photo by Tam King
Sunday, September 21, 2025
Two new views
photo by Tam King
Friday, November 18, 2022
"Prior"—what comes first?
"You seem to be saying that the two priorities are mutually exclusive."Joyce wrote:
When we're trying to achieve two goals there will be times when a decision will lead towards one but away from another.
I responded:
Priorities have literally to do with rankings. Two "priorities" can't be equal, or there is no "priority" (first-in-lineness, precedence). So if they are to be called "priorities" then I suppose one has to exclude the other at that point of decision making. But people can have two favorite causes or missions or concerns, and lots of times the precedence of them won't matter. When it does, that's when they learn their priorities.
photo by Drew
Older buildings are reflected in the window; Silver City, New Mexico, a few years ago.
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Canada... dude!

I'm happy to know I'm not the sole source of information for my kids.
Last night I came to use my computer and there was a dialog on the desktop, a leftover instant message between my thirteen-year-old son Marty and an older homeschooler. This was the entirety of that dialog:
Marty: You coming down?
Other kid: yeah.
Marty: Did you know Canada has Prime Ministers?
Other kid: yeah
Marty: dude
Now I will never have to explain to Marty that Canada has a prime minister. I don't know why he cared, on a Friday night in New Mexico, but it doesn't matter.
For the record, "last night" was in late 2002, and the other kid was Brett Henry, also unschooled, who is now a firefighter in the Los Alamos Fire Department.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Wednesday, November 18, 2015
Books? Old books?
(Before the internet, people had reference books, and even then they seemed like trivia. Trivia can be the interesting door that leads to strange, new knowledge.)
photo by Sandra Dodd

Monday, September 7, 2015
Tied up in words
| Thinking you "have to" do something keeps you from making a choice. | ![]() |
photo by Janine
Monday, June 29, 2015
Next week, next year, next century
People DO think of next week. They think of last week. But they're doing their thinking from inside their present selves.
Balance depends on the fulcrum. Be solid. Be grounded.
Be whole, and be here.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, January 29, 2015
Sharing movies with our kids
photo by Sandra Dodd

Sunday, July 27, 2014
Scenery is where you see it.
We seek out interesting “scenic routes” in real and figurative ways.
SandraDodd.com/why
photo by Marty Dodd, in rural Nevada, thinking "Fallout"
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Wednesday, July 2, 2014
Count, and then don't count
![]() | To be a better parent, make five more peaceful choices a day. That will make you feel better, and you can raise that number gradually until you're not counting, and the more peaceful decisions are your normal behavior. You will still think and decide, but you won't think "#6 for today." |
photo by Sandra Dodd
Saturday, January 4, 2014
Connections and cross-connections
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Normal or exotic?
Near you there are many many plain and simple things that you might overlook for being commonplace, everyday, throwaway background sights, sounds, smells, tastes or textures.
What are walls and fences made of where you are? Some other places, it is very different. How does the air feel and smell when it's cold? What's the first plant that might volunteer to grow in a bare spot? What little animals might you see, and what birds do you hear? What do people throw away that a tourist might pick up and keep? What food is readily available, that everyone knows how to make, and has the ingredients for on hand nearly always?
When you look as far to the east as you can see, what is the view? Turn around and look the other way, too.
Where you are is exotic to most of the rest of the world. Most other people will never see it. Knowing that your plainness is someone else's curiosity can make your life richer.
Sometimes, when you look, listen, taste, feel, smell, close your eyes and rest, remember that you are in one special place.
or
SandraDodd.com/museum
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Friday, September 27, 2013
Think in different ways
"Words can shape our thoughts. It's helpful to think in different ways to be different."
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, August 19, 2013
Enough trivia
SandraDodd.com/trivia
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Words
Please be careful with words, because they say what you're thinking. Be careful with thoughts because they affect the way you're responding to people.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Sunday, June 2, 2013
A beautiful mystery
"I want to see Lucas Sven Leuenberger's math rock band. But where? When?
"The future is a beautiful mystery."—Holly Dodd

One doesn't need to know what math rock is to appreciate the comment about the future.
photo by Colleen Prieto
Friday, September 21, 2012
Words, ideas, pictures and knowledge

About words, and learning:
As they got older, and war games, movies about history, and international celebrities came over their intellectual horizon, so did trivia about the borders of countries.
What's with Tibet? Taiwan? When did Italy and France settle into their current borders? Why does Monaco have royalty? The Vatican really has cash machines in Latin? What's the difference between UK and Great Britain? Is Mexico in north or central America? Were Americans REALLY that afraid of and ignorant about the Soviet Union in the 60's?
In answering those questions, the terms and trivia of history, geography, philosophy, religion and political science come out. The words are immediately useful, and tied to ideas and pictures and knowledge the child has already absorbed, awaiting just the name, or the definitions, or the categories.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Monday, February 27, 2012
Not so many rules
"Rules within the home tend to be entirely for the children to 'follow,' whereas Principles apply to everyone in the family, and to other people with whom we all interact. Principles are ideas like Kindness, Safety, Respect, Honesty."
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Thursday, September 29, 2011
Random connections
In The Big Book of Unschooling, most pages have a link. Every page links to others; some of them link to Joyce's, and with a couple of clicks, to everyone else's unschooling blogs and pages. So in a "six degrees of separation" way of thinking, probably anything in the world is six steps from unschooling information, but any of these random book pages or webpages is probably two steps from exactly the information one might be needing. Or it might be exactly what one needs.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
How to stop a power struggle
when the person with the power
stops struggling."
Deb Lewis, 1/3/11

SandraDodd.com/deblewis
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, April 4, 2011
Other sources of information

I'm happy to know I'm not the sole source of information for my kids.
Last night I came to use my computer and there was a dialog on the desktop, a leftover instant message between my thirteen-year-old son Marty and an older homeschooler. This was the entirety of that dialog:
Marty: You coming down?
Other kid: yeah.
Marty: Did you know Canada has Prime Ministers?
Other kid: yeah
Marty: dude
Now I will never have to explain to Marty that Canada has a prime minister. I don't know why he cared, on a Friday night in New Mexico, but it doesn't matter.
For the record, "last night" was in late 2002, and the other kid was Brett Henry, also unschooled, who is now a firefighter in the Los Alamos Fire Department.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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