Monthly Archives: July 2024

Excited to be planning an intimate wedding

Years ago, my husband and I talked about how we would like to handle wedding planning. Our ideal was to set aside an amount of money for each child’s wedding, and then let each couple determine how they wanted to spend it. If they wanted to spent it all on a one night event, that was fine. If they wanted to make a smaller or simpler event, they could keep the difference between what they spent on the wedding and what was remaining.

That was our ideal but we never had the opportunity to make that offer until now.

When you’re making a bar mitzva, you can do what you want because it’s only your family you have to consider. When you’re making a wedding, you need to take into account the preferences of another family.

Before each engagement, we meet with the parents of the other side and agree as to what our financial contribution will be for the wedding: what will be the overall budget and how will the expenses we distributed. We did that this time as well, and our baseline number was based on the sums we spent on our last two weddings.

However, the morning after the engagement, I was thinking that this would be the time when something smaller would be a better fit for the couple as well as both families. She is from England so neither she nor her family have a huge social circle that expects to attend.

Living in a small community in the north, we also don’t have a large number of people who will be attending.

The standard wedding halls have a minimum of 300 people for the meal, and 300 for the dessert buffet. We just don’t have a need for those numbers at all.

My husband called me from work the morning after the l’chaim and told me he had been thinking that this wedding could be smaller than our usual weddings, and reminded me of what we had said our ideal was: to give the couple the money to spend as they wished. It happens so often that we both think of the same idea at the same time without discussing it with one another, but he was still surprised when I told him I had been thinking exactly the same thing!

So what are we planning for this wedding?

Three years ago the son before this one got married on a Friday and it was a very good experience for us all for a number of reasons. When my daughter got married a year and a half later in the heart of the winter, a Friday wedding wasn’t an option since Shabbos begins so early. My son who is now engaged remembered how positive an experience it was, and talked to his fiance about it, who agreed to have a Friday wedding.

Next is the wedding venue. While the scale of the wedding will be adjusted (we’re thinking we’ll have about 100 guests for the meal), our new couple isn’t looking to do something radically different to save every possible penny, like having a potluck in someone’s basement. They want a beautiful hall with a nice catered meal. But once you aren’t having a very large crowd, there are many smaller halls that become an option.

Since smaller halls don’t have room for people to be seated at tables for the meal and to simultaneously have a large area available for dancing, we’ll be changing the standard wedding schedule. First will be the chupa, then the entire meal will be served, and then dancing will take place at the end. The tables will be cleared away at the end of the meal to make room for dancing, and dessert tables will be assembled around the perimeter of the hall.

After we made this arrangement, we realized that this set up will also cut the cost of the band, since their charge is based on the number of hours they need to be there. Usually the band arrives for the chupa and stays throughout the night until the final dance; this is around five or six hours. Since my son asked two or three of his younger brothers to sing at his chupa, and someone else will arrange for recorded background dinner music to be played for the meal on the speakers the musicians will set up in advance, we only need a live band for the dancing at the end.

We haven’t yet contacted a photographer but the photographer at our last Friday wedding gave us a discounted price because it was on Friday. Friday isn’t prime time for weddings so it’s likely there will be other costs that will be less than if the wedding was held in the evening.

The hall is located in the neighborhood where the new couple will be living, the same one where his yeshiva is located. This is incredibly convenient for his friends. This makes it possible for as many of the students who want to attend to come for the chupa, leave for the meal (other than his close friends), and return for dancing.

When I told a friend our plans, she said that when her daughter got married during covid, they were only allowed to have fifty guests total. She shared that it was the nicest and most meaningful of all of their weddings, and she wishes that all of her weddings could be like that. Every single person who was there was someone they were close to and felt emotionally invested in adding to the joyous atmosphere at the wedding. She also enjoyed being able to connect with all of her guests in a way that she couldn’t at a huge wedding with hundreds of guests.

I’ve heard a number of people say they regret that when the covid restrictions lifted, weddings went back to the same way they had been before. The smaller weddings were a beautiful blip on the social scene but seen as a choice people were forced to make legally and didn’t endure as a socially normative option when people had their choice of venues afterwards.

It will take some time to get an idea of what all the final costs will be, but I anticipate the savings will be substantial. I love that the couple will have a beautiful wedding surrounded by all of the people who care about them most, and at the same time have the benefit of the money saved to create some financial margin as they start their lives together.

Avivah

Why did hardly anyone in real life wish me mazel tov?

Friendship is something I’ve been thinking a lot about in the last week since my son got engaged.

The engagement was announced first thing in the morning on our community email list. One neighbor came over to say mazel tov. One person called.

And that was it. There was a huge, empty silence at the time we would have loved to have felt surrounded by the shared happiness of friends. It felt like people didn’t care.

I have good relationships with all of the women in our small community, and wondered why almost no one felt it was significant enough to pick up a phone, send an email, or even text a quick, “Mazel tov!”? Is twenty seconds too much time to spend on someone else?

All of these people probably had a thought of ‘how nice’ when they heard about the engagement. But it didn’t translate into any kind of action. I’m not going to analyze what has changed in the communication styles of people in the world at large though I think that’s the biggest factor.

I spoke to someone else who has been in the community much longer than I have and commented that something has changed in the years since I moved here, and this experience of mine reflected that. We seem to feel less connected to one another than we used to be. She agreed.

It’s not just my community that’s changed. There’s been a worldwide shift in how people communicate and people are becoming more comfortable interacting with a screen rather than real-life people. Though my community is much lighter on the tech than most, nonetheless we’ve been affected by the overall trends.

If you don’t like what you see in the society around you, you can feel like a victim, and be hurt or angry or insulted. Of you can recognize that if you want to see something different in the world around you, it begins with the person you see in the mirror.

I looked inwardly and asked myself, do I make that effort that I wished people would have made for me?

The answer was quick in coming – in a lot of ways I do, but when it comes to calling to verbally convey congratulations, that’s far from my strong suit. Making phone calls is a very weak point of mine and something I procrastinate a lot about. I’ve become less communally engaged than I was in the past, and can justify that in a number of ways, including saying how busy I am, and that the amount of people I have in my family to interact with takes all of my time and energy.

I could say that, and it’s true, but it’s not the complete truth. Everyone makes time for what’s important to him, and for various reasons I’ve put community effort on a back burner.

That same day my son’s engagement was posted, I learned that the son of someone I casually know had gotten engaged. She’s not in my community or someone that I’m particularly close with, but I know her enough that my call would be appreciated.

It took me three days but I picked up the thousand pound phone to make what ended up being an eight minute phone call, and made someone else feel seen and that their celebration was being shared. When I saw a sibling of the engaged man pulling out of the parking space, I jumped out of my car to stop her and congratulate her in person. Both of them were surprised and appreciative.

I also asked myself, what would make me feel connected to the people I know care about me, the friends I have many years of history with? I sat down over two nights and wrote personal emails to good friends in different parts of the world, sharing our good news. In the past I’ve sent out a standard email announcement to lots of people at once, which isn’t the same as an individualized message.

I don’t speak often to friends overseas – quite rarely, actually. It’s my phone issue again; add in the time difference and the busyness of everyone’s life, and easily a year or two goes by without speaking. In response to my email, two friends asked to schedule a time to talk in the next few days, which we did.

I have deep concern about how people are becoming increasingly isolated from one another, but just because it’s happening in society at large doesn’t mean I need to mindlessly participate. And I certainly don’t have to take it personally. I can look for ways to increase my own sense of social well-being and interconnectedness, and that’s what I’m going to continue to do.

Avivah




When it’s so easy – a kiss from Heaven

At the beginning of June I received a call from one of my married daughters.

She had been approached by a neighbor who wanted to know if our twenty one year old son was dating yet. I answered no, he’s not. It was almost his birthday but our sons wait until 22 before going out.

She commented that several people over the course of the last year have made the same suggestion to the neighbor, who is the aunt of the young woman suggested, as well as to my daughter. When my daughter was approached about it a few months ago she told them he wasn’t starting but at this point called since she wasn’t sure of his timeframe.

For me, hearing that a few people thought of the same idea is interesting but not enough to change my time line. When my last son was dating, eleven different people made the same suggestion of a young lady, people who knew him and her well. It seemed so perfect on paper that it seemed everyone was sure it was going to work out.

They went out once and my son came back and told me she’s definitely not a match for him.

So with this current suggestion, I was kind of like, that’s nice but he’s not dating now.

Then my daughter added, “I also know her pretty well and I think it’s a really good idea.”

As soon as she said those words, it became something for me to consider seriously. My daughter not only obviously knows our family and her brother well, but is an excellent judge of character and has a lot of insight. I asked her for more information, and she gave me a very good picture of who the young woman is.

I told her I needed to rethink my position on delaying him starting to date and would get back to her. I thought about why I was hesitant for him to begin dating and realized it had nothing to do with his emotional readiness, but with my desire to delay having to deal with the technicalities of the dating process.

I recognized that there was no reason for me to hold him back when someone who sounded perfect for him was being suggested. After getting clarity on some things we wanted to know, a date was set up.

From the start felt comfortable and relaxed with each other. I know he has the ability to synthesize a lot of details quickly and accurately, and shouldn’t have been surprised when after the second date, he told me he was confident she was right for him.

When he came home from the fourth date, he told me he was ready to propose whenever she would be ready. Early into the fifth date the topic of engagement came up and it was clear they were on the same page. He called to ask when I would be able to meet her, so my husband and I drove in the next night to meet her; that was Monday. Two and a half weeks after their first date they got engaged; last night shortly after he proposed we celebrated the l’chaim in Jerusalem with family and close friends. The official engagement party will be next week.

We’ve never had a child find his soulmate as quickly and easily as this. It’s an amazing kindness from Heaven.

——————–

This will be my sixth child in seven years to get married. They were born within nine years of one another but somehow it still feels astonishing that they’re all getting married in what is relatively a short time.

When I was a teenager and heard of people getting engaged after going out for two or three weeks, I couldn’t imagine how that was a good thing. They hardly know each other, for goodness sakes!

Yet, the charedi shidduch system is one that works very, very well. There are divorces in our world, we have unhappy marriages just like every society – but there is a strong positive value on marriage and on family; we believe a soul is incomplete until he is reunited with his other half. And the very positive results in our society reflect those values.

I deeply appreciate the shidduch system and the wisdom that is behind it. Young men and women go out with one another after a lot of thought beforehand – by people who know them well who want to see them happy – regarding compatibility in terms of personality, life direction and outlook and families. This narrows their dating to people who have a good chance of being a good fit for them.

I look at all of our married children and their spouses, I look at all of their parents, and I marvel…how did Hashem send so many wonderful people to our family? While I’ve heard many stories of the sets of parents of the couple having a lot of intense conflict, we’ve never experienced that while planning any weddings. Obviously there will be differences in expectations that need to be ironed out, but we’ve been very blessed with very, very good people who have been reasonable and accommodating, and now another great family is joining the mix.

Hashem is always taking care of each of us, but there are times the extra kindness inherent in a situation that feels like a kiss from Heaven, and this engagement is one of those times.

Avivah

Ds is turning 12 – thoughts and reflections on raising a child with Down syndrome

Today is our son’s twelfth birthday – I remember so clearly when he was born and shared with you here all about our surprise diagnosis of Trisomy 21 a short time after his birth.

There was a lot I didn’t know and a lot to learn about, but my biggest concern was what kind of life he would have. What opportunities would there be, would people be kind to him?

Last week we celebrated a milestone – after seven months of learning with his fifteen year old brother, ds12 completed his first tractate of Mishnayos. They stayed with it regularly for all of that time, despite having very different schedules, finding time to learn together and finally, they celebrated the culmination last week.

One of my married daughters was here with her family for that Shabbos and commented how emotional it was. It was a big deal. While this is a normative learning experience for a boy this age, most people would assume it to be out of reach for a child with Trisomy 21. He did this because he wanted to, not because we suggested it or pushed him to do it. And he did it well.

I don’t want to sugar coat or gloss over the challenges of raising a child with a disability. There have been times that have been frustrating. Very frustrating. There have been issues that went on so long despite my input and support that I sometimes felt close to despairing that we would ever resolve them. But even those tough issues have improved with time and are no longer the source of angst that they once were.

Sometimes I got lost in the close-up view of the difficulties and lost sight of how amazing he is, focusing on what needed to be improved instead of looking at all that was already so, so good.

But in the last couple of weeks I’ve stepped back to look at ‘the forest’ and am incredibly grateful for what I see. I see a child with a lot of self-confidence, who knows how to ask for what he wants and doesn’t give up. He is smart and capable, he loves people and people enjoy him. He’s kind, helpful, responsible and independent.

——————-

I went to a bris recently with the younger four kids and ds greeted the father of the baby at the entrance to the hall with a hug and congratulatory wishes.

We went inside and he sat at a table with men he knew, and he grasped their hands in a high five cross grip. Then he went to the rabbi of the community and respectfully shook his hand and greeted him appropriately.

My husband wasn’t there so he was on the men’s side by himself. Though most boys his age eventually got bored and played with the elevator and were running around, he stayed seated for the next two hours, joining in appropriately at each stage. (The hard part was when it was time to leave and he just didn’t want to go.)

I watched all of this and wondered, how does he know how to act differently and so appropriately with all of these people despite them all being in the same setting, without any guidance from me?

———————–

I attended his end of the year party a few days ago, and had mixed feelings while watching his class and the class above his perform with drums and songs. He’s in a special ed school, and while I watched, I kept asking myself what he was doing there. Yes, he has Down syndrome and yes, he benefits from extra mediation – but externally he seems to be more capable than the other children I saw. I’m searching for a better word than ‘capable’ and I’m uncomfortable making this statement at all because I have no desire to imply in any way a negative judgment of others.

There was a special breakfast for the mothers after the performance, and I listened to the conversation without participating. I drove a couple of the mothers home and we talked about an issue that came up in the group discussion, and I saw clearly that I think very differently than the other mothers. I don’t expect the school to raise my child; they are my partners and I’m appreciative of all that they do, but I see it as my responsibility to equip him for life. Not the school. This wasn’t their view.

Years ago a much more experienced mother of a child with Trisomy 21 told me that I think differently than most of the other mothers she met, and I didn’t understand what she was saying. She told me the way I take responsibility isn’t typical, and I finally understand her point now.

I’ve been thinking a lot about what academic framework would best serve him going forward. We’ve had a very difficult year because of difficulties ds has experienced on the school van – being hit, kicked and made fun of. When he reacted, I was told he was violent and not welcome on the van. The kids who instigated waited until the aide’s back was turned to say and do what they did, and it took four months until I finally learned what was happening from another mother whose child told her. It’s been a really rough year, and he’s spent a third of the year at home with me.

I’m very clear that there’s not going to be another year like this. I’ve already spoken to the person at the municipality who makes transportation arrangements and put in my strong request for appropriate accommodations for next year. (When I spoke to them at the beginning of the school year, they said they weren’t yet completely set up; when I spoke to them during the year, it was too late, and when I continued speaking to them, they said that ds is the problem and no changes would make a difference.) If they don’t provide appropriate accommodations, I’ll keep him home.

Ds enjoys school, he enjoys his friends – but it’s my input that is moving him forward.

I’ve thought seriously about homeschooling him next year but as someone who thrives on being with people, I’m hesitant because I can’t yet picture how we would fill that social gap.

The principal of the local yeshiva ketana that my teens are at has spoken to my husband and told him they’d like ds12 to join the yeshiva when he’s old enough – that would be in another year or two. (He knows ds because he’s sometimes come to learn with an older brother when it’s between the official learning sessions.) I’m very interested in doing that; perhaps he’ll continue in the mornings at the school he’s at and attend the yeshiva in the afternoons, or perhaps we’ll take him out of the school he’s in completely. We have time to figure that out.

Right now ds is beginning to learn to read his parsha (Torah portion to be read out loud for the congregation) for his bar mitzva; again, this is his initiative and something he wants to do. There’s no question I could do much more with him if he were home than if he continues at school – when he comes home it’s already 2 pm, and by the time he finishes eating lunch it’s time for me to pick up the other kids from kindergarten. So we don’t have quiet time together during the school year and I can’t focus on doing some of the things I’d love to do with him that would make a big difference for him.

So what does raising a child with Down syndrome look like twelve years down the road? We’ve passed the years when everyone looks at a small child and sees only cuteness. I worried when he was young that maybe we were living the best years of his life then and maybe it was only going to go downhill from there.

But now I don’t feel that at all. I see more and more maturity in him as he grows up, and have let go of most of those worries that I had in the earlier years. Now deep in myself I really believe he’s going to do great in life, he’s going to make friends and do things that are meaningful for him. I can’t guess what that will look like – we do talk a lot about when he gets married what will happen and I expect marriage to be part of his future – but I think it’s going to be really good.

So though I’ve had a year of challenge and I still have wishfulness about things I’d like to do and am not doing, at this stage raising a child with Trisomy 21 feels like hope and optimism, of relaxing and trusting the process as he continues on his path of developing into an incredible human.

Avivah