photo by Colleen Prieto
Showing posts sorted by date for query being present. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query being present. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
Doing and being
photo by Colleen Prieto
Friday, November 1, 2024
One of those people
So see how it's going at your house. Tweak it. Move more toward a good relationship. Move toward being more present, and then you start to understand. Then you start to be one of the people who's saying, "I tried this, and this was the result I got: my kids seem to be getting along better. My kids seem to be interested in more things. They're curious. They're conversational. They can deal with younger people, and older people."
photo by Alex Polikowsky,
of a girl who is now off at university
Friday, March 15, 2024
Be sweet and soft
I hate it, and feel like I'm missing out on so many sweet, little moments, but it is so hard for me to be fully present, almost like I can't control it.I responded:
Well don't hate it. Hate's no good. And you can't "control it." It might be easier to see it as a series of choices, with lots of chances to zone out, and lots of opportunities to focus back in.
People zone in and out all the time. It's not a sin. Live lightly. That's good for your children, if you can come back as easily as you slipped momentarily away, and if you're not hardened with self-recrimination and hate.
SandraDodd.com/negativity
Be sweet and soft, for your children.
SandraDodd.com/positivity
photo by Lydia Koltai
Wednesday, August 30, 2023
Twisty turny now
Twisting and turning to get away from the world can work sometimes (like my kids never went to school, for instance) but you can't twist yourself right off the planet or out of the present year.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, April 5, 2023
Full and whole
Helping them grow up whole helped me feel more full and whole myself.
(from a comment I made there)
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, October 17, 2022
Happy mom
A mom was worried about intellectualizing too much, and not being fully present with her young child. I wrote:
Nobody's still and at kid-speed all the time. But if you can figure out how to do it sometimes, then you can choose to do it, or choose to go faster, but to bring him along in a happy way.
Instead of saying "Come on, let's go!" maybe you could have picked him up and twirled him around and said something sweet and by the time he knows it he's fifty yards from there, but happy to be with his happy mom.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, April 18, 2022
Parental passion
Make becoming a fantastic mom your passion. Make learning all about those kids of yours, your passion. Make having a peaceful and joyful home your passion.
Then you can pursue that while still being fully present with your kids.
—Pam Sorooshian
or you could read about "Me Time"
photo by Kinsey Norris
Saturday, March 5, 2022
Learning, becoming, presence
The stated problem:
"With younger kids, there is no opportunity to pursue my own passions."
Pam's suggested solution:
Make becoming a fantastic mom your passion. Make learning all about those kids of yours, your passion. Make having a peaceful and joyful home your passion.
Then you can pursue that while still being fully present with your kids.
photo by Sarah S.
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
Being present with kids
They won't be three forever! Their understanding and needs will grow and change as they get older.
Conventional parenting is not about being present with kids. It's about giving kids rules as a replacement for being there. Same can go for information. Information shouldn't be a substitute for being there and being aware. We should let kids know that cars can hurt them, which is why we steer them clear of the street. But we shouldn't then depend on kids understanding. We need to be there. We need to be aware of our child's tendencies to run to the street when in that type of situation. We need to avoid as much as we can places where they can run into the street until they can understand.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Sandra Dodd
Something looks like this:
fence,
flowers,
furnishings,
gate,
road
Friday, August 20, 2021
Choosing paths
Jen, who took this beautiful photo of outdoor steps, sent a note with the image:
"Thanks so much for all you’ve done to show us a different path to choose. ❤️"
I like that phrasing, and I appreciated the message. I've thought about it for a couple of days. Unschooling is a different path, for sure. Being present and as patient and as peaceful with children as one can manage to be is a path to choose, too. Neither of those is one path to a shared destination, though. None of us can even see what's at the top of that hill.
Making choices as we go, we can opt out of attractive stairs, or we can come back to them later. Let your path meander. The way is clearer behind than in front, because every day we make many choices.
photo by Jen Fletcher
Saturday, July 11, 2020
They learned and learned
Caren Knox wrote:
I undertook learning how to be a good unschooling mom, and in that learning, experienced some of the most powerful personal growth and healing I’d ever seen in myself. I learned how to be vulnerable with and genuinely present for my guys.
They learned — and learned and learned, without having to be subject to someone else’s imposed timeline of when to learn what, without being limited to staying in a building 6-7 hours a day, five days a week, without having to pretend to learn something to pass a test, without having their grades determine their path. They freely explored their interests, utilized their own strengths and perspectives, and learned, and, as adults, continue to learn.
—Caren Knox
photo by Ester Siroky
Wednesday, June 24, 2020
Being the same

Even when it's not as clear as you're used to, the sun is as bright as can be behind the clouds.
It's the same sun.
Even when it's not as clear as you're used to, love is as bright as can be behind fear and frustration.
It's the same love.
Today, be present and patient.
photo by Beth Fuller
Saturday, June 6, 2020
Open to the moment
Sometimes it's hard to know whether to look at the flower or at the leaves or at what might be in the darkness behind, or up at the sky, or to turn around and ignore the flower completely. There might be a bird in a nearby tree, or an interesting sound coming from a window.
Plans change. It can be good, upon occasion, to just listen and look and explore. Sometimes it's fine to just see a flower and not say a word about it.
We could call those moments restless confusion and indecision, or we could consider ourselves being open to the moment, in a state of wonder and curiosity.
Keep a positive light on what's outside you and within you, and your world will be a better place.
(Text is repeated from 11/19/10, but other details changed.)
Photo by Gail Higgins
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Monday, September 23, 2019
Action, rethinking and healing

For me, the action/rethinking/healing all work together. I have comforted my "inner child" by comforting my own children. I have felt like a stronger, better person by being a stronger, better mom. Then it's not imagination, it's reality.
Helping them grow up whole helped me feel more full and whole myself.
(from a comment I made there)
photo by Sarah Dickinson
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Saturday, June 8, 2019
Unseen future
We all are preparing for our unseen futures.

Kids love the excitement of not knowing what's around the bend. Parents prefer the illusion of planning years in advance, but we don't know what's around the bend, either.
Being as present as possible today, now, in this moment, will improve your unseen future.
The first line is from Art, Aging and Spirituality
The best matches for the other ideas are Moments and Big Gambles
photo by Dawn Todd
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Kids love the excitement of not knowing what's around the bend. Parents prefer the illusion of planning years in advance, but we don't know what's around the bend, either.
Being as present as possible today, now, in this moment, will improve your unseen future.
The first line is from Art, Aging and Spirituality
The best matches for the other ideas are Moments and Big Gambles
photo by Dawn Todd
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Sunday, December 2, 2018
Savor the present
Taste your food, or holiday sweets, and feel the familiarity that you might miss someday. | ![]() |
clickable photo by Sandra Dodd
(well all photos are clickable, but this one leads somewhere)
Friday, November 16, 2018
Tweak it.

See how it's going at your house.
Tweak it.
Move toward a good relationship, move toward being more present, and then you start to understand.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, August 22, 2018
Part of being present!
Solve problems before they become problems. Notice the direction things are heading and change things. Don't let them get hungry, tired, testy to the point where they're hitting or destroying things. Food. Naps. Go home. Put on a video. Draw one away to do something totally different.

SandraDodd.com/being/healing
photo by Chrissy Florence
—Joyce Fetteroll

SandraDodd.com/being/healing
photo by Chrissy Florence
Wednesday, August 8, 2018
There and aware
Conventional parenting is not about being present with kids. It's about giving kids rules as a replacement for being there. Same can go for information. Information shouldn't be a substitute for being there and being aware. We should let kids know that cars can hurt them, which is why we steer them clear of the street. But we shouldn't then depend on kids understanding. We need to be there. We need to be aware of our child's tendencies to run to the street when in that type of situation. We need to avoid as much as we can places where they can run into the street until they can understand.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Ester Siroky
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Saturday, July 28, 2018
Things change
Being a child's partner rather than his adversary makes the balance of knowledge unimportant. Nowadays my children drive me around, help me out, read small print and get things off high shelves. For many years, I did those things for them.
SandraDodd.com/partners
SandraDodd.com/balance
Learning first, and partnership and being present close after, and all the other things flow in around it.
Part of a longer response to an odd question: The other things flow in around it.
See also "Snapshot" on this blog
photo by Karen James
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