photo by Laurie Wolfrum
Showing posts sorted by date for query better. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query better. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Friday, January 9, 2026
Guarantee
photo by Laurie Wolfrum
Tuesday, January 6, 2026
Upward
It can be a happy spiral upward, when feeling better about being a good mom makes one a better parent, and the child smiles and laughs, and the mom relaxes more.
SandraDodd.com/peace/mama
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a spiral Rex Begonia

photo by Sandra Dodd, of a spiral Rex Begonia

Monday, January 5, 2026
Clear and free
There is quiet beauty somewhere near you. If it's hard to find, close your eyes and imagine some. Look at art, listen to music. Breathe a little more deeply, a little more slowly, and you'll be better for yourself and for those around you.
photo by Irene Adams

Sunday, December 28, 2025
Slowly, all of a sudden
Sandra Dodd:
Karen James:
Move gradually into unschooling ideas—VERY gradually if your partner isn't interested.
Until you understand it better yourself, you can't explain it to anyone. And until someone is interested, he can't hear an explanation. Same as with kids. It needs to be related to an actual curiosity or interest for it to make any sense at all.
I didn't try to explain unschooling to Doug (my husband). I did a good variety of things with Ethan, and shared the cool connections I saw happening.
For example, when Ethan drew a self portrait with three rows of three stick figures and said, "Nine Ethans! Three threes are nine," I simply shared with Doug how cool it was that Ethan discovered multiplication through drawing self portraits.
I didn't need to explain how that worked. In time, by sharing these kinds of experiences, the benefits of learning naturally became clear and cool and convincing all on their own. (I framed that drawing. It was a big a-ha moment for me too!)
SandraDodd.com/gradualchange
Original, on facebook (where not everyone goes, I know)
art by Ethan, photographed by Karen James
Friday, December 26, 2025
For learning to really flourish
Being Ethan's mom changed me. I surprised myself in good ways. In learning to give to him, I grew to really like myself. The walls started coming down. I started to soften—to have compassion for myself.... I challenged myself to continue to do better, because I now knew I could. I had a found confidence in that new truth. Honesty and humility too. All good things for learning to really flourish.
—Karen James
photo by Sandra Dodd

Thursday, December 18, 2025
A warm welcome
Deb Lewis wrote:
If you could not have both or if it was rare to have both, consider which would be more important, having your daughter’s help with housework or having a warm and loving relationship with her. Which will serve her better? Children who do not have a loving connection with parents *will* look for one elsewhere. They may find it with people who don’t have their best interest at heart.
SandraDodd.com/nest
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Comments on a comet
The comet was elusive, but the clouds were stunningly beautiful with the sun burning behind them. The moon hung on for us as the sky turned that powdery blue of early morning. When there was finally enough light to see down into the valley, we counted deer all around us in the fields. And as the morning brightened, we could see tiny frost crystals shimmering in the air like glittering confetti. We didn't see the comet, but as we drove home we didn't feel like we'd missed anything at all. We had gone to find one thing but found other things instead. The comet was there, shooting toward the sun whether our eyes saw it or not, and it turns out, that's ok.
I think unschooling is better when we can be surprised or inspired even when things aren't going exactly as we planned, when we can welcome what comes, even if it wasn't what we expected.
photo by Deb Lewis
Something looks like this:
fence,
instrument,
mountains,
sky
Monday, December 15, 2025
Better is better
It's personal, not competitive.
This is the better I'm talking about:
Be better than you would have been if you had not thought "I would like to be better."
photo by Sandra Dodd

Friday, December 12, 2025
The present moment
Patience is about trying to endure the present moment until a better one comes. Unschooling is about enjoying the present moment for what it is.
—Melissa Wiley
photo by Denaire Nixon, of new snow on an old saddle
Monday, December 8, 2025
Clarity of thought
Untangling confusion with words often takes the use of other words, which is why people whose primary interests don't involve language can become very frustrated with others who say "But 'principle' is NOT just another word for 'rule'."
photo by Tara Joe Farrell
Sunday, November 30, 2025
Higher level considerations
I just really wish I could be confident that I'm making the right choices for my children.I responded:
Nobody can be confident that she's making "the right choices."
The best you can do is to gain courage in your own judgment and in making good choices given what you knew and what was available to you at the time. There aren't single "right" answers to life situations. There are ranges of options, and better and worse answers.
It helps to always consider an option or two when you make any decision. It's not a choice if you didn't consider two or more paths and then choose the one that seemed best. Gradually as you do gain strength of conviction and the ease of experience, the choices will come more easily and be of higher level considerations.
photo by Cátia Maciel
Something looks like this:
animal,
furnishings,
trees
Friday, November 28, 2025
Peaceful, interesting and happy
photo by Sandra Dodd,
of reflections and shadows in a simple moment
Something looks like this:
food,
mirror,
reflections,
shadows
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
What do you know?
How will you be, as a parent, and why? What's keeping you from being the way you want to be?
Inventory your own tools. What do you already know that can make you a more peaceful parent? What tricks and skills can you bring into your relationships with members of your family?
photo by Rosie Moon
Sunday, November 16, 2025
Another benefit of unschooling
Grateful for not having needed to help kids with homework all those years.Jen Keefe
We were out to dinner last night and the family seated behind us were trying to collectively complete the older daughter's algebra homework. It seemed stressful, but the dad was trying to make it better by ordering bottomless rootbeer floats and fries (which I thought was so nice). Still, I looked at my husband and said "November gratitude: no homework!"Sandra Kardaras-Flick
Until now, I hadn’t considered the whole homework thing. Wow, something else to be grateful for. So cool!
Art by Dave Coverly
Speedbump.com
Monday, October 27, 2025
Unique and interesting
Assuming a child will (if you don't screw him all up) grow into a unique and interesting person with a lifetime of connections is a cornerstone of really successful unschooling.
https://sandradodd.com/chats/bigbook/page186-191_focusHobbie.html
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Thursday, October 23, 2025
We really like it.
And the list didn't mention cleaning and organizing businesses! My husband and I started our business, Simple Solutions, 16 months ago. You can do very well financially if you want to push the hours and even maybe hire employees. Right now we work a combined total of 40 hours a week—we take turns working so one of us is with Andy. We have no desire to make this a big venture. It's just the two of us. We will be raising our rate soon. We are not rich, but we are getting by just fine, better than ever before. And we have virtually NO overhead expenses, which is awesome. We're even getting a pretty good tax return.
Best of all, we really like it. 🙂
—Paula L
photo by Karen James, of her workspace,
new wallpaint, her own organization
Something looks like this:
art,
collection,
furnishings
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
One tricky moment
If we recognize a difficult moment as one tricky moment in a day of potential great moments we're more likely to have a better attitude all day long.
—Deb Lewis
photo by Irene Adams
Saturday, October 18, 2025
Deciding what's good
photo by Colleen Prieto
Monday, October 13, 2025
A bond of inquiry
To most children or people it is apparent and that is only one of MANY examples of simple things that he questions.A mom named Sandra:
If it wasn't apparent to him, so what? He asked you a question that had a simple answer. If you expect him to be other than who he is, or if you withhold simple answers, he'll learn to stop asking you. Not good.
Questions are gloriously good for unschooling. And it's possible that he understands some situations better than you do and his questions are deeper than you think they are. Try asking him a question in return. Give a simple answer and then ask a question to help him clarify what he really wants to know. It will help both of you learn to think analytically, and create a bond of inquiry and shared experience between you.
a good, short discussion in which the original poster untangles and rethinks
photo by Nicole Kenyon
Thursday, October 9, 2025
What John Holt didn't know
NOTE FROM SANDRA: I was speaking, not writing, so when you get past that stuttery beginning, it might flow.
One thing that John Holt, when he was writing about Teach Your Own, he, too, had a curriculum in mind. He, too, was thinking, not "Teach a curriculum," but "Do this, instead of school, until school is out, and then you will be done, and it will be cool, you will have dodged the bullet, you will have missed out on the damage of school." That’s worthy all by itself.
But John Holt didn’t have any children. He didn’t actually do what he was writing about people doing. I respect him, I love his books, I am glad he did what he did. But then people come along, after that, and they do it. And then they shared that with each other, and then people did it better than they saw their families do it. Other families say, “Well, I wish I hadn’t done this; it was all right, but oh, I wish we had done this." And so entire lives of young people have been lived now since John Holt died, who didn’t go to school. And what those families discovered, that John Holt could not have known, is that if you live your life receptive to the learning around you, accepting of input, appreciative of the other people around you who know things, and of the resources around you, and trying not to be prejudiced against input like television and videogame and comic book, then what happens is, the parents' learning kicks back in. The parents, who probably had sort of calcified because of school, they soften back up, and they start to want to learn. And so they are learning along with their children, or in a parallel-play kind of way. They might all be in the same place all learning different things, sharing the good parts.
SandraDodd.com/familybonding
photo by Sandra Dodd
of Keith and Holly, 2015
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