photo by Rosie Moon
Showing posts with label wall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wall. Show all posts
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Learning for fun
photo by Rosie Moon
Sunday, October 26, 2025
"We’ll see how things go."
Sometimes parents, relatives, friends (even strangers!) may not agree with homeschooling, unschooling, how we choose to parent or meet our children’s needs.
How do we do what we feel is best for our families when others, especially those we love and care about, share their criticisms and well-meaning advice?
Periodically we evaluate how things are going.
Nothing is written in stone.
For now, this works for us.
We’ll see how things go.—Laurie Wolfrum
SandraDodd.com/beandip
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Something looks like this:
brickwork,
flowers,
passageway,
wall
Thursday, October 2, 2025
Ask yourself "why?"
Every time you feel the urge to control a choice, you can ask yourself "why?" and begin to question the assumptions (or fears) about children, parenting, learning and living joyfully that you are holding on to.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Saturday, July 26, 2025
Nurturing growth
So it is with children. They need to be protected from physical and emotional harm. They need to have positive regard, food, shade and sun, things to see, hear, smell, taste and touch. They need someone to answer their questions and show them the world, which is as new to them as it was to us. Their growth can't be rushed, but it can be enriched.
photo by Brie Jontry
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
Online real-life safety
My kids know that if they meet someone online and decide they'd like to get together in real life, I'll do my very best to help make it happen. We've driven across states to meet up with families in their homes who we only know from online until we get there.
A predator would have a really really REALLY hard time getting my kid into a situation they could be taken advantage of. A kid who isn't supposed to talk to anyone they don't know has much incentive to agree to sneak out to meet that person - the parent isn't going to agree because the kid was breaking the rules. They're easy prey. My kids, on the other hand, know that they can ask and I'll drive them to a safe meeting. If the "friend" said "Oh no, don't tell your mom" that's a huge red flag for them.
—Deborah Cunefare
photo by Julie Daniel
Coda: I thought the photo was mine, at first, because I was there. Someone from England drove me and Joyce Fetteroll (who are ordinarily in New Mexico and Massachusetts, respectively) to visit a family in Scotland. Without online discussions using real names, we would not have known one another, and I would not have seen that wonderful old wall, patched more than once over a couple or three centuries, and that shelf, and...
We KNOW fear and negativity to be dangers. We know joy and newness can add to peace and learning.
Thursday, February 27, 2025
Fun and interesting
My motivation for homeschooling was for learning to be fun and interesting whether first grade or twelfth grade.
As a learner I tend to absorb whatever runs by me whether it's from teachers droning or an engaging movie. That's why I did well in school. But it made no sense that school needed to be dull when outside of school was fascinating. I knew there had to be a better—funner—way to learn.
So that was my primary motivation for looking into homeschooling and ultimately choosing unschooling.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Cátia Maciel
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
Mix life up
That can go for going to the post office, to the movies, to buy shoes, all KINDS of things. Mix life up. Take a new trail.
Conversations With Sandra Dodd: Welcome!
photo by Sandra Dodd
Saturday, September 28, 2024
Open gates to peaceful places
Any program can be the springboard for sincere and helpful exchanges between parents and children **unless** the mom condemns and rejects a program in such harsh terms that the children aren't even able to discuss it with her for fear of criticism or rejection. Then the mom has cut off her kids. And "I hate X" is not an open gate.
"Hate" is a set of biochemicals that will not let love and open acceptance in until hate settles down, so moms hoping to build a peaceful learning nest for children should be using the best materials they have, physical or emotional or otherwise. Hate, jealousy, resentment and those sharp and separating emotions are not nesting materials.
I'll leave links to the original writing, to a newer page on positivity, and on "Building an Unschooling Nest."
SandraDodd.com/positivity
SandraDodd.com/nest
photo by Sandra Dodd
Saturday, August 17, 2024
A frame and a portal
Any subjects leads to every other subject, and every other connection of any sort. Rather than sorting things out with your children, try to keep blending and mixing.
Religion leads to history, to geography, to clothing, to fashion, to business and imports to transportation to law. Law leads to ethics to medicine to religion. Any of those "leads to" points could lead to a dozen OTHER destinations, so even with a list that short, it starts to blanket time and space. Don't resist those weird tangents; jump on them and ride.
SandraDodd.com/subjects
photo by Sandra Dodd
__
Friday, August 9, 2024
Odd realities
IF (if) that situation is at play, and IF (if) the parents aren't able to get out naturally and comfortably, school might be a good tool—not to present it as the place to "get an education," but to use it as a place for the child to meet and be with lots of other people. If it gets old or irritating, let him come back home.
This is an older article, but some truths might still be gleaned. 🙂 SandraDodd.com/schoolchoice
photo by Cátia Maciel (in Morocco)
Thursday, May 9, 2024
The roots of a belief...
From my notes for a 2012 conference presentation on "Why Radical Unschooling?":
So the history of "radical unschooling" came from someone saying "Well we're not that radical," and me saying "well I am."
Radical
radical in surfer lingo has to do with extreme.
Politically, extreme from a grassROOTs movement.
radius
radish
From the roots to the tips
from the roots of hair to the tips
or the roots of a tree to the end of each leaf
or from the roots of a belief to the end of each action.
photo by Sandra Dodd, in Óbidos
Thursday, January 18, 2024
Thinking in your own words
Saying what one means rather than using phrases without thinking is very, very important.
Hearing what I say as a mom is crucial to mindfulness.
If I don't notice what I say, if I don't even hear myself, how can I expect my kids to hear me?
If I say things without having carefully chosen each word, am I really communicating?
photo by Marta Venturini

Wednesday, January 3, 2024
Sometime maybe
When people think "always" and "never", they get stuck in "always" and "never", and can't see the in-between where, most often, the details and valuable bits of wisdom are.
I've found that a lot of new unschoolers seem to get stuck in extreme thinking--the always and never lands. 😉 I probably did too. Maybe it's part of adjusting to a new paradigm of thinking.
—Karen James
photo by Marta Venturini
Thursday, September 28, 2023
Thoughtful choices are better
but here's a link to
Making the better choice
photo by Sandra Dodd
Friday, April 21, 2023
Beliefs and priorities
photo by Holly Dodd, 2014, India
Something looks like this:
flower,
reflection,
wall,
water
Friday, April 14, 2023
Smaller problems
Deb Lewis wrote:
The more you're aware of how good things are when they are good, the easier it will be to wade through the times when things are less good. If you're aware of how lucky you are, everyday problems by comparison can seem smaller, and more manageable."
photo by Cátia Maciel
Saturday, March 11, 2023
Positively winning
As much as I read,... I seem to slide right back into schoolish ways. How long does it take to really break that bad habit?Forever.
If you think of it in negative terms ("bad" and not just "break" but "really break"), you will just sit in that negativity, frustrated, forever. You will feel there had to be a winner (you) or a loser (you) and you will be angry with yourself.
The change you need is to live a different way. Step out of the grumpy dark into the calm decision-making choose-joy light.
photo by Sandra Dodd
That was written before "Read a little, try a little, wait a while watch." It was also before the pages on Negativity and Positivity.
Thursday, February 9, 2023
Be more positive than I am
Positive is not being cynical and not being pessimistic and not taking pride in being dark and pissy.Yesterday I added it to my newish page on Positivity. It is the least positive thing on that page. 🙂
photo of Hadrian's Wall, by Jo Isaac
Saturday, January 28, 2023
Cliff wall
Appreciating the intersection of a natural wall and a manmade wall would not be ruined by knowing of other walls (if any, or fences) around those goats.
A wall isn't always an obstacle. It might be a shelter, a protection, and a thing of beauty.
It's possible, and it's fine, to appreciate part of a song, a film, a painting, a story, a life, without fully understanding the depth and breadth of the whole thing. A part of a thing is also a thing.
photo by Ester Siroky
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Learning is subtle
—Karen James
(that quote in a larger context)
(that quote in a larger context)
photo by Sandra Dodd
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