Bypra
Manhattan director of camp. I also love
talking and of course a little bit of
fishing.
>> Join us as we answer your questions
[music] and discuss the topics that
matter to parents the most.
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And welcome back to episode
14 of season 3, the second to last.
>> I was going to say, how many do we have?
15.
>> I think 15. The next one is the big the
live event.
>> Yeah. Tell us more about that so our
listeners could participate
>> on May 17th. I'm assuring our listeners
have seen it in Mishbah magazine so they
don't really need us. But in case you're
one of the four people that don't get a
subscription to Mishbah magazine. So I
think May 17th is our live event at 8:00
at night. It's a Zoom link and it will
be all around Jewish social media which
means WhatsApp statuses. You did this
once before, right? What's the format?
Remind me.
>> The format is that we have parents who
join us on a live Zoom. Some people send
in questions beforehand. We talk live.
We can't even like,
>> you know, scheme and conspire beforehand
>> and then we obviously post that as a
podcast. But
>> so some people are like watching the
Zoom live and other people have present
things.
>> Correct. And people live who are
embarrassed to speak,
>> right? They write it to us
>> voice or their face. So they write in
questions. It gets very exciting.
>> But
>> okay,
>> this is this is just a boring this
podcast,
>> right? This is our So this is our last
regular podcast.
>> Yes. Season three and what a season it's
been. We're not going to do all emotion.
I won't cry till the fifth till till the
next one. So we're going to say that for
now. our last episode I got a little bit
of I don't want to say negative push
back because no one's ever negative
about the learning curve and about my
ideas but a little bit of felt that I
was like trying to push an agenda
>> really
>> uh yeah about middle school behavior and
maybe yes versus non yes again I don't
know
>> well you did put that you kept saying
Baltimore is like hairy or something I
don't know I don't know if you said
those words [laughter]
>> I never said I live in Payic the joke
they always say is that Payic is the bus
that broke down on the way to Baltimore,
right? We're Baltimore. Go Baltimore.
But no, so that there was like this
claim against me that I have this agenda
about I don't know yivish. Now again,
who decides what is yeshivish or not is
really depending on that raam. The ram
says you're supposed to take the middle
lane. So I guess wherever you think is
the extreme. I I want to just
crystallize I think the challenge that
many people in the world have and it's a
challenge and I'm not is that for good
reason and well actually we'll discuss
that maybe in the first question the
perfect segue for good reason there is a
need to be and to nullify and to
ridicule and put down you know a large
components of secular society because of
the fear of it creeping into our society
and our culture and it having very
negative impacts on us and the larger we
get as a society as a from orthodox
society, the more freedom we have to
almost be our own inner culture like the
have done to a large extent. The
challenge becomes how do you and I you
know on the one hand not put down but
like separate ourselves for good reason
from some of the ills of society and on
the other hand still take part in
society and namely secular education
your example the last podcast of you
know the magician right so magician is
not secular education it's the magician
that does a magic show and it's a little
corny and you're like the yeshiva kids
eat them up right part of that is there
is a certain tendency to not accept
what is like the standard
things and and and and
you know and is and that's a real
struggle for us today whether
>> you say the nuances of this message and
I don't mean that to be cute although
you know it is something we've talked
about but you're saying that how do you
say
but not the stuff that's not stay away
from right
>> right and I know we're not discussing
this Now but it's this is like a trick
like science for example you know
evolution big issue
whatever if you try to you know develop
evolution within certain Dr. shoulder
forget that evolution big isophically.
Age of the universe big isoprophically.
So it's easy just to say science is
horrible and then they're like really so
then how come I go to the doctor when I
have strep? that I believe right that is
I think one of the fundamental
challenges and it's a challenge a
struggle it's a struggle I would say and
that seeps into whether it's behavior
whether it's approach or mindset of some
of our boys and girls is to have on the
one hand and on the one hand to really
appreciate and to really want to learn
secular studies and to at least have a
baseline on the other hand what do you
mean but they're horrible and they're
kyim that is some of the struggles.
>> You know, it's interesting you say that
because when I was preparing for the
Torah Masur Manal conference that as you
know I'm very involved in and excited
for, I asked for different topics. So,
someone sent me the following topic.
It's like one of these things like spark
a conversation. General studies doesn't
work because we don't care enough about
it.
>> Statement, right?
>> And it's like, of course, we care, but
there's always a but. Or do we? Right.
Yeah. Fine. That was
>> I thought that was a very, you know,
insightful line to debate and discuss,
you know.
>> So, that was episode 13, but now we're
episode 14
>> and now we're on the next one and two
small questions and then um we're going
to go above the board to Toronto to
bring in a professional to discuss an
interesting topic. So, here we go.
>> Okay. You said it's a small question,
but it's actually a long small question.
So, I'll do my best to read it in a way
that is helpful. Dear TLC, I am a
regular listener of the podcast here in
Town New York. I know the show is heard
all over the world, but I wanted to
reach out with a concern regarding the
sports culture I am seeing in camps and
various sport programs year round. While
sports are an amazing outlet, I am
deeply troubled by a trend towards
pro-style ego on the court. I have
noticed significant increase in kids
taunting and mimicking the flashy
aggressive celebrations you may see from
professional athletes. To me, this is
straight up hookas. Instead of using
sports as a training ground for midos,
it feels like we are allowing our kids
to act foolish. What is the best way to
redirect that energy towards menite?
Additionally, how do we push back
against a culture where kids feel they
need to imitate secular athletes to be
cool rather than valuing the refinement
of a bentyra? I'd love to hear you
discuss this on the podcast. Thank you
for all the incredible work you do for
the claw. So as someone who enjoys
sports, I have a little bit of an unfair
advantage in this question and that is
that I had one of the great role models
in in the last 50 years in cloud in
America and that is a region Kramer
maybe one who came on this podcast. So
bearers Kramer was my head counselor.
He's the eighth grade rebby in in Halb
in the five towns and you know it's like
the legend has it you know the best
Jewish basketball player ever right
definitely an unbelievable basketball
player I get everyone has stories you
know it's like with your guttle right so
I have stories of Kramer with me about
basketball how many shots hit in a row
but I think that Kramer who's my rebby
in camping in how to deal with a child
really one of the people that for better
or for worse made me who I am today in
the world of so I want to share two
stories about literally on this topic.
One was that the big game of the year
was always Heler Manov. We had Spiro on
who discussed that and before game um
the gym is wild and going crazy at pack
and before the game one of the players
in our team one of the star players on
our team
Ka took baby powder gave out little like
packets of baby powder to the crowd and
said one two three right before tip off
like LeBron James does before his games.
He still does it. Probably does. Poured
it and clapped his hands together and
threw it up into the crowd. Kramer was
the head counselor who takes basketball
very ser loves the game of basketball. I
was standing right there. I was on the
team T4 and he almost threw this
counselor who was a star player on the
team. He knows who he is. I won't say
who it is. Out of camp and he turned to
the team and he said, "Isaim."
He kept screaming it.
And his point was, we love basketball.
We played basketball. We took it very
seriously. We were competitive. If we
beat Manavu was the it was the highlight
of the summer. But to mimic the silly
little isms of LeBron James, of NBA
players, and to just want to be like
Mike, right, and just to want to be like
them is hazard.
And again to hear it from a rebby who
doesn't appreciate sports, who doesn't
enjoy sports, who doesn't care about
sports, it's much it's, you know, yeah,
what do you know, right? But Gersh
Kramer who was the coach of the
basketball team, who was always the best
player in the basketball team, it this
happened 20 years ago. It was such a
moment. Wow. of delineating and
separating enjoying athletics and
enjoying the outlet of athletics and
competition and self-esteem and
camaraderie and not letting it overstep
the line of
>> do you see this trend that the writer is
talking about like in camp or whatever.
Yeah, it's a real it's a real challenge
in camp because I'm Mama Ver Kramer. I
am I get very
frustrated, upset when they will mimic,
you know, the NBA players, they have
this thing when they hit a
three-pointer, I don't know, they go
like this with their hand, whatever they
do, right? And I will whenever a kid
does it fifth grader,
>> go.
>> No, [laughter]
I don't. No, no, this was remember this
was Dumb Robin from a staff. I'll call
them over and this is my line. That line
generally is when you hit a
three-pointer,
that's enough. When you try to be cool
and mimic LeBron James, let's say, and
mimic the player, you're just showing
how uncool you are. There's nothing less
cool than trying to copy the NBA player,
the football player. it. No, part of the
answer is that with the advent of the
internet and you know and social media
even though our kids bashm don't have it
but they have their parents' phone and
they're watching highlights and the
highlights are just celebrations. This
is a real challenge.
>> I know they're into sneakers. I want to
get to your thing but like they're into
every player has like their sneakers. I
don't know what they are today.
>> Yeah. Right.
>> But do you think that's a problem like
that your kid want? I want whatever
Michael Jordan sneakers
>> for some reason sneakers bother me less.
It bothers me. The midas bother me. I
don't mind so much buying a pair of
sneakers because everyone had you know
basically every sneaker is someone but
the midas on the court though when you
hit a shot and you like what whatever
the the mimicking and the copying the
midas on the court really bothered me. I
have an unfair advantage because of a
Gresian Kramer who was the best
basketball player I ever saw in my life.
Listen to the story and it will end and
this is my end of the story this at his
son Kramer who's an Alan Cherry Hill a
very dear friend of mine at his Chevraus
Rabbi Jacob Benenfeld who was another
head one of the head staff members in
camp a rub in Harrison New York he said
over the following story he said I was
speaking I think it was like in Colombia
and some college like to the Jewish
corporation you know the hill of that
college I was describing what it means
to be a Jew on the basketball court and
I was describing desing he said this
rabbi of mine this friend of mine
Gishian Kramer stories a legendary
stories of his midos on the court and a
Jew is a Jew wherever he goes he said I
finished my speech a guy comes over to
me I never met before and he says rabbi
that Rabbi Kramer that you discussed
does he have a son that lives in Miami
Florida and he says whoa yes why he says
because I play I live in Florida I'm
from Florida he said and I play
basketball in the local you know down
whatever they play and there was Jew on
that court who was an amazing basketball
player who plays with the same level of
character that you just described. It
was Kramer's son Kanani Kramer.
>> That's amazing.
>> Um so you know it's not the Kramer
Chevra but too bad these are my
>> That's an amazing story. Wow.
>> But it's an amazing story. But to me
what we have to do and yes this person
is right that there is a challenge. We
have to stop blaming the kids. And if
we're going to put kids in scenarios in
which we treat them like the NBA, you
know, when we celebrate in camp, I'm
very I get very upset in camp and I talk
to the kids about this about these
celebration when you win a game that's
wonderful. I have a muscle in camp when
these kids have these crazy celebrations
and I tell them there's a NFL player
Barry Sanders and Barry Sanders is a
great running back and whenever he would
score a touchdown, he would just turn
and hand the football to the ref. And
they asked him, "Why don't you
celebrate?" And he said, "Because I've
been there before and I'll be there
again. It's not a big deal." And I said,
"The whole idea of celebrating is just
it's egotistical. It's goish. It's a
lack of sportsmanship. And there's a way
to win. There's a way to lose. And it's
something that we as yeshiva work on and
definitely have to impart to our
children."
>> I did notice in the last like two years
there have been a few players that have
become
like well-known players that are like
news like I don't know
>> Sebie Sam. Sebie Sammit and there's a
guy named Galbett I think
Galbat
>> I'm laughing because we played against
him this summer Galbat we almost beat
him and now he's now he's joining a
division one school like
>> so maybe another one I'm not I don't
want to disrespect
>> Tamar Goodman is the legend from
>> yeah no but in between so anyway the
point is that like this has become much
more like a conversation amongst you
know
>> right and if you follow Zevy Samut's
story I know Zeb's family a little bit
he uses basketball and his as a platform
form.
That's not I'm not going there. You
know, that's a separate that's a unique
>> story.
>> All right. Question number two is for me
to you, Rabbi. Here we go. Dear TLC,
we're moving to a new neighborhood next
year, and I'm concerned about my
nine-year-old's transition. She tends to
be a warrior as it is, and it's going to
be a lot of life changes for her at
once. She is a sweet kid with a couple
of good friends, but she's never been
effortlessly charismatic.
How can we set her up for success? She
doesn't know that we're moving yet. We
didn't want to tell our kids too early,
but we're getting close to our moving
date.
>> Wow, that's a really good question. I
remember seeing statistics about moving
being one of the top most stressful
things that a person could go through.
And I know as an adult, I moved 15 years
ago and it was remarkable. It's just
remarkable. You know, first I would just
say to the parent, it's going to be
hard, but it will be over. You know, it
takes time. There's no there's no easy
way. I mean it's not it is a very hard
thing but you know you have to give your
child the confidence to know that and
you also need to know that that
difficulty is a and it will be avar that
said um depending on where you're moving
it might be good to identify some kids
who could be friends and help your son
help your son or daughter your daughter
in this case connect with them by making
playdates with them specifically and
facilitating that because it might be
hard for them to real to make meaningful
connections. So maybe there's a neighbor
or someone you know in advance and like
you know sort of fixate on that
relationship a little bit in the
beginning so that your child has like a
safe friend or a safe small group of
friends that you facilitated that move.
But um no question that it's going to be
you know a really hard challenge and she
needs support and and space and concern
and validation all those things that we
all need when we go through very
difficult transitions.
>> So I'll just share two things. Number
one is I moved at the age of nine.
Hello.
>> So uh maybe I was 10. I was in fifth
grade. I moved from Staten Island to
Queens in middle of the year.
>> You switched schools also or did you
stay?
>> I went from RJJ which is like a you know
you know
>> community school let's say
>> community school to run me um in middle
of fifth grade. It was and
>> again maybe I'm different than my
siblings. I don't my personality. I
wasn't it didn't bo it didn't affect me.
It didn't bother I moved from one day to
the next and in I went. Some of my
siblings struggled. But so I I
personally maybe just my personality
like kind of like things, you know, I
let things go. So I had that. That being
said, I will share without giving it too
many details. It's not a secret. There's
a family moving from my yeshiva out now
and it's they have a nine-year-old boy
and and a boy in pre1A and it's a hush
of a family with superstar kids, regular
well adjusted kids. And we have been
helping them throughout this process as
everyone helped. You know, my kids
moving and setting them up and talking
to the new yeshivas and getting them
ready and talking to the boy. And I I
think that when you you know, I'm not so
sure this parent is doing the right
thing not telling the kid until June,
July or I don't know, not you know, let
the kid grieve a little bit that she's
losing friends,
>> you know. Um it it's it's it's a move as
exactly what you said. It's a um it's
something that it's part of life. if
sometimes you move for for the for for a
million reasons. I do think though that
when you allow the kid in the process, I
don't mean in in contract signing of the
houses and picking houses. But at
certain point, and now we're that time
of year, talk to your daughter, talk to
your son who's 9 years old, is 10 years
old, validate that it's going to be hard
of all all the basic parenting tricks,
nothing fancy. You know, when when you
choose a new school, make sure the
school's ready for a kid. It's going to
be hard in September. But as you said,
um, plenty of people have moved and then
he'll make new friends and and she'll
make, you know, and and our family
that's leaving from from Yeshiva
selfishly, we're devastated because
they're an awesome family with an
awesome kid. And I told him, listen, I
moved. Um, you know, you're going to be
great and and they'll they'll they'll be
just fine. Just just be just be there
for them.
>> Wonderful. Okay, now we're going to go
to our spotlight question.
>> It's now our pleasure to welcome to the
learning curve, Dr. Mayor Grunfeld from
Toronto, Canada from above the border
and Dr. Grunfeld who went through the
Regal Shiva system and then went to
medical school and became a doctor and
runs a clinic in Toronto, a few clinics
actually in a few different very
important parts that help the from
community. But for us for the learning
curve as a clinic that cogent healthc
care that deals with ped pediatric
behavior which is what we do in we deal
with p pediatric behavior.
>> Well said.
>> So Dr. Grunfeld a very wellrespected
doctor clinician in the Toronto area.
His father is a very wellrespected
mechanic Rabbi Grunfeld in town. So he
comes from a family that really cares
about Klisro and I know the fact that
he's a doctor in Toronto it really means
he's in right because it's basically the
pay is the same if you're in medicine in
Canada Dr. Grimfield, thank you for
joining.
>> Thank you. My mother is the only Jewish
mother in the world who when I told her
I'm going to med school, she was
disappointed. She's like, "Do that mean
you're not going to be a Rebby?" They
got over it and here we are today.
>> So, we're going to ask you a question as
a springboard. But before we do that, I
just had one question about like what
you do in your bio, which is you
mentioned you went through family pra
you have a family like a medical degree
in in family medicine, but you have a
behavioral clinic where for children
behavioral health. I wonder like
wouldn't that be something a
psychiatrist would normally do or how
does that where's the line between when
one would go to a child psychiatrist
versus when one would go to someone like
yourself?
>> It's a fair question for most family
doctors. You're going to find there's a
couple areas of expertise. The they're
interested and therefore they're very
knowledgeable in those areas. There's
going to be a couple areas where they
don't know much. So as soon as the guy
walks in and says blank, they just refer
off. and then a whole bunch of areas of
middle of the road almost like they're
going to have the areas of that they're
highly knowledgeable in and maybe it's
going to be shabas and because those two
most common things and at what point do
you go to what point do you go to I'm
not sure I'll exactly answer that
question but I originally went into
medicine I thought I was going to do
developmental and behavioral pediatrics
and then I got bored of the paperwork
may or may not have a titch of the ADHD
and I ended up in family medicine where
you could do whatever you want and here
I am today. So why would someone go to
you versus a child psychiatrist?
>> Because I have an area of expertise and
a reputation regarding behavior.
>> But you're really doing the same. Are
you doing the same kind of work?
>> Yes. But more specifically in our world,
especially when it comes to anything in
behavioral health, you need a lot of
cultural understanding about what's
going on. When someone's going to talk
about if you're going to get the snap
forms for ADD from the English teacher
at your local school, everyone has ADD,
right? Because I understand the
difference between the rebby and the
teacher and what happens in the
afternoon, what happens in the morning.
But when we sit and talk about, you
know, he does pretty good in but not so
good in Gomorrah, I'll be able to
understand the concept of maybe he's not
so good at more abstract thinking but
pretty good at understanding and memory.
There's a lot of cultural understanding
that
>> he's like an insider. You're an insider
and therefore that gives you a unique
ability.
>> What I'm getting at and I think you're
answering it Dr. Runfeld is I know as a
principal like if I have a student who
has a complex behavioral challenge, I
don't want them going to the
pediatrician because the pediatrician
knows how to medicate very basic and you
know they have one or two things they'll
do. Oh, I'll just get a prescription
from my pediatrician. Like I want them
to go to a child psychiatrist and get
the proper medication that's properly
managed. So it sounds like what you're
saying is even though your training was
more similar to a typical pediatrician,
you've put a lot of focus, energy,
effort, you know, and developed yourself
to the point that you have that
expertise. Is that right?
>> Yes. And also I ended up doing a lot of
training in developmental and behavioral
pediatric. I thought I was going to do
that before I decided to stick with
family.
>> Wonderful.
>> I just want to speak that out for other
people listening that you're a bit of a
unique general practitioner. Most
general practitioners might be general
practitioners. You're a specialist, you
know, in a way. So
>> yeah and yes Canada is also a little bit
unique in this way that I'm essentially
>> given the freedom over here to do
whatever I want. I can write
prescriptions for chemotherapy and no
one will say boop. It's probably not a
good idea to write chemotherapy but
>> is that a Toronto thing you mean?
>> Canadian. Yeah. Yeah. Canadian.
>> All right. So here's the question to
start us off.
Dear TLC, our seven-year-old son is
bright and curious, but he struggles to
stay focused and manage frustrations
both at home and in school. His rev
suggested we quote unquote look into
ADHD.
While we're wary of quickly labeling or
medicating him, how could we support him
in a way that's healthy for his growth
without rushing into any decisions we
might regret? I think before we get into
this specific hit, I wonder if it may be
worth I was just discussing what is
ADHD. Once we understand what ADHD is, I
think we can get a little bit more into
details of uh the labeling, the
medicating and all of that. Fair enough.
>> Yes.
>> Okay. So, what is ADHD? Let's try to
understand it a little bit, right? ADHD
is a problem of impulsivity. What does
problem impulsivity mean? My mind is
always racing, running, moving, doing,
thinking. The mind is always running.
Right? Now the mind is everything. So
everything is moving, coming, going,
doing. This is going to affect three
primary buckets. Right? It's going to
affect my attention, my mood, and my
body. So let's go through that a little
bit, right? If my mind is always racing,
so that's going to affect my attention
for this reason. So you know, let's say
something is I'm sitting in the
classroom. The Revy talking is an audio
impulse that's coming my way. My brain
is always on thinking and accepting
everything in, right? I cannot regulate
or temper any impulse that's coming my
way. Rebby is talking. I hear the Rebi
talking. That's an audio impulse and I'm
listening to Reb. Very interesting. But
then out of the corner of my eye,
there's this audiovisisual impulse maybe
coming because the principal is walking
by the door. Or so that's where you Jack
was my attention. And then I have this
sensory input from my stomach where I
feel, oh, I'm a little hungry because I
forgot to eat breakfast cuz I was in the
middle getting dressed and my mommy was
yelling at me. So then I'm like, oh, I
really want to eat a bigger breakfast.
And then I hear behind me this, you
know, visual, this audio impulse. Maybe
someone's passing a note and I turn
around and that's grabbing my attention
and then oh wait, Rebby is still talking
and I'm back to Rebi. Right? So it's
almost a problem of it's not so much a
problem of too little attention to some
degree. It's a problem of too much
attention. I'm paying attention to
everything because everything is always
going right now. I do want to make an
interesting point when we talk about
this attention problem of whenever we
think about a rebby talking or
information there's always going to be
three levels of classes. Right? means
you know because everyone always asks
what do you mean my kid could have could
focus on a movie everyone could focus on
a movie so how in the world you think he
can't pay attention you know how does
that work and the answer is there are
three areas of interest you know
everyone could pay attention to a movie
now if let's say you have some guy who's
droning on and on in French about
Egyptian hieroglyphics no one could pay
attention it doesn't mean he's add it
just mean that the guy is boring right
so whenever we're thinking about
>> Dr. Phil just to pause. We're 3 minutes
into this conversation. You are not
boring. So continue.
>> Not boring. Okay. Got it.
>> So you know, so now we have whenever you
want to assess ADHD, it's always a
question of the middle level. So a
regular pedal look. I'm sitting in the
class. I'm here anyway. Do I want to be
out in the field playing baseball? Of
course I want to be. But I'm here and
the rep is kind of interesting. So I pay
attention. So with ADD, the mind is
always raging. I'm just so easily
distracted that I don't end up keeping
my attention. That make sense?
>> Yes.
>> Yes. Okay. So, now there is also another
point to be made. There's also an
impulsivity of attention is that they
can hyperfocus on things. So, they're
always going to come and say, "But my
kid at home could really focus on a
book, could really focus on his Lego,
can really focus on this and this." And
the answer to that is it's the exact
same problem of I cannot regulate or
temper any impulse that comes into me.
So, I'll explain this. So, you know,
when you go to sleep at night, even if
it's going to sleep, and there's a
little baby down the hall who's sleeping
now, in middle of the night, the baby
starts fetching, right? So, Tati sleeps
right through it, and mommy wakes up,
right?
>> Yes.
>> How in the world did mommy wake up? I
mean, she was so tired when she went to
bed. The answer is, cuz when mommy went
to sleep, she realized there's a baby
down the hall. So even though her
impulse, her desire is I want to go to
sleep fully, she stays up a little bit
because I know I have a baby down the
hall, right? So her impulse is to go in
all the way to sleep and yet she tempers
and regulates the impulse and stays a
little bit up. Her ear is a little bit
open. On the other hand, someone who is
impulsive, every impulse comes in and I
take it all the way in. I give every
impulse all the attention it does not
deserve. So then I want to be involved
in reading. I'm really into this. You
leave nothing left out here. I'm calling
your name. You hear nothing. You're in.
You're all the way in. The impulse took
you all the way in. And the ears you're
hyperinterested in because again, you
cannot regulate your temper any impulses
coming in. So the same problem on the
middle level of interest makes you hyper
distractable. I can anything can grab my
attention. But the areas that I'm really
interested in, I hyperfocus on. cuz
summarize in like in maybe like for
people like me that first of all have no
idea what you're talking about in ADHD
but is it that basically there's a lack
of ability to regulate your impulse and
therefore sometimes you'll focus on
nothing
>> and other times you'll focus hyper on
one thing
>> because you don't have the ability to be
like just balanced in picking and
choosing what is appropriate almost
>> exactly correct
>> is there any um measurement in for this.
Like, could they see this on a cat sc
brain scan or something where you see
>> No,
>> maybe you're just making this up. Like,
you just made this up. How do I know
that's actually real? You can't measure
it. You have no physical evidence to
support your theory.
>> Physical evidence? No. But sit in a
classroom watch a kid with ADD and tell
me you have no evidence.
>> Yeah. You know, everyone's I don't know.
I'm poo pooing it a little. like you
know you're would think that there would
be some brain evidence but okay
>> one one of the biggest challenges that
we hear from parents and teachers oh is
the mislabeling and the similarities
between anxiety and ADHD
>> fair enough let's do this I think it may
be worth let's go through our buckets of
ADD
>> and then we'll differentiate a little
bit between ADD and maybe some other
diagnet
number one how an impulsivity can affect
my attention because I could hyperfocus
or as you ra just said I won't be able
to pay attention to anything right I
can't focus on anything that would be
the problem with the attention and the
hyperfocus problem number two is going
to be it's going to affect my mood and
my mind right so what that means is you
know I'm driving down the street and
someone cuts me off okay I get irritated
for a second I get angry at him okay but
then you have a life so you move on
right okay so but someone who is
impulsive Any impulse that comes my way
remember I give it all the attention it
does not deserve goes all the way I get
really irritated and really angry right
so every mood I have an impulsive mood I
get irritated I get really irritated I
get angry I get really irritated I get
really angry I get happy I'm
disregulated in happiness it comes perm
they're running in circles right all the
moods become disregulated in the extent
and height of the mood right so that's
going to be the impulsivity of mood and
again I'm generalizing to some degree
and then we have the impulsivity ity of
body and let's explain this again. You
know the brain is really you know what
are your senses is just they all end in
the brain they're all just nerves right
if everything is on all the time that
means my ears are always on and my smell
is always on and my taste is always my
feel is always on so these are the kids
who are very sensory my you know there's
a label in the back I'm so itchy from it
I hate it and and they can't wear
anything wool because it's scratchy on
my skin if someone's chewing at the
table they're freaking out because I
chewing right in my ear and I want to
twist his head off and you know it's
every single little smells bad. I can't.
I'm biting it and it's mushy in my
mouth. You hear these funny things from
these kids, right? So, you have the
impulsivity of attention, you have the
impulsivity of mood, and you have the
impulsivity of body. And when you get
all those snapshets that you get, and
then you have to fill out or are filling
out, you'll find that there are really
27 questions in there. Nine questions
are going to be about attention, nine
questions are going to be about
hyperactivity or movement, and nine
questions are going to be about mood.
Right? Do typical ADHD kids have all
three?
>> So, let's break that down a little bit.
So, nowadays they change the terms every
couple of weeks just to confuse us.
Officially, it's ADHD. And then we have
our inattentive subtype and we have our
mixed subtype. So, on a very technical
level, you're going to say the nine
questions about attention are going to
be inattentive ADHD. The nine questions
about hyperactivity are going to be
hyperactive ADHD. And the nine questions
about mood officially equals
oppositional defiance disorder. But
that's kind of garbage and really it
just boils down.
>> Sorry for clapping but I like what you
just didn't.
>> Yes.
>> For the people who are very familiar the
only question dear that matter the last
one of when they say that a kid looking
to spite you is a child spiteful or
vindictive. A child who's spiteful or
vindictive truly so not because he's in
a fight with the rebies who wants to
spite the rebi but a child who's truly
spiteful or vindictive that's when you
get very nervous for other real
problems. But other than that, the mood
liability is really just going to be
that other effect of an ADHD. So an
inattentive ADHD will have the attention
and the mood. Hyperactive ADHD will have
all three typically
>> is conduct disorder. Not to get too
technical, but you touched upon
oppositional defiant disorder and it's a
questionable diagnosis. Would you say
the same about conduct disorder?
>> Oppositional defer and conduct disorder
is just different ages.
>> So but you said opposition define
disorder is somewhat not legitimate. And
I'm wondering if you feel that way about
conduct disorder, too.
>> I think the word was garbage.
>> Right. I'm asking, do you believe
conduct disorder also is not legit?
>> You think I got myself a little in
trouble. Now you want to get me in more
trouble.
>> Exactly.
>> Got it. Conduct disorder is what it is.
>> Let's move on. For the record, I would
like to publicly state that I do believe
in conduct disorder and I do believe in
oppositional divine disorder. Although
you have to know the whole context and
there's a lot to unpack, but I don't
like the dismissal of it. But I am not a
doctor of medicine. So therefore, I am
not here to argue with you per se. I
just feel the need to say that. We can
move on now.
>> Yeah. No, I will say and by the way, you
know, I'm being maybe a little too
facitious with it. At the end of the
day, medically, you are correct. By the
way, I would just say that it's, you
know, the fact that someone went through
three foster homes and then, you know,
maybe went through three sets of
addiction before he turned 18, you know,
had a disorder or just he had a really
bad life and is angry at the world, so
we just give it a name.
>> At the same time, a 10-year-old who had
a great parent and and is defiant to
everything anyone tells him to do, he
does the opposite in great haste, may be
a reason to say there's something going
on here. I would push back and say if
the kid is vindictive, if the kid is
trying to hurt you, so then he was
probably hurt in some way. There's going
to be if I see a child with who's
vindictive across the spectrum, he's
victim many people in all likelihood you
will find trauma or abuse.
>> Okay, so you could say the oppositional
defiant behavior was brought upon as a
result of abuse. Fine.
>> Correct. Fair enough.
>> But it is what it is. Well, let's move
on.
>> All right.
>> Yeah.
>> Sorry, it's a pet peeve.
>> Okay. So, now to your question about
like anxiety, depression, anything like
that. Let's say when someone comes in to
let me even give a bit of an intro to
this idea. One of the I had a family
recently. One child ended up with brain
cancer. Another child ended up with a
behavioral health disorder. So, it was
very interesting to ask them which one
did you find harder?
>> What would you think?
>> Cancer. I would obviously say cancer but
you're asking the question so I
obviously know that the answer
>> a lot of parents interestingly will find
the behavioral health a lot harder okay
very it's very set okay you go to the
doctor he did it like Rabbi Garfield
said before I did a cat scan and here it
is and now the treatment is very well
defined right there's a rubric which we
follow so we're going to go for surgery
and then we're going to get some chemo
and radiation and then you're going to
be on this and this med for the next two
years everything is very set and clear
right when it comes to behavioral health
there's so fluiness that it's hard to
even know in what direction to go.
Right? So, one of my goals with a lot of
behavior and in partly in creating this
kind of creating a lot of our processes,
it's create some clarity that parents
can come in and say, "Okay, these are
the steps. This is what we're looking
for. This is what we need to do." Okay.
So, when someone comes in with
behavioral health, any type of
behavioral health concern, we're looking
at four buckets we're thinking about,
right? We're thinking about the bio,
psychos, social, academic. We look at
biological or physical causes that could
be affecting behavior. This is anything
from vitamin deficiencies to celiacs if
that exists, right? You're going to ask.
Yeah. From any of the physical things.
So you have your vitamin deficiencies to
all the way up to brain tumors. You can
imagine all those will affect behavior,
mood, attention, whatever you want.
Bucket number two, psychological
diagnosis, right? This is going to be
the anxiety, depression, ADHD, autism,
all of those things. Bucket number
three, social. If there's a lot of
instability in the kids's life, trauma
or abuse, right? Any of those. Bucket
number four, academic. That would be IQ,
learning ability, disabilities, maybe
language ability, disabilities,
>> right? So, there's four buckets we're
going through, and that's going to be
the rubric we use to try to figure out
what in the world's going on with this.
>> Can I pause just for a second? This is
fascinating. I just want to share an
anecdote. We had a a child two years ago
who was in third or fourth grade. Third
grade. And we thought he was being
manipulative, and we really didn't deal
with him. He was like lying. He was
consistently lying to us and called in
his parents and it turns out he had a
language processing disorder. And what
we thought was him being manipulative
was him not processing properly the
information that it was coming and he
would therefore answer a question and
then once he got stuck he would lie.
Right. Literally one of the but we
misbucketed him you know and to this
which is so terrifying as an educator.
>> Yeah. Continue.
>> Yeah. So I I could be I still I think
hold the claim of the only person who
ever has someone come into the office
complaining about the anxiety and I
diagnose Crohn's you know these types of
things. So we have our four buckets and
the way to assess all them become
somewhat interesting. So the physical
the bio that's the easiest one right we
have our blood tests and we have our
scopes and you have your imaging and all
of that. Okay, bucket number four, the
academic is also some this is where we
have the psyched assessment and this is
where there's some confusion when it
comes to psychoeducational assessment.
They think that it assesses for the
autism and ADD. That's not what the
psycho educational assessments are for.
Psycho educational assessment a full
psych it has three parts. There's going
to be IQ testing. There's going to be
ability testing. That's the learning
ability disability. And there going to
be language testing, right? Language
processing, you know, expressive
language, all those things. That's what
a full cycle is essentially meant for to
rule out the academic bucket. But let's
go back to the psychological, let's say,
right? The psychological bucket where
we're looking at our ADHDs and autism,
anxiety, depression, and here's a
problem that comes up in all mental
health that well, it's a problem. There
are many people who have anxious
personalities. Correct? You ever met
someone like that?
>> Yes. One or two.
>> And maybe some people who have a little
bit more active personalities and but
they're just personalities. So here's
the problem. All mental health is on a
spectrum, right? So we all have our
midas, we all have our characteristic,
we all have our character traits. So you
know when we think about ADHD or
attention, no, there's those kids who
can just sit for three hours listening
to whatever. It's not a Jewish kid.
Don't worry, you don't have any of these
kids in your school. The point is
everything is hurry. So you can have the
kids with attention. You know, I could
just sit and listen to some guy droning
on and on for an hour and a half. And
then you're going to have the kids who,
you know, you got to keep me entertained
or in two minutes I'm out, right? Where
do we go from, you know, in anxiety,
same thing, by the way. So, some people
are just very relaxed and chill. Some
people are more anxious personality.
Some people get really anxious. Where do
you go from anxious personality to
anxiety disorder? Where's the line?
>> Amazing question by the way. And I think
that is the question that every parent
who's listening to this is wondering
because you know labels
or just medication, no medication. I
know all of thing no one wants to
medicate unless they are supposed to.
Like if your son has strep, you got to
give him strep. But you're not going to
give your son a maxicillin because he
has a virus or because he has a sore
throat. So this question of personality,
you know, character, midos verse
disorder, verse condition is like it's
why you're here. [laughter]
>> Okay. So here's the problem. I'm going
to disappoint you. There's no great
answer to that question, right? Okay. So
let's say mathematically, you know, you
look open your textbook. was going to
say if you're two standard deviations
from the normal, right? Top and bottom
2%. Okay, but here's no here's here's an
interesting problem. You know, a lot of
people I've heard this concept a lot
that people say like, "No, the
non-Jewish schools are really academic.
Our schools aren't so academic. Nothing
could be further from the truth.
Nothing." Right? Think about your
classic 9th grade yeshiva kid. No, your
public school kid is up for what time
schools start? 9:30. They're done by
what? 3:30 p.m.
>> Right.
>> Okay. Our kids are up by 7:30 a.m. for
shakas. They're coming back after their
945 MARV and they have to learn all this
in at least two languages. Right? Our
schools are one full standard deviation
of public public school. It means
someone who's getting a 50 in our
schools would be getting a 70 in public
school. Right? So we have very high
academic standards in all our schools.
More than that by the way again this is
very you know the lot the average Jewish
IQ is around 115. The average American
IQ is around 100. Means our schools run
at very high levels. So let's say you
take the top 2% we just said top 2% of
not being able to pay attention equals
ADHD. Let's say what about the guy in
the 97th percentile? How is he doing?
You think he's being successful? Is he
learning? Is he getting the information?
Is he feeling good about himself? Is he
feeling I'm able to do this and I'm
going to thrive in the yeshiva?
>> Right?
>> Well, not great. So it's a bit of a
random cut off to say okay the top 2%.
So okay. So let's ignore that one for a
minute. So there's another answer. So
what do we do?
>> Why don't you use a functional
diagnosis?
>> There's another approach that says,
okay, is it affecting function? So
you'll see every diagnosis of every
behavioral health is always going to be
it has to be an affecting function. No,
but affecting function is also
subjective matter, right? You go to
let's say a much more modern orthodox
school. My kid got a 98 today means it's
affecting function. You should have
gotten 100. You go to NC school, he got
a 52. He's doing great. It's two points
more than necessary, [laughter]
right? So it's a bit subjective. What
does it mean affecting function? Some
people say affecting function means he
can't do the things he needs to do. What
are the things he needs to do in our
world? He needs to go to chakras. He
needs to know how to read Gumarra. He
needs to. So that becomes a little bit
problematic. So I'm going to go out on a
limb here and I'll give you the answer
that I use in my clinic. Right? At what
point do we need to consider medication?
It boils down to one thing and one thing
only. Confidence of the kid. Right.
Explain.
>> Is he maintaining confidence that he can
do well?
>> Self-esteem. Confidence is another word
for self-esteem.
>> Yes. So, this is the one. Let's talk
about your classic ADHD kid. Just
because we're focusing on ADHD, but you
can say the same thing about anxiety or
anything else. Your classic ADHD kid,
right? He wakes up in the morning and
his mother woke him three times already.
I know he gets up and he gets
distracted. So, he's running around
trying to get his clothes while his
mother yelling at him downstairs, right?
He runs downstairs with his shirt
untucked and one shoe on and he missed
breakfast. He has to run out to carpool.
It's a very toplant. He gets into school
and now the Rebi keeps telling him, "Sit
down, buddy. Sit down. Sit down." And he
also doesn't know what in the world is
flying. He goes out by recess and now
he's getting into fights with all the
other kids because he lost the game and
wanted to try to ruin the whole game
because he got all riled up over there.
>> Do you work? Are you a Rebisha?
[laughter] How do you
>> Okay. Then he goes to English and
obviously got expelled, right? Or kicked
out already halfway through and he's
sitting in one of your offices. And then
he comes home in the evening. He's
fighting with his siblings. Tati is
yelling at him. Mommy is spending way
too much time with him. And now it's the
end of a random Tuesday,
right? Tomorrow, rinse and repeat and
rinse and repeat. So here's the
beautiful thing. Every 5-year-old, you
know, when you go to 5-year-old, who
loves you? Mommy loves you and Taty
loves you and Bobby loves you and
everyone loves you, right? They're so
full of confident. They believe in so
much. Why wouldn't someone love me?
Around the age of seven, they're going
to start realizing something isn't going
over here. I can't maintain my
friendships. I'm fighting with everyone.
I don't seem to know what's going on.
Reb, they start losing self-confidence,
right? And then what happens is I lose
my self-confidence. Around the age of 9,
10, they start developing anxiety. Why?
I'm coming to school every day. I'm not
doing well. Of course, I start hating to
go to school. I need to like it. I need
to thrive. I need to be able to I need
to at least be able to do well in order
to want to go to school. So, I get
anxious about going to school because
everyone's yelling at me. And if I have
no self-confidence and now I'm also
anxious around the age of 12, they
develop depression and now I don't know
anyone who gained confidence in high
school. Right? So it's the end.
>> They're doomed. [clears throat]
>> To me, it's one thing and one thing
only. Every parent can try whatever they
want. If you see your kids confidence
starting to flag, you must intervene.
>> Absolutely.
>> You said the word intervene, not must
medicicate. You must intervention has a
line, right?
>> Intervene. We can get to what the
interventions are, but you must
intervene. You can't ignore the lack of
confidence,
>> right?
>> Could they just say they'll grow out of
it? It's normal.
>> All kids suffer a little. It's okay. I
did it. You did it. We did it.
>> Maybe. Yeah. I mean, you're a principal.
From what you see, the kids who have no
self-confidence and are not doing well
in school, do they start all of a sudden
turning and thriving at some point?
Some turn it around like towards the end
of high school or you know
>> I love your confidence.
>> Yeah, some do. I definitely don't think
you're setting them up for success.
That's for sure.
>> So, here's the problem. It's a good
problem. Parents are looking, you know,
as much as sometimes they they can drive
some of the the Rebean principles nuts.
Most parents are looking out for their
kids, they are trying to do what they
perceive as best for their kids,
>> right? So, it's not like he's just
trying to be oppositional. parents are
just I don't want to medicate. It's a
good thing not to medicate. We should
point out medication is not a good
thing.
>> Why not?
>> Cuz everything has side effects.
Everything costs money. Remember getting
those calls. I don't know if you guys
used to get the calls for the free condo
in Miami.
>> I didn't get that call, but sounds like
a good call to get.
>> Yeah. What phone number?
>> Maybe I should tell them to call you.
You take the call. When I was married,
just a side story with Sha Risha, I got
one of those emails that you won like a
a yacht trip and all it cost is $100 and
I I fell for it. By the way,
>> Yep. Uh
>> oh.
>> Yeah. So, nothing is free in life.
That's one thing we knew.
>> Everything costs money, right? So, every
medication you're ever going to take
will have side effects. Absolutely. But
the question always is risk and benefit.
And we do this every day. I don't know
about you guys. I don't walk around cuz
I got $20 bills. Maybe I should, but I,
you know, I don't throw around money,
okay? But I walk into a store and all of
a sudden I'm paying $ 20, $40 for
cheese. Why in the world? Because I
don't like to give away money, but I do
like cheese. And when I balance the risk
and benefit, I say, "Well, it's worth
it." It's never a question of is
medication good. Medication is not good.
But neither is a kid with no confidence,
right? Think chemotherapy, by the way.
Is chemotherapy good? No. It's terrible.
But cancer is even worse. So,
>> so the parent, but to your point, that's
why parents say since medicine isn't
good, it just might be necessary. I
would rather do everything I can in the
intervention world, whether it's getting
him a tutor, right, and getting him, you
know, maybe a basketball coach so he
builds self-confidence and working on
his kria and getting him after school
and pulling and getting a pull out,
right? And working on his diet. All of
that are interventions, of course, to
avoid the not good choice of medication.
Correct. Yeah. So, two points to that. I
wish we could have Montasuri schools in
from world. Now, here's the problem. We
don't want mastori because in our world,
we all need to be able to d and you need
to be able to read and need to be able
to inas who can't do dafi.
You need to be able to do a lot of the
basic things especially elementary
school. It's about fundamental skills.
We need all these fundamental skills and
every Jewish parent wants the kid to
have those fundamental skills. We don't
want to miss out. Oh, my kitty can't
really read Hebrew. It's okay.
>> Nope. Most decent parents who are
sending to the from schools want their
kids to grow up to be anas to them and
so we need those skills. So that's step
number one. And number two, so the main
answer to that question is really this.
You know, let's say making a wedding
nowadays is very expensive. I've heard,
right? So let's make believe. I can make
a wedding in Toronto for $50,000. Let's
make believe. You can't, but let's make
believe. Right. 50 or5
>> 50,000 50
>> Canadian,
>> right? So, let's make believe I can make
a wedding for $50,000. Here's the
problem. I don't have any money. I'm
broke. Remember, I work in Canada. So,
what am I going to do now? So, now you
know, Rabbi and both both very nice
people. And I get I tell you, I got two
texts from both of them and they both
said, "Oh, I heard you're making a
wedding. Here is $1,000 for you." I have
a question for you. Is $1,000 a lot of
money? Yes. Is $1,000 helpful?
Absolutely. But then when my
father-in-law comes in and says, "Mayor
maz." And he puts a $36,000 debt on the
table. That's helpful, right? What is
the $36,000 check? Meds in this.
[laughter]
>> Is it? Wow. That is that Rabbi Garfield,
that is going in the promo.
>> Yeah. What percentage of students who
come to you, parents, do you end up
medicating
>> with a diagnosis? I mean,
>> they come to you with a problem, meaning
they're sent to you, my kids are
misbehaving, la. What percentage walk
out not right away necessarily but after
your process with meds? Would you say
90%.
>> No. No. Because like a lot of people end
up coming because they just want to know
what's going on. But for the I have a
good success rate of parents of children
who need meds will often get them on
meds because we work with parents and I
understand them and we're just trying to
get the kid to a place where it needs to
be.
>> So what is the answer to that? What
percentage of people that come through
the door of the cogent healthcare clinic
end up being medicated? And I guess the
question maybe is not almost about you
but about our society. Like what
percentage of people who are coming and
are afraid of their child really have a
child that needs medication?
>> The ones who are coming for behavioral
complaints usually there's something to
it. I don't know uh 60 80 70 80 I don't
I don't I never
>> right
>> a relatively high percentage end up with
something. come in or because we also
have a different problem by the way of
let's say even the kid here's an
interesting point uh uh uh uh type of
kid a kid who comes in we did let's say
the academic testing right and the IQ is
a little low what do you do with a kid
like that how can I make this kid feel
successful in a school which he is truly
the bottom of the class
>> medicate him
[laughter]
>> yeah I'm not sure that works right
>> an interesting question it's an
interesting I'm There's a real challenge
there's a real challenge in yeshiva.
>> Yeah. So I'm not coming to pas and this
I'm afflicted by the way between a bunch
of the rest of yeshiva. Let's say I've
I'm not sure if I should say then it
I've [snorts]
>> heard that elephant has said publicly
that a kid who's struggling get him at
all because if it'll make him feel
successful he'll be successful heard.
And by the way, especially nowadays,
there's the world is so it appears so
fun. There's so many things out there to
distract us, right? So what's going to
keep someone in yeshiva and involved?
Means we all like what we're good at,
right? This is success breeds success.
No, if we're good at it and we're doing
well, we enjoy it. The thing you're not
good at, how long do you want them to
sit in yeshiva doing all the things
they're not good at and not enjoying and
not being successful
is not going to last that long,
>> right? So to some degree you can argue
do what you need to do to get the kid to
a point of success. So there is an
argument to be made. I can take this kid
with a lower IQ. I can't fix his IQ.
There's no fixure his IQ. What I could
do is let's say a regular person is able
to focus 45 minutes an hour. And now I
take this kid I give him a stimulant.
Let's say and now he can focus 50
minutes an hour. I just give him 10%
more time to make up for his 10% lost
IQ.
>> Does that work?
>> Now he's in that way. It works for
everyone. It's a It's coffee. It's
>> But I wonder if it works that way.
Meaning, if you can't add five digits
together, it's not because you can't
focus. It's because your brain can't,
you know, keep that kind of high
sophisticated processes. You know,
>> when you're dealing with an IQ of 80,
correct? I mean, even the military want
to take someone with IQ of 80, but like
we're talking about
>> Okay. Nebucha 100 105 Neba.
>> Yeah.
>> Wow. All right. This is really
wonderful. Well, one one last thought
and we want to certainly let you finish
if you have anything else that you
wanted to say.
>> I have many.
>> Okay. Well, one last thing I wanted to
say is to that parent that's skeptical
that saying to themselves, you know, I
don't want to medicate my kid. They're
going to get stuck on it for a life and
it will lead them to a life of
dysfunction, drug use, they'll be
dependent
>> orim and stigma and label. That's
another thing
about No. and the [clears throat] mood
the mood side effects that you spoke
about like that for good reason. You
know, how do you talk that parent
through when you as a doctor have
reached the consensus that they should
be medicated? How do you talk to that
skeptic? What do you say to them?
>> Okay, so a few points. Okay. So number
one, so a parent comes in. You can
always do this by the way with a kid who
you know I hesitate to say you should do
this with a kid because especially when
we talk to our we try to make sure like
you don't you can't say a diagnosis
right say what you see you never say a
diagnosis but let's say here in the
office. So I bring the kid in for a few
minutes and then at one point we start
saying and by the way does your rebby
like you? Oh yeah my I think my rebby
likes me. Yeah. Yeah. Do your friends
like you? Yeah my friends like me. And
what do you think you have a pretty good
personality? Yeah. Okay. Do does your
rebby think you're smart? Now, let's say
if especially if you have a good rebi.
So, usually
very quite often the kid says, "Yeah, my
reb thinks I'm smart." Okay. Do your
friends think you're smart? I don't
know.
And do you think you're smart?
And it gets quiet, right? And
that's when we can say, "How far are you
going to take this?" You know? So,
you're going to have this kid who thinks
he can't do anything and he's coming
apart and he's 7 and a half years old,
right? What are you going to do? Therapy
with this kid at eight. It's hard enough
for me as an adult to try to change my
mid. You're going to take a kid who's
impulsive and gets angry really quickly.
You're going to send to a therapist
who's going to tell me when you start
getting angry, count to 10. I mean, I
can hardly do it, right? Apparently, I
get angry a lot. I So, it's means
therapy doesn't really work. Behavioral
therapy. And I'll get more trouble for
this is it won't really work until
around the age of 12. It means for an
8-year-old kid, let's give a better
example, right? A Ferrari
>> is getting cut. So you could keep going.
>> Why?
>> Yeah,
>> this is great.
>> Why would it be cut?
>> I mean, I mean, because play therapy is
something that we suggest to so many.
>> Well, we'll let him finish his point. He
didn't finish.
>> No, no, I didn't mean to get cut. This
is just fun.
>> Let me get cut.
>> Play therapy for ADHD.
>> No, no, no, no. You are you talking
about specifically ADHD?
>> ADHD? I'm talking about ADHD, a skill
therapy for ADHD to help you manage your
impulsivity.
>> Right. Okay. Good. Okay. Good.
>> No, I'm not an idiot. [laughter]
>> That might get caught a little bit back
to the show.
>> We have to wrap up soon, so let's Okay,
go ahead.
>> So, you know, let's even go back. Is
ADHD a medical problem? I ask you,
>> what do you say?
>> No.
>> My answer is no.
>> No.
>> It's a personality more than anything
else. Half the people you know
successful like the ones who's running
four businesses the guy who's half the
principles out there because you're
managing 17 different things at once
more than half more than threequarters
of the people on this meeting right now
probably could diagnose with ADHD
>> here and then so you're running that the
guy who's learning formulas at once in
all likelihood then elements of ADHD
it's a good thing
>> right your mind is racing you're you
have a lot of energy you think uniquely
You can conquer the world. You have to
have a high IQ to be able to manage a
brain that's always processing
everything. It's an absolute superpower.
Here's the problem. I take a Ferrari and
I have to admit I'm not a very good
driver. So far, I've admitted that I
have no money and I'm not a good driver.
Right? Okay. So, now I'm not a good
driver. I get into Ferrari and I touch
the pedal. Boom. I just went through
four lanes of traffic. I got to 17 car
accidents. Big problems. Is the problem
me or the Ferrari?
>> Wait, you?
>> It's It's me. I don't know how to I
can't manage the car. What was happening
is the car was driving me rather than me
driving the car. If I learn how to drive
the car, what am I driving? A Ferrari.
It's a million-dollar car. You can
conquer the world. You will beat
everyone with it.
>> Wow.
>> Right. So, this is what's going on over
here. An 8-year-old is being controlled
by his personality. And he's not big
enough to manage it. When he gets to
around the age of 12, he can learn how
to manage a personality and he will do
great.
>> Do you find off medicine as they get
older? I need him to maintain his three
years, medicate for three years and then
like re and then let's reassess
>> at the age of 12 to 14 you reassess.
Most of our bakum if when they end up in
yeshiva often they want the medication
then they can focus better for seder and
yeshu but the if you really don't want
medication get them at least the age of
12 or 14 help them maintain their
confidence get them to a point where
they can develop the skills of learning
how to manage that personality and they
will do great.
>> Dr. Grenfell, this was insightful,
incredibly clear, and I think I learned
a lot. We learned a lot. Entertaining at
the same point. How do you know? You
could have doctors that are that are
entertaining. Now I know why your mother
is upset that you didn't go into, you
know, you're great. But this was my goal
over here. I get to come and and be part
of like
>> really special. And I know you and we
thank you for joining us and for
teaching us. So, thank you.
>> Thank you so much.
>> Oh, that was fun.
>> Yeah, he was great.
>> Yes, he was. Dr. Grimfield was. I think
there's a tremendous mila not all
therapists can be one of us so to speak
but when you have yeshiva guy went to
the ra yeshiva system and you understand
the the nuances of what it means to be a
yeshiva boy yeshiva girl within our um
society there's a huge mile to that but
but more than anything else which is
what it was to me was like going to a
shear I felt like there was a certain
>> understanding for parents of what is the
ADHD mind of of what your child looks
like of what what we can do for him, you
know, to me, insightful and entertain at
the same time. I wanted to hear more.
>> Yeah. And I also think like in the end
of the day, people in the field, and
it's hard for parents to hear this, but
you know, it's a podcast, so we're
speaking anonymously to an anonymous
group.
>> It's like it's not to try medication if
it could work. It doesn't always work,
but like for people who need it, why
wait three years and have the kids
suffer and go through all these
difficulties and everything like that,
you know? Basically he was saying like
you know you owe it to your kid to give
him or her the best shot they could have
>> right and one thing that I think I speak
on behalf of all of Manalin and Rebim
and yeshivas today none of us are
doctors
>> and none of us will ever tell a parent
to medicate all we will tell a parent
exactly that was articulated in the last
you know conversation was these are the
struggles your son or daughter are
having
>> get it checked out
>> right
>> right get it get a diagnosis maybe and
you're right maybe the answer is that
it's something we should medicate for
and maybe there's a million other things
but to just say yeah my son is my what I
won't medicate I won't go there I won't
have that conversation um I think you're
just hurting your son and it's
interesting you said medicate till the
age of 12 and then reassess
>> interesting but the amount of stories
that kids get such success from therapy
I don't just mean medication
>> intervention
>> inter a better word thank you
intervention it's a therapist, it's a
tutor,
>> it's it's just learning how a new way to
process audio processing. All of a
sudden, the kid learns how to create
pictures in your mind. All of the
different the world out there has
incredible resources, right?
>> Don't be afraid. We're not This is not
should your son's not get a daughter not
getting married tomorrow. She's not
coming back from seminary. We'll figure
that out. Then, by the way, when they
come back from seminary, every guy she's
read to also have went through the same
thing. Like, let right now we want to
get your daughter and your son to be the
best they can be. Uh, don't be afraid of
the journey.
>> All right. Well, thank you for joining
us, the Learning Curve Podcast. Let's
remember that episode 15 will be our
live podcast May 17th, 8:00 PM Eastern.
You could submit questions in advance if
you'd like through email at the learning
curve.com or by calling our hotline
number. Just made that up. 443-686-9339.
That's 443-6869339.
We're going to be choosing some audio
and written comments and questions that
we've gotten, plus some live ones.
>> It's going to be vile. It's gonna be
wild. Can't wait.
>> All right. All the best everyone.
>> See you then. See you then.