photo by Sandra Dodd
Just Add Light and Stir
Inspiration and Encouragement for Unschooling Parents
Monday, April 19, 2021
Present and open
photo by Sandra Dodd
Sunday, April 18, 2021
Teamwork!
"It isn't self-sacrifice to work for your team. It's teamwork." |
photo by Marta Venturini
Saturday, April 17, 2021
Peace in the bank
![]() | Do what will help your baby. Be the gentlest, sweetest, most attentive mother you can possibly be, and you will be putting peace in the bank for you and your whole family. |
SandraDodd.com/mentalhealth
photo by Lydia Koltai
Thursday, April 15, 2021
Making a family's life better
![]() | Some have written that unschooling made their family life better. In every case I've seen, making a family's life better is exactly what makes unschooling work well. So which comes first? Neither grew wholly in the absence of the other. |
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Surprising changes
Sometimes deschooling works best when there are surprising (maybe even shocking) surprises, or stark refutations of what the mom has “guaranteed will happen,” or is positive can ONLY happen—that having candy out all the time will make kids throw up, have cavities, get fat. The stories of kids in the presence of the same old bowl of candy asking for vegetables and fruit are important stories to share. |
Choices can’t happen without choices, and choices don’t happen well with a mom hovering around and predicting negative outcomes. Lots of people have reported that their experiences with food, and unschooling, changed everything. Seeing kids learning about food, and making choices about food, made other choices seem to make total sense. |
photos by Ester Siroky (mushroom basket) and Elise Lauterbach (mushroom golf)
Tuesday, April 13, 2021
More than one thing
I always like the idea that most things are many things. Language is both too big and too small, sometimes.
If a chart is made of food or food can by played with; if a house is a home and a brownstone and a townhouse; if music is noise, and a pet is a dog and a stray and a mutt, it's even more impressive that kids can learn English (or whatever native language they find themselves born or brought into).
A sweet shortcut to more peace at your house is to allow things, and people, to have many facets and designations. I'm a mom, a wife, a sister, a writer, a mender, a joker, and sometimes I sing. Not so long ago, I became a grandmother. I maintain a webpage, and this blog. You, too, and each person you know, is more than one thing. Let your imagination and calmness extend that to chairs, tables, and blankets.
This post might be soothing or irritating, helpful or long. Same with lunch, or the next story someone tells me.
Find ways to be happy through all those words and thoughts.
Peace
photo by Cátia Maciel
If a chart is made of food or food can by played with; if a house is a home and a brownstone and a townhouse; if music is noise, and a pet is a dog and a stray and a mutt, it's even more impressive that kids can learn English (or whatever native language they find themselves born or brought into).
A sweet shortcut to more peace at your house is to allow things, and people, to have many facets and designations. I'm a mom, a wife, a sister, a writer, a mender, a joker, and sometimes I sing. Not so long ago, I became a grandmother. I maintain a webpage, and this blog. You, too, and each person you know, is more than one thing. Let your imagination and calmness extend that to chairs, tables, and blankets.
This post might be soothing or irritating, helpful or long. Same with lunch, or the next story someone tells me.
Find ways to be happy through all those words and thoughts.
photo by Cátia Maciel
Monday, April 12, 2021
Connections, respect and learning
Kristiva once wrote:
I was very prejudiced and fearful when my son (12) first started spending lots of time playing (FPS) games on the xbox and minecraft on the computer. Long story short, I realized that everytime I rejected his interests I was missing an opportunity to connect with him. And connection became my priority. Even before I understood anything about video games besides my shallow observations and judgements. As soon as I shifted to respect, a whole new world opened for me. I also learned some amazing things about my son.
Nicole Richard wrote, of photos she sent:
I love this. Estrella built a block tower and the boys honored it in Minecraft."

Embracing Minecraft
photos (links to larger images) by Nicole Richard, of her children's art
I was very prejudiced and fearful when my son (12) first started spending lots of time playing (FPS) games on the xbox and minecraft on the computer. Long story short, I realized that everytime I rejected his interests I was missing an opportunity to connect with him. And connection became my priority. Even before I understood anything about video games besides my shallow observations and judgements. As soon as I shifted to respect, a whole new world opened for me. I also learned some amazing things about my son.
—Kristiva Stack
Nicole Richard wrote, of photos she sent:
I love this. Estrella built a block tower and the boys honored it in Minecraft."


photos (links to larger images) by Nicole Richard, of her children's art
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)