GREAT READS → SECOND GUESSING Issue 1031 · September 29, 2024

Missing Out: Readers Join the Conversation

“Who and what gets prioritized? As a parent, your first responsibility is to your child”

Missing Out: Readers Join the Conversation
Last Week:
Shaindy: “Even though every one of my bones is screaming in protest, I told Avrumi it was okay if he missed the Shabbos sheva brachos. I have no idea if I made the right choice. They say growing up brings hard choices, but I never had to choose between my family and my son before.”

 

Prioritizing Needs
Rayzel Reich

When resolving an issue involving various parties with conflicting needs, there are two levels of decision making:

  1. Which person’s needs come first?
  2. How can the other people and their needs best be addressed?

Let’s look at all the potentially conflicting needs here.

  1. Avrumi wants to stay in yeshivah for Shabbos.
  2. Avrumi and cousins should spend quality time together at the Shabbos sheva brachos.
  3. Shaindy’s sister Malky, the kallah’s mother, shouldn’t be insulted.
  4. Shaindy’s parents shouldn’t be upset.
  5. Shaindy’s grandfather, Elter Zeidy, shouldn’t be hurt and should get to spend quality time with Avrumi.

Who and what gets prioritized? As a parent, your first responsibility is to your child. What is best for Avrumi in this situation? The most important source of information is Avrumi himself. Fortunately, he was open with his parents. His parents, to their credit, really heard him, and understood that he needed this time to settle into yeshivah.

What about Avrumi’s need to spend time with his cousins? Well, that need is valid, too. Will he feel bad in ten years that he missed out? Probably not, but if he does… that’s his choice to make. When it comes to gray areas like this, where there’s an important and valid need on the other side of the equation, it’s important to allow a relatively mature teenager to make their own decisions.

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