photo by Jihong Tang
Showing posts with label path. Show all posts
Showing posts with label path. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
Ideas, changing, carefully
photo by Jihong Tang
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Healing and validating
Victory is what it feels like—the biggest victory in my life so far. I am my own healer and validator. Unschooling my every thought word and deed is my healer, my boys are the absolute proof of my victory and my healing. I am now a sweeter, kinder person—a less judgemental, critical and negative person. I have found again the joy, curiosity and fun that was squished (and often violently) out of my life so much as a child, and I can't get enough of it! Bring it on! Unschooling heals and rocks!
—Janine Davies
SandraDodd.com/healing
(there are two sound files there, in addition
to more writing by Janine and others)
SandraDodd.com/healing
(there are two sound files there, in addition
to more writing by Janine and others)
photo by Jihong Tang
Saturday, April 26, 2025
Changing, building, and understanding
SandraDodd.com/unschooling
Those sites exist so that people can explore unschooling, but reading those pages doesn't make anyone an unschooler. Only changing one's own thoughts and beliefs and actions and reactions, and building a relationship with one's children based on those understandings can make unschooling work in a family.
There is a "there there" tradition among women. I've referred to it as "teaparty" talk in the past, and then made a page to illustrate what I was talking about. It *sounds* like support, but it's really more like "let's all avoid real thought together!" Unschooling takes real thought, and a desire to change. Any desire to be supported in staying the same will be a problem.
SandraDodd.com/support
"Support" messages all in one list
photo by Jo Isaac
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Enriched lives
When our children take the space they need in order to experience things, it doesn't make our lives as parents more difficult, it's something that makes our lives enriched and abundant.
—Sonya Austin
photo by Karen James
Monday, December 9, 2024
Once upon a time...
Once upon a time in the hamlet of Columbia in the province of Carolina, South, lived a woman of extraordinary gifts and beauty and her beloved husband of two decades and two years. The couple had two wonderful boys who shared their lives with them along with the family’s domesticated animals. The family lived peacefully together, enjoying their lives of travel, friends, and the pleasures from living life so simply. They encouraged one another’s passions and shared many as a family as well as having some of their very own. They loved hearing stories borne out of those passions and frequently wove tales that created interest, laughter, and joy from telling and hearing them.
The boys lived and learned freely. Their home became the foundation of their strength and learning and passions and love—it became their stepping stone to the freedom of expression and living and imagination that both boys had created for themselves. From their mother, they received their creativity, their curiosity, and their love of travel. From their father, they received their athleticism, their patience, and their interest in telling stories. From their parents, they received unconditional love and undying support.
—Ben Lovejoy
The Stories of Our Families
photo by Chelsea Leigh Thurman
Monday, November 4, 2024
Things started happening...
—Jenny Cyphers
photo by Cally Brown
Wednesday, October 2, 2024
Accepting and Supporting
Every negative message to a child is a scar on that relationship. Not enjoying the same thing is fine, but HATING what they enjoy ("hating" much of anything) is a loss to joy, not an addition to joy.
photo by Colleen Prieto
Monday, September 23, 2024
Carefully-thought-out ideas
photo by Karen James
Wednesday, June 26, 2024
Relax into the next step
I have come to see that it helps peace and learning to notice when we are clinging or tightening around an identity, an idea, or even a hope. I think that's why breathing and baby steps are such useful suggestions for new unschoolers. Both help us to stay in the moment, to relax right where we are rather than leaping ahead or getting mired in "shoulds." They help us cultivate soft, open ground upon which we can rest with joy, and know enough confidence to take the next step.
—Leah Rose
Note from Sandra:
That quote is the bottom of longer writing by Leah, on how she moved from rules to "no rules" which wasn't the best direction, and found a better path in living by principles.
SandraDodd.com/rules
photo by Karen James
Sunday, June 2, 2024
Modelling consideration
Being loud and wild and "breaking the rules" seems to be a celebratory stage for some people who are new to unschooling, but it shouldn't be the goal or destination. It's not good for that family, really. It's not good for those who wonder what unschooling is about.
photo by Nicole Kenyon
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
Doing (not not-doing)
photo by Karen James
Friday, May 24, 2024
Entryways

Entries are literally and figuratively everywhere, past and future and in a minute.
When you see a place, a path, or think of something you could look up on the internet, you don't know exactly what will happen next, or how far you'll go. It might be just the first touch or glimpse, and you're back out again.
An entry-point at your house could be a "not interesting" to one person and a days-long rabbit-hole adventure for another. See that and accept it. Entryways to other things, people and places are coming up soon.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Saturday, April 13, 2024
Less control, more learning
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Tuesday, April 9, 2024
Foggy confusion
People will come [to a discussion] and say "I've given him freedom, when will he self-regulate?" and I think (though I've never asked) they mean "When will he somehow do what I would have made him do if I were making him do things?" Some newer unschoolers are similarly waiting for their kids to ask to learn biology, or to wake up one morning eager to write a book report.
photo by Karen James
Monday, February 19, 2024
Compassion and kindness
I think that any time we get caught up in the idea that the child is "being disrespectful" (self-focused thinking) it can be harder to get back to thinking about what they are feeling, the need is they are expressing, and how to help them either fill the need, or cope with it being impossible right now, with compassion and kindness.
—Robyn Coburn
photo by Robin Bentley
Monday, January 15, 2024
Purposes and directions
Mindful Parenting.
photo by Renee Cabatic
Monday, December 18, 2023
Positive, inspired, happy
When I was 14 years old, I asked the leader of the Sikh ashram I was visiting what to do when I am feeling blue and he told me the scriptures advise meditation, service and giving gratitude. He told me that it is also the same advice for when you are happy.
This all helps me keep my cup full. That is what works best for me - keeping my cup full of positive, inspired, happy energy as much as possible. Life has its ups and downs, but I like to focus more on the ups and put myself in the best possible position to help myself out when I am down. I am more sensitive than most people, and I feel very deeply. If I had not learned early in life how to deal with my lows, life might not have been as wonderful as it has been.
—Ripandeep Saran
(a.k.a. Rippy Dusseldorp)
(a.k.a. Rippy Dusseldorp)
but I also saved it at SandraDodd.com/cup
photo by Marta Venturini
Friday, December 8, 2023
Quietly, yourself
photo by Denaire Nixon
Wednesday, December 6, 2023
Paths made of life
Looking back, we can often see the path pretty clearly. But we can't look ahead and know what the path is going to be.
photo by a realtor, on an unschooler's property
Thursday, November 2, 2023
Trails connect to other things
The Roy Rogers Show used to end with "Happy Trails to You," like this:
photo by Gail Higgins
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