photo by Sandra Dodd (of local mountains)
Showing posts with label reflections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reflections. Show all posts
Saturday, January 4, 2025
Unschooling is modern, not ancient
photo by Sandra Dodd (of local mountains)
Something looks like this:
building,
mountains,
reflections
Sunday, May 21, 2023
Concerned and attentive
It doesn't happen all at once, and you can't send them the bill. You can't count or measure it. It has to be selfless and generous. Your kindness needs to be given because it makes you kinder, not because you want any further reward.
Also see: SandraDodd.com/betterpartner
photo by Marin Holmes
Something looks like this:
lights,
reflections,
stonework,
tree,
water
Thursday, March 30, 2023
Solidly optimistic
I think it is possible that THE most significant thing unschooling does is nurture optimism.
—Pam Sorooshian
photo by Jihong Tang
Something looks like this:
frame,
mountains,
reflections,
snow,
window
Saturday, December 10, 2022
Bridges and reflections
In this photo, the arches are reflecting and making a round shape. That's always fun. There is also roundness in the tree to the right, and in its reflection in the water. The bank of the river has a rounded edge, and is covered with rounded pebbles.
Others, seeing that, might be thinking of what birds live around there, or other wildlife. If it's someone familiar with the area, they will know where the road goes, maybe who owns the land, and who used to own it before that.
Kids, seeing it, might wonder first "Could we get IN that water?" Wild swimmers (people who like to swim in naturally occurring waters) probably had that thought before any other.
Any scene is many things. The knowledge and perspective of each viewer is different. People spot different things and make their own connections.
photo by Ester Siroky
Something looks like this:
bridge,
reflections,
trees,
water
Friday, November 19, 2021
Carefully the first time
The idea of living so that you don't have negative things to journal about is a good tool.
No one is perfect, but without imagining positivity, how could you aim toward it?
Without experiencing positivity, how could you know you wanted to return there?
Help (chat transcript)
photo by Jihong Tang
No one is perfect, but without imagining positivity, how could you aim toward it?
Without experiencing positivity, how could you know you wanted to return there?
photo by Jihong Tang
Tuesday, October 12, 2021
Receiving Light by mail...
Some of you should be seeing an improved mailing. Our replacement for the longtime "feedburner" was not as clean or as pretty as Just Add Light and Stir needs. Having heard what I liked, wanted, and wished for, Vlad Gurdiga has created his own subscription system.
One hundred subscribers have been moved to the new program as a test. I missed this year's anniversary (September 2), but Just Add Light and Stir is over 11 years old now! Thank you for reading, and I hope that soon every subscriber will have a more beautiful e-mail to open each day.
Without Vlad's generous help, much of our long-collected unschooling information would be unavailable. I'm very grateful.Gratitude
photo by Tara Joe Farrell
One hundred subscribers have been moved to the new program as a test. I missed this year's anniversary (September 2), but Just Add Light and Stir is over 11 years old now! Thank you for reading, and I hope that soon every subscriber will have a more beautiful e-mail to open each day.
photo by Tara Joe Farrell
Something looks like this:
flora,
reflections,
sky,
water
Monday, October 5, 2020
Attentively, solidly, and well
DO IT. Do it attentively, solidly, and do it well. THEN you can relax. If you relax at the beginning and don't really become an unschooling parents of a thriving unschooling child, it can amount to confusion, frustration and neglect.
SandraDodd.com/doit
art by Robert and Robbie Prieto; photo by some Prieto or another
Monday, January 6, 2020
Playing with connections
I found something to share, but it seemed too long. While looking for a place to put it, I came upon a link to posts in this blog that are about play and playing.
These two images came up one after the other. They were posted seven years apart, but they're similar, and the posts they link to were called "Playing around" and "Play around." They're links here, and the quote follows.
Someone wrote in 2011:(The quote is from halfway down here.)
photos by Sandra Dodd and Karen James
These two images came up one after the other. They were posted seven years apart, but they're similar, and the posts they link to were called "Playing around" and "Play around." They're links here, and the quote follows.
Someone wrote in 2011:
I do worry about my boys playing computer all day.I responded:
I have three kids who have played hundreds of games among and between them--Holly learned two new card games just this month that nobody else in the family knows, even her dad who has been a big games guy all his life. There is no game called "computer." I think you mean playing ON the computer. HUGE difference.
We have dozens of nice board games here, and table games (games involving cards or other pieces, to be laid out on a table as play proceeds), but those aren't referred to as kids playing board, or kids playing table.
The computer is not itself the game. There are games on the computer. There is information on the computer. It's not really a net. It's not really a web. It's millions of ideas, words, jokes, pictures, games, a ton of music and videos and.... But you know that, right?
Clarity can begin with being careful with the words you use. Thinking about what you write will help you think about what you think!
photos by Sandra Dodd and Karen James
Something looks like this:
illusions,
patterns,
reflections,
tile
Sunday, January 20, 2019
Hello?
We can't always know, when we have a wish, whether its fulfillment would be good for others or ourselves.
Probaby the best thing to do is to relax and say "Hello!"
SandraDodd.com/patience
(These words aren't there, but others are.)
photo by Janine Davies
__
Something looks like this:
colors,
friends,
lights,
playing,
reflections
Tuesday, September 25, 2018
Confidently build more confidence
Each time you think of something to help them with what they're doing, needing, learning, you become more confident.
Each success builds confidence, and makes it easier to have future success.
photo by Sarah Dickinson
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Something looks like this:
child,
reflections,
shadow,
water
Monday, July 31, 2017
Exotic things
I can see mountains from my house.
Something where you are would be breathtaking to someone from a different part of the world.
photo by Chrissy Florence, in Fiji
Something looks like this:
family,
reflections,
sunset,
water
Sunday, June 11, 2017
Quiet courage
There was a study...that found babies could quickly learn the names of objects they found interesting but not of objects that didn’t interest them. And if they heard only the name of a boring object but could see an interesting object, they attached the name to the interesting thing.
Unschoolers have been thinking about the importance of interest to learning for years.
—Deb Lewis
photo by Abby Davis
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Saturday, April 22, 2017
If you can...
SandraDodd.com/sleep
photo by Holly Dodd
Sunday, October 9, 2016
Magic (it isn't)
Read a little, try a little, wait a while, watch.
Unschooling cannot be learned by reading or writing.
SandraDodd.com/readalittle
photo by Sandra Dodd
___
Something looks like this:
architecture,
light,
reflections,
window
Thursday, April 7, 2016
Acceptance and relaxation
photo by Andrea Taylor
__ __
Something looks like this:
dad,
dyad,
reflections,
sky,
water
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Life changes things
Life changes things. See that, accept it, and flow.
photo by Shannon Loucks
Something looks like this:
patterns,
reflections,
water
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Remodel your mind
Once upon a time a confident and experienced scholar went to the best Zen teacher he knew, to apply to be his student. The master offered tea, and he held out his cup. While the student recited his knowledge and cataloged his accomplishments to date, the master poured slowly. The bragging continued, and the pouring continued, until the student was getting a lapful of tea, and said, “My cup is full!” The master smiled and said, “Yes, it is. And until you empty yourself of what you think you know, you won’t be able to learn.”
Weird Al says it a different way in “Everything You Know is Wrong,” and Christians say “You must surrender yourself.” Before that Jesus said, “Unless you become as a little child…”
What it means in homeschooling terms is that as long as you think you can control and add to what you already know, it will be hard to come to unschooling. The more quickly you empty your cup and open yourself to new ideas uncritically, the sooner you will see natural learning blossom.
SandraDodd.com/deschooling
photo by Sandra Dodd, of paintings on glass by Hema Bharadwaj
Weird Al says it a different way in “Everything You Know is Wrong,” and Christians say “You must surrender yourself.” Before that Jesus said, “Unless you become as a little child…”
What it means in homeschooling terms is that as long as you think you can control and add to what you already know, it will be hard to come to unschooling. The more quickly you empty your cup and open yourself to new ideas uncritically, the sooner you will see natural learning blossom.
SandraDodd.com/deschooling
photo by Sandra Dodd, of paintings on glass by Hema Bharadwaj
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Patterns and dots
Find, consider, value connections. Notice, contemplate, appreciate patterns. |
photo by Sandra Dodd
Friday, March 7, 2014
Preventing regrets
Jenny Cyphers, quoting Pam Sorooshian:More by
Jenny Cyphers and Pam Sorooshian
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp
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Jenny Cyphers and Pam Sorooshian
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp
__
Something looks like this:
family,
museum,
reflections
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Affection and esteem
Pam Sorooshian wrote:
Something that has rattled around in my head for years is the line, "You're the parent, not their friend."
What is a friend? I'm not talking about the schoolmates teenagers go out partying and drinking with. Not talking about the 5-year-old kid your child happens to play with at the park that day. I'm talking about real friendship.
1. a friend: one attached to another by affection or esteem
Knowing what I know now, with my kids grown, I strongly feel that that that one line, which permeates parental consciousnesses, should be quickly and actively contradicted and rooted out like a pernicious weed every single time it sprouts up.
Instead of "You're the parent, not their friend," substitute, "Be the very very best friend to them you can possibly be."
SandraDodd.com/friend
photo by Sandra Dodd
Something that has rattled around in my head for years is the line, "You're the parent, not their friend."
I was just reading a news article and someone was quoted as saying: "Your kids don’t need a 40-year-old friend. They need a parent."
What a tragic dichotomy that one little line sets up!
Every single time that line has ever entered my head, it was leading me in the wrong direction. Every time.
1. a friend: one attached to another by affection or esteem
Knowing what I know now, with my kids grown, I strongly feel that that that one line, which permeates parental consciousnesses, should be quickly and actively contradicted and rooted out like a pernicious weed every single time it sprouts up.
Instead of "You're the parent, not their friend," substitute, "Be the very very best friend to them you can possibly be."
—Pam Sorooshian
photo by Sandra Dodd
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