photo by Karen James
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Slowly and solidly
photo by Karen James
Monday, March 18, 2024
"Trying 'no limits'"
I see so many families trying 'no limits' and then…I responded:
Two problems: "trying" and "no limits." If a kid knows the parent is only "trying" something, he will certainly take all he can get, desperately and in a frenzy.
"No limits" is not something any family should believe in, or promise their children The world has limits of all sorts. Parents don't need to add to that, but parents can't guarantee "no limits." They CAN give children lots of choices and options.
Gradual change would have helped.
Saying yes a thousand little times is better for everyone than one big confusing "Yes forever, don't care, OH WAIT! Take it back."
SandraDodd.com/cairns
photo by Sandra Dodd (in Albuquerque)
Tuesday, September 27, 2022
Learning and experiencing
photo by Nicole Kenyon
Thursday, August 25, 2022
A spotlight and a dance
A light touch is hard to guarantee. Gratitude and appreciation, acceptance, joy... they can't be planned except for finding opportunities to explore and to observe.
These things don't happen every day, and I'm glad when I know they have happened, somewhere.
(or try here)
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Tommy Dodd and her aunt Holly
Monday, June 27, 2022
Rainbows and shooting stars
If I planned in advance to show someone else a rainbow, I couldn't guarantee a sighting.
Friends travelled from New Mexico to Finland to see Northern Lights, and failed to spot any.
Even during meteor shower times, you might miss them all.
And so?
Consider each sighting a blessing and a tiny miracle. Count the things you saw, and not the things you missed.
photo by Theresa Larson
Friday, June 10, 2022
Discover and do and be
If by "limits" people mean "safe boundaries," sure! If by "limits" people mean "someone to watch and care," absolutely! But what people usually mean by "limits" is parents who say "no / don't / stop / forget it / when you're older."
When unschoolers discuss limits they're often discussing arbitrary limits, trumped up to make the parents feel good, or used as magical talismans to guarantee that their children will be creative, healthy and safe. What creates much more magic is to help children discover and do and be.
photo by Brittany Lee Moffatt
Monday, April 25, 2022
Humor helps
Deb Lewis wrote:
Studies are now popping up suggesting laughter makes our brains work better, reduces stress and helps sick people get well...
I don't think humor will guarantee my kid will have a better life, but I know it won't hurt him. If all it does is leave him with happy memories of his childhood and parents, I'll count it among our most useful tools."
photo by Elise Lauterbach
Monday, March 14, 2022
Learning is natural and personal
"Unschooling stems from the premise that learning is natural and personal - and as such it depends utterly on the individual's perceptions and perspectives. It is not something that can be given or created from the outside. There is no way to guarantee what another person will learn. From that perspective, teaching isn't so much bad as superstitious."
Saturday, July 17, 2021
Even better...
"When things are handled matter-of-factly and the kids KNOW the parents love them and will be there for them, a lot of the air of danger and urgency just dissipate."It's way too late, but I wish I had written "can dissipate." For one thing, there's no guarantee. Also, if it happens, it's not casual magic.
If trust and love do bring feelings of safety and calm choices into a teen's life, that's solid, and good, and should not be dismissed with "just."
photo by Shan Burton
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P.S. Should've been "dissipates" in the original anyway, for the technical among us. There are discussions in busy moments, and then there are quotes from those, years later.
Wednesday, May 20, 2020
Moments of growth

Some moments seem more important than they are. Other moments are more important than they seem.
We can't guarantee or control much, in the world, so look for the good, and look for the growth.
A moment of peace and sweetness cannot be recreated. Perhaps new ones can be induced, though!
photo by Elaine Santana
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Friday, June 1, 2018
Life is a gamble
SandraDodd.com/gamble
photo by Ester Siroky
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Saturday, June 27, 2015
Living with the truth

Response to someone who wanted reassurance that unschooling would create success:
I can't guarantee anything for anyone else, nor for my own family. I know what does damage, and I know what might help.
Every second of every day things happen or don't happen and there are consequences.
I would say if you don't want to gamble, don't unschool, but the truth is that everything else is a gamble too.
photo by Sandra Dodd, left over from playing a board game online—
click to enlarge it for candid desk details
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Saturday, April 11, 2015
Caution and growth
I could destroy that tree, all kinds of ways. I could do it damage. I could neglect it. But I can't predict where the next branch will grow, or whether it will double in size this year or just do 1/3 again of its height. Not all years' growth are the same.
I could mess my kids up and make them unhappy and keep them from having access to things, but I cannot make them learn. I can't make them mature. I can give them opportunities and room to grow, and food and water and a comfortable bed.
I can't guarantee anything for anyone else, nor for my own family. I know what does damage, and I know what might help.
SandraDodd.com/guarantee
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Sunday, January 25, 2015
Guarantee
photo by Laurie Wolfrum
Saturday, July 20, 2013
Healing and learning

Deb Lewis wrote:
Studies are now popping up suggesting laughter makes our brains work better, reduces stress and helps sick people get well...
I don't think humor will guarantee my kid will have a better life, but I know it won't hurt him. If all it does is leave him with happy memories of his childhood and parents, I'll count it among our most useful tools."
photo by Sandra Dodd, of the only funny thing
in Chichester Cathedral
Saturday, June 1, 2013
Now what?
photo by Dylan Lewis
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Any gaps?

photo by Colleen Prieto
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Limits

"Conventional wisdom" (those truisms that too-often aren't true) says "children need limits," and that good parents have lots of limits (the more limits the better the parent). We've all seen (and some have been in) families where stifling limits caused the very problems they were expected to prevent. But without a counter-mantra to "children need limits" it's easy for parents to fear that it must be true or people wouldn't keep saying it.
If by "limits" people mean "safe boundaries," sure! If by "limits" people mean "someone to watch and care," absolutely! But what people usually mean by "limits" is parents who say "no / don't / stop / forget it / when you're older."
When unschoolers discuss limits they're often discussing arbitrary limits, trumped up to make the parents feel good, or used as magical talismans to guarantee that their children will be creative, healthy and safe. What creates much more magic is to help children discover and do and be.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Monday, January 3, 2011
Is unschooling too big a gamble?

Would school seem like less a gamble to you?
Would buying a curriculum seem like less a gamble?
Moving to a fancier neighborhood, or to a country not involved in any wars?
I cannot make my children's lives good. I can't ensure their success. I cannot make a tree grow. I can water it and put a barrier near so Keith doesn't hit it with a lawnmower, and ask my kids not to climb in it while it's young.
I could destroy that tree, all kinds of ways. I could do it damage. I could neglect it. But I can't predict where the next branch will grow, or whether it will double in size this year or just do 1/3 again of its height. Not all years' growth are the same.
I could mess my kids up and make them unhappy and keep them from having access to things, but I cannot make them learn. I can't make them mature. I can give them opportunities and room to grow, and food and water and a comfortable bed.
I can't guarantee anything for anyone else, nor for my own family. I know what does damage, and I know what might help.
SandraDodd.com/guarantee
photo by Holly Dodd
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