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Latest Family Matters
Family Matters
Joan Zlotnick
Family Matters
Joan Zlotnick
Family Matters
Joan Zlotnick
Family Matters
Joan Zlotnick
Family Matters
Joan Zlotnick
Guestlines
Although it was an admirably selfless act, why was Esther’s attribution worthy of triggering the process of geulah?
Rabbi Eytan Feiner
Inbox
“The Torah map of this country would look very different without the quiet influence of out-of-town kollelim”
Mishpacha Readers
Friendship
Would you rather be part of a large chevreh or have one special best friend? Many teens have asked themselves this question
Devora Zheutlin, MA, CAS
Friendship
When faced with hard moments, remember the following: Many meaningful conversations are “charged” with discomfort
Devora Zheutlin, MA, CAS
Naming Myself
Most of us are given our Jewish names at birth. But sometimes, we gain our name later in life. 3 accounts
Rikki Silver
Naming Myself
Most of us are given our Jewish names at birth. But sometimes, we gain our name later in life. 3 accounts
Rochel Samet
Diary Serial
“Dating is about meeting the person you’ll spend your life with. It deserves preparation”
Rachel Burnham with Bassi Gruen
Diary Serial
Feelings are a package deal — avoiding the hard ones means giving up the chance to feel the amazing ones
Rachel Burnham with Bassi Gruen
Etched in Memory: Rosh Hashanah Theme 5784
Sometimes there are events so monumental they’re perfectly preserved as a snapshot, never forgotten. 5 readers share the moments forever
Family First Readers
More Family Matters
Family Matters

Writing is a way to feel some small sense of control over our lives in those circumstances. When I wrote in my journal, worked on a memoir, and then published my novel, Griefwriting, I felt that, at long last, I was in charge of something

By Joan Zlotnick

Family Matters

There would be no Zumba classes for me. I definitely was not going to join a senior citizens’ center

By Joan Zlotnick

Family Matters

A discussion of what not to say would surely include the following question about a dementia patient: “Does he still recognize you?”

By Joan Zlotnick

Family Matters

Calamity is the surest test of friendship, and from its onset sets in motion a nearly foolproof process of discovering who your true friends are

By Joan Zlotnick

Family Matters

Over time, I took over all the tasks my husband z”l had been in charge of, jobs for which I had little aptitude and that I had avoided all my life

By Joan Zlotnick

Family Matters

G rief is an emotion familiar to most of us, and is generally thought to follow the death of a loved one. But grief can also be experienced before a death and, in the case of long-term caregivers, can go on for months or even years as we suffer multiple losses — the decline of our

By Joan Zlotnick