Frum Therapist: Mental Health Resources for the Frum Community
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Mental Health Resources
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Showing Results 1 - 40 (274 total)
Treating the Problem of Compulsive Prayer
August 25th, 2012

By Avigdor Bonchek, Ph.D. The topic of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) has received much media coverage over the past decade. This is because we have recently seen remarkable progress in the treatment of this serious, debilitating, psychological problem, which for centuries had defied attempts at treatment. The progress in treating OCD can be attributed both to medical advances (treatment with anti-depressants) and to cognitive behavioral t …
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ANOTHER APPROACH TO DEMENTIA
August 25th, 2012

Leah Abramowitz The very words put fear into the hearts of everyone who hears them: dementia, Alzheimer's disease, cognitive decline, organic mental illness. We live in a generation when the number of people affected by dementia has ballooned beyond imagination. Everyone knows someone who suffers from a progressive deterioration of the mind: memory decline, inability to learn, impaired judgment, distorted orientation to time and place or behavio …
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The Shidduch Speed Bump
August 25th, 2012

Howard Forman, M.D. Recently a young patient began her first session with me, "Everyone tells me all the time what a great girl I am and how they cannot figure out why I am still single and about to turn thirty." As I got to know Devorah* a little more, I learned that she is well-educated, professionally successful, has a wide-network of friends and involves herself greatly in chesed. I was able to observe at that first session that she was smar …
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The Monster in the Closet: Helping Our Children with Fears
August 25th, 2012

Robin B. Zeiger, Ph.D. In my practice s a clinical psychologist, fears often enter my office. It may be the child who is convinced something is under the bed; it may be the teen who is anxious about taking a test, or it may the father who worries whether his ADHD son will succeed in life. To adults, fears often appear unfounded and frustrating. For example, we may become frustrated trying to convince our children there are no monsters under the …
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Flipping Out: A Parent's Guide to Sending a Child to Israel
August 25th, 2012

Michael J. Salamon, Ph.D.Many parents whose children have graduated from high school are busy preparing them for a year or possibly two or more years in Israel, where they will be studying full time in a seminary or yeshiva. This event has, in many circles, come to be seen as both a developmental requirement and a defining event for teens in their transition to adulthood. This progression from high school to a higher level of Jewish learning in …
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Self Thought for Better Health and Relationships
August 25th, 2012

Dr. Judith Guedalia — 2012 After more than 30 years in the psychology "business," I have learned a lot about the mind-body interaction in medicine, specifically the role of resilience and self-help. I've learned this not only from my university training and work experience with trauma patients, but primarily from my own experience as a patient, having had four births by Caesarian section, thyroid cancer, and now endometrial/uterine ca …
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ANXIETY: CAN IT BE CONTROLLED?
August 25th, 2012

Dr. Miriam Adahan As a teenager, I suffered from occasional panic attacks, social anxiety, and more than the usual amount of teenage angst. In today's drug-obsessed society, I would certainly have been given psych meds; thankfully, back then, it was expected that maturity would bring greater resilience and awareness. And so it was. Over the years, I developed numerous skills to help calm myself. I also learned that all normal people have ups an …
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Emotional Validation- Who, What and Why?
August 25th, 2012

By Aviva Biberfeld "Ma, I'm hungry." "Don't be silly, you can't be hungry, we just ate lunch." "I don't like that shirt. It has too much black in it." "What do you mean you don't like the shirt, of course you do." "Boy, I am really hot" "You are not hot. You can't be hot, it's a perfect temperature in here". Do any of these lines sound familiar? Or do they just sound ridiculous? I am willing to bet that at some point in our lives we have done th …
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On The Magical Relationship of Sisters
August 26th, 2012

 Hindie M. Klein, PsyD  They are born of the same parents, yet they are so different. They are loving and petty, helpful and hurtful, envious and generous, confidantes and rivals. With just one look, they can be giggling uncontrollably and with another, they can hurt coldly and squarely. They are bound forever, in times of happiness and in pain. And even if they don’t particularly like each other, they love each other.   The …
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My Teen Is Stressed, But Is Treatment Necessary?
August 26th, 2012

Mark Banschick   Stress is unavoidable in life. As good parents we want to shield our children, but we also know that we can only do so much. Stressful situations come in many shapes and sizes and affect our teenagers, whether we like it or not. Moving from one city to another or one yeshiva to another; the illness of a parent or a sibling; a parental psychiatric disorder like depression or anxiety; a difficult divorce; a parent losing a j …
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PERINATAL MOOD AND ANXIETY DISORDERS
August 26th, 2012

Perinatal Mood and Anxiety Disorders (PMADS) is a clinical term that means depression and/or anxieties that women might experience during pregnancy or postpartum. These feelings often conflict with assumptions and fantasies of how a woman should feel. A pregnant woman and her husband can be at a loss as to how to understand what is happening and how to cope. PMADS is triggered by dynamic and profound hormonal and physiological changes that begin …
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Sacrificing For One's Parents
August 26th, 2012

Parents sacrifice for their children - giving up their time, money and sometimes their own dreams - in order for their children to have the best life possible. Children, too, sacrifice for their parents. Consider this: A child grows up in a family with parental conflict or divorce, or with mental illness, or with a sibling off the derech, or with a parent who yells and hits. Children absorb the tensions in the family, taking on the role of protec …
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Why Won't They Get Along? --Insights about Sibling Rivalry
August 26th, 2012

Tali Moskowitz, LCSW               Imagine your boss has sent out an email with the intention of motivating his employees. There will be a productivity competition, and the winner will receive a monetary reward. This may bring out a competitive part of you and motivate you to win the prize. How do you think this competition would cause you to feel toward your co-workers? Perhaps you wou …
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LIVING WITH DEATH AWARENESS
September 1st, 2012

Aviva Barnett Personally, I believe that when I make choices and take responsibility for my life, I am living with my eyes wide open. When I have death in mind, I try not to take my loved ones for granted. If I had death in mind when I say goodbye to my husband at the start of the day as we leave home for work, I would realise that there is a possibility that either one of us may not come back. Death is always a possibility. I want to be open to …
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On Value and Valuation: Uncovering Your True Worth
September 1st, 2012

Yitzchak Rosman, Psy.D. “I can give you $3,800, but can’t go any higher.” My stomach dropped. How could he only offer $3,800? I bought the car three-and-a-half years ago for roughly $16,000 and, while it now had a few dings and scratches (and was in a couple of minor accidents), it still worked as perfectly as the day I was first handed the keys and title. How could he not see the value?! I was having my subcompact car appraise …
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Add A Minim Of Anger To Spice Up Your Life
Author: Dr. Yisroel Susskind, Ph.D.
September 1st, 2012

For years, I have taught clients that Torah forbids us from acting and speaking in anger. We have a right to take unilateral action to protect our legitimate needs; that action should be done with calmness, courage, determination and forcefulness; but without anger, hatred, resentment or vengeance. People need to communicate their hurt, clearly and directly, and that communication is obscured when they speak in anger.
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"I want to get married, too!"
September 2nd, 2012

 “Is it possible for my disabled child to get married?” This is a question that parents often ask. Their son or daughter may often convey “I also want to get married just like my sister or my brother or my friend.”   It is painful for persons of disabilities to see others get married while they are left behind. At the same time, there are naturally additional challenges to marriage amongst those with disabilitie …
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NAVIGATION FOR SINGLES
October 6th, 2012

By Dvorah Levy, LCSW I had the honor of speaking at two singles events this weekend and observing the world of people trying to meet that special person with whom they can form an attachment. I quote a friend who said, regarding the continuing effort to find the right relationship, that "it is the triumph of hope over experience." We are hardwired to want to be in a relationship with someone. That yearning is a very human and special part of our …
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Mirroring & Healthy Emotional Development
October 17th, 2012

Robin B. Zeiger, Ph.D. I must confess. I am privileged to collect and "play with" toys for a living.  In addition to traditional psychotherapy, I am a sand-tray therapist.  Sand-tray therapy is a technique developed by the students of Carl Jung.  Clients place miniature objects in a table-top sand-tray to create, symbolize, and work with their world.  One of my favorite groups of toys is my mirrors.  Mirrors help us jud …
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When All Else Fails, Play Gin Rummy
November 4th, 2012

He recognized me before I recognized him. We were in Yerushalayim on different sides of the street.  He was six foot two waving and yelling my name. "Noach, Noach, Noach Schwartz, the social worker! It's me Yechiel Klein! Don't you remember me? "He was wearing a hat, white shirt and suit and looked like a regular bochur from the Mir or Brisk. He did not look like the Yechiel I had met ten years earlier at a clinic in Boro Park.   …
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A Ticking Time Bomb
November 27th, 2012

Shmuel is an 8 year old boy who cannot tolerate changes in his routine and if
things do not go the way he expects them to, he can erupt into a tantrum that
terrifies his mother and his siblings. For example, one night, Shmuel wanted to
read a book that his brother was reading and promptly took it out of his brother's
hands. His mother tried to educate Shmuel that it was inappropriate to do that
but Shmuel just didn't unde …
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Anxiety in Children and Teens
November 27th, 2012

Rates of anxiety among young people in America have steadily increased over the
past fifty to seventy years. Today, five to eight times as many high school and college
students meet the criteria for diagnosis of major depression and/or an anxiety disorder.
As many as 20 percent of children between the ages of 5 and 16 experience some
type of anxiety, compared to the 5 percent of kids worldwide with attention deficit/
hype …
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Bipolar- Not a Life Sentence
November 27th, 2012

BIPOLAR – NOT A LIFE SENTENCE

By Dr. Miriam Adahan

Chaim* was admired in yeshiva for his incredible diligence. His days were consumed
with learning and he could be found in the Beis Midrash almost 24/7. For him, sleep was a waste
of time.Great things were forecast for his future until neighbors found him lying in the middle of
the street in Geula, hallucinating that he was Moshiach. Medications stopped h …
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A Matter of Relationship
Author: Mindy Hajdu, MS, LMSW
November 27th, 2012

Moshe and Sarah have been married for 5 years. Moshe describes Sarah as controlling and critical. Sarah describes Moshe as withdrawn and aloof. The conflict between Moshe and Sarah has increased with time, causing each to feel disillusioned with the other.

Just as in mainstream society, our community too has its share of couples living in a state of mutual disconnection and contention. The reason? "He needs to change!" she wags her finger. "She needs to wake up and smell the coffee!" he rebuffs. Each holds onto his or her position tenuously. Until then, husband and wife pass by like ships in the night, living two very lonely lives.
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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde: Two Parts of a Whole
November 27th, 2012

Tali Moskowitz, LCSW

The Mysterious Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a novella by
Robert Louis Stevenson about a prominent doctor who believes
that there are two parts to every person: good and evil. As an
experiment, the doctor creates a potion that divides the two sides of
his character, allowing him to transform between the good person
and the evil person inside of himself. Sometimes he is Dr. Jekyll,
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Looks Can Be Deceiving
November 28th, 2012

What’s the difference between private mental experiences (things that happens inside of us), and
concrete external behaviors (things that happen outside of us)?

One of the main differences is that we can experience things that happen outside of us by using our
senses.

For example, when people smile, we can see their lips turned up in the familiar expression (an outside
behavior). When someone looks away …
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Re-building Lives
November 28th, 2012

One of my clients once told me about the first time that she was taken to a

mental hospital. She was very confused. She didn’t feel comfortable in her body. She

didn’t know how to be or what to do next. She kept on trying to run to the nurse’s

station because she was terrified of the other patients. In the end she was strapped to

her bed to keep her safe and out the way. She was diagno …
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The Writing on the Wall: Noticing the Signs of Sexual Addiction
November 28th, 2012

Addiction necessitates secrecy, double lives, and self-denial in order to allow self-destructive behaviors
to persist over time. The addiction can survive so long as addicts can sustain their dual Jeckle and
Hyde existence. Once the behaviors are exposed, discovered, or revealed by loved ones, the addict
can no longer easily maintain this lifestyle, and is often forced to confront the unpleasant truth about
the reality he/she …
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This Year’s Book of Life Isn’t Sealed Yet.. G’Mar Tov
November 28th, 2012

Dr. Judith Guedalia © 2012

Director, Neuropsychology Unit; Chief Psychologist; Shaare Zedek Medical Center; Licensed Supervisor
and Specialist in Medical, Rehabilitation, and Developmental Psychology; EMDR Certified Practitioner:
Supervisor; Certified ADOS Diagnostician; Co-Chair Nefesh Israel. Dr. Guedalia can be reached through her
website: www.drjudithguedalia.com ALSO her new book:A Neuropsychologist’s Jou …
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Shidduch Crisis or Identity Crisis?
November 28th, 2012

My initial intention in writing this article was to explore various aspects of the “shidduch crisis” but
as I wrote I found my thoughts turning to a larger problem that needs to be addressed. A problem
that contributes to the “shidduch crisis” and causes so many other problems in our community. The
“shidduch crisis” is a nisoyon and we need to be careful about the propositions we make about it. T …
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Parenting -Expectations
November 28th, 2012

Rabbi Noach Orlowek, shlit”a, defines anger as “the distance between expectation and reality.”
I think this definition neatly explains much of the parental anger that we moms and dads struggle with
as we try to raise superstar children. So much of our anger is the result of our having expectations of
our children that are not met. This does not mean that we shouldn’t have expectations of them – only …
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The Magic of No
November 28th, 2012

Anyone who has attended one of my parenting workshops will be surprised to hear me touting
the word “no.” My usual mantra, after all, is “never say ‘no’ when you can say ‘yes.” I still
maintain this “golden rule” because I find that many parents say no automatically because
that’s the answer they would have gotten from their parents. Thus, it often comes without
reall …
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LIVING WITH HEARING VOICES
December 30th, 2012

LEAH ROKEACH  LCSW Ms. S. is 31 years old and has been hearing voices for the past 10 years.  The voices come almost every day and they tell her that she is a failure, will never amount to anything, no one likes her or respects her.  Ms. S. was diagnosed with schizophrenia.  At the age of 21 she was told she has a disease of the brain and will need to take medication for the rest of her life.  She was a senior in college …
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New-Town
January 3rd, 2013

Rabbi Richard Louis Price, M.D.

I am writing these reflections on the Newtown, Connecticut Massacre for The Jewish Press December
20, 2012. Most likely, by the time these words have been published, we will have more information
and greater insight and understanding as to what went wrong on that tragic day. Nevertheless, for the
sake of my own catharsis and hopefully for the benefit of the readers of this publication, I s …
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THE INEVITABLE AND INESCAPABLE TRUTH: TALKING TO CHILDREN ABOUT DEATH
February 19th, 2013

Dr. Norman N. Blumenthal

Terrorist attack in Toulouse….Gunman kills children in Newtown, Connecticut…Bombs continue to fall in Southern Israel…Child abducted in Brooklyn…
The news abounds with frightening and catastrophic events from which it is increasingly hard to insulate our children. Should we continue to try to protect our children from an awareness of such misfortune? If we have to resign ourselv …
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Can All Hurts in Marriage Be Forgiven?
February 19th, 2013

By Dvorah Levy
Our spouses have the ability to hurt us in a way that very few others can. How we understand these particular hurts and the process of working through them is the key to getting to forgiveness. Can all hurts be forgiven in marriage? The answer is “yes” but it requires a process that takes work, understanding and patience. The insight and understanding gained when working on repairing a deep hurt often bring couples …
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Psychotherapy: The Good, The Bad, and The Dangerous
February 19th, 2013

In the course of our 120 years there will be, Gd willing, many wonderful times.  However, since we are here to grow, we may also face stress, loss, and hardships.  Some of us might experience abuse, neglect, poverty, or financial strain.  Others might face challenges in marriage or parenting, mental illness, or medical illness. Accidents, war, crimes, or “acts of nature” may undermine our sense of safety.  No …
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Breeding For Succeeding: Teachers and Parents’ Symbiotic Relationship
February 19th, 2013

“My student’s mother is impossible!” exclaimed Mrs. Melamed to the teachers.  “Her son’s pants are always falling down an inch.  I’ve been making an extra check box in red next to his homework with the word ‘belt’ to remind Mom.  She fills out the rest of the homework but ignores ‘belt;’the next day, this kid’s pants are falling down.”  Ever sympathetic, t …
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Psychlogical Treatment and the Haredi Community
February 19th, 2013

By Seymour Hoffman

The attitude of ultra-orthodox rabbis toward mental health practitioners varies from outright hostility and distrust to respect and cooperation. The former generally view psychotherapists as a threat to religion and religious values, while the latter generally relate to them as colleagues in ministering to the emotional and psychological needs of people in distress. The former group, generally, is highly vocal in its …
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‘Anxiety’ Clarified
February 19th, 2013

By Benyamin Halpern We all hear the buzzword “anxiety,” along with statistics like those stating that one out of three people will battle anxiety in their lifetime. What is anxiety? What causes it, and how does one overcome it? And what is the Torah’s prospective?   Almost every normal person will experience anxiety and/or its related conditions during their lifetime to some degree.   A third of the population will ex …
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