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Rabbi Shloime Ehrlich - Each Child Another Shevet; A Unique Approach
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The topic tonight is every child a
unique
a unique tribe, a unique approach.
Right? That was the um again as I said
in our speech today that I have a lot of
experience dealing with the boys and
trying to connect them with the parents
back and forth and we have a lot of
experience hands-on experience doing
this for many many years. So
there is a uh
there's a common belief that
every family is a style. This family is
let's say this family is this is
all kinds of types. This is this is how
the family works. And everybody wants it
to be that way because everybody wants
to it's easier. Let's say you uh you're
a gak. So you want to have your children
to be the same and everything the same
the same and hug him the same thing and
then it's easier for the family and it's
it seems more it's nicer and everything
but we all know that it doesn't work
like that all the time. Many times we
have different children and everybody
has their own uh
their own route that they want to take
how they want even if they I'm not
saying even challenge kids but
the children want to grow up in a
certain way that they you know whatever
pulls them
the problem is there was a
brother
and he has a brother that
he's older boy older boy is 22 23 forget
about the parents already.
So he one day he tell he told me of
course not in the middle of learning was
after learning. So he tells me that his
brother is getting older and his parents
are very concerned and he's thinking an
idea there's a girl down the block a
family they have a daughter and she's
also an older girl 21 and he wants maybe
if I could be the shakan to take this
boy for this girl I should call up. I
said, "No problem. Just give me two
names." I call
I call up this woman, the mother of this
girl. And I say, "Hey, my name is I want
to give you a a suggestion for have a sh
suggestion for your daughter. This and
this boy." And she starts telling me,
"Do you know my daughter?" I said, "No,
I just heard some some, you know, more
or less what type she is and this and
this boy is like this, he's like that,
this mid is good midas, and he's I was
telling her she was like so excited.
It's exactly what we're looking for."
And I go on and on and on and on. And
she says, "Okay, which is he?" I said,
"He's he belongs to this and this."
And she says, "No, is not for us." I
said, "Why? We're visionets. What do you
mean?" I said, "What do you talk about?"
She says, "No, it doesn't work. It's
it's my husband sings all the vision
songs shabas by the table and he's not
going to know the song." I kind of
that that that's what that's where it
ended basically the and I felt bad for
her.
I know that not everybody is like that
extreme, but
there is a point here that we all have a
a certain image, a certain design in our
brain how we want our families to look
like. And although we're not everybody's
that extreme, but at the end of the day,
in our family, we don't wear long
shadles. And our family, we only wear
long skirts. Alamina, it's it's like a a
I think that in 2019, this has to stop.
It has to stop because it's creating
issues. We have our girls, they're going
to school. I have my have a large family
and my kids going to different schools.
I mean the girls are going to a school
and the boys
there's a certain um model the way the
the school works a certain model about
what they're into what it's not what's
considered in this school is in a
different school considered a the
other way everybody is their own it's
very nice
but to say that every child because they
went to the same school they're the same
one one of my daughters likes to wear a
different color let's say nail polish
this child wants that I Am I going to
fight it? What what am I going to
create? I'm going to create rebellion.
The child is not going to want to go
along.
There's a
in the to it says
was the father from the 12
he gave them the we know right before he
was
I want to he he gathered all his kids
and he says I'm going to pass away and I
want to give all of you a a but we all
know it wasn't just a brah was a mission
statement he was telling all the he
called reven and he's giving him a whole
mu said exactly what mission is out of
this world and then Shiman and the Levy
and he is such different Isask you go
learn you go to work and he wasn't just
talking to them he was talking to their
children the sha the whole he understood
that every child has a total different
mission on this world
it says t and ms lean there was
but they were all very stuck or so to
speak fit in in a certain mahal has to
be yanavini and Emis he was able to he
was much broader and MS is alf is the
first and then in other words he
understood according to all the levels
all the alabis different levels from
Madraas and he was the one that was able
to be the father of Kali to have to to
have and what came out you had lei
and in ley was split he had kahan levim
it was never like we're all the same it
never worked that way each and every one
of them got a different mission they all
had different natures they were very
different beings
and this is something that for some
reason got lost throughout the ghoulas
that parents are very stuck that our
kids need to be the same and we need to
take the same approach certain children
besides of their nature they have some
kids are are are driven some one child
is a thinker the other child is a feeler
let's say one child is more of an
extrovert introvert different types of
kids so different types of mahalen fit
for them the problem is When we create
an image before we get married, all of
us have a certain I want my children to
be I want my kids to be like there's a
whole which is very nice. It's it's good
to create some kind of plan how you want
your family to be and nice and healthy
and very good. But you need to
understand that it it's not always that
all your children are going to grow and
become and be the same exact like their
fathers, their mother is. It's it's just
not going to happen that way. and and
even more so in 2009 in in in our in our
age. There is too many kids that are
very different than than the parents. It
used to be a little different. I guess
there was it it just it's just
different. I think all of us who have as
children or many children if you you see
when they're born you see right away one
child always gives away their snack. The
other child knows how to the snack from
the other kid and they they negotiations
and they argue. It's every child is
different. We all born with a very
different nature and different thing.
There's a family in Borak that has 18
kids. Can I not?
I remember when I was a child that were
already up to the younger kids that were
my age and each and every one of the
children over there is total different.
One is a litm one is one is a belina
like and some people say
it's like it's a mixed up family. It's
like and I look at it total opposite. I
know the parents and I know the family.
I mean I've seen many of the brothers
and the sisters. All of them grew up
beautiful, very successful in their own
communities wherever they came to be.
The parents gave them a unique
how to be how to be a mench and that's
it. And from there on you take it
whichever one child his his his nature
and his home worked with you he went to
this is great for him. The other kid it
went to a different place it was good
for him. It's it's it's everybody has
their own unique place wherever it was
pulling them. It's it's no it it doesn't
have to be the same.
So each child grew up different
but to say that they're confused and
it's a bad I want to tell you
something the bashmtov the bashmtov
had many talmid and you look around
today it's only a fraction without
Hitler killing the the other would have
had hundreds of types was so different
on one hand but the mission and the idea
you look at the bash he gave a mission
he had a he had a uh message for the
world but he never
told us to meet them exactly how to do
it he gave them he gave them ideas
there's like There's a cipher many
different things that he that he he
stood for messages that he had for the
world and he gave us to his some of them
from from Polish from from Hungary from
Romania from from Russia and all of them
took it in their own ways you look at
the
one generation later two generations
later it's like so different their
ideology the way they look at things but
there's always a common denomin there's
always a common thing that the bashmtov
gave a message he never dictated that
all his talidum have to be the same and
relay the message. The same way he had a
message. He gave it over and he said,
"This is it. Take it. There's a there's
a
says
it says
you should send away the mother first.
If you want to take the eggs, you send
away the mother first. You take the eggs
like this." She doesn't have.
So he says that we could learn from this
something deeper. The says it.
says
you should when you go to a Reb when you
go to a teacher a mentor you should
throw away the M m is in the language M
means like a mother something that that
that that fruitful
that you can learn something from it
says
throw out all the and all these nice
things it's important but very nice
take out take home the
take home the message and that's what
the did he has a message and he gave it
out he did not nobody Nobody wrote all
the tyrus on the bash of this there's
very little written from him. The only
half from is tidum
the swim that they wrote and you'll you
look at it you see there were mish
totally different opposite everybody
wore different lavush everybody had
different clothing everybody different
message total different opposite you
look you look at from kabat today till
till till till breastlift all of them
it's before there was even more war
there was all kinds they were very
different
there's no need
felt that has to the same. It has to be
like a certain like soldiers.
Everybody's to be dressed the same and
marched the same. It doesn't work like
that. As older, they're working for the
same milis
needs to have all kinds of people. We
need to have all kinds of missions and
all kinds of things. And that's why it's
very important to understand that
there's all colors and all types. But it
happens in families also.
So now when you have a child that's
challenging you, you have to work on
this idea even even even stronger even
deeper because you need to understand
that this child has a very unique
mission in this world. this child as
something Hashem put this child into a
regardless if they were abused or
whatever create whatever caused or
seemingly caused them to become uh this
this this wandering soul or this
searching person or this whatever it is
confused soul whatever it is it was
there it was made it was sent by Hashem
he wants this child a whole different
mission
there was um I once heard from uh from
Dr. the Pelawitz maybe some of you know
the story masa um he said that he once
had a a a zida a a a person called him
up and he said I have one of my children
is very challenging and this child is
always different all my kids are very
special and this child is always I think
he needs therapy there's something wrong
with this child and maybe you can see I
said Dr. Belquid said sh isn't tight. He
comes in and he starts analyzing him and
and he is a regular healthy kid and he
said what's the issue? Said I don't know
I just want to go to work. I'm very into
money and I want to you know I want to
dress a little more mad. I'm very into
my looks. I'm not some men have a little
tendency of looking a little more you
know and he had nothing more than that.
So Sean he calls up the father and he
says your child is a healthy child. He's
just different. He just just not he says
you don't understand this son is a mager
and this is a yeshiva this one is a rav
and this one and this daughter is a
principal my wife is this and this is
the only child there must be something
wrong
is think what is he going to do hey this
there's nothing so he says you know what
out of the blue he doesn't even know why
he thought about it he said you know
what how about you come together with
all your children to the office next
visit together with your son with this
boy and we'll discuss it and he said by
the way you have grand you have parents
there's grandparents said yes your
family's is close. Yeah, bring them
along. Fine. The whole MBA walks in. Dr.
Belas, I don't know how many they had
over there. Much malam teachers,
everybody walks in.
And Dr. Pelwood says, "I want to tell
you guys, I want to break the news.
Every person is different and this child
is even more different. And this child
wants to grow, you all have to start
respecting this kid. You have to be
loyal to this. You have to understand
that this kid has his own mission. He
has his own life. if he has his own he's
he's he's and the father started saying
it's not true maybe we could like make
do incentives that he should want to
learn more maybe should and Dr. said
what what are you doing not everybody's
made to learn and he's we know this is
the
brings that if a person sees that gar
doesn't work for him starts learning
sometimes is the thing you know like I
like to always more than when I was a
book every if if this doesn't work for
you maybe
whatever works for you that means that
you're has to do that not everybody's
made to do the same exact so just it's
like the bal is telling them I know
exactly this word the different words
like this. Suddenly the zid the
grandfather is standing there and he
says I want to talk a minute. Can I can
I talk? Go ahead. He says I want to tell
you something my dear son and my dear
over here before the war
I came you know your eli from a very
very special family were allen
to
I was the same like this. I was the
dropout. I was the one that went to work
as a teenager and I wasn't I wasn't into
all these things like no family and of
course my family started rejecting me a
little bit and this and that and because
I was working I was you know there was
no smartphones but he had he was into
the news and he's listening and he saw
there's a Hitler coming and this he said
one day I came and I told my parents I
said I'm leaving I'm leaving to America
because there's a war coming just learn
we're going to learn we're going to
Toyota takes away all the gazirus and
everything just Don't worry. And he
said, I'm packing my bags. You guys
could come along if you want. If not, Z
is in Gavas. He packed his bags. They
came to America. And he says, my whole
family, brothers, sisters,
parents, everybody perish, perished in
in in the war. And all of you are here
only because of me, the dropout of the
family. All of you Ben and all of you
are here only because of that. Dr.
Pelitz is right. We need this. Let him
be. Let him be. You never know. They
were lucky enough to have a story to see
it. But it's it's something that we can
learn from this a message. We never know
where a child where the destination is.
And also, Hashem sees the the big
picture. Sometimes we look at our child
and it's so painful to see a child doing
bad choices. It's very painful.
Hashem sees the big picture. He has a
bird's eye view more. He can see the
next generation. and the next
generation. If you see today, the
biggest inspirers today, the biggest
speakers today in the world are
Balichua.
And the other big inspirers today are
the Kabatka that are working with
Balachuva. And because they're working
with them, they have to become more
advanced in knowing how to answer
questions about Hashem and how to
inspire people. And these balu when they
come from being from the world from the
from the outside world and they they
take Idish kite upon themselves they are
the ones that are able to to articulate
and to and to and to bring out all these
beautiful messages about kites. Because
of them we created ahat and ashat is
making today and and
all these places are making more balas
from the from the FFBs from from birth
than balichua by now because we are the
ones that are bought into a system and
we're learning you know we're growing up
and everything has to go this way now
you have to sit now you have to d you
have to do this and the children today
are asking questions as we said in our
sweeps today and they're becoming you
know deciding asking questions where did
they go who answers the questions
the Balichu you go to I don't want to
say the names because it's a but there's
so many of the greatest speakers today
are balu people there or them or people
that work with balachuat so now let's
look back there was alaba in the that
she had a child that went off she was
crying a she saying to him she said
hashem why didn't you listen to my tilis
and hashem said what a minute why vi
her children were born and raised in
south Africa
wis whoever it was they went to college
over there and there was I don't know
what the other and became from and now
this kid this is inspiring thousands of
thousands of yen around the world said
your child that went over the it's not
Hashem made it should be in a way that
he shouldn't even have because it wasn't
his fault it was influenced or she was
influenced by by whatever so she didn't
even have a I'm just giving a mushul of
how to see that sometimes Hashem sees
the big picture we don't we don't see
the G there was there was many like the
other Bash was saying before by by
Shashid is the woman who weren't there
he was saying that that with Manasha
he didn't want to have a child and this
whole Hashem has his plans we have to
always see that there's a bigger picture
and we have to understand that sometimes
a certain child or many of our children
have to come up with something and they
they're trying to experience life in a
different way. They're trying to see
things in a different way. So, how do we
do it? How do we juggle all these? How
do we juggle all types of children in
the same house? And then you still have
the regular kids that are the the cookie
cutter kids, whatever we call them, like
the the ones that are, you know, that
work along with the cycle with the
system and they they they they behave
the way you want, they get dressed the
way you want and everything's fine. the
non-challenging kids living in the same
house as this child that's this that's
that's challenging you and you know
doing all kinds of uh painful things in
the house and and and you're scared
they're going to become influenced
I want to tell you something personal
I'm a second marriage
the children my children my wife's
children
are raised in my house house together
with my wife and they're doing great but
they're being exposed to the other side
of the family when they go there for
visitations to to the family that's not
so religious anymore to the father
that's not so religious anymore the way
we are so in the beginning of times it
was a lot of people saying ah they're
going to be exposed they're going to see
different types of yiddish they're going
to see people
and I kept saying it doesn't matter I'm
putting in the salad
salad into all the kids and they'll make
smart choices they're all big teenagers
years, almost the years, and they're all
doing great. Not only great, they're
better than the other kids in their
class because they're open. They
understand. They had questions they
asked me. They've been exposed. They're
they're they're not so they could handle
the world even they're like tougher.
Sometimes the kids that grow up in in in
challenges and they've seen things, they
grow up much more solid. I know the
family my
child that was mish on drugs and tattoo
on one hand and he was doing a crazy
kid. hyperactive like you've never seen.
And and I used to, you know, work with
the fathers. He was so worried about his
other kids. I said, just make salads
your other kids. Talk to them about kite
and excitement and and explain to them
that this kid is different and he has
his mission in the world and he has
going through his struggles. The other
kids are doing amazing. Mamesh, I'm I'm
looking now after 10 years. I'm looking
back, you know, trying to think before
Shabas different families that I helped
in the last 15 years. They're doing
amazing. These kids are growing up
stronger than ever before. Our
children I don't know where most people
come from Burough Winsburg Lakewood
Crown Heights. We have all the kids are
the same. They're going to the same in
the same place. If you look at the out
of town kids, the kids that grew up in
in places where there's five kids in the
class, I have a friend of mine that grew
up in Vienna. Another person I remember,
he was in Denmark. There was there was
one lab kid in the class, one Sabber
kid, and and two very modern kids. And
that was the whole class. All of them
grew up. He's telling me like he's
looking back so solid, so strong. They
grow up that there's diversity, there's
different types of things. It's okay.
Our other children are only going to
become stronger by seeing the way you
deal with this challenging child with
this child that's going through now
their own they're they're finding
themselves or some say creating
themselves or whatever you want to call
it. It's it's it's it's only going to
make them stronger. It's not going to
was so worried by being macar this kid
that that fell out that it's going to
ruin the other kids. It that does not
happen usually. It's the opposite. If
they see you're not lost, you understand
that this is your kid. This is your
mission and your mission. And that's how
it's the way it's supposed to be. We've
seen Tanak. We've seen the Gummuda. Many
many families in the olden days used to
be like this. It was every child was
different. It was it was a given that
every child is different. But now for
some reason after the Holocaust the way
we we set back all that it became that
if I'm all my kids have to be if I'm
have to it has to be that way and this
is something that we the parents over
here are going to teach the world
outside the rest of the the people that
don't have now at the moment uh children
that are struggling they're learning
from us a lot of things a lot of the
speakers over here that come they get
inspired by this shabas and the previous
shabas if they're not working hands-on
on with these parents and with these
kids. They're the ones that are becoming
educated and then they go back to their
kahillas and their shs and they they
they look at life and and and at the
family value it's such a different image
and this is teaching the the rest of the
rest of the it's teaching them that you
have to understand is and everybody has
their own different way of seeing
things. I want to share with you a
story. There was the um there was a a
couple it's a story from 15 20 years ago
but it's it's a gamasa
there was this uh couple that the wife
started after she wanted to be I guess
keep at risk as a girl and she couldn't
because of after the wedding sometimes
some kids push it off because the
parents are so strict while they're
teenagers so they keep it in you're not
allowed to do this you know and they're
able to have control but it plots after
the wedding there very common in the
high 20s and the 30s. There's a lot of
people that are go through their second
teenage years then it's some kind of
it's a whole so this this woman was
going over the d she's dropping ydish
kite every day more and more and more
and they had one child a boy and the
father was a
and he had to divorce her she stopped
keeping everything that that was
supposed to keep at home and he came to
a boy he said listen we can't live
together so there were they got
separated and was getting ready to get
divorced
she said I'm taking the boy with me. He
doesn't need to be this this whole thing
is below. And he dropped the whole
Yiddish I'm taking this child with me
and this and she meanwhile found a
boyfriend in she went and he lives in
Texas. So she wanted to move there to go
there with her boy and live with a real
low low people. So he went to court
obviously he's trying to fight. He
didn't want his child to to go there
together with his wife over there. who's
fighting and fighting and the law in New
York in New York state I'm not sure of
all the states is that the child has to
the children have to remain the same
religious status as they were before the
parents got divorced after all so in
other words if one becomes a goyer if a
go becomes E the child has to be until
they're 16 years old when they're 16 the
child could decide whatever they want I
think 16 and 15 trying he won that so he
knew he has he had another like five
years to go six years to go with this
kid and the boy was with him his ex went
Texas. She's living over there with
these Harley-Davidson guys, like real
low people. Shut. And
he has 5 years. The boy keeps on saying,
I'm going back to mommy. You know, it's
it's and she keeps on bribing, telling
on the phone, you're going to see you're
going to come. And so he has 5 years to
go. And he's trying to put into his
child whatever he could that when he's
going to go there, he should still be
salad. So he's trying to think trying to
think for yourself, what would you tell
this child? How would your shabas table
look and how would your relationship be
with this child for the next five years
that when the child is going to go there
the child should not fall the child
should not drop everything you started
thinking he educated himself he started
to talk about ydish kite history and he
talk about all kinds of he's talking to
every day when the child came up from
yeshiva from he was talking to the kid
made relationship with him he took him
out he became buddies with the kids like
this when the child is going to go there
the child's going to call back all the
time you know until be 189 19 could
maybe eventually move back here and drop
the whole thing.
Of course, the father succeeded. The
child went there and by now this this
this boy got married. This he's okay.
But I was thinking about the story. I
know I know people that know this. I
know someone that knows this person. He
says he wishes he could go around in the
whole Kalisru and tell everybody how to
treat their children at home because we
are living in Texas. We are living
already in a place our children are
already exposed. They could be exposed
any second to the biggest schmutz in the
world. In a second they could be exposed
to the to apocarsis. I'm telling you
there's there's a there's a the bottom
thing that the biggest issue of the
internet is schmutz. It's a much bigger
issue up apocarsis and and it's not even
real upperceurs but at least if someone
is not educated enough they they they
get exposed to all kinds of shalas and
cautious and yushka which but if they're
not uh prepared for it they don't know
how to deal with it but this is a bigger
issue so we're already living in Texas
it's right over here what would you do
with your child to make sure that the
child should not get exposed to all
should should stay your friend should
stay in the circle should stay in the f
should stay giddish
Why can't we do it? Why do we have to
wait till the child goes over there and
then go, "Oh, the child's over there.
Now I have to I have a choice." This is
something that we have to work on right
now.
Can we do it? Can we do We said five
more minutes. Wow. Can we do it? Someone
show them by the door. Can we do it with
our child? That's a keep. Can we do it
with a child? That's what
we know how. We could if we know how,
but if we do it right now, try to think
that your child is going to be moving to
a a a midbr, a place where there's no
Yiddish whatsoever. What would you do?
You would talk to your child and you
would give them Jewish pride, regular
Jewish pride, just being proud to be a
Yid. What did the Jews do for the world?
Regular stuff, not even talk about
Yiddish. You would give them Jewish
identity. You would give them the family
value. You would give them the love. You
would give them the connection. you
would get connected to your child like
your best friend. I have good news for
you. All of our kids, not only our kids
that are struggling need us to become
their best friends.
Of course, it has to be with their adult
and he's a child understand that has to
be some some boundaries. Obviously, your
father and the Reba today has to become
friends with the kids. When I used to go
to Kaida, I used to when I saw my Reb
Shabas and Sh I was a kid. I ran the
other I was so scared of my Reb was like
in a pocket. My kids, they see the Reb,
they run to him and say, "Oh, Chabas,
they go to But it's this is how it has
to become. If you want to save the next
generation, it's only getting the world
is becoming more and more open and
there's more and more Texas over here.
There's more and more of the of that
kind of situation that we need to
understand that all of them need to get
and there's a few ingredients that every
child needs to get. This is regardless
of which shaven they are and regardless
of what type of kid they are, what type
of personality they are. Like we said
before, there's
there should not be a minus. There's a
minus. If a child does not feel secure
and stability at home, that's a minus
that that child is a broken shattered.
He has to know that his parents, his
mother's father's here for them through
sick and thin and we're here for you.
You're stable. You're in a stable home.
You're in and and and and
you're secure. You're safe. Safety is
number one. And then of course a plus,
which is not only a plus, it's a
necessity. Love. They have to feel
connected to you that you love them. You
care for them. And we know what love is.
What is love?
Hashem said, "I love you." What does
that mean? A is giving. I care for you.
Someone could tell you, "I love you a
thousand times." But if they don't care
for you, they're not in tune in your
feelings and your needs. They don't love
you. They need something from you.
Loving you means that I care for you.
And when you feel cared for very much,
there's a feeling that ignites in you.
And the name of that feeling is I feel
loved. Love is the name of a feeling
that gets awakened
when we when we give love or when we
feel love.
When we give care and we feel cared for.
That's when you feel loved. That's when
you're able to give. There was a that
came to Balata and he said, "Reb
my hashem. I want to know what's more
important. Loving or loving
is huge. Is huge. Which one is bigger?"
to Balatan. He says, "They're both the
same."
He says, "What does that mean? What do I
work on?" He says,
"Hashem said, I love you. I love if you
love someone, you love their children.
You love who they love." So, it's one
thing. If you love that means that you
love if you love Hashem, that means that
you have to love. If not, it doesn't go
like that. So, what does loving means?
We have to care for each other. We have
to give. We have to really if
if a person hurt themselves, you have to
pick them up. You have to care for
another and we think doing mitzvah and
it's always outside of the home. It's
like oh was you know doing all kinds of
it's all at home. It's in the house and
all of our children regardless if if
they're the struggling ones if not if
they're the ones they're going through
now they're and different nature than
you. I think a man that came to me mish
before after m and he's talking and he
says but how can I love my daughter if
if she walks in with a skirt with a
dress like this how could I love her I
said how could you not love her what
does what does a yiddish have to do with
you loving her she's your child you love
her
what's even telling you not to love this
child the child is not growing up the
way you want you love a child because
you love your child it's there it's
there's no other
loves us regardless if we if we're if
we're in a high level or If we do it a
separate Hashem loves us and he wants us
to love every year and is the same thing
and that's the second thing we need to
have love
and the third thing is which is another
plus which is a a necessity of a plus is
obviously self-confidence. You need to
build them up and tell them how special
they are that you're able and you're
capable self-esteem self-confidence.
um you know they should feel that
they're that they they're they have a
dignity they have something that they're
worth for there's a someone says I'm not
confident if I would sit tomorrow into
into a plane I don't want to drive a
plane you think my wife trusts me about
Hashem very much but you think she'll
she'll be comfortable I never drove a
plane in my life so does that mean that
that she doesn't have confidence in me
she doesn't have confidence in me that I
know how to drive a plane but she has
confidence in me that I'm a good father
maybe that I'm a good husband that I'm
good this that I'm good that a person is
not a confident person. If someone never
cooked in their life, say, "I'm not so
confident in my cooking." Does that that
mean you're not a confident person? So,
if that's the case, you could find in
every child, even while they're going
through all these
interesting stages and all these
mishagas that they're going through, you
could still tell them, "I'm very
confident in you. You're a great driver.
You're a great this." And you tell them
and you show them that I'm comfortable.
Even when you drive fast, you know, I
have a teenage son. I know what it is.
And I'm like biting my tongue like
holding like that and he's driving and
he's you know on the highway because I
felt that's the only place where I could
give him at that time that I'm that I'm
I'm confident in him. You find somewhere
where you give them I'm confident in
you. I love you. I care for you. You're
important to me. I'm attuned in your
feelings. I know what you feel. I I And
then security when something happens I'm
the first one that's going to bail you
out. I'm the first one. me and mommy
going to the first one that going to be
here for you regardless if it's going to
cost us money, if it's going to cost us
headaches, whatever it is, we are you
are secure in the family are secure. You
can have outside the seemingly these
kind of friends that they go out to
party with and the other when it comes
to when it comes to any struggle they
they drop you in a minute. Tati and
mommy home is the place where you are
very safe. This is the place where we
care for you. This is the place where we
where we where we uh where we love you
and we care for you. And I think that to
conclude, it's a shame. I wanted to say
a few more things, but we'll have to
finish. But the idea is that all of our
children are a different All of
our children, the struggling ones, the
non-strugging ones, one kid is going to
come out of London and one is going to
come out a businessman. And what if you
give them one
mission, the mission is be your best.
Bring out the best in yourself and
whatever you are good at, I'll support
you. This is what I'm here for you. Whe
whichever direction it is, if it's in
success in any way, I'm here to back
you. I want to give you whatever it
takes. I'm not telling you which
direction to go. I'm not dictating if
you should be this type of Eid, if you
should be that type of Eid. I'm not
dictating that. We are here as parents
to give you the encouragement to be
whichever works for you. What did they
say that? They said that there's a song
in it. says when you come up with shaman
they're going to ask you did you give it
all you've got that's all they're going
to ask you did you give it all you've
got so all of them are given something
else everybody's a talent everybody's
their own brain and everybody has
something to give for this world
otherwise they wouldn't be here created
all of us here for a reason and all of
us have some mission over here sometimes
the parents at the moment cannot see
what is the mission of this kid this kid
is sitting in the basement on their
phone on the computer over there for for
days you How many how often I have these
people going I don't what's my kid doing
down there I don't want to I don't want
to disturb you but didn't come up for
supper didn't come up for lunch come
down over there they're like sleeping
they're like on on Facebook on Instagram
there for hours and all the fake friends
and and they got s and and you're like
I'm telling you something there is a
mission this kid has this kid has to go
through this this ages and stages you
know there's all kinds of stages that a
child goes through we have to let them
it's I mean you have to try obviously
different from which everybody's is
their own mentor how to exactly do with
their child. But the general statement
is the general rule is every child has
to go through whatever they have to go
through. But eventually they're all
going to shine in their own way. We've
seen many people anybody that's over 30,
40, 50 years old. And you look back
you've seen friends that were losers
when they were 20. They're so successful
when they're 40. And how many times did
we see this successful the top girl in
class, the top this, the top that you
look 10 years later, they're like
zombies. We don't know. It's everybody
has their time and their thing. If your
child is going through a struggle now,
it's very painful. It's very hard to
watch it. But you have to understand
there is a plan.
But for me to help my child get to their
plan and be successful is I have to give
them security. I have to give them love
and confidence. These are the three
things you give it to them and you tell
them go out whichever direction. You
know, one child, you know how our
children surprise us. I could think back
of so many boys that I worked with in
the last 17 years. Parents said this
child is a write-off. One child I
remember was a dyslexic. It was it was
my he dropped out of school many times
and once he was in my office and I was
on the phone with my insurance company
and I told him write down the I didn't
have so I said quickly write down the
the the VIN number and I saw he starts
from one side and he finishes the he
wasn't continuing the VIN number has
ABC's and numbers and I said you could
read. He says no. spoke to Spain they
never they never identified it was he
was going through the whole elementary
he this boy was like 13 14 years he's a
good head so certain times when he
remembered he was able to say
but he was never able to they never knew
he's dyslexic like in in a in severe
case so I remember we worked with him
back and forth and parents of mamish
he's a such a successful financially
successful in gam today you wouldn't
believe it he's making a lot of nice
numbers nice six digits very very
successful
So he has a secretary writing for him
because I remember when I was sitting
with his father, his mother, very very
family and I was telling them just build
this child, give them confidence that
they could do something. He's happens to
be he's very smart. He's able to he's a
good he knows how to negotiate. That was
one of his I remember now he's he he's
he's a shot for for for real estate
deals back and forth and makes
commission off this one that he sits
with Manhattan. His English is so broken
and he's he's but he's successful. He's
doing he's shining. He's trying and you
think it's Yiddish didn't come back.
Everything came back. Yiddish kite when
we see our children falling in Yiddish
kite. That's not the problem. It we only
realize it then unfortunately that our
children were already struggling with
something way before. But when they
start dropping this levish and that they
stop going to sh they start putting out
feel the girls in that way and this way
and issues it's that's not it. That's
the way it comes out. There's something
deeper. There's something that they
need. But if they're going to feel very
secure in your home, they're going to
feel that my parents are here for me
through thick and thin. They care for
me. I'm secure. My parents love me
regardless.
And my parents believe in me. They give
me my confidence. They believe in me.
Eventually,
sometimes it's a longer process, but
eventually they're going to come out
stronger and better than before. They're
going to be so successful in whichever
direction, whichever way they have to,
whichever they have to build up in
Cli.