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just meParticipant
To all you non-NYC people, here most people use public transportation to go to work. To start shlepping bags to work then home again to pick up a few items after work IS a tircha.
Yes, there are more important things in the world, but here in NYC, the government is making life uncomfortable. This bag thing is annoying unless you keep them in a car, but here it is getting harder to get around in a car. The speed limit is 15 – 25 mph, depending where you are. They are NARROWING the highways instead of making them able to carry more cars. The trains and buses don’t run on a normal schedule. Our Mayor would like to eliminate all free street parking.
It is like the city would like to go back to the 1950s when most people didn’t have cars and people used paper bags (which often would fall apart mid-use).
We need a government that is responsive to the people’s needs.just meParticipantI don’t know what part of Flatbush or BP you are looking at, but where ever I lived in Flatbush, the driveways were legal.
just meParticipantKlugerYid, if you say that in the Gemara it says there is no private property, can I move into your house rent free? It isn’t really yours anyway…
July 30, 2015 2:52 am at 2:52 am in reply to: If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem #1094756just meParticipantIf you are not part of the solution, you are part of the precipitate.
just meParticipantrebdoniel, who said that every person on programs has to sell everything they got before they had money issues? Who says many expensive looking jewelry isn’t really fakes under $10? Are you looking into homes to see who still owns sterling? Are you complaining that they own it or are buying it? As for meat, many people only eat meat on Shabbos if that. Look to your own neshama and don’t worry about yenem.
just meParticipantBTW, Lipa dropped everything and ran to entertain a child he didn’t even know because the mother (my friend) saw him and told him about her son who was in the hospital and was a fan.
This is for sure the midah of a rasha.
just meParticipantTherapist, I agree with you but this lashon hara is SO much fun to write and read. And since we are all anonymous, it is even more fun to say…er…write. But we are all tzadikim speaking about a rasha so we all know that is correct, good and praise worthy. I’m sure there will be a special place in Olam Haba waiting for all of us lashon hara l’shaim Shamayim speakers…writers.
December 23, 2012 3:26 pm at 3:26 pm in reply to: A bit bothered by some advertisements in frum publications #1009258just meParticipantSo well said DaasYochid!
My thought about it are:1)If someone earned the money honestly and didn’t ask me to subsidize his expensive watch (or whatever bauble)I don’t care. 2)I personally wouldn’t don’t understand the need of someone to buy such high end thing unless it is much better than a lower end item i.e. lasts much longer, better resale value, more comfortable. 3)People should look at their own budgets and pockets and not someone else’s.
Oh, and more ahavas Yisroel and less jealousy would make Moshiach come faster, I think.
just meParticipantBottom line seems to be that halachically there is nothing wrong with ankle length skirts or denim. Saying “dress like a bas melech” is like saying people should all dress like chassidim since the men dress like the royalty in 18 century Easter Europe. Not that I am saying they are wrong, chalila, but that is the example many people here are giving.
just meParticipantThe only one I found showed rebbes lighting Chanuka licht. It wasn’t complete. It looked very good.
just meParticipantOooh! I have to go check it out.
just meParticipantJosh 31, I disagree with you. If we want our daughters to be treated like bnos melachim, we need to teach our sons how to behave to a wife. Or to people in general but that is another story.
So from what I understand here, there is nothing wrong with long (ankle length is also long) skirts except that certain communities don’t like them.
just meParticipantThank you, Popa and Whiteberry, that gave me well needed smile.
Shendrick, you are assuming that I own that sefer.
Plonis, why is a long skirt “sporty”? If we are trying to look “regal”, something, I have never heard before, why is corduroy ok. It isn’t regal.
So what has been said here so far, is that there is nothing wrong with it. Right?
just meParticipantMicro, that is where the role of a shadchun comes in. Your shadchan should go to the young man and ask him what is going on.
just meParticipantAurora, welcome back to the Jewish family. I am happy for you that you are discovering your roots. When things like this happen to me, I feel it is like Hashem, our holy Father, giving me a hug.
just meParticipantAll aged cheeses such as parmesan, romano and sharp cheddar are “hard” cheeses. These are aged at least 6 months and you must wait 6 hours (depending on your minhag) before eating meat. Some cheeses these days are chemically aged so they aren’t aged 6 months, but I’ve been told by the mashgiach of a cheese company that they are still considered aged. When in doubt, call the company. I’ve found most mashgiachim to be very helpful.
September 19, 2012 10:24 pm at 10:24 pm in reply to: Why haven’t the Gedolei Hador & Leaders of Klal yisroel made a zman Teshuva with #1098966just meParticipantwhy don’t YOU work on yourself to be a better person. I’m sure that would influence the people around you and the movement would grow. By sitting and wringing your hands wondering why SOMEONE ELSE hasn’t done anything, nothing is accomplished.
just meParticipantThat year, in his pre-shofur drasha, all my rav said was “If the events of this week can’t inspire you to do tchuva, nothing I can say will either.” With that said, he klopped/banged on the table and we started musaf.
just meParticipantFor those that don’t believe in learning Daf Yomi:
I read that when the Chofetz Chaim heard about the idea of Daf Yomi, he said he saw the pages of the gemara that no one usually learned, dancing around the kisai ha kovod from joy.
just meParticipantI’m coming from work. I will wear a better skirt and top, but not Shabbosdik. I read that you can bring an umbrella. I plan to. I’ll also wear my fall because it is cooler and I don’t care as much if it gets rained on.
June 14, 2012 10:31 am at 10:31 am in reply to: Where to buy Baby clothing in Flatbush/Boro Park #879727just meParticipantLittle Assets on E. 14 St. on the corner of Elm Ave. right off Ave. M
Klassy Kids on Coney Island Ave corner Ave. L
My daughter shops there but mostly on ebay. You can get great thing for little children there.
just meParticipantThe problem is that many people want to join and it cost hatzala alot of money for the gear the member’s get. There is also lots and lots of politics.
The problem with a new volunteer ambulance, it seems to me that they started it more to show Hatzalah they could do it than out of a need to help others. I say that because Hatzlah is doing the job very well. Another ambulance staffed by guys who couldn’t get in to Hatzala isn’t needed. ALL of these organization have more politics than you would believe! The expression used is “Hatzahlah works DESPITE itself”.
You want to help? Volenteer for Project Yes or Camp Simcha or Tomchei Shabbos. Somewhere where they are looking for people and would want you.
just meParticipantThis is a view from the other side of the needle. Many years ago, I worked for DY drawing blood from HS girls. In one school, the principal was very on top of it making sure there weren’t too many girls in the room at one time. If any girls started getting hysterical, he calmed things down right away. It was a pleasure. The other tech and I got things done quickly and efficiently. In an different school, they stuck us in a room about the size of a closet. There were no teachers or authority figures around. The girls started getting hysterical and before long they were dropping like flies. Rabbi Ecstien, the head of DY tried to keep order but couldn’t do it.
In general, it isn’t a big deal. IF the patient cooperates and doesn’t squirm, it usually doesn’t take long and isn’t painful. When a few vials are taken, it looks like a lot, but it really isn’t more than 2 tablespoons.
just meParticipantOnce I was at a family bar mitzvah and a cousin said that yesterday (which was Shabbos) she dreamed a figure of a woman came to her and said she was the Tzailimer Rebatzin and she was unhappy because since she had no children, no one came to her grave on her yurtzeit. Another cousin said that she also had a similar dream the day before. Someone checked the calender and it seems it was a few days before the yurtzeit. You can be assured that people made sure to always go to the kever on her yurtzeit since then.
I know other people who have had dream that were true.
just meParticipantI know someone who worked with her during her divorce. She felt that her husband’s connections put her at a big disadvantage. She felt she was getting a bad deal. I don’t know how true that is, but I know I have heard of many women who becomes less religious during a difficult divorce. Many feel that rabbis favor the man. Possibly what happened here.
just meParticipantKissing someone’s hand is a sign of respect. I remember seeing my father always kiss his father’s hand when we would leave his house. My father never had us do it, but it made an impression on me seeing my father’s respect for his father. He and my mother also used to talk to him in 3rd person i.e. Does the Tatte want a drink of water?
just meParticipant2sense, so are you wearing long robe and a turban these days?
January 8, 2012 4:44 am at 4:44 am in reply to: Girls High School Curriculum: Maybe all the schools need to do this #870013just meParticipantOne of Many, if you read the post, the class is called Toras Habayis. The girls learned how to check vegitables for bugs among other things. Who says loving Torah only comes when a person has a sefer in front of them? While you don’t ONLY want to teach Toras Habayis, it will probably be more useful to a future mother of Yisroel than leaning how to read a RaMBaM.
just meParticipantI heard a bunch of these um…people (we have to be nice) want to move to Lebonon to get away from EY. That shows what they are. I wish them luck with their “cousins”
just meParticipantSo you are saying the NK are right and gedolim like R’ Finkle, the Steiple, Chacham Ovadya Yosef and others are wrong?
I think that once a person denies the Holocaust and hugs people with Jewish blood dripping off their fingers, the rest of what they say is moot.
just meParticipantI am not a posek or a talmid Chacham, but it seems to me that to get a divorce, you have to go to a civil court. It may be an uncontested divorce or not, but marriage in the US is a civil matter and a secular divorce is necessarily.
I agree that there may be a FEW times when withholding or not accepting a get might be legitimate, but the average case involves a man who just wants to hurt the woman. Sorry, but that is how it is.
I don’t know if the picture circulating on FB is the same one that there was a demonstration about on Sunday, but if that is the case, Rabbi Auman from the YI of Flatbush was there and encouraged people to go. Knowing him, I’m sure he checked out the details and knew the husband was wrong.
just meParticipantUm..actually, I meant to post “can’t pay” but made a typo. A good reason to triple read over before you press “post”.
Of the yeshivos that I PERSONALLY know send kids home if the tuition isn’t paid, only one is MO. I understand it is a big problem. But what do you do? I have heard of children in Public School because the parents don’t have money to pay tuition for all the children. On the other hand, I’ve heard of a yeshiva that almost had their electricity cut off because there was no money. I personally know of a yeshiva that had a student whose family had big money problems because of illness in the family. That yeshiva heard that a sibling in another yeshiva was going to be thrown out so THEY raised money to pay the other yeshiva.
I don’t know the answer. I just know it is a big problem.
just meParticipantHarotze: I understand the yeshiva needs money, but what should be done if the family really can’t pay? Also, I personally know of 3 yeshivos that send children home. I also know that Prospect Park Yeshiva WILL NOT. It’s a hard issue.
One Of Many, yes, her ex should be paying it. It is a legal matter but until then, those yiddishe neshamos were sent home from school. It is a yeshiva matter because these are children that may end up in public school because the mother and her family doesn’t have the money and the father and his family wouldn’t help. She already sold her leichters the last time the yeshiva wanted to throw the boys out.
January 1, 2012 5:04 pm at 5:04 pm in reply to: Does such a guy have a chance of getting happily married? #840629just meParticipantNo person likes to feel that they have to do all the talking. For that they can sit home and talk to a wall. If he is that introverted that he can’t even hold a conversation, maybe he should take a public speaking course or do something to work on himself.
just meParticipantI loved the tour of Eir Dovid, City of David. It is right near the Kotel. It may be a little cold this time of year to wade in water.
December 27, 2011 2:09 am at 2:09 am in reply to: Increase in OTD Children… are made to feel like second-class citizens, #839784just meParticipantemuna, you must be young to say such things about 30 years ago. I am married 34 years and I can tell you that even though there weren’t so many brands of wigs, most women wore wigs. Also, I graduated Yeshiva of Brooklyn in 1969 and if you look at my graduation pictures, you would see that MOST of the hems only touched the top of the knee.
In my opinion, a big difference from those days to today is:
1) there were so few children that schools WANTED any warm bodies.
2) Most people were more open minded because they say what WWII did to the Yidden spiritually as well as physically. Most people had family that wasnt’ frum anymore after WWII.
So much of today is shtiyut (stupidity). When I got married, it was considered a major faux pas to wear black to a wedding. Now? And why is it ok for the Chosson or kalla’s sisters to wear colors but not anyone else? When I got married, during the summer about half of the Aguda where I davened wore straw hats! And we were still an Aguda shul.
People should not send their child to a school were the child is the frumest or the least frum. A MO parent who wants to send their child to a Chassidic yeshiva is looking for trouble. The same with a Chassidic parent who wants to send a child to a MO school.
WE HAVE ALL GONE CRAZY! I also have problems with people who wear “the uniform” then walk into a store and treat the staff like dirt. I have problems with people who wear “the uniform” and then do things that hurt people. Like the heads of a certain major frum organization that threaten to blacken reputations of people that threaten their power. Then these people sit there self-righteously and wonder why people are off the derech. DUH?!
OK, I’ve raised my issues with things, here is my answers: In places where there is a choice (like NY), schools have a right to restrict their school to people who uphold their levels i.e. Cholov Yisroel or not, denim or not, sleaves all the way to the wrists or 3/4 sleaves, white shirts or not. In places where there is not choice (like many places out of town), schools cannot deny a child a Jewish education. If your community school isn’t frum enough, MOVE. You can’t scream that everyone should change for you.
Schools also have to realize that if you squeeze kids too much, they will rebel. SOME things must be allowed. Pick your battles.
Sorry for the long post, but this bugs me alot!
December 14, 2011 11:43 pm at 11:43 pm in reply to: should parents stay together for the children? #835671just meParticipantHis obligation is to try to work on it. If he can’t, he should leave. The children aren’t helped by living in an envirement where 2 people are fighting or where one person (the “crazy” wife) snipes at the other and the other (the “tzadik” husband) is a doormat. If he thinks she will run away with the kids, he could go to court about it.
Most of all, I think he should go to a rav who HAS EXPERIENCE with these things and make some decisions, not just listen to the advice of total strangers.
just meParticipantPost high school religious studies. They will understand the fun part since some colleges are known for the partying.
just meParticipantwho says it is true? How does your friend know?
December 11, 2011 3:59 am at 3:59 am in reply to: Separate Times For Bochurim & Sem Girls In Gateshead #1029655just meParticipantMy daughter went to sem in Gatehead. She loved her sem, hated the community. It makes sense to me to have the different hour in stores because of the crowded stores. 2 tiny stores and lots of people is not tzniyus. My daughter complained that the boys didn’t get into trouble if they shopped at the wrong hours, but the girls could have been sent home from sem. That is life. Yeshiva boys always have more freedom than girls.
just meParticipantI did very well when I shopped with my daughter at the Kallah Warehouse on Ft. Hamilton and (I think) 45 St. The prices were good and the service was excellent.
My first thought was like Akuperma, that “there is a sale of kallas somewhere?” That would take care of the shiduch crisis!
just meParticipantI’ve had mono. All you can do is wait it out. Take a multivitamin and when you do feel like eating, make sure you eat healthy things. Refua shelaima.
just meParticipantLemaysa, was your leibidike kiruv keeping other people up? They weren’t right for spraying your dira with stinky stuff, but can you honestly say you didn’t do anything wrong?
just meParticipantThere is a lovely shul on…I think 82 Sheishes Yomim or 82 Yam Suf (they intersect by the kikar near Poran)…I think. But I do know for sure that my husband loved the minyan. There is a small yeshiva on the top floor, if that helps. It is a block off Sedorot Eshkol.
September 21, 2011 4:59 pm at 4:59 pm in reply to: Bringing children home from Israel because of impending trouble #811510just meParticipantI wasn’t planning to take my kids home. I was just curious about other people. I believe that the same One that watches them here, is watching them there. My son says he feels the same way. He promises not to go through the Arab shuk on Friday singing Hatikva.
Ms. Critique, if you think kids can’t or don’t mingle just because their parents are in the same city, you should learn more about kids.
just meParticipantI turned on the radio at 9 AM expecting to hear a light talk show. The morning news team was on instead and they sounded very serious. I don’t remember whether I heard it on the radio or heard the news when my mother called a few minutes later. I was horrified and scared. From where I live in Brooklyn, I could see the smoke coming from Manhattan. It was very scary. The day is very somber to me because of all those deaths and also because the whole world changed on September 11.
just meParticipantYalili Lover, thanks for a bit of inane lightness on a heavy day. You made me smile. 🙂
just meParticipantJustsmile613, the ORIGINAL Mom’s Knishes in Woodburn! A tiny hole in the wall with 5 million people squeezed in waiting for a knish!
August 19, 2011 6:37 pm at 6:37 pm in reply to: Tumah in Camp – we must differentiate ourselves from the Goyim #808238just meParticipant2 points, Gefen!
just meParticipantI don’t understand why you are bringing this to annonomous people instead of your rav. Who are we and why do you care what we say?
About European Hair, being in the business, I can tell you that SOME of what you say is true BUT NOT all of it. 1) There is no hair collected from Italian anymore but there hair processing is a large industry there. 2)Rav Moshe matir-ed the shaila of Indian Hair many times. 3)Chabad rabbis never assered Indian hair 4) Very long hair is available from Eastern Europe and Brazil 5)An expert can easily tell the difference between European and Indian hair.
Good luck with what ever you decide to do. Taking on a chumra is a good thing if you can stick with it and doesn’t impose on other people. May Hashem help you in your quest for growth.
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