Ancient Lessons for a Modern Life with Adam Teitelbaum

The Shavuahthon - Shavuot 5786

5 min · 22. maj 2026
episode The Shavuahthon - Shavuot 5786 cover

Description

The first time I lived on my own, my toilet broke. I called a plumber. He drove across town, walked into the bathroom, reached into the tank, reattached a small rubber stopper, and handed me a bill for $250. The part costs $5 at the hardware store. The fix takes ninety seconds once you know what you're looking at. I now know what I’m looking at. My Grandpa Harry would have been aghast. Almost every clear memory I have of him begins with the phrase, “let me get my glasses …” followed by an enduring solution. He hemmed all his own pants, built the dining room table now living with us, and resuscitated the toys I broke playing too enthusiastically. I cherished watching him in those moments, not a little awestruck. Every action was filled with love and devotion. Unfortunately, I can’t recall a time he said, “Adam, today I will show you how to sew on a button,” but that’s another essay.

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episode We contain multitudes - Parshat Korach 5786 artwork

We contain multitudes - Parshat Korach 5786

Not too long ago, I came home from a long work trip to a lackluster reentry. Turning into the driveway, I envisioned my triumphant return in the form of a dogpile in the doorway, followed by a lovely dinner filled with adoration and appreciation. What I walked into for real was the usual managed chaos and general underwhelm for my reappearance. No ribbons, no balloons. Only, “Daddy what’d you get me?” and “Can you grab the chicken out of the oven?” Deflated, I felt…deflated. Incidental. Hardly the hero’s welcome. And instead of recalibrating, I retreated into a pout. Yes. A pout. Which turned into a three-day stew. The unfortunate irony is that I knew instantly I’d missed an opportunity to become the husband and father I aspire to be.

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