My perspective on Jewish life, chinuch/parenting, psychology, social issues, health ...
Sep 30, 2013
The Seminary High
A woman whose daughter went to seminary in Israel for a year, said she wants her daughter to have six months back home before dating so she can see who she really is and not date from a "seminary high."
That got me thinking. Why does this mother think that the "real" person is the one who comes down from her inspiration? Maybe the inspired person is the real person? How are we defining real?
An analogy, you go to an event or shiur and are inspired by the speaker. Is that real or not? You know how when are you excited by what you heard, you want to tell people about it? Would it be a good idea to wait a week or a month before telling anyone so the inspiration will wear off and the real you will be back? I don't think so ...
But I do understand where that mother is coming from. It's one thing to sit in a classroom, having all expenses paid for, usually by one's parents, and being inspired to marry a ben Torah and enable him to learn for years to come. Actually being married and living that life is another thing. So the mother figures that six months down the road, reality will set in. If the girl still feels strongly about her religious undertakings and ambitions, she will say so and date accordingly (though even then, it's not like actually being married). But to date while on a high can be a dangerous proposition because you can end up married based on idealistic commitments that are not as desirable as time goes on.
R' Avigdor Miller z'l felt otherwise. He said a girl should go from graduation to the chuppa for precisely that reason. She is idealistic and should marry in that state and it will uplift her future life.
No comments:
Post a Comment