• Can You Please Tell Me What to Say? with Mrs. Chumi Friedman לעילוי נשמת ליפשא בן יהושע
    Jun 17 2024

    Chumi Friedman
    Director of HUG, a division of A Time for those who have experienced perinatal or infant loss

    · My sister-in-law had a stillborn. The one-year mark is coming up. Should I say something to her?

    · My brother lost an eleven-year-old son. But he was very special-needs. His bar mitzvah is coming up; they wouldn’t have made a real celebration anyway. Should I say something?

    · Does it make sense that my sister-in-law doesn’t want to talk about her loss while my brother-in-law wants to talk nonstop? I thought men are more reticent.

    · Is it better to say something cliché or just to say nothing?

    These questions and more are posed to Mrs. Chumi Friedman all the time. There is no “one-answer-fits-all” here. She doesn’t know the person you are wondering about. But you do. Come listen and hopefully gain some valuable insights.

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    50 mins
  • No Such Thing as a Perfect Relationship with Mrs. Esther Gendelman, לעילוי נשמת יחזקאל שרגא בן אלישע
    May 13 2024

    Mrs. Esther Gendelman, MS, LPC, ACS
    Mrs. Esther Gendelman’s passion is to help people foster meaningful relationships. There is no such thing as a perfect person, which means there’s also no such thing as a perfect relationship, although some relationships feel rock solid. Yet loss can impact even the strongest relationships with ripples of uncertainty.

    A mother can feel so confused as she watches her daughter navigate the pain of losing a child.Where is her place in all this? And does her pain as a grandmother count at all? Similarly, after a wife loses a parent, her husband may be confused by her changes in behavior and mood swings. Loss affects not only immediate family members but also extends its reach to siblings,neighbors, and friends.

    In the wake of profound loss, individuals may find themselves navigating uncharted territory in their relationships. Moreover, if relationships were already strained before the loss, the added burden can exacerbate existing struggles.

    Listen to Mrs. Gendelman as she speaks with much wisdom and understanding. Relationships can be complicated. But that doesn’t mean they can’t be wonderful.

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    https://www.chevrahlomdeimishnah.org/product/i-wish-someone-would-have-told-my-friends/

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    50 mins
  • Killed for being Jewish with Mr. Hillel Fuld לעילוי נשמת יהושע בן זאב
    Apr 15 2024

    Hillel Fuld was preparing for Yom Kippur. Although he had heard the news about a terror attack in the neighborhood where his brother lived, he didn’t know that his brother was the victim. Because… well, these things only happen to other people. Except that sometimes they can happen to us.

    During this time, when our hearts are with our brothers in Eretz Yisrael, when we all need to work on our emunah and we wonder why the world hates us, Mr. Fuld reminds us that halachah b’yaduah she’Eisav sonei l’Yaakov. We can’t change that. But we can recognize that wherever we may find ourselves, we need to be absolutely committed to making a Kiddush Hashem.

    https://www.chevrahlomdeimishnah.org/product/i-wish-someone-would-have-told-me-a-book-for-teens-who-have-lost-a-parent/

    https://www.chevrahlomdeimishnah.org/product/i-wish-someone-would-have-told-my-friends/

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    18 mins
  • Sitting Shivah for the Brother I Didn’t Want to Sit For with Rabbi Naftoli Kassorla לעילוי נשמת אליהו נתן בן הרב חיים יוסף
    Mar 22 2024

    Rabbi Naftoli Kassorla, Speaker, Teacher and Rebbi in Yerushalayim

    Imagine getting an unexpected call informing you that your brother died. Presumably, you would always remember it as one of the most difficult phone calls of your life. But what happens if you haven’t spoken to that brother or had any kind of real relationship with him in years?

    For valid reasons Rabbi Kassorla had found it simply impossible to maintain a relationship with him. In fact, Rabbi Kassorla was told that because of this history, he wasn’t even required to sit shivah. But his wife saw that perhaps it wasn’t so clear-cut. She encouraged her husband to re-ask the shailah. And so began a journey of grief that was very far from typical. Since that fateful phone call, Rabbi Kassorla has worked hard on himself, grappling with feelings of grief and confusion. Today, he has so much to share about that journey.

    Rabbi Kassorla can be reached at mailto:nkassorla@gmail.com




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    https://www.chevrahlomdeimishnah.org/product/i-wish-someone-would-have-told-my-friends/

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    45 mins
  • Lessons from the Paper Menshies with Mrs. Mindy Blumenfeld, LCSW לעילוי נשמת שמעון הלל בן חיים יצחק אייזיק
    Mar 18 2024

    Mrs. Mindy Blumenfeld, LCSW
    Mrs. Mindy Blumenfeld is positive and upbeat. She is smiley, and she makes you smile.
    You would never know that she lost her youngest son Hillel to cancer. Although she has
    been profoundly impacted by her loss, she won’t let the pain bring her down into
    negativity.

    She started writing about Hillel as a means of finding comfort. But really, her journey
    with writing about her son began with the puppets she created when Hillel was first
    diagnosed at age six. Faced with the challenge of keeping him occupied during difficult
    treatments, she created cute little puppets. These whimsical characters not only
    provided a distraction for Hillel but also became a source of comfort throughout his
    battle, even during his relapse at the age of eleven and his subsequent years of illness
    until he succumbed at age sixteen.

    While initially crafted for one young child, these puppets have surpassed their original
    purpose. They are now featured in a book designed to teach children about facing
    challenges, and surprisingly, they have become valuable teachers for adults as well.
    The story of these endearing puppets has also earned a place on the Relief from Grief
    podcast. Mrs. Blumenfeld's resilience and creativity shine through, turning a personal journey of pain into a story that just might make you smile.

    Click here to order the book
    https://www.israelbookshoppublications.com/store/pc/Hillel-and-the-Paper-Menschies-PRE-ORDER-29p10056.htm

    https://www.amazon.com/Hillel-Paper-Menschies-Mindy-Blumenfeld/dp/B0CZPN2CDV/ref=sr_1_1?crid

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    43 mins
  • From a Middle-Row Seat with Mr. Aaron Broyde לעילוי נשמת יחזקאל שרגא בן אלישע
    Mar 4 2024

    Mr. Broyde, who happens to be my first cousin, discusses his struggles and pain after losing an uncle, aunt and cousin who were an integral part of his family.

    He was part of the same tragedy that was my life. But as Mr. Aaron Broyde says repeatedly, it was from a seat further back. No one realized how much the loss of his relatives affected him because he was a nineteen-year-old bachur learning in yeshiva in Eretz Yisrael during that time.

    He had stomach problems. The Israeli water is easy to blame for that. He had sleeping issues. Whatever. But after living with these issues for many years, even getting married and building his own family, Aaron said, “I can’t. I just can’t do this anymore.” Finally, he invested time in understanding what trauma means. He spent time learning about neurological pathways. And he devoted time learning how to live with happiness and connection.

    He found his own way. But I think it can become the way for many other people too.

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    https://www.chevrahlomdeimishnah.org/product/i-wish-someone-would-have-told-my-friends/

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    29 mins
  • Twice in one year with Mrs. Barbara Bensoussan לעילוי נשמת ראובן בן חיים
    Feb 19 2024

    Mrs. Barbara Bensoussan

    Novelist and well-known contributor to frum publications

    The young mother checked in to the hospital to have a baby. Nothing out of the ordinary. But this time, nothing went as expected. Not many people die from childbirth today, but Mrs. Benssousan’s daughter Miriam did. When her birth experience went awry, the doctors worked all night, desperately trying to ensure a happy outcome. They saved the baby. But the mother remained in a coma for the next four months until she passed away. This precious newborn never got to know her mother. Her two older sisters have, at best, only hazy memories.

    And then, before the year of aveilus was done, tragedy struck again. Mrs. Benssousan’s six-year-old grandson came down with what appeared to be a simple infection. But complications set in. For six months he fought for his life before succumbing.

    Yet, despite her losses, Barabara is such a positive person. She clings to her emunah. And she clings to doing what is right.

    She has been through a lot and she has a lot to offer.

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    https://www.chevrahlomdeimishnah.org/product/i-wish-someone-would-have-told-my-friends/

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    34 mins
  • My Brother Toli with Mrs. Soroh Leah (Rickman) Cohen לעילוי נשמת יהושע בן זאב
    Feb 5 2024
    My Brother TuliMrs. Soroh Leah (Rickman) Cohen The Getting Used to Having a Pebble in Your Shoe podcast with Rabbi Benjy Rickman has gotten many hundreds of views. If you listen, you will understand why. When his son Tuli passed away, his world ended. The pain was so intense, it seemed to him that life must have stopped for the whole world. How could life move forward when his beloved son had died? But life did move forward, and Rabbi Rickman learned how to move forward with his pain, role-modeling for his family how to do so as well.


    And then Hashem blessed the family with a simchah. It was with much gratitude and joy that they celebrated the engagement and wedding of their daughter Soroh Leah.


    Like her father, Soroh Leah Rickman, now Cohen, has so much to share, but this time from the perspective of one who lost a sibling. She was so close to Tuli. She missed him like crazy. He wasn’t even at her wedding. But her husband is getting to know the brother-in-law he never met. Listening to Mrs. Cohen’s experiences and insights will give listeners a peek into what it can be like for those who lost a sibling.


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    https://www.chevrahlomdeimishnah.org/product/i-wish-someone-would-have-told-my-friends/

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    42 mins