Shidduch Diaries

Ok. I admit it. I’m out of my league. I’m lost. My son is dating and he is dating in the Orthodox Jewish world. There are apparently a lot of dating rules. But they don’t seem to exactly be consistent and many of them seem to be inherent to the FFBs (frum from birth, aka observant since birth) and not the BT (baal teshuvas, aka runaway secular Jews, I mean those returning to Torah and mitzvot observance).

Anyway, there must be a handbook somewhere.

Somehow when we signed up for We Will Obsessively Observe 613 Commandments, we were not given this Finding a Shidduch for Dummies handbook. The rules also honestly seem to be financially driven in a world with very little financial stability. For example, boys are encouraged to learn in a yeshiva at least for the first 2 years of marriage (after 5-6 years post high school learning) and find a girl who wants to work. Yet the girls’ families seem to want their daughters to find a boy to support her. Something is amiss. Honestly, this system is not as simple as I thought it would be. I was thinking: educate son, eliminate girls, introduce girls and voila! Well actually I knew it wouldn’t be so simple and I’ve been scratching my head through the whole thing. I think it worked well when our ancestors lived in shtetels and everyone knew each other, but in 2015 with our techno ways, something seems lost. And funny thing is many of the girls I talk to don’t think it works that well either. One of them, as I asked her about her friend, said to me, “Yeh, you’re not going to find out much from that piece of paper in front of you.” It’s like everyone knows the system doesn’t work that well, but somehow we’re just stuck in it.

Anyway, each girl comes with a resume, or as I like to call them “applications.” They look something like this:

Name: Bracha Chana Leibowitz 
Education:
High School: Beis Yaakov School For Girls 
Seminary: Bais Yaakov Israel  
Work: Pre-school assistant teacher at Bais Yaakov Pre School 
Parents:
Reuven: Works at the kosher food market
Sarah: Secretary at Bais Yaakov for Girls 
References:
Gitty Yehudis Shmuelivitz: best friend from Seminary 
Chana Leah Goldberger: best friend from high school
Rachel Bracha Mermelstein: family friend 
Shoshanna Shira Cohen: aunt and close family relative

Statement: I am looking for a ben-torah who will support our family and who is kind, dedicated to learning and davening and has a close relationship with his rebbe (apparently it’s inevitable that he is going to need some counseling)

Now the boys also have resumes. I really tried to fix my son's up. In fact, I think all these resumes could use a little sprucing up, especially with the statement part. My suggestion was this:

Really funny, handsome guy looking for fun, loving energetic girl to organize my life, laugh at my jokes and ride bikes with me. Must be cute, adorable and smell nice.

“Mom!!!!!”

“What?” How is anyone going to know what you’re like with something boring like ‘Ben Torah looking for frum girl?’ You can at least tell them you’re artistic.”

“But I’m not artistic.”

“Yes you are. Don’t you remember the horses you drew in the 3rd grade on the sidewalk by tracing your foot?”

Anyway, Now from this bit of information, I’m supposed to decide whether my son should go out on a date that may or may not lead up to marriage.

How do I know if her father served time in jail? Or what if her 11th brother fell off the “derech” (path). And, did you hear about the girl who married the boy and then she left him after one week?

Initially I was of the opinion that unless she has daggers coming out of her head, he should go out, meet her and decide for himself.  But that is not the social norm. He explained that we need to call the references before he goes out. That is how it is done.

“Mom, you’re supposed to call references. And, don’t just ask normal questions, ask questions like “how does she dress?” “Who are her friends?” “What does she like to do?”

“And, don’t just take the answers, listen between the lines.”

What am I? A private investigator?

So, I suck it up and start calling the references and here is how most conversation go:

Brrring….

“Hello?”

“Hello. Hi I’m calling to inquire about Bracha Rachel Nechama Smulevitz. “

“Who?”

“Um, I think you’re listed as a reference for Bracha Rachel Nechama Smulevitz.”

“Oh, yes. So what do you want to know?”

“Well, maybe you can just tell me a little bit about her.”

“Well, I’m not exactly sure what you want to know (does she not know she’s listed as a reference on a resume?).

“Maybe you can tell me a bit about her family or what she likes to do?”

 “Oh. She comes from a phenomenal family. They are just amazing people. I mean I just don’t know what else to tell you. She’s smart, beautiful, kind, and a real go-getter. You’re son would be wise to go out with her.”

“Wow. She sounds really amazing.”

“Yes. I really can’t think of anything negative to tell you.”

“What does she like to do?”

“She loves helping people and doing chesed.”

“Well, that sounds great.  Thank you for being so upfront.”

“Sure. Anytime.”

Brrrring.

“Hey, Lev”

“Hey Mom.”

“Well, I checked out the references and she sounds like a gem. She’s cute, pretty and smart.”

“What else?”

“What else is there to know?”

“Mom, I’m not sure you’re doing this right.”

“Yeh, well me neither. Have a great date. Let me know how it works out for you.”

“Oh and Mom. Tell Aba he’s not supposed to Google her and show me photos from LinkedIn or Facebook.”

Well, you don’t have to worry there.  She doesn’t have an account. We already checked.

Comments

Anonymous said…
gr8 levs my dorm consler THE BEST

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