photo by Tam King
Showing posts sorted by date for query /growth. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query /growth. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Sunday, September 21, 2025
Two new views
photo by Tam King
Something looks like this:
architecture,
bridge,
signs
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
Saturday, April 12, 2025
What do trees, cats, and people need?
What does a cat need for its brain to develop more?
They need a lack of abuse. They need water and food, sunshine. The cats can use things or people to play with, and people or other cats to groom them, pet them, lie down next to them sometimes. The tree might need to be less in the shade of other trees for optimal growth, or might need not to be where the wind is banging their branches against a cliff or building or fence or something.
If you think of people as the natural, biological beings they are, rather than as school kids who either are or are not in school, things become much clearer.
Longer version here, with some Pam Sorooshian commentary
photo by Jo Isaac
Sunday, April 21, 2024
What is needed?
|
There is personal growth in quietly providing what is needed. The world is made better by those who notice and attend to needs. |
photo by Gail Higgins
Thursday, April 18, 2024
Spiritual growth
At first it’s a practical consideration but later on, as the children are looking at the world through older eyes, they start to see that no matter whether the neighbour noticed or not, it made you a better person. No matter whether your cat would have done your stuff damage or not, it made you a better person. So I think there’s a spirituality there of respect given to the children being passed on.
SandraDodd.com/radiotranscript
photo by Brie Jontry
Sunday, November 19, 2023
Changes
You may pass through the same door again, but you will be different each time.
Where you are right now will never be exactly the same again.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, June 27, 2023
What it is
"An apple seed will never grow into an oak tree. An acorn will never grow into a tree that bears fruit. Knowing that, the best thing we can do as parents is to do our very best to nurture the seed we have at every stage of growth it sees."
photo by Nicole Kenyon
Friday, May 19, 2023
Patient, generous, kind
If you remember how exciting a little mechanical ride could be when you were a child, try to keep some coins on hand to indulge your young children.
If you don't have young children, consider keeping coins for offering rides to other children whose parents are tired or don't have what makes those little rides go.
If you don't remember being very young, for just 20p (or 50¢, or your local equivalent), if you're lucky and open to growth, you could live vicariously through another young person.
Patience, generosity and kindness make a person better.
A patient, generous, kind person makes the world better.
photo by Sandra Dodd, 2011, in Bristol
Wednesday, May 3, 2023
Growing safely
I see deschooling much more than just that process of replacing school with no school. Because to me, radical unschooling is that lifestyle that you were talking about, is that spiritual practice, almost. Because radical unschooling is that to me, deschooling has been so much more. It’s been about personal growth. It’s been about healing.
And so, trying to give Conchinha this safe place, I ended up getting my own safe place, too, in the process.
—Marta
and there is a link to the transcript
photo by Karen James
Something looks like this:
architecture,
shadows,
vista,
window
Thursday, December 1, 2022
Doing real things
That's true whether the child is a toddler, or any age. There are useful things that older people do all through life, that younger people watch, think about, and might eventually try.
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Tuesday, October 11, 2022
Happy apple trees
photo by Roya Dedeaux
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Monday, September 12, 2022
A hundred times
If a parent says "okay" and "sure" hundreds of times instead of "whatever you want" one time, the gradual change can be a joy for everyone.
"Too Far, Too Fast": SandraDodd.com/problems/toofar
(I changed the original slightly, for focus and flow.)
photo by Janine Davies
Friday, July 22, 2022
"G" is for Growth
This photo is the background for the "G" on the lovely Learn Nothing Day logo.
Children 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.
The photo first appeared here in 2017:
Sky
Thank you, Gail Higgins.
from "Thoughts on Growth"
(one word changed)
(one word changed)
Thank you, Gail Higgins.
Something looks like this:
colors,
creature,
flowers,
Learn Nothing Day
Friday, May 13, 2022
Comfortably oneself
I've been reflecting on the idea of potential...
I think, six years ago, I was thinking of the potential to be anything. Now, six years later, as I watch my son navigate his teen years, and as I come to understand him and myself better, I think the potential to be comfortable enough in one's own skin, to be fully and unapologetically oneself, is what is so great.
—Karen James, 2018
photo by Sarah S.
Tuesday, May 10, 2022
"What do you mean?"
It might be useful to ask conversationally, "What do you mean?" It's very likely they don't know what they mean. It's a question asked out of very vague fear. If they have an answer, say "Can you give me an example?" It probably won't take much to lead them to see that they haven't really thought much about the topic.
Some home educating families feel that they're on trial, or at least being tested. If someone asks you something like "What about his social growth?" it's not an oral exam. You're not required to recite.
You could say "We're not worried about it" and smile, until you develop particular stories about your own child. It's easier as your children get older and you're sharing what you *know* rather than what you've read or heard.
(listen there about socializing vs. socialization)
photo by Nina Haley
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
Consider ideas
Live your life in such a way that you're not ashamed if someone quotes what you said, or tells something you did.
photo by Gail Higgins
Friday, December 10, 2021
Growth, life, past and future
New children meet old people. Forgotten toys are re-discovered.
Change is part of growth, of life, of past and of future.
Thoughts on Changing
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, July 27, 2021
Growing things
photo by Holly Dodd
Friday, January 15, 2021
Solidity and permanence
Karen James took both of these photos. They ended up next to each other in my folder of possible-future-Just-Add-Light images. They made a pair, for me.
One has a framework of sticks that grew slowly and gradually. Sticks they are, still.
The second image shows sticks that were collected and propped up for fun. Each pole had a life, somewhere, one time. A new phase of that life was being part of temporary art. Another phase was being seen and captured from one angle on one day, in one moment. Then I saved it a while. One thing leading to another, now you've seen them.
Look at what else in that scene seems solid, and old. What else seems fragile or transitory? The ocean is ancient, and strong, and it changes too. It moves all day and all night.
Expecting people to be more solid and unchanging than other, older, harder things is an expectation to let go of. People do change, and we see them with our everchanging eyes and thoughts.
Learning to accept change is good growth.
SandraDodd.com/acceptance
photos by Karen James
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One has a framework of sticks that grew slowly and gradually. Sticks they are, still.
Expecting people to be more solid and unchanging than other, older, harder things is an expectation to let go of. People do change, and we see them with our everchanging eyes and thoughts.
Learning to accept change is good growth.
photos by Karen James
__
Wednesday, January 13, 2021
Clear and easy
When you come to obstacles or there's more than one path, you'll be rested and prepared to choose based on what you know and what seems to lead you nearer to safety and growth.
photo by Jihong Tang
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