Navigating love across lines of faith, culture, and tradition can be beautiful, and sometimes complicated. Whether you're just beginning the conversation, preparing for marriage, or years into your relationship, you don’t need to have it figured out.
Even with deep mutual respect, it can be hard to talk about holidays, raising children, extended family expectations, or how faith shapes your values without giving the impression that you are rejecting everything that makes the person you love who they are. These conversations aren’t about choosing one path or the other. They’re about listening, being heard, making thoughtful decisions together, and building a shared future with integrity and care.
Jewish tradition offers centuries of tools for working through conflict with humility and respect — especially when we don’t agree.
These conversations are not therapy. I’m a rabbi, not a therapist, and my role is to help you feel seen, not instructed. I’ll help you meet each other with respect, honesty, and presence. We’ll draw on Jewish wisdom when it helps, but this isn’t about answers.
I offer grounded, nonjudgmental support shaped by decades of spiritual leadership, deep listening, and thirty years of marriage.
Sessions are 50 minutes and can be booked individually or in a three-session series.
Navigating love across lines of faith, culture, and tradition can be beautiful, and sometimes complicated. Whether you're just beginning the conversation, preparing for marriage, or years into your relationship, you don’t need to have it figured out.
Even with deep mutual respect, it can be hard to talk about holidays, raising children, extended family expectations, or how faith shapes your values without giving the impression that you are rejecting everything that makes the person you love who they are. These conversations aren’t about choosing one path or the other. They’re about listening, being heard, making thoughtful decisions together, and building a shared future with integrity and care.
Jewish tradition offers centuries of tools for working through conflict with humility and respect — especially when we don’t agree.
These conversations are not therapy. I’m a rabbi, not a therapist, and my role is to help you feel seen, not instructed. I’ll help you meet each other with respect, honesty, and presence. We’ll draw on Jewish wisdom when it helps, but this isn’t about answers.
I offer grounded, nonjudgmental support shaped by decades of spiritual leadership, deep listening, and thirty years of marriage.
Sessions are 50 minutes and can be booked individually or in a three-session series.