Move Over St. Valentine, Rabbis Are the Real Romantic Experts

Posted by Susan Walsh on Feb 13, 2009 in Relationship Strategies |

 

Speed Dating

Speed Dating

This morning I checked my inbox knowing that my Google Alerts would have coughed up numerous articles about romance, just in time for the imminent, dreaded, Holiday That Must Not Be Named. Sifting through the trite and the cute, I found four separate articles describing recent college speed dating events. Huh? I thought speed dating was for single folks getting on in years and still in search of a soulmate. Now it appears to be at least moderately successful on college campuses around the country, with hundreds of students showing up on some campuses. What gives? Could this signal a return to dating among the young? Be still my beating heart, this merits further exploration!

SpeedDating was introduced by Rabbi Yaacov Deyo of Aish HaTorah in 1998. He conceived the idea as a way to help Jewish singles meet and marry. For some time, the Jewish community has been concerned about the rate of intermarriage with non-Jews, which has been estimated at 52%. Providing structured opportunities for young Jews to meet seemed like an effective marketing strategy. Turns out that rabbis are the new go-to dating coaches. Who knew? These guys make it their business to know who’s dating whom, and they’re coming up with some novel approaches to playing matchmaker.

At about the same time speed dating became a phenomenon, JDate was founded by Joe Shapira and Alon Carme. Its stated mission is “to strengthen the Jewish community and ensure that Jewish traditions are sustained for generations to come.” Again, the not so subtle objective here is to get Jews to stop dating Shiksa Goddesses and Sheygetz Romeos. Stop diluting the gene pool! In Boston, a nearby temple funds $150 JDate memberships for interested singles, a trend that can be found in synagogues all over the country. I personally know several college students who are on JDate, a trend I haven’t observed with other online dating sites among twenty year-olds.

The best relationship guru around is Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, an Orthodox rabbi who hangs out with Oprah:rabbi-shmuley-boteach2He wrote a bestseller a while back called Kosher Sex; it sold over a million copies. I love Rabbi Shmuley. I wish he could come live with me and give me heartfelt encouraging advice about relationships all day long. But I doubt I could lure him away from his wife and nine children, Shiksa Goddess though I am. A daily dose of his wisdom is available on Oprah.com in the form of Today’s Shmuleyism, though:

On the steps to falling in love:

“To love specifically,  you need to love generally. To love one person, you need to really love all people. This is the holistic approach to love – you can’t fall in love if you are not practicing overall love.”

He actually recommends committing first, then falling in love later. He says love starts to come once commitment brings out your best qualities.

On the rules of dating:

Do not get the four stages of romantic relationships out of order, namely:

  1. physical attraction

  2. verbal communication

  3. emotional intimacy

  4. physical intimacy

These four stages need to unfold gradually and in the right order. If you get them out of order, then the relationship is going to be very troubled.”

On finding a soulmate:

“To find the perfect soul mate, focus not on what you have, but what you lack. By identifying that one big thing we are missing, we are guaranteed to find someone who makes us feel whole.”

He says a soulmate is someone with whom you never have to prove yourself, and with whom you can be honest.

On where to find a nice guy:

“A good man, while not easy to find, is possible as long as you look in the right places, and the right places mean venues that foster purpose, compassion, hard work and spiritual commitment.”

He suggests places of worship, bookstores, charity events, the military, work, libraries, concert halls, weddings, lectures and coffeehouses.

 

So forget the whole stupid Valentine’s Day shtick. Whether you are Jewish or not, listen to a rabbi. They really seem to know how to get the job done.

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3 Comments

  • verie44 says:

    I'm not trying to rain on anyone's parade, everyone is free to choose whomever they want as a partner, but why is the Jewish community so concerned with the rate of intermarriage with non-Jews? You can still have the same culture as long as both parties agree to raise the children Jewish. And you have the added benefit of having a partner that doesn't have a ONE in THREE chance of carrying AT LEAST one gene for a devastating, debilitating disease (Ashkenazi Jews are notorious for having Tay-Sachs & Cystic Fibrosis among others). If the Jews intermarried a bit more, they wouldn't have such problems due to lack of genetic mixing.

  • Polyamorous Desi re: Rabbi says:

    On finding a soulmate:
    “To find the perfect soul mate, focus not on what you have, but what you lack. By identifying that one big thing we are missing, we are guaranteed to find someone who makes us feel whole.”

    I totally disagree with that.

    I think the major problem is that people are looking for someone to “fix” them, to give them “purpose” or to make them “happy”. All of this comes from within.

    We should be 2 wholes coming together to enhance each other. Not 2 broken halves looking for the “other” to “complete” us.

  • Susan Walsh says:

    I agree with you – I guess I took that more as an “opposites attract” kind of thing. I have found that to be true. I am highly social and gregarious, while my husband is more reserved. We complement each other well. If we were both like him, we’d be a boring couple, probably, and if we were both like me, we’d be overly emotional and most likely fight all the time.

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