0:00 / 0:00
Rav Shloime Ehrlich - Five Tips; Bring Your Marriage to Higher Level While Going Through Challenges
147 views
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
many different in the animal kingdom
there many different uh like pigeons
they they married the sister it's like
the parents leave two eggs a boy and a
girl and they have children why did
Hashem make that kalisil that that
humans should marry from one family to
the other that we all have different
backgrounds of different natures is to
work on ourselves to become better it's
like to integrate and work out stuff but
that in itself leads a lot of a lot of
practice, a lot of work and a lot of
until we become better beings. But when
a huge challenge comes into life, that's
when it becomes that's when we have to
bring our marriage to the next level.
Just two months ago, they hired me to
speak by Mikimi. If you know what it is,
you shouldn't know. It's an organization
that helps uh patients and families of
patients that have were diagnosed with a
very sad situation and they had a mala
they got they got in my there were like
150 people so they wanted me to some
give them some guidance and some comfort
and so I spoke some how to deal with you
know different types of issues and with
the other kids and the families but
really it was a question and answer
session afterwards All of them there was
very calm. They were saying how do we
deal with it? I deal with the issue very
different than my husband deals with it
or than my wife deals with it. We all
have a different outlook how to deal
with the child. How do we tell the other
kids? But I think it's even more so when
we deal with the current with children
that challenge us or I don't I don't
like the labels the OTDs. I don't
whatever label it is.
That's when I think there could be a lot
of um
I don't want to use the word conflict or
it could be a very different way and a
different approach how to look at it.
Let's say for instance there's a uh
people are shopping in Walmart and
suddenly there's an explosion at the
other side of the store. There's
explosion of some smoke, right? There's
a few hundred people in the store.
Everybody's going to deal with it very
different.
Some people are going to run out. Some
people are going to grab others and run
out. Some are going to run towards it to
see how they can help. And some are
going to freeze,
right? There's fight uh flight, flight,
and freeze. They don't say freeze. I
added freeze. But you see it there. The
light shines in the eye. It freezes. It
doesn't know what to do. Doesn't it's
not aggressive and it doesn't run away.
But many people do that. We freeze. We
don't know what to do.
And within that is a difference between
the men and the women. How they're going
to see and deal with this.
When there's a a tragedy happens in a
family, something goes very wrong, a
health issue or a child that goes off
the just chooses to going through
different stages.
Usually the husband and wife have a very
different outlook. There are certain
things. We all have different egos. Men
have egos and women have egos. We all
have our own co our own but it's very
different.
Sometimes the the husband or the or the
father is is uh more concerned about
shame. what are the street going to say
and how do we deal with this? How do we
deal with that? And the mother, the wife
is dealing with a total different issues
that that bothers her. What's going to
be with the other kids? She's our own
maternal. So there's different types of
concerns. They they both are concerned
for the same thing. They want the child
to grow up healthy and and happy and and
from and
productive.
But what happens is
if you don't work together as a team,
obviously obviously it's not going to be
not only it's not going to be uh it's
not going to work out good, it's going
to be destructive. It's just not going
to be
there are so many times in in life that
we have to work together on an extra
level. Let's say looking for shitta for
good thing. You look for sha for your
child. It's very common that you have a
different outlook than your wife or than
than your husband. It's a very different
what you're looking for. How does she go
about it? Should we call or should we
not call? You know, there's always in
general there's always, you know, I deal
with couples a lot in Shumbai. It's so
common that you have he's always on
time, she's always late. Or the other
way around, he's a perfectionist, she's
a Slav or the other way around. I just
had a couple. They went on vacation.
This guy spent I don't know like $5,000
on vacation. went or whatever. He wanted
to run around. He spent so much money.
He wanted to run around. And she said,
"What do you mean? I work so hard the
whole year. I want to sit in the Yama on
the beach and just just relax. I'm not
interested." And sometimes I had the
opposite. Everybody's different styles.
Some people want to go on vacation, just
relax, some want to run around. Some are
spenders, some are more saviors. It's
it's it's it's part of Hashem's uh I
don't want to say comedy, but but that's
what he does. We could we could date and
go out I don't know how many times and
when we get married you get to see
there's so many things that were
opposite but that's the beauty of life.
That's the beauty of marriage that we
grow together and we become we
integrate. If you're
if you're a lemon and she's an orange,
the children are going to be
grapefruits, right? So it's it's always
it's good to integrate. But when it
comes to a challenge with something way
more way beyond than just, you know,
always always have to wait for you.
you're never on time or you're always,
you know, stop spending on this. It's
it's, you know, all these differences is
when dealing with your own child, your
own inner and what you're sharing
together, it could be so painful.
And even more so when the child is
already in a stage where where it's it's
it's it's just I don't say dreadful, but
it's already in a in a in a in in a
state where it's it's a danger mode.
There's a lot of thoughts back, you
know, last year I was here for this for
the Shabas. And so many people just
wanted to tell me how it happened. Oh,
when he was in this yeshiva, he was
kicked out and I shouldn't have let him
leave and then he went to here or she
went to here. They always I I kept on
hearing that everybody's repeating the
process how it happened because suddenly
we find ourselves our child is is you
know is doing all kinds of stuff and
it's it's it's already so what happens
is this could bring blame. Oh, my
husband should have listened to me when
we started in the first place. We
shouldn't have sent him that stroll.
That was a mistake or we sent her to
this school or or we listened to this
one, we listened to that one. There's a
lot of those kind of things. So,
obviously, we have to minimize that if
we want to to be productive and work
together to save the child
and ultimately to save the whole family.
If you're working together as a team,
you look and you understand the
difference, the gender differences, the
way a woman sees the situation, a man
sees the situation, and you see beyond.
Yeah. So, I want to ask when we when we
go back to the Torah, the first time we
see, we see it's h and
they're not agreeing on as right. Right.
She has only issue with it. It treat
them like gold and she doesn't. So,
maybe was planned was good, bad. Yes.
But but the way I look at it, I'm saying
like maybe sometime it's not so bad to
say to the kids this what Aba feel this
what I feel but I'm agreeing with with
that's okay that's okay in on a daily
basis in a regular thing we'll talk
about in a general plan right you're
setting up a a a plan how to deal with
this child the child is out the child's
a teenager she knows or he knows what
he's doing already at least I think so
and they're out in the street they're
big they could there there's huge
decisions that has to be made together
obviously it could be on on on a daily
basis, a child could ask you a even a
little kid could ask you, I I want to
have a snack before I'm going to bed
tonight and you can say yes and then
they ask daddy and daddy says no. That's
okay. It's not a conflict. It doesn't
doesn't it doesn't take away the
stability of the child.
It's not that's not the we talk about
the plans and how to deal with the whole
with the whole situation.
The worst thing in marriages in general
is that people sometimes grow apart.
while you're dating, while you meet,
you're on the same level in Yiddish Kite
and other things. And then eventually,
you know, he he gets his influences, she
get her, they read different papers or
they get 20 years later, they find
themselves in two different sides. And
the kids end up feeling that. But if you
have to work together to save a child,
you have to start growing together. And
growing together is a choice. It's a
choice. It's a it's a um it's a
decision. we have to make a decision
that we have to work on this project
together on saving this child as much as
we can and the rest of the children and
that's something that that that why why
why we're talking about this today and I
think that there many different um
speeches on this topic because obviously
this is something that has to be
discussed this is just not again as I
said before this is not only with
parents that are struggling with teens
this is parents that are strug
struggling with children that are not
healthy or or or or
married kids that are not happily
married and there's so many other things
that that life could bring. We have to
we're forced basically when we have a
struggle like this, we're forced to work
on our marriage and to bring it to the
next level and that's that's something
that we have to focus on.
So, I think that getting a little more
practical, hands-on, how do how do the
marriage together and a place that we
could work as a team to save this child
and to make all the other kids stable. I
always say just before that, just one
second, I always say that people say I
remember like 25 years ago, 30 years
ago, Rabbi Abraham J. Torski was the
first one that came out with a book and
he was talking about uh self-confidence,
right? It was like a new thing at the
time and everybody was into it. It took
a few years till it penetrated and all
the speakers now it's a given. We all
know we got to give your child
confidence. You have to build them up.
You have to give them and then love.
Everybody know you have to give your
child love. We all know we have to give
our ch child children love. I mean you
know post Holocaust the our my parents
whatever the parents of 60-year-olds
their parents were Holocaust survivors.
They didn't give if you survived you
were good you know wasn't but today's
generation we need to give. But there's
one word that is is not mentioned enough
and that is security
and stability. If a child feels secure,
my parents are always going to be here
to protect me. That's a very important
ingredient. If you don't have that, you
can give them as much love as you want.
The child doesn't feel comfortable in
this world. They don't they don't feel
uh secure. You can give them love and
try to build up their confidence. It's
not going to work. You need to give them
security. They need to feel secure. And
what makes them feel secure? If Taty and
mommy are a team,
if the father, if the husband and wife
are not a team, again, not like I said
before, if he wants a snack before goes
to bed. I'm talking it's in a stable.
The child is not going to feel stable.
And the child doesn't feel stable.
Whatever you put into the child
afterwards, it's all full. It's like
it's like building a cup and then you
could fill it up. If it has holes and if
it's not a stable cup, you could pour in
whatever you want. it's going to leak
out the the the structure of the human
being, the structure of the child of
every child is to feel that my father
and my mother are a team and this is a
stable home.
It's okay if they my both parents think
a little different than different
things. It's okay. But they need to feel
that. And how did they feel that by
working together say ask daddy, ask mom
or you know different things. They see
working together they see that the
parents respect each other. They see
this parents love each other and that's
fine. That's that's saying it. But when
it comes to a story like this, you have
this child that's starting to become at
risk acting up by the Shabas meals or
throwing things. I I need to tell you
all these we all have different stories,
but it's in the same category.
The other kids are seeing are looking
consciously and even more so
subconsciously. How are my two pillars,
my father and my mother, going to deal
with this together? When there's an an
eruption in the house, there's an
explosion and there's a an 18-year-old
making a tantrum in the house. How is my
father and my mother going to handle
this? Are they strong? Do they know how
to deal with this? Oh, she's going to
scream. You deal with it. No, you deal
with it. I don't know what to say. Why
you screaming at him? You should be
nice. Don't fight it out in the bedroom.
Like, work it out how you want to deal
with it. But as soon as the other
children, that child and other children
feel that when there's a problem in the
house, the parents are not a team
together, they're not working on this
together. This takes away the stability
of the other kids and this child also.
They want to see you being
a team and a strong team that that
that's giving the security and and and
and the and the stability in the home.
So I think that the first thing is
the women are going to like this one.
Communication,
you know, communicate more. You have to
communicate more. Yes. Communication is
like this. You know that um to say it
quick, you know, the moral always talks
about there's a
right. So this so the is so different.
The is a is a water stone. It's nothing.
It's a regrowth. And then there's a
which is us. What's the difference
between a and a madab? That a is alive.
An animal could come and go. It could
also reproduce and everything, but it
can't talk. But is it that that we're is
the talking the more
is is the talking that the difference
between us and the Kai? Isn't it the
cycle? We have cycle. We have brains. We
could we could build bridges. We could
go up to the moon. An animal can't more
than his own territory. He doesn't know
how to do it. He doesn't.
And the answer is he gives is because
mab
communicating is what makes us more than
the animals. It's not so much. Of
course, is huge. Our brains is amazing.
But if you can't communicate, if you
can't give over and you can't tell the
other party you're communicating to your
problems, your issues with them or
communicating or I mean communicating
your your feelings or your
understandings and understand and listen
and everything that comes along with
communication. You're not in Madabi.
You're still a Kai. That's what makes us
special.
So if a team works together and there's
a huge project when we have a child like
this, it's a huge very serious needless
to say project and it's not just
something that happens on its own. We
need to work on it and how is it going
to be if we the couple has to designate
and put away extra time to communicate
how are we dealing with this kid and not
only that how are we dealing with each
other.
So if you put away time, extra time
because there's so much stress in the
house and so because there's so much
issues, you put away a time, you go on a
date once a week, you could be married
25 years, I don't care. You just go on a
date. You take a time every Wednesday
night, Tuesday night, Sunday night,
whatever it is, an hour, two hours, it
doesn't have to cost money, doesn't
nothing. Just close your phone, not a
vibrate. Close the husband and the wife.
You have time to look at each other in
the eyes and just it's time not about
the situation. just general just to
build a relationship just to have extra
time. If you have more stress, you have
to add more more more of the of the good
things. You have to there always has to
be a balance and if pe if a couple has
time together they they they fab
together and talk and communicate. I
think that alone it gives kayak to deal
later with the other problems. It has to
be it has to be that. Number two,
you have to become your spouse's
therapist. We could all have outside a
therapist who we talk to everything. But
at the end of the day, a wife wants her
husband to understand and know her
feelings about the situation with the
child
and to validate it. And the same thing
is the husbands. Of course, they're not
going to admit it all of them, but they
also want their wives to really know
their deeper inner feeling of how they
feel when they go to shu. Their issue,
the part that bothers the man other
different than bothers for the woman.
the the the this this challenge, this
child's challenge, and they want the
wife to have a feeling and feel along
and to say and validate. He comes home
and he says, "I was so embarrassed. We
went to this in this wedding and our
child walked in there looking like
what?" And maybe to her this part
doesn't bother her as much as bothers
him. You have to really understand them
and feel it and validate it. And if you
again, if you designate a time for this,
you're going to deal with this. You're
going to say, "Yeah, I understand you.
It makes sense. this is terrible that
that this is how you feel and this is
how it is. We're forced to become
therapists. We have to I mean anybody
that's married would be but we have to
work together and understanding the
others the other party's feelings and I
think that's that's a very very
important thing.
Number three I think what's very
important is to have a common
mentor. You both decide that whenever we
have a challenge, if there's something
coming up, there's a there's a change, a
plan, you have we're going to ask, you
try to work it out together. If it
doesn't work, you ask this and this
professional that deals with these kind
of kids or whatever. And you say
whatever they say, we both follow like
this. There's no one to blame
afterwards. If it doesn't work out,
there's no there's no difference between
the husband and wife. This we decided
together that we're listening to this
and this professional or to this and
this Rav or to this and this person and
whatever they say, that's what we're
following. It's going to take it's going
to avoid so many so much pain and so
much confusion. It's it's going to avoid
all kinds of issues that could come up
later. We say listen we decided and
we're following and we ask Hashem that
this person that we're asking should
have whatever they say that's what we're
doing. It's very important to have a
mentor someone that we discuss and it
has to be an agreed mentor that whatever
this person says that's what we're doing
and that's and I I think that could
avoid a lot of issues and that could
bring people together.
Then I want to talk about something
which I think is the most important of
all of it is to put away a time when
you're going to deal with this issue or
any issue in life. If someone let's say
you're looking in a regular issue you
look for your child your child is
getting a little older and so what
happens is it's constantly on your mind.
It's constantly your mind. You think oh
what are we going to do? What are we
going to do? I'm not calling this should
be called so or people that have even
some people that don't have it's also
constantly on their mind on their mind
and their mind. What happens is it's
stealing them from life because they're
constantly thinking about that
particular problem. Life is so much
bigger than that. We have so much
pleasures and so much good things in
life. We could focus on our good kids.
We could focus on ourselves and our
health and everything. It's sim and
there's always good things in life. But
if someone has an issue that's bugging
them constantly on their mind, they're
stealing their own their own their own
their own life. I was once in a uh in a
old age home and uh there was an elder
over there says tell him this kind you
should you should learn from the
elderly.
So I was had a schmuz was very smart to
eat and I asked him this all kinds of
question about life and he I asked him
if you could relive life again
what would you do different let's say
you turn 20 now what would you do
different he thinks a second and he says
nothing I would live life exactly the
same way I did now the only thing I
would change I would never worry again
whatever I worried for I'm looking back
I was worried for my son was not
married. He's a Za already. I was
worried about this. If it has to work
out good or the other way around, it
worked out anyway. It happened anyway.
The worrying stole my time and stole my
life. And this it sounds simple, but to
me it was this was such a deep message
like giving an old deed an opportunity
again. It says nothing. I just never
worry again. You don't worry about how
you're going to pay your mortgage. You
don't worry how what's going to work out
with your child. everything is going to
work out the way Hashem wants to be and
it's going to be anyway. So why should I
steal? But the only way to do it is if
we learn I think this is a general uh
gift you could give yourself that you
designate a time. So let's say every
Sunday night you sit down for two hours
and together and you discuss this child
what are we doing next? Where we up to
you have a file a folder you write down
last time the mentor said this we should
do that. Did anything change this week?
did it not change where where we're
going from here and as soon as the time
is up you close that book you leave and
the whole week you don't think about it
when if it's emergency you deal with it
twice a week three times a week but you
designate a time the rest of the time
the rest of the week you're focusing on
yourselves you're focusing on your other
kids you're focusing on the world you're
focusing on on your business and
whatever it is on your relationships
whatever it is don't let it come if it
pops up in your mind you tell yourself
Sunday 6:00 clock will deal with it. You
have a thought we should call maybe
this. So you write on the thing you put
it away and then you push it. After a
few weeks what's going to happen is I
tried and tested this many times and
worked with so many people. I was I was
by Shabaton this year um for sister to
sister for divorced women and I spoke
there for them
on Shabas and and then M Shabas there
was a lot of some women sitting around
and they wanted to like it was like it
happened. It became like like a workshop
sort of. So I was elaborating on this
topic how it works. Exactly. We have our
subconscious a subconscious constantly
brings up the issues a whole time and
all. So what's going to be with that all
the worries? What's going to be? What's
going to be? So I told him it's just
like a little child. If you have your
little child, a 2-year-old knocking,
"Daddy, I want a candy. I want to go
already." Right? And you say, "One
minute, one minute. I'm on the phone."
Right? I'm I'm I'm on the phone. Mommy,
I want this. I'm on the phone. One
minute. Child doesn't know what one
minute means. again and again and again.
How can you get a child to stop bugging
you and say you do something physically?
You say, you see the the clock, it has a
stick. When the stick is going to be
straight, that's when I'm going to take
it. They're going to stop because they
know that this is this time you're going
to deal with it. Our subconscious, the
same thing. If you give it a time, after
a few weeks, the same way when you go to
therapy, I always say the best thing is
to do it the same day of the week at the
same time. If let's say you're going for
therapy for a few weeks for something,
you make it the same time. Your
subconscious is going to know, it's
going to learn after a few weeks that
Thursday 3:00 is when I deal with this
issue. And it's really going to let you
live the rest of the time. It mamish
works. It's like it's like a nest. So
you cannot live and breathe. I talk to
parents, they say, "I'm I I'm not
sleeping at night. I'm not eating. I'm
this. I'm so worried about my child. I'm
It's true. It's very worrisome." And
this is this is one of the worst pains a
person could have. Murus has cleared
this is the worst pain to have in in in
the world. I think uh as I said before I
was by many different Shabatones. Last
year when I came to the Shabaton for the
teams at risk to me this was I've seen
more pain over here than I've seen them
in in other places which
so this is a very painful thing but if
you designate you put a time you're
going to see it's gonna it's going to
become easier. Situations are going to
change. You're going to change and
you're gonna just know how to deal with
it. It's just going to become lighter.
You'll say, "You know what? I'm
designating this time and this is what
I'm going to do with it.
The idea that
that we are in control
is something that happens when we're
three-year-old kids, four year olds.
When we start building blocks and you
say I have I built something. I made
something I and then you you have it
falls down then you build it again. You
start building up something and you
start taking control of things around
you. You cook your own lunch. You know
how it is. You you start doing things
throughout life. As you get older we
start believing in oursel that we're
building up. We could do something.
We're productive. I know how to deal
with this and I don't deal with that.
And of course men are different than
women when it comes to this. Before
there was GPS, a man would never stop to
ask directions. He say, "I know how to
go there." Even though you go around the
block 25 times and still try to find,
"I'm going to figure it out. Don't
worry, I'm going to figure it out."
Instead of stopping and asking someone,
you know, but we all are like that in in
different ways.
These children, these boys and girls,
when they go through something, they
say, "Don't tell me how to deal with it.
I know already." You know, you talk to
these 17-year-olds, 18y olds,
20-year-olds, different ages, and they
say, "I know how to deal with it. It's
okay." Right? And we try to rationalize
with them, and it doesn't work. You try
to rationalize with with a with with
someone that's that's in that mode. It's
just not going to it's not going to
work. There's the there was a
150 years ago was called
he wrote a safe was called
he was more like a um like the pett a
little more psychological
like a little out of the box let's call
it was he was but it was a little for
those years he was like wow and he
writes something interesting it says in
the it says that theor says
right? We all know that question.
If if the Torah says that I'm going to
pay you back on this will
say if you're going to do the mitz
you're going to get
and if not not and then you see that
people righteous doesn't mean that a
person that does righteous that does
lives the way doesn't do and does
mitzvah and the basics is considered a
and and they're and and they're having
so of course we know that there's all
kinds of nice and this way and that way
was trying to figure it out there
No, nobody got an answer basically. So
he says something interesting. He says
if someone is a real sadic, they're
living in a in a higher level. They see
everything is Hashem and everything is
it's all about the next world. It's not
about here and whatever Hashem does is
good to them. Wow. They don't have a big
deal. They have health issues. Whatever
they have, they don't care. It's not
they're living for Hashem. They're total
devoted to Hashem completely. To them
it's not. So he says what is sadic vero
if someone has a child that's of the d
that's the question that mob asked veral
how could it be all the other stuff they
could deal with but a child going that's
that's that's that's the most painful
thing in the world and how do we answer
that that's called sadi
you know the game strateg
was my kids are playing last week shabas
my 5-year-old and 8-year-old I see them
think and then the younger one comes and
he wants to figure out how it works and
he says let show me where's your flag
right you know the flag is the last so
he says I can't show you my flag my flag
the game is over I said ah
if hashem tells us this answer the game
is over
asked
show me show me your face we know is not
physical but no show me your plans that
that's my flag the game is
You can't be alive and see the flag. You
can't continue the game. You can't
continue the mission and the and the and
the avoid over here. If you're seeing
the if I'm showing you the flag, you
come shim. I'll show you the game is
over. I'll show you. Yeah. What my plans
were. I show you everything.
So, when we go through this kind of
challenge,
we don't see the flag. Hashem doesn't
show us the flag. He doesn't show us
when we're going to get there, how we're
going to get there. He doesn't show us
his plan. But one thing I can tell you
just like this old Eid that told us that
looking back his life and he says the
only thing I can tell you is don't
worry. I would never worry again.
He says I don't need to see the flag
now. I'm already seeing the flag. I'm
90. All the daggers that I had, all the
issues that I had but child over it all
worked out to the end of the day. I'm
constantly I think back and so many
things that I was just for an exercise.
You remember like two years ago I was so
worried about this and this thing. What
happened at the end? It worked out. It
came from left field. Hashem sent some I
don't know miraculous thing and it
worked out you know like I just met the
I know he came to America to collect
money. He was the mach. The first few
kids he had money still. He's up to I
guess younger kids he can't. So he came.
So he asked me I should help him collect
money for
so he said
he he was like so stuck. What's going to
happen? And then out of left right
before he went back, he said he met
someone that someone that had made a
promise. That's how it goes. Someone
made a promise to Hashem that if this
this works out, he's going to give it's
a huge sum. I don't know whether it's
$10,000, $8,000 for something. And he's
going to give it to the first person
that needs it. And that person had a
issue. Something worked out. I think it
was in the hospital, whatever it was.
And this my this this maki that I know
was went over to him and he said maybe
not. He said he lost it. He gave him a
check or a cow, whatever it was. She
said, "Look, Hashem Mish put into my
hands the day before I was supposed to
go back." I mean, this is a firsthand
story. I I spoke to this mug here. I
have to remember the exact details, but
this is the story. So, looking back
after something gets resolved or
whatever works out, whatever the way you
see that mishad and everything
and everything and it's just we just we
just can't be worried while it's
happening. It's easy to say, hard to do,
of course. But if we set a time and we
set a place, we say, "Listen, this is
the time I'm going to deal with it. The
rest of the time, I'm not focusing on
it." It's going to make it much easier.
It's hard to do, but you focus and you
train yourself, it's going to it's going
to work out.
Um, I have to finish. So I want to I
want to say these words that
the couples that
work together as hard as it is after a
big assign or assign that we're dealing
with or or different types of issues. If
they worked it out together, they
sometimes look back and say, "Ah, who
knows if this whole struggle was just to
bring us to such a place because working
out together
and and really trying to understand the
others perspective and back and forth
and getting there and working together
as a team through this challenge. The
closeness that this couple gets to
nothing else could have brought them
there. I've had many many people tell me
that that when they look back afterwards
the child just now in the hall right
before we came in here someone gave me
regards of a young couple that just got
married and they a year ago and they're
living in in in Towns River and he gave
me regards to them and I said I so took
me a minute to his and this is one of
the boys that I dealt with probably 13
years ago that and he was like totally
he was on drugs he was in everything he
like all the real stuff And Msham was he
was one of my first few boys that I
worked with. I remember this and he got
married from regular and his father I
remember that time told me if you could
bring him to just be a men I don't need
to be a ye I don't need nothing just he
should be a normal person he shouldn't
have we're good and he's so settled and
also miracul
to to to N what was different the whole
now he's doing great it was mamishnissim
the parents had no way of seeing this
child and it was a very uh let's call it
aggressive type of nature like a
It was hard hard not to crack but just
so sometimes the parents look back and
they say wow had I known right imagine
Alon never comes to you and he says
don't worry this child is going to go
through a stage from now till 2 years PM
time is going to happen and it's going
to change are you still going to be so
worried you're going to be pain to see
them doing crazy choices but if you know
Hashem sends you that don't worry the
child is going to be worked out you're
going to be much calmer same thing
you're waiting for you're waiting for
children right someone would say I would
I would use that time to you know I
would I had a talking so he told me that
he was bringing stuff from England to
Israel back something and he was caught
and they they passed he went to jail for
18 months
and he was thinking regular was a cing
man at the time he says 18 months I
could finish took a longer the time he
came out. He went to the and he got
became a dy he figured out. So he used
he utilized this time
he turned it into a a a an experience
that he was able to for the rest of his
dying today. I know. So if you would
know if we would just know things,
right? We were just shown that that
flag, right? The the we're not but we
have to look around the world and we see
that eventually things always somehow
maybe it's not going to work out exactly
the way we want to. It's going to it's
not going to be everybody goes through
ages and stages
and there's no such thing as as saying
you know this guy there's um there was
one of my sheer once who I I I gave a
speech about uh late bloomers and
someone came and approached me later I
was talking about trees that certain
trees give out flowers later and you
have children he had a child that the
teacher said the the playground teacher
and this one and that and the therapist
said you got to send this child for
speech therapy the child is not talking
and the child turned 4 and a half and
just started talking like like a za
never stopped like suddenly something
still had to be developed in the child's
brain and everything was a late bloomer
some of our kids are mitzvah boys you
see them putting on a hat it's a date 13
years he mitzvah he become but the child
is still a child you see he's still a
10-year-old in his in his brain is
something wrong it's it's our perception
we decided that that schools have to go
according to age the the classes and
everything goes according to age maybe
it has to go according to stage
So a lot of people need to are in
different stages. You see 18year-old
boys and girls that are behaving like
13y olds and sometimes you see them it's
okay it's going to pass which you have
to of course try to keep them from from
doing like crazy things that are
detrimental for life that it's going to
be irreversible damage as much as we can
and of course whatever but we need to
know that it's a time it's it's a age
and it's a stage it's going to at the
end of the day. So if we could designate
a time and I could I think we'll finish
with this to that this particular time
let's say every Sunday at night you sit
down and you discuss with your spouse
how are we dealing with this child what
are we doing next what's our plan who we
speaking to what's the next thing and
the rest of the week try say oh it's not
Sunday night you do it three weeks in a
row you're going to see immediate
results you're going to start think
you're calmer the rest of the week you
know some people are afraid to let No,
because then it's something wrong with
me. Why am I not thinking about the
issue now? Probably something wrong with
me. I'm not I'm not doing right. I'm
cold blooded. What's going on with me?
Why? No, I'm a healthy person and I'm
putting away a time to deal with it. I
don't want to deal with this issue the
whole time. I think this is the greatest
gift you can give yourself on this issue
and many and many and many other issues.
Okay, shine. Good job.