Monday, March 2, 2026

Taanis Esther Survival Guide for Lakewood Parents

 Taanis Esther Survival Guide for Lakewood Parents
A Note from a Social Worker: Staying Calm Amid the Chaos

As a social worker in the Lakewood community, I often hear from overwhelmed parents who feel like Taanis Esther is a perfect storm of pressure  traffic, tantrums, tight schedules, and the ever-growing lists of drop-offs and expectations.

Today, the scene will be familiar: cars inching along block by block, toddlers melting down in car seats, and a backseat filled with shalach manos bags teetering on the edge of collapse. You're expected to be in 14 places at once in Lakewood Jackson and  Manchester (Do Morahs live in TR?) dropping off shalach manos early, visiting morahs and teachers, reminding your kids to smile and say thank you  all while fasting and juggling regular responsibilities.

It’s a lot.

So here are a few gentle tips to help you navigate the day with calm, presence, and even a little joy:

1. Set Realistic Expectations
You won’t get everything perfect and that’s okay. You’re showing kavod to the teachers and morahs, not competing in a Pinterest Purim competition. Even if one bag gets crushed or a ribbon falls off, your appreciation still shines through.

2. Prep Your Mind in the Morning
Before the chaos starts, take 5 quiet minutes  yes, even if it’s in the laundry room  to breathe deeply and set your mindset. Say a short tefillah or affirmation: “Hashem, help me go through this day with calm and kindness.” You’ll be surprised what a few moments of grounding can do.

3. Create a Drop-Off Game Plan
Map out your route the night before, and prioritize your most important stops first. Keep a printed list so you’re not scrambling. Build in buffer time  because yes, someone will forget their shoe or spill juice on a rebbi card.

4. Car Time Can Be Quality Time
You're going to be in the car for a while  turn it into bonding. Play Purim songs, share funny memories,  count the traffic cones on Central Ave, count how many new Eqonox cars are on the rd or talk about what each teacher means to your child. These conversations can transform the “wasted” hours into precious connection.

5. Remember: The Teachers and Rebbeim Appreciate YOU
A kind note and a warm smile mean more than the packaging. But yes  tips matter too. It's a gesture of gratitude for a year of hard work, care, and chinuch. Don’t stress about the amount  give from your heart, according to your ability. Even a modest envelope, given with warmth and a thank-you, carries value.

6. Expect Gridlock… and Choose Calm Anyway
Lakewood traffic on Taanis Esther is almost a minhag at this point. Getting frustrated won’t make it move faster but turning on calming music, keeping snacks in the car for the kids, and choosing patience can change everything. Your kids will mirror your energy  if you’re calm, they will be too (eventually!).

7. Hydrate Wisely Before the Fast
Don’t forget, you’re fasting  and dehydration is a shortcut to stress, irritability, and fatigue. Prep the night before: drink water, rest, and plan light tasks for yourself post-drop-offs.

8. At the End of the Day… Pause and Reflect
You did it. You showed your children how to express gratitude, how to manage chaos with dignity, and how to prioritize kavod hachinuch. That’s no small feat. Be proud of yourself, even if you forgot a label or ran 20 minutes late.

Final Thought:
It’s easy to get caught up in the packaging, but the real shalach manos is the smile you give the morah, the gratitude and Hakoras hatov you show the rebbi, and the emotional calm you offer your children. That’s the kind of chinuch that lasts longer than any candy bag ever will.

Wishing you a meaningful fast, a joyful Purim, and a car that miraculously stays clean for more than 15 minutes.

With warmth,
A Lakewood Social Worker Who Gets It 

AI




9 comments:

  1. Taanis Esther is for Davening amd Fasting !
    Purim is for Mishloach Manos !
    Don’t mix them up .

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The minhag in Lakewood is traffic jams and mishloach manot.
      Of course, there's no messorah, except that traffic jams are every day.

      Delete
  2. Beautifully written, but unfortunately missing the mark. Taanis Esther is not supposed to be mishloach manos day. It is for fasting and davening. If it isn't possible to deliver mishloach manos on Purim, then sending a Hakaras Hatov package to school is a great and low stress option. Mothers should consider that opting out of the Taanis Esther madness is a completely acceptable option.
    Likewise, no one should feel pressured to send a check if they cannot afford it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This is a spoof

      Delete
    2. Well said. Sending something to school should be where it starts and ends

      Delete
  3. When and why did menahalim/os principals rebbes morahs teachers etc become mandated recipients of mm ?

    It's for friends & neighbors - at most

    It's cute that schools try to arrange for it to be prior to Purim etc but what they should really be doing is abolishing it in toto

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. When and why did neighbors and friends become mandated recipients of mm?

      It's for menahalim/os principals rebbes morahs teachers etc at most

      Delete
  4. The fact that we need such advice is a sickness. Like everything in Lakewood, we have made the ikkur into taful and taful into ikkur.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Quite sad that every occasion needs a guide and it's about survival since we can't manage. Every
    occasion is taken out of context, and the difficulty is really keeping up with the Joneses. Come on people let's get a grip on ourselves.

    ReplyDelete