Friday, June 12, 2026

The Existential Shoulder Shrug: Why Modern Parenting Needs a Spiritual Revolution

Despite a decade of focus on "grit" and "positive psychology," we are facing an epidemic of unhappiness. Clinical statistics show that beyond the 25% of teens with major depression, another 40% struggle with intrusive anxiety and substance abuse.

In her book, The Spiritual Child, Columbia University psychologist Dr. Lisa Miller who is herself an observant Jew, identifies the culprit: an increasingly narcissistic culture that rewards achievement but ignores the soul. As Miller notes:

"We can see the crisis in the making when spiritual development is neglected or when a child’s individual spiritual curiosity and exploration is denied. In a culture where often enormous amounts of money, empty fame, and cynicism have become toxic dominant values, our children need us to support their quest for a spiritually grounded life."

The Science of the Sacred

For parents who find organized religion "squeamish," the science offers a bridge. Dr. Miller’s research, spanning over 20 years, suggests that spirituality—defined as an innate sense of connection to a larger, sacred world—is the single most powerful predictor of health.

The data is staggering:

Depression: A shared spiritual outlook between parent and child can reduce the risk of depression by 80%.

Risk-Taking: Spiritually connected teens are 40% less likely to use drugs and 80% less likely to engage in dangerous sex.

Neurobiology: fMRI research shows that a transcendent relationship actually deactivates the brain’s "craving mechanism." As Miller writes, it reduces "the draw of all objects of insatiable desire."

In the landscape of human development, Miller is unequivocal:

"In the entire realm of human experience, there is no single factor that will protect your adolescent like a personal sense of spirituality."

Becoming a "Spiritual Ambassador"

You don’t need to be a believer to be a "Spiritual Ambassador." You just need to stop quashing your child's natural curiosity with cynicism. Spirituality is hard-wired—studies on twins show that 30% of our capacity for transcendence is inherited. The "oh wow" feeling you get at dusk on a beach? That is a spiritual heritage you can pass on.

Children are naturally spiritual. A child gazing at an anthill is practicing mindfulness. A child weeping for a homeless person is practicing mercy. When parents acknowledge these moments as "sacred," they build a "sturdy self" rather than a "brittle" one.

As Miller advises:

"Even when you’re away at school we stay connected heart to heart—that’s forever!"

This language might make a secular parent’s teeth edge, but the protective power is undeniable.

The Prophet in the Bedroom

The transition to adolescence is often where the spiritual life is most tested. The typical "teenage rage" is often a search for truth and a rejection of hypocrisy. Miller suggests a radical shift in how we view our rebellious teens:

"The rage of teenagers is like the rage of the prophets. They insist on having their own visions of the world... Shushing a teen is like silencing a mystic. Stay with her. Her perceptions are real."

A spiritual life isn’t about having all the answers; it’s about the courage to ask the "why" questions. It’s about teaching a child that they are more than their last success or failure.

The Fulfillment Goal

Parents who push for the "right" school or the "perfect" resume are missing the biological bottom line: spirituality is more essential to success than the ability to perform. Spiritual children grow into adults who regard human relationships as sacred and see misfortunes as opportunities.

As the philosopher Viktor Frankl once observed:

"Being human always points, and is directed, to something or someone other than oneself... The more one forgets himself—by giving himself to a cause to serve or another person to love—the more human he is."

By moving past our own agnosticism and embracing our "inner earnestness," we give our children the one tool that actually works. We move them from a life of mere "grit" to a life of true fulfillment. And that, more than any soccer trophy or SAT score, is something worth pushing for.

The Achievement Trap: Why Nurturing the Spiritual Self is the Antidote to Teen Unhappiness

Despite more than a decade of focus on "positive psychology" and the "science of happiness," we are witnessing an unprecedented epidemic of unhappiness among children and adolescents. The statistics are sobering: beyond the 20% to 25% of teenagers diagnosed with major clinical depression, another 40% struggle with intrusive levels of depressive symptoms, anxiety, and substance abuse.

Surprisingly, this crisis is most acute among children of middle-class and affluent families—those who seemingly "have it all." These children show significantly higher rates of anti-social tendencies and emotional distress than their less privileged peers.

The question we must ask is: Why has the mass happiness initiative failed our children?

The Rise of the "Performance Self"

Our increasingly narcissistic culture—one that constantly rewards achievement on the playing field, the stage, or the classroom—has created what I call the "Performance Self." This is a child who believes their intrinsic worth is founded entirely on ability and accomplishment.

Perfectionism is not the same thing as striving to be your best. Perfectionism is the belief that if we live perfect, look perfect, and act perfect, we can minimize or avoid the pain of blame, judgment, and shame.

We want our children to have the "grit" to persist, but when grit is untethered from a deeper sense of meaning, it becomes a cage. These children come to believe they are only as good as their last success, leading to a profound sense of worthlessness in the face of even moderate failure. When love feels conditional on performance, the soul suffers.

The Antidote: The Spiritual Self

New research from Columbia University, recently published in the Journal of Religion and Health, suggests a powerful antidote. It found that happiness and the character traits of grit and persistence go hand-in-hand with a deeper inner asset: spirituality. In this study, spirituality is defined as a deep connection to the sacred and a sense of belonging to a larger, purposeful universe.

Spirituality is an innate faculty. We are born with a natural capacity for transcendence, for a sense of connection to G-d.

More than 20 years of research on adolescence and depression shows that prioritizing performance over the inner life stunts a child’s most powerful protection against suffering: the Spiritual Self.

What the Science Tells Us

We are now at a point of scientific certainty: spirituality is a fundamental source of health and thriving. Our research demonstrates several key findings:

Developmental Foundation: Spirituality plays a vital role in social, emotional, and cognitive growth. Children with a strong spiritual core exhibit higher grades, greater optimism, and more authentic persistence.

A Protective Shield: Teenagers with a strong sense of spirituality are 80% less likely to engage in dangerous or unprotected sex and 40% less likely to struggle with substance abuse.

Neurological Impact: A direct personal relationship with the transcendent (nature, a higher power, or a universal presence) correlates with physical wellness and recovery from disease. In fact, brain scans show that spiritual awareness produces neural patterns similar to those seen in clinical recovery through medication.

As Albert Einstein famously said:

"The most important motion we can ever make is to decide whether the universe is a friendly place."

Fostering the Inner Life

Spirituality is an innate capacity—much like the ability to learn a language—but it must be nurtured. If left dormant, it withers. Parents can foster this growth through simple but intentional steps:

Encourage Transcendence: Introduce practices like meditation, prayer, or long, silent walks in nature.

Model Values: Demonstrate empathy, altruism, and optimism. Show them that "being good" matters more than "looking good."

Embrace the "Why": Parents must not turn away from the difficult questions children ask. When a child asks about God, death, or morality, they are reaching for their spiritual self. These conversations are the bedrock of resilience.

Beyond the Win

In contrast to the fragile "Performance Self," the Spiritual Self is sturdy. It is happy to win but does not depend on the win to feel worthy of life. In a culture of relentless competition, parents must actively work to protect their children’s inner lives.

Viktor Frankl, psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor, once wrote:

"Success, like happiness, cannot be pursued; it must ensue... as the unintended side-effect of one's personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself."

Parents who aggressively push for the "right" school or the "perfect" job should consider the science: spirituality is more essential to thriving than the ability to perform. A spiritual child possesses an inner worth that is "sacred"—much bigger than the day’s win or defeat. When these children eventually reach their goals, they don't just find success; they find fulfillment.

That is something truly worth pushing for.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Ad By The Yetzer

One of the frum news sites advertised "don't miss one second of war news". 

That was written by the Yezter Hara.

You should ABSOLUTELY miss most seconds of most news stories. 

We were put in this world to serve Hashem - not to be news junkies. 

Knowing in general what is going on in Eretz Yisrael is very important but one can consume that information in seconds and one need not be immersed in it. 

The rest of the time we can do what really matters - learn, daven, do chesed and all the other mitzvos and making the world a better place. 

Modern Orthodox Educational Challenges

The contemporary Modern Orthodox high school boy navigates an unprecedented cognitive landscape, one characterized by a profound tension between traditional aspirations and digital-age realities. Today’s student is not merely 'distracted'; he is immersed in a 24-hour ecosystem of algorithmic entertainment—TikTok, Netflix, and AI—that competes directly  [and almost always wins] with the deep, linear focus required for Talmudic study. When you overlay this digital saturation with the intense pressures of a high-level secular curriculum, the physiological demands and excitement of competitive sports, and the complex social dynamics of adolescence [including girls....], the proliferation of ADD and ADHD etc. etc. the expectation of producing a Talmid Chochom becomes statistically improbable.

Historically, even without the invasive reach of the smartphone, the dual-curriculum model struggled to produce mastery and boys came to Israel for the year woefully ignorant. Today, we are facing a structural crisis. We are hoping that teenagers achieve spiritual excellence while their attention is being systematically harvested by the most sophisticated stimuli in human history. If parents and educators do not radically reassess their pedagogical priorities, the gap between communal ideals and educational output will become an unbridgeable chasm.

A.C.I. 

Seudas Preidah For The Rav Of Breuer's - HaRav And Rebbetzin Mantel

 

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The Most Effective Way of Avoiding Disputes

The Torah portion of Parshas Korach serves as the definitive archetype of machlokes—interpersonal discord—a phenomenon that is unfortunately far from esoteric. For anyone who navigates the complexities of social, professional, or familial life, the dynamics of conflict are acutely relevant. The narrative provides a masterclass in what modern psychology describes as emotional regulation and strategic non-engagement.

The following two insights explore the profound psychological utility of silence and withdrawal in the face of vitriol.

1. The Strategy of Radical Non-Reactivity

The text records that when Moses was confronted by the inflammatory rhetoric of Dathan and Abiram, “he fell on his face” (Numbers 16:4). The Talmud (Sanhedrin 110a) notes that Moses, a seasoned leader forged in the crucible of Egyptian bondage and decades of desert communal management, was not easily shaken. What, then, prompted such a visceral reaction?

The Sages explain that he was being subjected to character assassination of the most egregious kind: he was accused of private impropriety with married women. In the parlance of modern psychology, this was a systematic attempt at gaslighting and social subversion. Given Moses’s integrity, an indignant, high-decibel defense would have been entirely justified. He had the "right" to be right.

Instead, Moses’s ultimate response was a strategic withdrawal: he moved his tent outside the camp. He chose silence over symmetry.

In the literature of Stoicism, Marcus Aurelius famously wrote, "The best revenge is to be unlike him who performed the injury." By refusing to descend into the arena of mud-slinging, Moses preserved his psychological sovereignty. Psychology identifies this as breaking the "conflict cycle." When we respond to an insult with a counter-insult, we validate the aggressor’s framework. By "falling on his face" and subsequently withdrawing, Moses signaled that the accusation was so detached from reality that it did not even merit the dignity of a rebuttal.

A contemporary application of this is found in the "Five-Year Rule" of professional ethics. A successful congregational Rabbi once shared his personal protocol: when faced with inflammatory disrespect, he remains silent. He understands the Affective Forecasting of the human ego—that while the impulse to retaliate is strong in the moment, the long-term "moral high ground" yields far greater psychological dividends. Years later, those who were once aggressors often return in a state of contrition, their own guilt having done the work that a thousand arguments could not achieve.

2. The Paradox of Success: Losing to Win

The narrative of Rav Yosef Shlomo Kahaneman, the Ponevezher Rav, introduces a concept that mirrors what self-help pioneer Dale Carnegie often suggested: The only way to get the best of an argument is to avoid it.

The Chofetz Chaim famously blessed Rav Kahaneman with success in all ventures—save for one. He told him he would "lose" every dispute he entered. This was not a curse, but a profound psychological safeguard. It suggests that the Opportunity Cost of winning an argument is often too high. To "win" a machlokes requires an investment of emotional labor, time, and mental real estate that could otherwise be spent on one’s primary mission (the "gold" of the Rav’s life’s work).

Rav Kahaneman tells the story that once when he went to London, a member of the community started yelling at him and hurling accusations at him. The London Rabbinate was appalled at what happened and they wanted to put the person in Cherem [excommunication]. The Ponevezher Rav told the Rabbis that he has a tradition from the Chofetz Chaim which precluded that option. The Chofetz Chaim gave Rav Kahaneman a blessing that he would be successful in all his endeavors except one: He will never be successful in any machlokes he takes part in! “Everything you touch will be gold. You will be tremendously successful. But you will lose badly every dispute in which you take part.”

He urged the Rabbinate to take no action against the person who insulted him. This attitude takes a tremendous amount of self-discipline.

In Game Theory, this is akin to recognizing a "negative-sum game"—a contest where even the winner ends up worse off than when they started. By refusing to allow the London Rabbinate to excommunicate his detractors, the Ponevezher Rav practiced Ego-Transcendence. He understood that his legacy was tied to his productivity, not his pride.

3. The Architecture of Silence: The "Two to Tango" Principle

Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach offered a nuanced linguistic analysis of Psalms 38:14: “And I am like a deaf person, I do not hear; and like a mute person who will not open his mouth.” He noted a curious grammatical shift: the first half of the verse is in the first person ("I do not hear"), while the second half describes the result in the third person ("He—the opponent—will not open his mouth").

This represents a fundamental law of Social Psychology: Mirroring. Human beings are neurologically wired to mirror the emotional state of those they interact with. If one party remains "deaf" to an insult—refusing to provide the "dopamine hit" of a reaction—the aggressor eventually loses their momentum.

As the adage goes, "It takes two to tango." Conflict requires a feedback loop; it is a fire that requires the oxygen of a response. By assuming the posture of the "deaf and mute," we effectively starve the conflict of its fuel.

Conclusion

The wisdom of Parshas Korach, viewed through a psychological lens, teaches us that self-regulation is the ultimate power move. Whether it is Moses withdrawing his tent, the Rabbi’s quiet endurance, or the Ponevezher Rav’s refusal to "win," the lesson is identical: your peace of mind is too valuable to be auctioned off to the highest bidder in a trivial dispute. In the economy of the soul, silence is often the most sophisticated currency we possess.

The Wisdom Of Ohn Ben Peles' Wife

The Talmudic narrative of Ohn ben Peles, a figure initially prominent in Korach’s ill-fated mutiny against Moses, offers a profound psychological treatise on the nature of human conflict and the mechanics of rationalization. Though enumerated among the rebellion’s architects, Ohn conspicuously vanishes from the biblical record before the catastrophe strikes. The Gemara (Sanhedrin 109b) attributes this preservation to the astute psychological intervention of his wife.

The Strategy of Radical Realism

When Ohn’s wife observed her husband’s descent into the insurrection, she did not engage him in a theological debate or a legalistic polemic. Instead, she utilized what modern psychology calls "Cognitive Reframing." She challenged his perceived "utility" in the hierarchy of the rebellion, asking him a searingly pragmatic question: What is your personal "ROI" (Return on Investment)?

She argued that whether Moses remained the leader or Korach ascended to the throne, Ohn’s social standing would remain static. He was destined to be a perpetual subordinate—a "commoner" regardless of which "King" held the scepter. In the parlance of self-help literature, she forced him to confront his "ego-traps." He was risking his life for a cause that offered him no "secondary gain." Ohn admitted his error but felt trapped by "sunk cost fallacy" and the social pressure of his peer group. He had already committed; the rebellion was a moving train he felt he could not jump from.

To save him, she employed a brilliant maneuver in social psychology. Knowing the "performative piety" of Korach’s followers, she drugged her husband into a deep sleep and sat at the entrance of the tent with her hair uncovered. She understood the rebels’ cognitive dissonance: while they were comfortable with the moral transgression of rebellion, they were rigid about external, ritualistic modesty. Her "immodest" appearance served as a psychological barrier, causing the "pious" agitators to retreat in discomfort.

The Anatomy of Rationalization

The central philosophical question raised by the Ba’alei Mussar (Ethicists) is this: Korach had built a compelling, albeit deceptive, narrative of victimhood. He accused Moses of nepotism, elite capture, and even cited a heart-wrenching (though fabricated) story of a widow driven to death by the burden of priestly tithes.

If Ohn ben Peles had been radicalized by these high-minded concerns for social justice, how could a simple argument about "personal status" sway him? Why didn't he respond, "Even if I gain nothing, we must stop this tyrant who oppresses widows!"?

The psychological answer is both cynical and liberating: The "Issues" are rarely the issue. In psychology, this is known as "Motivated Reasoning." When people engage in Machlokes (divisive conflict), the laundry list of grievances—the "It’s not fair!" and "It’s not right!"—is often a facade. These are intellectual justifications constructed to mask deeper, more visceral drives: the hunger for Kavod (honor), the thirst for power, or the alleviation of a bruised ego.

The "Fake News" of the Ego

As the Gemara notes, the story of the widow and the oppressive tithes was a complete fabrication—an early historical example of "Performative Outrage" or "Fake News." There was no agriculture in the desert; there were no tithes of grain or wool. Yet, the rebels "believed" it because it served their emotional objective.

In the field of Conflict Resolution, it is understood that ninety percent of disputes are driven by personality clashes and the "Urge to Win." We see this reflected in the book The Righteous Mind, which posits that "the emotional dog wags the rational tail." Our moral arguments are often just post-hoc justifications for our tribal instincts and ego-attachments.

The Wisdom of Discernment

The "Wisdom of Women" (Mishlei 14:1) attributed to Ohn’s wife lay in her ability to cut through the "Intellectual Noise." She bypassed the polemics regarding tzitzis and mezuzah—which were merely academic smokescreens—and spoke directly to the core of the matter: Kavod.

By revealing that there was no "ego-supply" to be found in the rebellion, the entire house of cards collapsed. Once the prospect of personal gain was removed, the "noble cause" lost its luster.

This narrative serves as a timeless reminder from the self-help world: Whenever we find ourselves embroiled in a "crusade" or a heated dispute, we must ask ourselves the "Wife of Ohn" question: Is this truly about the principles I am espousing, or is my ego simply looking for a victory? To save one’s "house" requires the wisdom to distinguish between a genuine pursuit of truth and a sophisticated masquerade of the self.