Know Your Children with Rav Shlomo Katz Podcast By Rav Shlomo Katz cover art

Know Your Children with Rav Shlomo Katz

Know Your Children with Rav Shlomo Katz

By: Rav Shlomo Katz
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“Know Your Children with Rav Shlomo Katz” is a series about the everyday holy work of raising children with heart, patience, and honesty. Join Rav Shlomo in learning from the sefer Da Et Yeladecha by Rav Itamar Shwartz, author of Bilvavi Mishkan Evneh, and explore how Torah and Chazal guide us in building a healthy, loving connection between parent and child. This isn’t about perfect techniques or quick fixes. It’s about creating a foundation of truth, learning to really listen, and finding the right “funnel” so that what we want to give actually reaches our children. Each shiur is meant to be practical, gentle, and encouraging, and something you can take home and live with.© 2026 Rav Shlomo Katz Judaism Parenting & Families Relationships Spirituality
Episodes
  • 18. The Hidden Message Behind “What’s for Dinner?”
    Apr 12 2026

    There’s a question every home faces almost every day. “What’s for dinner?”

    It sounds simple. Maybe even trivial. But in this shiur, Rav SHlomo Katz and the women of Shirat David uncover how that question is actually a gateway into one of the deepest יסודות of parenting.

    What happens when a child says, “I don’t like this”?
    Do we push? Do we ignore? Do we accommodate?

    Rav Shlomo opens up a completely different דרך — one that doesn’t get stuck on the food at all, but sees it as an expression of something much deeper: a child’s עולם הרגשות.

    We explore:

    • Why suppressing a child’s preferences may “work”… but at a cost
    • The difference between acknowledging and indulging
    • How food becomes a language for emotional expression
    • Why children must first feel seen before they can be guided
    • And how to hold the tension between גבולות and רגישות

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    For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
    Join Rav Shlomo Katz's WhatsApp Community: https://chat.whatsapp.com/KHKOhhPaeHx5Kb74WL9L9a?mode=ems_copy_t

    Chapters
    00:00 Opening Greeting and Shabbat Blessing
    01:14 Sponsor Acknowledgments and Memorial Tributes
    02:52 Importance of Children’s Emotional World
    03:58 Core Parenting Question: What’s for Dinner?
    05:09 Two Dinner Strategies: Individual vs Uniform
    06:57 Analyzing the Textual Example on Food
    09:51 The Snake’s Curse and Taste Concept
    10:53 God-given Sense of Taste Explained
    19:28 Acknowledging Children’s Food Preferences
    21:39 Extending Taste Principle Beyond Food
    24:00 Masking Deeper Issues Behind Food Preferences
    25:48 Parenting Book Review and Khush Ha-Ta'am
    27:30 Shul Leadership vs Parental Authority
    29:07 Children's Meal Requests Reveal Emotional Needs
    30:13 Managing Multiple Dinner Options for Kids
    32:13 Gift of Midrash Iyov and Hidden Messages
    45:42 Questioning Suppressing a Child's Taste Preferences
    46:57 Importance of Recognizing Child's Feelings First
    48:08 Taste of Love Over Food
    49:30 Generational Differences in Emotional Acknowledgment
    50:55 Daily Meal Acknowledgment Practice
    52:27 Guiding Eating Habits Through Lenatev

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    53 mins
  • 17. How Am I Supposed to Know How to Truly Parent?
    Feb 22 2026

    Parenting can feel like you’re expected to know how to do something you’ve never done before — and then do it differently for each child.

    In this week’s Know Your Children, Rav Shlomo Katz and the women of Shirat David go deeper into a core yesod: investing in a child’s emotional development isn’t a “nice extra” — it’s essential. We talk about the pressure parents feel, the fear of “getting it wrong,” and why failure is often the only real way we learn (“ein habayshan lamed / אין הביישן למד”).

    From there, we move into practical, real-life tools: upgrading the quality of conversations as kids get older, creating daily emotional check-ins, and integrating a child’s emotional world into normal home life (not only reacting when something goes wrong).

    Along the way: a powerful “good questions” chinuch story, humility in parenting, and a big reminder that self-care and emotional health in the parent is often a prerequisite to building it in the child.
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    For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com
    Join Rav Shlomo Katz's WhatsApp Community: https://chat.whatsapp.com/KHKOhhPaeHx5Kb74WL9L9a?mode=ems_copy_t

    CHAPTERS
    00:00 Opening and Sponsorship Acknowledgments
    01:29 Emotional Development Is a Must
    03:52 Physical Growth vs Emotional Needs
    05:52 Parents’ Self-Criticism and Growth
    08:51 Learning Through Failure (Ein Habayshan Lamed)
    10:38 Humility in Parenting
    11:44 Divine Intent in Parenting
    13:10 Practical Steps for Emotional Investment
    18:05 Age-Specific Emotional Strategies
    22:51 Recording Device Test for Family Talk
    25:35 Daily Parent-Child Check-In: “How Was Your Day?”
    26:38 The “Good Questions” Lesson from Isadore Rabi
    28:39 Integrating a Child’s Emotional World into Daily Life
    31:14 Limits of the Chinuch Obligation After Bar/Bat Mitzvah
    35:15 Hebrew Mistake Story: Accordion vs. Playing
    37:36 Making Emotional Talk a Regular Part of Home Life
    43:03 Parent Self-Care as Prerequisite for Child’s Emotional Health

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    54 mins
  • 16. Developing My Child’s World of Emotions
    Feb 15 2026

    This week’s shiur comes with a warning: parenting is triggering because it not only exposes our children’s inner world, it exposes ours.

    Rav Shlomo Katz and the women of Shirat David continue the conversation about the three garments of the soulthought, speech, and action— and apply it to a core parenting question: How do we build our child’s world of emotions in a healthy, Torah-aligned way?

    We explore what it can look like when a parent is emotionally blocked (chasum), how that can echo through marriage, friendships, and even one’s relationship with Hashem—and why “being frum” is not the same thing as emotional closeness. Along the way, we touch on attachment theory (including Rabbi Yaakov Danishefsky’s Attached), the difference between “open” and “everything goes,” and why chinuch isn’t only about fixing negative emotions—but also about actively building confidence, love, and joy.

    Takeaway: Emotional safety isn’t permissiveness. It’s a home where the child can grow and where feelings can be named, held, and guided… without shutting the child down or turning the home into a free-for-all.
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    For more Shuirim and Music from Rav Shlomo Katz, visit: https://ravshlomokatz.com

    Join Rav Shlomo Katz's WhatsApp Community: https://chat.whatsapp.com/KHKOhhPaeHx5Kb74WL9L9a?mode=ems_copy_t


    CHAPTERS
    00:00 Sponsorship and Memorial Acknowledgments
    01:23 Trigger Warning and Parenting Focus
    02:37 Three Garments of the Soul
    04:59 Emotional Blockage in Parents
    08:29 Childhood Origins of Emotional Closure
    11:09 Open vs Closed Emotional States
    14:43 Illusion of Spiritual Closeness
    16:49 Attachment Theory and the Book “Attached”
    21:04 Scope of Emotional Education
    48:20 Psychologists vs Parental Duty in Child Development
    49:25 Common Questions and Experience of Seasoned Parents
    51:32 Beyond Negative Emotions: Building Confidence and Joy
    53:37 Love and Joy as Part of Chinuch
    55:03 Conclusion and Next Session Plans

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    55 mins
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