Categories: Marriage and Relationships
Dear Dr. Yael
Dear Dr. Yael,
I read your column about being silent during a shiva visit and it struck a chord with me. You see, I have challenges with silence in general. I think they come from not being heard or understood as a child. My father would often say, “When are you going to get it?” This made me feel frustrated. Later, on I was diagnosed with ADHD, which I understand was the underlying cause of many of my issues. Yet, I still carry within me the child who felt unloved and invalidated. I yearned for a positive relationship with my father, but I didn’t know how to achieve it. And neither did my father. He was a Holocaust survivor who spent the war years in Siberia and parenting did not come easy to him. Can you address some of this in an upcoming column?
A Reader
Dear Reader, Thank you for writing about this very important issue. You are correct that validating and understanding children’s feelings are some of the most important ingredients in childrearing. In order to do so, you must keep your ego and desire to lecture in check. Validating means acknowledging his/her feelings without judgement, sometimes it helps to repeat what your child said in other words. When you are empathetic, loving, and patient with your child, even when he/she is not being lovable in that moment, you are teaching your child a few important things:- a) You will always love him/her no matter what.
- b) You are teaching discipline by not losing your cool.
- c) Validating feelings is not condoning bad choices or giving in to defiant behavior.


June 21, 2026 







