Sunday, April 28, 2013

Fine Crystal (a 2 minute shiur by Rabbi Lazer Brody)

click the link to hear the 2 minute shiur

A MARRIAGE, JUST LIKE FINE CRYSTAL, IS BUILT SLOWLY WITH LOTS OF EFFORT, BUT IT CAN BE SHATTERED INTO SMITHEREENS WITH ONE CARELESS WORD. IF YOU'RE MARRIED, THIS 2-MINUTE CLIP MIGHT BE THE MOST IMPORTANT THING YOU'LL EVER SEE; DO YOUR FRIENDS A FAVOR AND EMAIL THEM THE LINK SO THEY CAN SEE IT TOO:



Fine Crystal

The Intimate Road (about mikvah) (Rebbetzin Feige Twerski)


The Intimate Road

The Intimate Road

Mikvah helps to transform the act of intimacy into an act of holiness and the highest expression of husband and wife.

by 
The Western world has considerable difficulty with the concept of sexual intimacy. One indication is the culture's obsession with the subject. On highway billboards, in magazine ads, in best selling novels, in almost every form of cultural expression from high art to low language, sexual innuendoes dominate the landscape.
It often reminds me of that incisive quip made by Hamlet's mother Gertrude: "The lady doth protest too much, methinks." Rather than showing a free-and-easy approach to our physical relationships, this need to constantly mention the topic betrays a distinct discomfort with it.
Ironically, though the Western world has worked determinedly in the past century to free itself from every religiously imposed moral and sexual restraint, it's been left with a souvenir that sexuality is somehow dirty.
Judaism stands utterly opposed to this outlook.
In Jewish thought, physical intimacy contains within it the highest potential for spirituality. It is one of the greatest means a married couple is given to express holiness.
Like any other means, however, its use depends completely on the expression given to it by the individuals involved. The sexual union is like a canvas in the control of the artists -- husband and wife -- and the spiritual message they produce can be meaningless, or it can be a masterpiece.
Classical Jewish sources describe sexuality as a mighty river. If harnessed, it can bring irrigation and magnificent energy to countless communities. If unharnessed and out of control, it brings floods and destruction.
At its highest use -- in a Jewish marriage lived according to Jewish law -- the sexual union brings holiness into the world, as it bonds husband and wife together, spiritually, physically and emotionally.
Closeness between a husband and wife is not just a nice thing, but rather, it is the re-creation on a physical plane of a deeper spiritual reality. According to Jewish thought, a husband and wife were originally one soul before birth, split into two halves when the younger of the two was conceived. When they reunite in marriage, their bond is unique because it represents the recreation of a single entity, of one soul.
In describing marriage, the Torah writes:
Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother and cleave unto his wife, and they shall become one flesh. (Genesis 2:24)
Yet this "oneness" that is the central goal of a Jewish marriage is not easy to achieve. By marriage age, these two half souls belong to two quite distinct individuals, who grew up with separate histories, separate experiences, separate likes and dislikes. Fortunately, marriage itself provides abundant tools to overcome these superimposed differences and establish on the physical plane the same oneness that exists on the spiritual plane.
Perhaps the most powerful of the tools that foster oneness in marriage is sexual intimacy. All the wonderful feelings a couple has in a relationship culminate in the physical intimacy between husband and wife.
If God gave intimacy this extraordinary power, it makes sense that God would give us guidelines -- a medium -- to use it to its maximum potential. Indeed, that's the case. We call this medium: Mikvah.
Mikvah -- and the accompanying discipline called "family Purity" associated with it -- were once as well known and as universally practiced in Jewish homes as lighting candles for the Sabbath. No Jewish family would dream of living without them.
Today, not only has this institution been completely forgotten by the vast majority of Jewish families, but marriage itself has lost much of its status.
In former times, however, values were different. Marriages were stronger; Jewish marriages, indeed, were the envy of the world. In those times, Jewish families not only knew about mikvah and family purity, they risked their lives to be able to practice them.
mikvah is a spiritual tool; it has no association with hygiene.
Mikvah means collection. In physical terms, it refers to a pool that is used to collect "natural" water, untouched by human hands such as rainwater, or water from rivers and underground springs.
Culturally, a mikvah is of such significance that the rabbis of Talmud ruled that if a community has neither a mikvah nor a synagogue, building a mikvah takes priority over erecting a synagogue.
Practically, a mikvah is used by both Jewish men and women who immerse in it before certain holy acts. Though it looks like a bath, it's not: When Jewish law mandates the use of a mikvah, the user must be perfectly clean and bathedbefore immersion. A mikvah is a spiritual tool; it has no association with hygiene.
The Torah mentions mikvah most prominently in connection with the Jewish High Priest, the Kohen Gadol, who immersed in its waters five times during the Yom Kippur services when the Holy Temple stood in Jerusalem. Today, the most important use of mikvah is by women, who immerse in it as one step in the cycle of reunion and separation between husband and wife known as family purity.
No brief description of the practice of family purity, like the one that follows, can suffice to insure its proper practice. And indeed, no brief description of the benefits of family purity can adequately explain its beauty. Only practicing it can truly convey the remarkable nature of it.
Jewish couples who were initially unaware of the mikvah discipline, and who learned about it and incorporated its practice into their lives, have told me that if they once had doubts the Torah was given by God, then mikvah and family purity erased them. The insight, or, as they describe it, the genius of this practice is so great that no human mind could have invented it.
And yet, to the modern mind, this practice may sound strange at first because it's so different. Because this pillar of traditional Jewish life is now so foreign to us, it's often misunderstood, as we try to apply our inadequate and often shallow 21st century understanding to its extraordinary deep ways.
In the practice of mikvah and family purity, a Jewish couple separates when the wife gets her monthly period, and physical contact doesn't resume until seven days following the conclusion of her period. On the eve of the night that the couple is to resume physical relations, the woman immerses in the waters of themikvah, where she utters a prayer inviting God to sanctify their forthcoming intimacy.
After the husband and wife wait for this time to elapse, their union represents a reaffirmation of the powers of life over death.
Essentially, the sexual union is an affirmation of life, as the couple joins together in the sacred endeavor to draw a new soul from its heavenly source into this world. Conversely, the time when a couple is allowed no contact is associated with the period of time when the woman undergoes a loss of life potential, as the unfertilized ovum is expelled from her body.
When the husband and wife wait for this time to elapse and the wife employs the mikvah before rejoining her husband in physical intimacy, their union represents a reaffirmation of the powers of life over death. It is a rising above our mortality. The cessation of physical relations between husband and wife has no connection to a feeling of revulsion over the woman's monthly flow, as is often mistakenly assumed. Such a concept has no home in Jewish sources.
Interestingly enough, though the mysteries of mikvah are bound up in this interplay between life and death, it's clear that the role mikvah plays is deeper than our understanding of life and death, because Jewish law calls for the use of mikvah even among couple for whom procreation is not possible. Indeed, Jewish law also calls for the active pursuit of a healthy, wholesome sexual relationship in married couples of all ages, and considers it an independent value -- indeed, a spiritual value -- whether or not creation of a human life is possible.
If we want to understand mikvah in depth, we must return to the references to it in the Torah. In Leviticus, chapter 16, we read about the Yom Kippur service as practiced when we had a Temple in Jerusalem.
At the apex of the service, the High Priest would enter the innermost chamber of the Temple -- indeed, the holiest space on earth -- the Holy of Holies, orKodesh Hakodashim, where he would ask forgiveness for the nation's shortcomings throughout the previous year. No one but the High Priest was allowed to enter the holy of holies, and he himself, as the holiest representative of the holy Jewish nation, was allowed in there only once a year, for one short interval on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year.
It's hard to imagine today the significance of that moment. For seven days beforehand, the High Priest prepared himself for it. The night before he entered the holy of holies, a team of great Jewish leaders kept him awake all night, quizzing him and pushing him to the heights of his moral and spiritual potential. The future of not just the Jewish nation but the entire world would rest on his actions in the holy of holies - actions that were done completely in private, witnessed solely by God and himself.
After the seven days of refining himself, and after the night-long vigil, the High Priest had one final preparation to make before the awesome moment in which he would enter the Holy of Holies and effect atonement for himself, for his nation and for the world: He immersed himself in the mikvah.
The resumption of the act of intimacy of a Jewish woman with her husband is a similarly awesome moment. After her seven days preparing for that moment, a woman immerses in a mikvah in order to elevate her relationship with her husband and to elevate the world itself.
How? How can immersing in something as plain as water have such a profound effect?
Water is the most spiritual of all the physical elements. The opening passages of Genesis (1-2:22) describe the creation of many impressive things including the earth and mankind. And yet, though water is referred to ("The breath of God hovered above the face of the waters" [Genesis 1:2]), there is no mention of its creation. Our sages learn from this that water pre-existed our account of creation, and pre-existed the earth itself.
mikvah, containing waters untouched by human hands because they either fall as rain directly into the mikvah or were fed into it via an underground spring, is the closest thing we have to a piece of heaven on earth. It gives us the opportunity to reunite with our spiritual source.
Just before a woman immerses herself in these Godly waters, she says a prayer, inviting God to sanctify her marriage -- her most intimate and important relationship.
What she says through the prayer, in effect, is: "Almighty, this is the most sacred relationship in my life. This, our conjugal union, is one of the greatest expressions of that sacred relationship, and I don't want something as sacred as this to be devoid of Your Presence. I want You to join me in this act. I want you to be there." And then she immerses and, in a sense, touches hands with the creator of the world.
The late Rabbi Shlomo Twerski, who was my brother-in-law and a brilliant Torah scholar, said that it's particularly appropriate that going to the mikvah is a woman's responsibility, as opposed to a man's, because mikvah sanctifies the family, and it is the wife's wisdom, more so than that of any other family member, that builds the home.
In a sense, a woman creates her family. For nine months before their births, she shapes a perfect internal environment for her children; then, for nearly two decades after birth, she sculpts their emotional, mental and physical environment. If she doesn't have children, she's still the one, who, in most families, will have the most creative influence on the home atmosphere and those living under her roof.
When a woman goes to the mikvah, before she returns home to exercise once again her creative intelligence, she -- the human creator -- asks for the blessings of the Creator of the universe. She asks God to come back home with her, to join her in her sacred activities, and foremost of these, to join her in her marriage.
All mitzvahs are kindnesses, and mikvah is no exception. The Talmud, which expounds on the laws in the Torah, explains a simple rule of human nature in discussing sexuality: something constantly available to us eventually loses its luster in our eyes. We allow routine to replace excitement, and grow contemptuous and bored. Boredom in marriage is no trifling matter. It is extremely destructive and in our times, it is a leading cause of divorce.
Because of this monthly "vacation," a husband and wife become like a bride and groom to one another each month, again and again.
This is the first and most obvious advantage of mikvah. For approximately two weeks every month a husband and wife are off limits to each other. Because of this monthly "vacation," the Talmud tells us, a husband and wife become like a bride and groom to one another each month, again and again. There's a perpetual freshness to the relationship; if you doubt it, ask any couple who practices mikvah and they'll confirm it, although they may blush over this truth.
Second, mikvah teaches us the value of restraint. In a world where infidelity is as common as it is today -- there have been estimates that almost one of every two married men has been unfaithful -- people have to learn the art of restraint. Unfortunately, it's not taught in school.
Within the Jewish marriage relationship, if a husband and wife can't have access to each other at regular intervals, it means they must learn to control themselves within the marriage relationship. Outside the marriage relationship, when a temptation suddenly develops and they're called upon to exercise restraint, they know how to respond. It's not as if they're suddenly called upon to run ten miles when they've never run a block.
Third, mikvah gives us the invaluable asset of "spaces in our togetherness," to adapt the poet's phrase. It affords us the opportunity to be ourselves in a way not possible if there were no separation period.
One of the primary reasons our individual souls were brought down to earth is to actualize a part of ourselves that is unique and unlike anyone else. Yet in marriage it's easy for two people to get lost in each other and not know where one ends and the other begins. This is not the Jewish ideal. The "oneness" of a Jewish marriage is not a unity of sameness, of identical mates who neither oppose nor challenge one another. Rather, it's a dynamic interaction between two individuals who maintain their identities, even though they are joined by one goal; one heart and one soul.
Two people who strengthen their individuality during this time of separation join again and enrich each other precisely because they've strengthened that part of themselves that's theirs and only theirs.
Finally, mikvah teaches us that we are not objects. Because I don't belong to you and you don't belong to me in the same way we do during the togetherness period, I'm compelled to treat you as a whole person, not as an object for my pleasure, This is an invaluable lesson in our society which, for all its obeisance to feminism, continues to treat women as objects, in advertising, at the workplace and too often in the home itself.

During the two weeks without physical contact, a couple has to learn how to talk about everything.
We also learn to communicate better with each other through mikvah. Many problems can be glossed over by a hug and kiss. During the two weeks without physical contact, a couple has to learn how to talk about everything, including many difficult things. We get to know each other's inner thoughts in ways we might not otherwise. Intimacy -- real intimacy -- is the result.
As we stated before, these benefits just scratch the surface of the spiritual effects mikvah has on our lives and on the world. There are depths to this practice we, as humans, cannot fathom. But one thing is clear:
Without serving a higher purpose, our physical intimacy is just that -- physical. With mikvah -- and God's presence -- the sexual relationship changes from something that's completely physical, an act which subhuman species also engage in, to an act of holiness and the highest expression of two people.
The Intimate Road

Marriage and Love by Emuna Braverman


Marriage and Love

Marriage and Love

Take the test: Are you unintentionally turning your marriage into a business partnership?

by 
Marriage is not a business partnership. I know, I know, you’ve heard this idea before. It doesn’t apply to you because you and your husband are different. You discuss parenting techniques, you agree on money matters, you even have a regularly scheduled date night. You certainly aren’t one of those couples who fall into the trap of treating marriage like a business relationship.
Or are you? There are ways of doing this that are less obvious and more insidious than the standard expected way. I’m thinking of your pattern of giving and taking.
Are you giving to your spouse because you love him (or her) and want to give him pleasure? Or do you have an agenda? Is there something you want or expect in return? Is there a quid pro quo in your relationship? Are you keeping a list?
If you answered the first question in the affirmative, then you can stop reading now. But if your answer is ‘no’ or ‘sometimes’ to the first query and ‘yes’ or ‘sometimes’ to any of the remaining ones, then we have something to discuss.
A relationship where we give in order to get, where we give with expectations or with strings attached, may not always be a business one but it has been shaped by the mindset and attitudes of the business world. And it is certainly not a marriage in its most ideal form. It won’t lead to a deep and lasting relationship.
You can’t keep score in marriage.
In marriage, you can’t keep score. “It was up five times last night.” “I went to the dry cleaner’s three times last month.” “I made dinner every night last week.” This type of negotiation is reminiscent of a brokered mediation not a loving caring relationship.
When the Talmud tells us that “If you treat your husband like a king, he will treat you like a queen,” it is not describing a reciprocal contract, but the natural consequences of behaving in a giving and respectful way.
Not only do we need to give to our partner without expectations or conditions, we need to do it with warmth and enthusiasm. We need to do it exuberantly and whole-heartedly. We need to do it with love.
There is a common perception that love isn’t enough to help a couple weather life’s challenges. It’s certainly true if we’re speaking of romantic love, infatuation, stars and bells.
But real, deep, abiding love, the kind that is based on commitment, where the lover cares more about his spouse’s welfare than his own, that is a love that will last. It’s so much harder than most business partnerships. You can’t leave the work at the office; it’s a 24/7 proposition. It’s non-stop giving and caring and trying to do what’s best for someone else, putting them first.
The Talmud also teaches us that “a man doesn’t die except to his wife.” That’s the most significant relationship in anyone’s life. Everyone else moves on; the deepest and most profound loss is that of a spouse, a life partner, the one who shares your hopes and dreams, goals and aspirations.
This reflects how it should be in life. We don’t want to wait for a tragedy, God forbid, to recognize this. We want to work on our marriages now and treat our husbands and wives with the caring they deserve. We want to appreciate them and the relationship now, not only after loss (I just came from the funeral of a 44 year-old mother, so this feels particularly timely).
The Talmud is teaching us about the importance of marriage and the uniqueness of the marriage relationship. It remains silent about the death of a business partner.

The Marital Sand Trap (Rabbi Lazer Brody)


The Marital Sand Trap
By: Rabbi Lazer Brody

  Email This Article  Print version
   
   
  
Dear Rabbi Lazer,
 
Before the wedding, my wife and I were best friends. We both love golf and tennis, so we'd play a lot together. Something strange has happened in the three years since we've been married - we're not best friends any more. To be honest, we're not even friends. I can't make the slightest comment without her blowing up at me. Even on the golf course, when I see she's doing something wrong and I try to give her advice for her own good, she goes crazy. I need your help; three years ago, she was calm and attractive, and now she's a bundle of nerves that's impossible to live with. Not only that, but she doesn't even want to play golf or tennis with me anymore. By the way, we're not Jewish and we really appreciate your availability to all people. Thank you for your time. Sincerely, LP, Pennsylvania
 
Dear LP,
 
Before the wedding, your "best friend" relationship with your wife was fun and games with no responsibility or commitment. Playtime friendships don't necessarily last under fire. Foxhole friendships - when the two of you are being bombarded from all sides - last a lifetime. Marriage is not a country club; it's pulling together when the two of you are bombarded from all sides.
 
Obviously, your premarital infatuation kept you on your best behavior. After the wedding, once you had the bread in your basket, you allowed yourself to begin criticizing her. By your admission, in three short years she has transformed from "calm and attractive" to "a bundle of nerves that's impossible to live with". Sorry, LP, but it's all your doing. I'm sure it's the last thing you want to do, but you're destroying your wife with your own two hands. Your job is to be a loving husband, and not a kangaroo court. Who asked for your criticism? She'd much rather be a mid 90's golfer with a loving husband rather than a low 80's golfer with the state comptroller as a partner in life. She needs a husband and a faithful companion, not a judge and jury or a kangaroo court.
 
Criticism destroys a person's confidence. When criticism is frequent, it also eats away at a spouse's self-image. The lower a person's confidence and self-image, the more they become hypersensitive and nervous. In golf terms, criticism is a marital sand trap - easy to fall into, hard to get out of.
 
LP, from this moment on, you must decide to refrain from any and all criticism, justified or not. If your wife burns your dinner, eat it, smile, and tell her that it's the best thing you ever ate. And if, heaven forbid, you're entertaining fantasies of divorcing her, I guarantee you that your next relationship will be 10 times worse. I give you my solemn promise that if your stop the criticism, begin complimenting her and allowing her to drop her emotional guard, within 30 days your life and your marriage will take a dramatic turn for the better. If you readThe Garden of Peace and implement its advice, your marriage will be better than you ever dreamed it could be. When you finish that, I'd add The Trail to Tranquility as your next read too.
 
Happy marriage and criticism don't mix. Put that in your heart and brain and don't ever forget it. Write me again in another month, and let me know how things are. Today, buy her flowers and take her to her favorite restaurant; remember how you used to feel about her when you were dating. Now get your marital act together and you can look forward to happier times. I strongly suggest that you do different, less competitive and more together-oriented activities as hiking or biking instead of tennis and golf. Also, these following CDs will make a revolutionary change for the better in your marriage and in your attitude toward your wife: Respecting Your WifeFirst PlacePeace in the HomeUprooting Anger,A Kind Word and All in the Family. You don't have to be Jewish to benefit from our books and CDs, LP - with Divine assistance, they'll surely help you. I'm pulling for you! Blessings always, LB
 

Spiritual Adventure! Ukraine, May 28 - June 2, 2013


THURSDAY, 25 APRIL 2013

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Smartest Ways To LIve Maccabeats

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=3_Mx8vye6W8

Dr. Zev Ballen's Ultimate Marriage Program (based on Rav Arush's teachings)

http://lazerbrody.typepad.com/lazer_beams/2013/04/dr-zev-ballens-ultimate-marriage-program.html
For those of you who don't know who Zev Ballen is, don't worry your not alone.  He's a renown psychologist who has endorsements from the following Rabbinical leaders:

  • Rabbi Shalom Arush, Rosh Yeshiva, Yeshiva Chute Shel Chesed, Jerusalem, Israel

  • Rabbi Lazer Brody, former Rosh Kollel, Yeshiva Chut Shel Chesed, Ashdod; Founder, Emuna Outreach

  • The Nikolsburger Rebba, Monsey, New York
  • Rabbi Chaim Leibish Rottenberg, Rav Bais Hamidrosh Netzach Yisroel, Monsey, NY
  • Rabbi Yitzchok Frankel, Rav Agudas Yisrael of Five Towns
  • Rabbi Dovid Shlomo Mermelstein, Rosh Kollel Tosh, Monsey, NY

  • Rabbi Yehuda Jacobs, Mashgiach, Beis Medresh Gevoah, Lakewood, NJ

  • Rabbi Chaim Yehoshua Hoberman, Rosh Yeshiva, Mesifta of Long Beach, NY

  • Rabbi Tzvi Mandel, Rav Khal Bnei Yisrael, Brooklyn, NY

  • Rabbi Mechel Rottenberg, Menahel, Veena Cheder, Monsey, NY

  • Rabbi Yochanan Cohen, Menahel, Cheder Ateres Tzvi, Monsey, NY

  • Rabbi Hertzka Freidman, Menahel, Klausenberg, Monsey, NY

  • Rabbi Yisrael Saperstein, Maggid Shir, Yeshiva Gedola of Bridgeport

  • Rabbi Shimon Deutsch, Rosh Yeshiva, Belz, Monsey, NY


The kitzur from his site is

Dr. Zev was a prominent New York psychotherapist for more than 30 years when he discovered Rabbi Lazer Brody's emuna broadcasts and the writings of Rav Shalom Arush.  Once he discovered the Truth, there was no turning back for Dr. Zev.

Dr. Zev has committed his life to helping people through the teachings of his Rebbe and Spiritual Guide, Rabbi Shalom Arush. Dr. Zev is the  developer of Emuna Therapy, a unique approach to emotional healing based exclusively on the teachings of Rabbi Shalom Arush.

You can hear Dr. Zev’s weekly live broadcasts every Wednesday at 5pm Israel time on Breslev.co.il at 5pm Israel time. With the Blessing of Rabbi Shalom Arush, Dr. Zev is planning a book on Emuna Therapy.

From Zev Ballen's blog

Thursday, April 18, 2013

What methods make your marriage better? (give your special tricks that you and your spouse use)

The best ones will be featured as posts!

Rabbi Lazer Brody Shlita

If you don't know who he is check out his bio I'm coping from his website

http://lazerbrody.typepad.com/lazer_beams/marriage_and_family/


Rabbi Lazer Brody was born in Washington, D.C. in 1949. Upon completing his agriculture studies at the University of Maryland, he moved to Israel in 1970, joined the Israel Defense Forces regular army and served in an elite infantry unit. He is a veteran of two wars and many counter-insurgence operations.
Following the Israel-Lebanon conflict of 1982, Rabbi Brody could no longer ignore the hand of Hashem in his life. He left his mountaintop farm to study Torah in Jerusalem.
Nine years of intensive Talmudic, ethics, and legal studies, led to his rabbinical ordination in 1992. He subsequently furthered his postgraduate learning as the understudy of the famed Melitzer Rebbe in Ashdod.
In 1998, Rabbi Shalom Arush, head of the "Chut Shel Chesed" Institutions in Jerusalem, chose Rabbi Brody to be "Rosh Kollel", or Dean of the Chut Shel Chesed rabbinical seminary branch in Ashdod. 
In 2005, Rabbi Brody began devoting his time to outreach, spreading the light of emuna - pure and simple faith - all over the English-speaking world. He has translated many of Rabbi Shalom Arush's major works including the international bestseller, "The Garden of Emuna." His English CDs - translations and adaptations of Rav Arush's emuna lessons - now circulate worldwide in over 125 titles and more than a million copies. Rabbi Brody is also the English-language editor of Breslev Israel's highly popular English-language website at www.breslev.co.il, and the founder and director of Emuna Outreach.

Rabbi Brody's first book, "Pi Habe'er", is a Hebrew-language contemporary commentary of Torah based largely on the teachings of Rebbe Nachman of Breslev. The book has been widely acclaimed, and has received the approbations of Rishon Le'Tzion Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef, the Bes Din of the Eda Haredis in Jerusalem, Rabbi Eliezer Berland, and others. His second book, "Nafshi Tidom", also in Hebrew, is a unique guide to coping with verbal abuse, embarrassment and insult.
Brody's third book - his first in English - is "The Trail to Tranquility," a highly acclaimed self-help guide to overcoming anger and attaining inner peace.
Other Brody books include the English-language "Chassidic Pearls" collection of original parables on the weekly Torah portion, a delightful children's book, "The Worry Worm," beautifully illustrated by Rebecca Shapiro, and Lazer Beams, an exquisite collection of his best quotations edited, illustrated and compiled by Rivka Levy.
Rabbi Lazer Brody is also a musician and composer. His first music CD, "Calming Waters", is an exquisite collection of relaxation and meditative music played on his native flutes. His second CD, Judean Dream, recorded together with Guy Tzvi Mintz, is a flute and guitar collection of original Land of Israel melodies.
"Lazer Beams," Rabbi Brody's award-winning daily web journal, has been instrumental in helping tens of thousands of people around the globe find joy and fulfillment in their lives.

Chabad.org and aish.com

Two different groups, but essentially the same messages

http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/1718619/jewish/Save-this-Marriage.htm
http://www.chabad.org/theJewishWoman/article_cdo/aid/313388/jewish/Relationships-Marriage.htm

http://www.aish.com/f/m/

Link to YU Torah on Marriage

Get to hear from some of the greatest minds from the Tri state area (not all are about marriage)

http://www.yutorah.org/search/

YU Connects to Go 1&2

From My Alma Matter
                                 http://www.yutorah.org/togo/yuconnects/

Yeshiva University Center for the Jewish Future

Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary
presents the Benjamin and Rose Berger To-Go® series

YUConnects To-Go® 5773


Fertility Enhancement

Fertility Enhancement

FERTILITY ENHANCEMENT

Dear Rabbi Brody,
Problem one: My husband and I are both healthy and fertile. I am very regular as well. Yet, we've been married for eight years and have not yet been blessed with children. The doctors say that there's no reason I shouldn't get pregnant, but it just doesn't seem to happen.
Problem two: Thank G-d, we are very compatible, yet we bicker a lot over non-consequential things. Our rabbi told us to have our mezuzos and ketuba (marriage contract - LB) checked, and we did - they're all fine. I'm at my wits end. What do we do? Appreciatively, Karen from LI
Dear Karen,
The bickering is expected, since you and your husband are quite up tight with month after month of anticipation, then month after month of disappointment. I know it's not easy, but you should both sharpen your self-awareness, and avoid the senseless clashes, especially during the time of the month when you can't be intimate. The tight nerves are also counterproductive to fertility.
You may find this odd, but have you and your husband ever asked Hashem for a baby? If you were here, I'd take your husband out to the desert, give him a canteen of water, and leave him on a hilltop for an hour to yell his heart out to Hashem. Since you're not here, go with your husband to a deserted stretch of beach on Long Island Sound, take separate directions, and cry your eyes out, praying in your own words - in English - and beg Hashem for what you want. Hanna, the prophet Samuel's mother, did the same thing. So did Isaac and Rebecca. Repeat this as much as possible.
Try to eat as naturally as possible. Your husband should eat figs, garlic, and warm eggs. You both should eat red or blue grapes as well.
If you're not pregnant within the next 60 days after taking the above advice, don't despair: Rebbe Nachman of Breslev writes that living in Israel is conducive to childbearing and to peace in the home. I would therefore suggest that you seriously consider moving to Israel. If that's out of the question, I would suggest two alternatives - one, give regular charity to a worthy cause in Israel, and that way you are in effect a shareholder in Israel, and second, fill your house with Torah-oriented books printed in Israel. Another good ploy that has helped loads of people is by spreading emuna CDs all over the place. Either way, with Hashem's loving grace, I pray that you'll be parents within the next 12 months. Peace and blessings, Lazer Brody

Roommates or Soul Mates? Reviving marriage from Aish.com

Roommates or Soul Mates?


Remember when you first got married, ready to conquer the world? There was nothing that you and your spouse could not overcome. Your love was strong and you swore you would never become a statistic. Yet, a few years later, or perhaps ten, twenty or more, you may be wondering: Where did the vibrancy we once felt go?
If you feel more like a roommate or a business partner than a husband or wife, you are not alone. You may not have terminated your relationship – perhaps you’re staying together for your children or because you don’t want to be alone, perhaps you’ve found other ways to get your needs met, whether it be friends, hobbies, children – but deep down you may feel a profound sense of loss about what could have been.
Marriage can be challenging and if you don’t make a conscious effort to work on the relationship, it can become downright painful. As couples begin to push each other’s buttons, trading jabs and emanating negativity, they eventually choose to emotionally disconnect to protect themselves from further pain. Despite the loss of meaningful connection, it is easier to “check out” than engage and open yourself up to more hurt.
But if your marriage could be better, wouldn’t you make the effort? One of the main issues that couples in crisis struggle with is the lack of hope. They don’t sincerely believe that their relationship can be different. As Jews, we believe in the power of change. Otherwise, we are fooling ourselves every Yom Kippur. It takes courage to have hope as there is always a risk that the changes you desire in your relationship will not occur. The good news is that there are things you can do to revive your marriage and reignite the passion that was once there.
  1. Become aware of where you focus your energy. Are you looking every which way but your spouse? Begin to notice how you spend your free time and how those activities may fulfill the needs you are not getting at home. Are you staying late at work to avoid being at home with your spouse? Are you exercising constantly?
    While many of your extracurricular activities may even be healthy or praiseworthy, recognize if you are so busy that you have made it virtually impossible to have time with your partner. Take small steps to spend more time together and focus on your spouse in a positive and connected way. It may be hard at first so find activities that you may enjoy doing together until you begin to enjoy each other’s company again.
  2. Guard your tongue. It is easy to complain to others about your marriage or to criticize your spouse. Stop the cycle of negativity by thinking of five positive qualities before you utter a disparaging word. Negativity begets negativity. When we think negative thoughts and express negative feelings we reinforce those neuropathways in our brain. Although it may be hard to overcome past hurts, by dwelling on them incessantly, you make it impossible to get beyond them and create the relationship you want.
  3. Become a grateful person. Nothing is too small in life to appreciate. The more we express appreciation to our spouse, we not only change our relationship, we change ourselves. Clients have shared with me that sharing daily appreciations with their spouse have had a long-term effect of transforming them into appreciative people. By focusing on what is right, we begin to see and experience the blessings in our life. Gratefulness can also serve to reinforce positive interaction. Your spouse will be much more likely to meet your needs when you express appreciation for the good he/she is doing as opposed to criticizing what he/she is doing wrong.
  4. Perform loving acts. Dr. Steven Covey tells the following story in The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People:
After a marriage workshop, a man approached Dr. Covey and told him that he know longer loved his wife. “I just don’t love her anymore.” Dr. Covey replied, “then love her.” The husband was a bit confused, “ But I told you, I don’t love her. The spark is gone.” Again Dr. Covey replied, “Then love her.”
Sometimes the best way to revive our love for each other is through action. Even if you think you care or express your feelings of love verbally, consistent loving acts are concrete ways to rebuild the trust that you are fully present in this relationship. Action itself is an expression of your thoughts and your feelings as that is what motivated you to do the act in the first place. A loving act is a powerful expression of caring and can provide the security so needed in a relationship that may have been neglected for years.
It is never too late to decide to work on your marriage. By refocusing your energy on your partner, guarding your tongue from negativity, becoming more grateful, and performing loving acts, it is always possible to reignite the spark and actualize the hope and dreams that you originally had for your marriage.
If your marriage requires more immediate assistance, download your free copy of Rabbi Slatkin’s book, Is My Marriage Over: The Five Step Action Plan to Saving Your Marriage

Confessions of the Mikva Attendant by Rabbi Lazer Brody

Confessions of the Mikva Attendant


The following letter is especially relevant to many people, so we decided to share it with you:
Dear Rabbi Brody,
A young woman was sitting in the waiting room of the mikva where I am balanit (attendant - LB) last week, and she had a MP3 player. When her turn came, I called her in, and we struck up a conversation (this was a new face to the mikva, and I do my best to make everyone feel comfortable). I asked her what she was listening to, and she said that she was listening to a lesson from an English-speaking rabbi in Israel about shalom bayit (peace in the home, or marital bliss - LB). I asked her then if there's anything new, or just the same old cliches that so many other people are tossing around. She then pulled the original CD out of her purse, and told me to take it, since she already had it copied onto her MP3. "See for yourself," she said. "Ever since my husband started listening to these CDs, he's been treating me like a princess, lavishing me with love, respect, and consideration..."
Rabbi, I took your CD home and listened to it. What you say in Respecting Your Wife is revolutionary. You could be saving thousands of broken marriages. Let me explain...
I'm the Wailing Wall for most of the women that come to the mikva. Many of them pour their hearts out to me, because they know that halacha (religious law) requires a balanit (mikva attendant - LB) to be ultra-discreet. Thank G-d, I also have a reputation for being very tight-lipped, so I enjoy the trust of the women in our community (and the trust of those that come here from outside the community, and there are many of them - because our mikva looks like a tropical garden with soft music, etc., so women love to come here). Without further digression, you should know that at least 50% of the women that speak to me are not satisfied with their marriages. They have melancholy eyes, and are not looking forward to going home from the mikva. It's a tragedy. I would venture to speculate that the percentage of unhappy wives among those that don't go to mikva is so much higher.
At any rate, I feel an obligation to pass the word about your teachings. I love the way that you keep them real and down to earth, practical and not pie in the sky theory. To be honest, there are no chassidim (except for the local Chabad house) in our area, and chassidic thought isn't exactly what you'd call popular around here. Breslev especially has a bad reputation for weirdos; yet, if the Breslev wives have husbands that live according to your audio teachings, then they can be laughing at the rest of us. I must confess that we have been shortchanging Rebbe Nachman for a long time. I also confess that I have frequently criticized the Breslevers for leaving their wives on Rosh Hashanna. Many of us have husbands who are physically at home, but their minds are millions of miles away. I guess that Uman for a few days a year is a better deal, especially if your husband is with you in heart and body for the rest of the year.
At any rate, when I heard your CD, I almost fainted. The label told me that you're a Breslever, associated with the Chut Shel Chesed Yeshiva and with the Breslev Israel website. I was so embarrassed. Even though I'm considered "tight-lipped" as I said, on numerous occasions in the past, I have been guilty of saying less than complimentary remarks about Rebbe Nachman and his followers. This has been total ignorance on my part.
I called a leading Breslever USA Rabbi on the phone, and asked him how I can repent for turning people off to Rebbe Nachman in the past. He said, "Simple - just turn them on to Rebbe Nachman's teachings in the future!" He was so nice and unjudgmental. When I read the articles on your website, I get the same impression from you too. Maybe that's why the Breslevers' wives are happy - their husbands are nice guys and unjudgmental.
Rabbi Brody, I can imagine how busy you are and I know I've run off at the keyboard. Yet, I feel that there's a message here for everybody - don't prejudge.
Please tell me if you can cut me a deal on my first 100 Arush-Brody CDs. I would be honored to distribute them in our area, because as far as I know, you don't yet have a distributor here. With sincere thanks, DB from the Midwest USA
* * *
100 CDs are already in the air and on their way to DB. I arranged for her to get them at a wholesale price. Not only will she be joining our Outreach team, but she'll be making a few extra dollars on the side too. If she helps just one couple have a happier marriage, then her rewards are unfathomable, in this world and in the next. And, if she helps save just one marriage, then it's as if she has saved an entire world.
No mitzva in the Torah brings dividends like the mitzva of Outreach. When you put a CD in someone's hands, you're task is just as important as my saying the lesson. You become a first-string player on our team, and bask in the glory of every victory, namely, bringing another soul closer to Hashem.
Quite a few people have invested maaser (tithe) money in Emuna Outreach books and CDs, and have seen tremendous blessings by distributing them in their neck of the woods. You can too!

What this blog is

Currently I am single (probably won't be able to set me up, because I am likely not in your community, and getting ready to go to Israel).  This is an issue that is important to me, because I see how big a difference that shalom bayit can make in a home, and from what I have seen there are a lot of people out there who may THINK THEY HAVE SHALOM BAYIT, BUT DON'T!  How do I know this, because at my congregation I see all of the women with BIG SMILES ON THEIR FACES.  I know that this is one of those things everyone would like to give advice on, but I know I don't know everything and there are people who are more qualified.  That is why I'm going to look at collecting a large amount of articles by proven pros in the Jewish community to help make a large amount of advice available.

Shalom is the vessel that helps a person merit all the blessings in the world.  It's important and can improve your life so drastically!

The book I have heard the best results from are by Rabbi Shalom Arush for men Garden of Peace http://www.breslev.co.il/store/books/family_and_relationships/the_garden_of_peace_english.aspx?id=7269&language=english, and for women Woman's wisdom http://www.breslev.co.il/store/books/family_and_relationships/womens_wisdom_the_garden_of_peace_for_women_english.aspx?id=11942&language=english (a little secret not everyone knows there is a book by Rav Arush in Hebrew on marriage for both spouces http://www.feldheim.com/authors/arush-rabbi-shalom/gan-eden-m-kedem-hebrew-only.html)

How to use this blog.
1.Find an area that you can work on
2.Figure out ways to implement this change (will power alone doesn't always change things)
3.VERY MUCH SUGGESTED GO OVER YOUR DAY AND SEE HOW YOU DID IN THE AREA YOU DID (IF YOU DO THIS PRAYING TO HASHEM THIS IS A FORM OF CONFESSION (ADMITTING SINS)
4.If it doesn't work then repeat
5.When you improve an area with solid gains move on to another area

Good luck!