Categories: In Print / Features
Sarah Pachter – Spreading Divine Sparks

Sarah Pachter, a dynamic and sought-after international speaker and lecturer, is a writer who contributes regularly to newspapers, websites and podcasts, and the author of two books: Is It Ever Enough? and Small Choices, Big Changes. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and five children. Her lectures and articles focus on self-improvement and connecting with Hashem. So it shouldn’t surprise anyone that she recently gave her first TEDx Talk in San Diego.
While Ted and TEDx Talks have featured tens of thousands of speakers from celebrities to aspiring unknowns, Pachter is still one of the pioneers when it comes to Jewish religious female speakers. And her looking more like a model than a frum wife and mother, along with her poise, articulation and positive energy, can only help with deconstructing stereotypes.
Pachter’s talk, Love Triangles without the Romance: Fixing the In-Law Dynamic, is about mother-in-law/daughter-in law drama and how to avoid it – a universal subject if ever there was one. She presents the five rules she constructed from working as a kallah teacher for the past 17 years, all over the world.
From interviewing hundreds of mothers and daughters-in-law, the main tension Pachter has found is the conflict that results from mothers-in-law wanting to be more included and daughters-in-law wanting more space. This gave birth to this simple dual rule: Mothers-in-law, the less you intrude the more they include; and daughters-in-law, the more you include, the less they intrude.
The Five Rules are:
- Play fair. Equal love and equal attention: treat your daughter-in-law like a daughter and your mother-in-law like a mother.
- QTip. Quit Taking It Personally. It isn’t always about you. Stop finding malice where there might be misunderstanding, and give the benefit of the doubt.
- Start praising and thanking. Most daughters-in-law crave praise and most mothers-in-law crave thanks. Everyone craves appreciation.
- Choose connection over control. They are polar opposites and cannot co-exist.
- Accept and respect – and that includes boundaries. When a bride circles her groom under the canopy she is making a boundary to protect their privacy. Respect for each other’s limitations, and acceptance of each other is not optional and it goes both ways.


July 3, 2026 






