photo by Cátia Maciel
Just Add Light and Stir
Inspiration and Encouragement for Unschooling Parents
Saturday, November 29, 2025
Seeing and living harmoniously
photo by Cátia Maciel
Friday, November 28, 2025
Peaceful, interesting and happy
Yesterday's post might've warned you not to look at the photo or click anything. Sorry about that. I had cut and pasted something that was NOT a link on my page, but e-mail turned it into one.
There are Wayback Machine saves of some (not much) of the information from that long-gone forum, and I'm quoting something someone saved that I wrote, below. The link will go to an archived page about a parent worried about "socialization." It was nice to see something someone else had formatted up and saved that I had written. I'm usually on the collecting side.
If they're happy then they are!. . . .
If this moment is good, it's easier for the next moment to be good. If you have three or four really good moments in a day, people can go to bed happier, sleep better, and wake up happy. In as many small ways as you can, create a peaceful and interesting nest for your children and they'll leave it as happy, interesting people someday.
Socialization (archived)
photo by Sandra Dodd,
of reflections and shadows in a simple moment
There are Wayback Machine saves of some (not much) of the information from that long-gone forum, and I'm quoting something someone saved that I wrote, below. The link will go to an archived page about a parent worried about "socialization." It was nice to see something someone else had formatted up and saved that I had written. I'm usually on the collecting side.
photo by Sandra Dodd,
of reflections and shadows in a simple moment
Something looks like this:
food,
mirror,
reflections,
shadows
Thursday, November 27, 2025
More peaceful
You guys do it your way, let your kids run wild, let them curse, let them do every little thing they want to do.arcarpenter/Amy responded:
That's really not how my house looks or feels—not wild, not out-of-control. There is something in-between the extremes of demanding obedience and having children feel and act out-of-control all the time. The something in-between is giving feedback about how a behavior is affecting me and others, while also being understanding that the behavior is coming from a valid need. The something in-between often takes more time and attention than either of the extremes, but it is worth it, because my children get a chance to problem-solve and to grow in their own emotional awareness now, when they're young, instead of trying to figure it all out on their own when they're older.
The more we practice these principles, the more peaceful our house becomes. *That* is what our house looks like—not what you described above.
Peace,
Amy
Amy
What I left out was a story with examples of how unschooling was creating peace at their house. It's here:
photo by Gail Higgins
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Who thinks what?
The parents need to be truly interested in their children as people, not just as symbols or irritants or mistakes or property. They need to care more what their children think than what other adults think, and that is very rare in the world.
I'm glad she saved it.
photo by Elise Lauterbach

Tuesday, November 25, 2025
What do you know?
How will you be, as a parent, and why? What's keeping you from being the way you want to be?
Inventory your own tools. What do you already know that can make you a more peaceful parent? What tricks and skills can you bring into your relationships with members of your family?
photo by Rosie Moon
Monday, November 24, 2025
Heat and light
If I have a big woodpile, I don't have a fire. Even if I have a fireplace and matches and bellows and kindling and firestarters and a fire extinguisher and the chimney was just cleaned and inspected and I have a paper saying "good to go," I don't have a fire. Would wrought-iron fire tools on a cool rack help? What about a stained-glass fireplace screen, so no sparks can get out on the floor? I could subscribe to magazines for fireplace owners. I could join a yahoo group and a facebook page to talk about fires. I could be receiving catalogs with all kinds of fancy flameproof rugs and indoor wood racks and really cool slings for carrying wood in, and Ooh! What about a beautiful mantle?
Still no fire.
Meanwhile, the neighbors might have built a real, operating fire, in a little hole they dug and lined with scrap bricks or rocks, with wood they found in a vacant lot, and kindled it with old receipts and fast-food wrappers they found blown into the alley. Their fire has heat, their fire has light, if they're sitting around it talking and laughing, they have the benefit of the fire.
Some people want to look like they're interested and that they intend to hone their skills, but they don't actually want to do it, if it's going to involve any real combustion or change in them.
A Story of NOT Changing
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a fire in our own back yard,
not in a hole, but quite make-shift, 2012
Still no fire.
Meanwhile, the neighbors might have built a real, operating fire, in a little hole they dug and lined with scrap bricks or rocks, with wood they found in a vacant lot, and kindled it with old receipts and fast-food wrappers they found blown into the alley. Their fire has heat, their fire has light, if they're sitting around it talking and laughing, they have the benefit of the fire.
Some people want to look like they're interested and that they intend to hone their skills, but they don't actually want to do it, if it's going to involve any real combustion or change in them.
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a fire in our own back yard,
not in a hole, but quite make-shift, 2012
Sunday, November 23, 2025
Real people
Dan Vilter shared this story on the AlwaysLearning list in 2001:
At a park day, we were having a discussion about the usefulness of praise and sincerity. The unschoolers in the group were trying to point out the fallacy of over and insincere praise, and indirectly about treating your children as people first. After much talk getting nowhere, one of the other unschooling parents turned to me and in the French poodle voice started thanking me for all the things I had done for the group that day. Something like,"Oh Dan, thank you for bringing the stove for hot cocoa. You did such a good job setting it up and heating the water! You're so strong carrying that big jug of water all by yourself!" Everyone had a good laugh and the point was succinctly made."Treating them as people first." That's it. See them as people, who hear you and are thinking, and treat that respectfully. In her book Whole Child/Whole Parent, Polly Berrien Berends, uses the term "Seeing Beings."
photo by Denaire Nixon
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