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November 19, 2024
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Linking Northern and Central NJ, Bronx, Manhattan, Westchester and CT

A One-Sided Conversation

I don’t know you (unless I do), but statistically, I’m pretty sure you don’t like public speaking.

Unfortunately, though, you probably have to make a bar mitzvah at some point, nebech, and you have to speak, even though you’re not the one becoming bar mitzvah. And what do you even speak about? At your son’s bris, you got to talk about his name, but what now? Everyone already heard the name speech.

Not only that, but you have to provide your son with a speech, too, plus your son’s rebbi is going to speak, so you might have to write him something. You should probably ask.

These days, if you don’t feel that you can write a d’var Torah, you could always hire a talmid chacham. Though if you do, you’re still going to have to write the thank you’s, unless this is a talmid chacham who knows all your family politics.

For example, you have to write into the speech that your son thanks you for making him a bar mitzvah. You have to do this even though everyone’s aware that he didn’t write the speech and that you wrote a thank you for him to say to you, in public, but you still have to write it so your family doesn’t think that you have the type of kid who doesn’t thank his own parents.

He also has to thank whoever bought him his tefillin, though he shouldn’t just say, “whoever bought me my tefillin.” He should insert an actual name. It’s more meaningful. And of course he has to thank whichever grandparents sometimes babysit him during the summer.

You also want to mention any relatives who unfortunately couldn’t make it to the bar mitzvah, but you know that they’re there in spirit, except for the ones who are still alive.

And even once he starts his vort, your job isn’t done. You have to sit where he can see you so you can make gestures in case you want him to speak louder (hand motion upward) or to for goodness sakes slow down (hand motion downward). And you also want to have him memorize what your hand motions mean beforehand, so that he doesn’t think that downward means talk quieter and upward means speed up. Being more animated about the motions on the spot will not get him to suddenly realize what you mean, though it will make for a more exciting simcha video.

And then you have to speak. (Sure, you might want to speak first so you can introduce the bar mitzvah boy, but arguably, anyone who needs to be introduced to the bar mitzvah boy doesn’t need to be at your simcha.)

Firstly, you have to thank everyone for coming in. It doesn’t matter if every single one of them lives just down the block. It’s more about the energy that it takes to go out to someone’s simcha and be social when they might not really feel like it, and what if they’re asked to speak? And you’re saying, “I’m not asking them to speak.”

But they don’t know that you’re not asking them; they just know that you haven’t asked them yet. For all they know, you’re going to ask them on the spot, even though you had 13 years to call them. This isn’t a surprise bar mitzvah.

As part of this thank you, of course, you have to list all the towns that people came in from, and you’re inevitably going to forget one, at which point someone in the audience will helpfully yell it out. And it will be some inconsequential town that was really included in what you said. Like you’ll say, “People who came from as far away as Borough Park and Flatbush,” and someone will yell, “and Midwood!” and then he’ll grin at the guys at his table like he just saved your entire speech, while you make a mental note to ask him to give the next speech. In fact, you’re going to introduce him immediately at the very end of your speech.

You also have to make a joke about poschim b’chvod achsanya—the achsanya being your wife—and everyone will chuckle nervously, like they stepped in the middle of a shalom bayis thing. Or, at the end of your thank you’s, you can say something like, “And of course I’d like to thank my wife for taking care of planning this bar mitzvah from start to finish.” Every husband says something to this effect, and if you just listened to the speeches, you would get the impression that the wives do absolutely everything, while the husbands just bumble around waiting for their turn to speak.

“Don’t worry; you can speak at the bar mitzvah.”

The truth is that the husbands do plenty, and if the wives gave speeches, you’d hear about how much the husbands do. So not only does everything the husband does go unsung, he has to speak, too. So that’s fair.

But in reality, the husband has to thank his wife, because even a husband who does the best job that a husband can possibly do is still going to come up short in the planning department, because even the most helpful husband, left to his own devices, will blow the entire bar mitzvah budget on food. And don’t get me wrong; it will be amazing food. And all you husbands out there are like, “Well, what else is there? … Oh, you mean photography?”

But I mean other things, too. Decorative things, for example. Like centerpieces. Women say, “Yeah, we need something in the middle of the table so people don’t have to stare at each other while they eat.” So this way, you could be sitting across from someone the entire time and not even know.

Another thing the wives think of is tablecloths. Husbands don’t want to spend money on tablecloths. If not for his wife, he’d just say, “This is a wedding hall. People only ever eat fleishigs on these tables.”

Basically, a husband has learned that most of the men there, like him, won’t notice the things his wife did unless he points them out in his speech. He’ll say, “She arranged everything, from the flowers…” and the other guys will look around and go, “Oh yeah! There are flowers!”


Mordechai Schmutter is a freelance writer and a humor columnist for Hamodia and other magazines. He has also published seven books and does stand-up comedy. You can contact him at [email protected].

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