
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Marriage isn’t a continuation of dating — it’s a different world. Rabbi Klapper explains the essential “switch” every engaged person must make: moving from a life of mostly-me to one that is fundamentally “us.” The engagement sparkle can mask the hard reality that daily married life requires deep, sustained effort: shifting priorities, learning to care about things that don’t naturally move you, and accepting that many small slights (dirty socks, missed calls, a forgotten expectation) are really tests of consideration. He unpacks the ancient pairing of matzah (found, settled) vs motzah (still searching) to show why wholehearted commitment — not hedging or “let’s try it” ambivalence — is the strongest protection against future heartbreak.
This episode is a practical primer for engaged couples and their mentors. Rabbi Klapper gives concrete guidance: cultivate a rabbinic mentor, set realistic expectations for the engagement period, practice explicit communication instead of mind-reading, and deliberately reprioritize goals so the marriage’s needs come first. He stresses that many “common sense” shalom bayis techniques are deceptively hard in practice and require rehearsal — humility, vulnerability, and steady daily acts of care. If you want a marriage that lasts and grows, treat the engagement and first year as training for lifelong partnership, not as an extended honeymoon.
By Rabbi Ari Klapper, Real Judaism, Eli Podcast ProductionsMarriage isn’t a continuation of dating — it’s a different world. Rabbi Klapper explains the essential “switch” every engaged person must make: moving from a life of mostly-me to one that is fundamentally “us.” The engagement sparkle can mask the hard reality that daily married life requires deep, sustained effort: shifting priorities, learning to care about things that don’t naturally move you, and accepting that many small slights (dirty socks, missed calls, a forgotten expectation) are really tests of consideration. He unpacks the ancient pairing of matzah (found, settled) vs motzah (still searching) to show why wholehearted commitment — not hedging or “let’s try it” ambivalence — is the strongest protection against future heartbreak.
This episode is a practical primer for engaged couples and their mentors. Rabbi Klapper gives concrete guidance: cultivate a rabbinic mentor, set realistic expectations for the engagement period, practice explicit communication instead of mind-reading, and deliberately reprioritize goals so the marriage’s needs come first. He stresses that many “common sense” shalom bayis techniques are deceptively hard in practice and require rehearsal — humility, vulnerability, and steady daily acts of care. If you want a marriage that lasts and grows, treat the engagement and first year as training for lifelong partnership, not as an extended honeymoon.