photo by Roya Dedeaux
Showing posts sorted by date for query /peace/becoming. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query /peace/becoming. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Ultimately...
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Saturday, January 6, 2024
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, March 23, 2023
Good things swirl

Debbie Regan wrote:
Children prosper when parents are able to provide enough sense of safety, calmness and support, that feelings of peace and joy are close at hand. From there the business of childhood—exploring and learning about the world can progress unimpeded by stress. Stress is a distraction from the natural flow of curiosity, focus, joy, excitement, engagement, creativity, emotional awareness, learning...
The more peace and mindfulness I bring in my home, the more all those good things swirl around.
—Debbie Regan
Becoming the Parent You Want to Be
photo by Julie D
Monday, January 30, 2023
Little actions
—Pam Sorooshian
photo by Sarah Dickinson
Monday, July 25, 2022
Learning and joy
photo by Nicole Kenyon
Monday, March 1, 2021
Change one thing.

Change a moment. Change one touch, one word, one reaction. If you try to change your entire self so that next year will be better, you might become overwhelmed and discouraged and distraught.
Change one thing. Smile one sweet smile. Say one kind thing.
If that felt good, do it again. Rest. Watch. Listen. You're a parent because of your child. Your child. You should be his parent, or her parent. Not a generic parent, or a hypothetical parent. Be your child's parent in each moment that you interact with her.
photo by Jennie Gomes
Monday, November 23, 2020
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
Tuesday, May 12, 2020
Creating and protecting peace
Peace precedes learning.
Peace is a pre-requisite for unschooling to start working. It doesn't need to be constant peace (and won't be) but it needs to be increasing peace, and the attempt and intent to create and protect more peace.
photo by Pushpa Ramachandran
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Sunday, March 15, 2020
Peace is primary

Tara Joe Farrell wrote:
Peace is THE priority in unschooling. It's primary. No amount of dropping bedtimes or food/media restrictions, no finding the yeses, no rich environment can get a family to unschooling well until someone (the at-home parent, the keeper of the nest, usually the mom) understands how to scan for peace, see where it's missing, and then find a way to let peace grow in that space. That could mean simply planting peace, but it can also mean clearing obstacles (including ourselves). Learning only, ever, thrives where there is peace.
—Tara Joe Farrell
photo by Gail Higgins—rainbow on a waterfall
(click to enlarge)
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Saturday, August 10, 2019
Becoming solid
When people first come to unschooling, when they want to be unschoolers, they're basing this on something they read that resonated, or someone they met that they'd like to be more like, which is the way I came to it, but I don't think it will really stick, and be solid in that family or in that person's way of being—in their behaviors and their thoughts—until they see that in their own children.
Until you're doing it not because you think it will work, or because you've heard it will work, or read it will work, but because you've seen it work.
. . . . Until people get to that point in unschooling, they could relapse. They could easily forget that they wanted their kids to be more like someone else's kids.
But once they get to the point where their confidence in unschooling is not faith in other people, but certain knowledge, direct experience of their own children learning and being at peace, and of the parents learning to see the natural learning that happens when kids just draw for hours, or just play video games for hours, or ride their bike, or play with the dog—when they start seeing those things as equal in learning value, to things that look academic, then it's hard to relapse from certain knowledge.
20:45 in the sound recording of the interview at this link
photo by Emma Marie Forde
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P.S. By the time you get to that point, you probably won't want your kids to be different, but the comparisons are normal before deschooling, and can fade as unschooling ideas permeate and pervade.
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But once they get to the point where their confidence in unschooling is not faith in other people, but certain knowledge, direct experience of their own children learning and being at peace, and of the parents learning to see the natural learning that happens when kids just draw for hours, or just play video games for hours, or ride their bike, or play with the dog—when they start seeing those things as equal in learning value, to things that look academic, then it's hard to relapse from certain knowledge.
photo by Emma Marie Forde
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P.S. By the time you get to that point, you probably won't want your kids to be different, but the comparisons are normal before deschooling, and can fade as unschooling ideas permeate and pervade.
Friday, March 1, 2019
Beyond normal
Being a good parent, not according to a list in a magazine, or vague memories of what grandparents might have thought or said, but being a good parent in the eyes of one's children, in one's examined soul, is a big thing most parents never even see a glimpse of.
We can go beyond normal.
photo by Janine Davies
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Monday, January 28, 2019
Choosing "better" better
Jen Keefe wrote:
Choosing peace over anything else seems so obvious. Except when I didn’t know there were more peaceful options I thought I was choosing them. I guess I thought the least unkind or least chaotic choice was choosing peace- if I even realized there was a choice, or that peace was a goal.
Last night the kids and I stayed up until 2:00 a.m. watching The Office. We typically go to sleep earlier than that but we were so into the show (we are binge watching and are at the place where Robert California took over).
We stayed up later so we slept later. So we went and got subway for lunch and brought it to the pool. The kids got chips and cookies and soda. That’s not a big deal anymore, but it used to be.
Now they are swimming so happily while I sit here typing this and chatting with them. It’s so... peaceful. As much as I loved my kids and was learning to parent gently this is not the way I was headed. I wouldn’t have had this moment, or the moments last night, or those moments this morning when we snuggled in bed right after we woke up, watching more of The Office. I wouldn’t know who my kids are.
This is better. It’s just better.
There is a bit more of that at Becoming the Parent You Want to Be
photo by Janine Davies
__ __
Choosing peace over anything else seems so obvious. Except when I didn’t know there were more peaceful options I thought I was choosing them. I guess I thought the least unkind or least chaotic choice was choosing peace- if I even realized there was a choice, or that peace was a goal.
Last night the kids and I stayed up until 2:00 a.m. watching The Office. We typically go to sleep earlier than that but we were so into the show (we are binge watching and are at the place where Robert California took over).
We stayed up later so we slept later. So we went and got subway for lunch and brought it to the pool. The kids got chips and cookies and soda. That’s not a big deal anymore, but it used to be.
Now they are swimming so happily while I sit here typing this and chatting with them. It’s so... peaceful. As much as I loved my kids and was learning to parent gently this is not the way I was headed. I wouldn’t have had this moment, or the moments last night, or those moments this morning when we snuggled in bed right after we woke up, watching more of The Office. I wouldn’t know who my kids are.
This is better. It’s just better.
—Jen Keefe
(March 2018)
(March 2018)
photo by Janine Davies
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Tuesday, April 24, 2018
One interaction at a time

One interaction at a time. Just make the next interaction a relationship-building one. Don't worry about the one AFTER that, until IT becomes "the next one."
—Pam Sorooshian
photo by Meryl Rosenfeld Ranzer
Monday, September 25, 2017
Effects and causes
I liked the shadow this basket was making on the wall and floor of my bathroom. You can see inside the basket which part the light shone on to make the pattern. Every bit of the shadow corresponds to part of the basketweave, and to the angle of the light.
What you do shines on, and sometimes through, your children. You affect them, and others can see the effect.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, August 1, 2016
Your part
![]() | Make the world more peaceful by being a peaceful part of the world. |
photo by Eva Witsel
Saturday, February 20, 2016
Change one thing.

Change a moment. Change one touch, one word, one reaction. If you try to change your entire self so that next year will be better, you might become overwhelmed and discouraged and distraught.
Change one thing. Smile one sweet smile. Say one kind thing.
If that felt good, do it again. Rest. Watch. Listen. You're a parent because of your child. Your child. You should be his parent, or her parent. Not a generic parent, or a hypothetical parent. Be your child's parent in each moment that you interact with her.
photo by Jennie Gomes
Monday, December 14, 2015
Watch quietly
Thoughts don't show. Provide opportunities and time. Watch quietly. Don't break the spell. |
photo by Jennie Gomes
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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
Friday, June 19, 2015
Beyond normal
Being a good parent, not according to a list in a magazine, or vague memories of what grandparents might have thought or said, but being a good parent in the eyes of one's children, in one's examined soul, is a big thing most parents never even see a glimpse of.
We can go beyond normal.
photo by Janine Davies
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Friday, January 30, 2015
Little actions
—Pam Sorooshian
photo by Sarah Dickinson
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