photo by Cass Kotrba
Showing posts sorted by date for query peace. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query peace. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Monday, October 20, 2025
Don't make it weird.
photo by Cass Kotrba
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Deschooling...is to sit and think
My husband came home the other day saying he had the perfect Christmas present for our 9 year old son - a gel blaster toy gun. He was beaming and so happy. My first thought was "oh no, not a gun!" ... [and then I've left out the angsty part, and the Swiss-army...gun story, and the mom's transformative thoughts...]
Deschooling for me is sometimes not to act straight away but to sit and think about it. Is it a pattern the media has fed you? Where is the "no way" coming from?
While I wrote this story my husband and child are down in the living room and enjoying life, making little cardboard targets, laughing and having a great time. ❤
—Nicole Kenyon
SandraDodd.com/peace/guns
You can read what I left out, and if you can get to facebook you can read (linked from that page) comments at the time.
photo by Supriya and Aseem's Mom
Sunday, September 28, 2025
Look directly; join in
When you look at your children, see *them*, not the ideas of peace, joy, success or failure. Notice what your children are engaged in. Join them when you can. If one of your children is cutting paper, quietly join in, even if only for a moment. When another child is playing Lego on the floor, get down there and put a few pieces together with her. One girl is drawing, do some doodles. One girl is playing Minecraft, notice what she's building. Ask her about it (if your question doesn't interrupt her). As you join your children you will begin to get a sense for what they enjoy. Build on what you learn about them.
—Karen James
(from a longer original)
(from a longer original)
SandraDodd.com/breathing
and
SandraDodd.com/badmoment
photo by Cátia Maciel
Sunday, September 14, 2025
Ultimately...
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Stir up some peace
Sandra Dodd (in 2017—general discussion, not unschooling):
There is a natural need in people to know the "us" and the "them." Those who want an inclusive, multicultural, liberal, accepting life will still have a "them." It's easy to revile "the enemy." It might be impossible NOT to have the idea of "other." But creating a "culture" or nation that is created of a combination of others won't save any individual from their own instincts.
Deb Lewis wrote (in the midst of other things):
You can't clean up a pile of shit by shitting on it.
Sandra Dodd, to that:
The people who are cleaning up can feel hatred for those who keep shitting on it (whatever the "it" is they're cleaning up).. . . . Hating those other people makes you hateful.
There isn't a final solution, but there are things to make it (the big pile of shit) worse, and ways to make our own moment in time better. Enough good moments might make a good day. Don't collect shit unless you want a shitty day.
Back to nowadays...
I know it's not the most uplifting quote, but a reminder that negativity is negative might help parents of children who are still at home to be positively sweet and present. Stir up some peace.
photo by Holly Dodd
Tuesday, July 15, 2025
What you can see
I appreciate people's beautiful (or funny, or kid-capturing) photos, and their willingness to share them, for the inspiration of readers who hope to improve their family's peace and learning.
photo by Stacie Mahoe
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
Seeing learning

If beginners don't go through a phase in which they REALLY focus on seeing learning outside of academic formalities, they will not be able to see around academics.
photo by Lisa Jonick
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Sunday, June 22, 2025
Connection and trust
Unschooling, deschooling, parenting peacefully, all of it called to me, deeply, but it felt like a huge risk, a giant gamble. But I'm so glad we didn't pull back, that we continued down the path. ...
Learning to parent mindfully, keeping my focus in the present, making choices towards peace, towards help and support, is not, as it turns out, much of a gamble or a risk. It is the surest path to connection and trust.
—Leah Rose
photo by Marin Holmes
__
Something looks like this:
architecture,
colors,
lights,
stairs
Sunday, June 15, 2025
Peace and optimism
While I don't deny that money can make an unschooling life easier, and that affording opportunities can contribute to a rich full unschooling life, it isn't everything. It can be worked around. Creating peace and optimism and comfort and trusting relationships are bigger and it shows through in times when things are less than ideal.
—Jenny Cyphers
photo by Gail Higgins
Something looks like this:
clouds,
mountains,
reflection,
sun,
water
Friday, June 13, 2025
Love. Generosity. Simple and kind.
Some people say "But cockroaches will come," or "our house has ants" or "mice."
Submerge the dishes in water until morning, and they'll be easy to wash. Get a dishwasher.
But the attitude that someone has to wash the dishes gets in the way of seeing options.
Wash dishes because you want to. What would make you want to? Love. Generosity. A desire to have an available kitchen, a clean slate, a fresh canvas. The wish to do something simple and kind for yourself and others. The wish to keep peace in your house. ...
Washing Dishes
photo by Sandra Dodd
other dishes, from around the world,
in photos on Just Add Light and Stir
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
Online real-life safety
My kids know that if they meet someone online and decide they'd like to get together in real life, I'll do my very best to help make it happen. We've driven across states to meet up with families in their homes who we only know from online until we get there.
A predator would have a really really REALLY hard time getting my kid into a situation they could be taken advantage of. A kid who isn't supposed to talk to anyone they don't know has much incentive to agree to sneak out to meet that person - the parent isn't going to agree because the kid was breaking the rules. They're easy prey. My kids, on the other hand, know that they can ask and I'll drive them to a safe meeting. If the "friend" said "Oh no, don't tell your mom" that's a huge red flag for them.
—Deborah Cunefare
photo by Julie Daniel
Coda: I thought the photo was mine, at first, because I was there. Someone from England drove me and Joyce Fetteroll (who are ordinarily in New Mexico and Massachusetts, respectively) to visit a family in Scotland. Without online discussions using real names, we would not have known one another, and I would not have seen that wonderful old wall, patched more than once over a couple or three centuries, and that shelf, and...
We KNOW fear and negativity to be dangers. We know joy and newness can add to peace and learning.
Wednesday, May 21, 2025
Talking and thinking and being
More people talk about peace than think about it. Many people are full of peaceful platitudes, and fury that others aren't "peaceful" to their specifications or fantasies.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Monday, March 31, 2025
Easier lives for children
I'm concerned only with what makes children's lives easier, not what makes their mothers feel more important or martyrly or special.
Nothing has ever made me feel better about me than the feeling that I was being a good mom.
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Monday, March 24, 2025
Confident and at peace
For the first time, in what seems like my entire life, I am not terrified. Up until now, I have been wielding my alarm and anxiety like a sword and shield battling against the world. I thought that's what I was supposed to do. Isn't that what a good parent does? I thought that fear was a parenting tool that told you how to keep your children safe. I felt that letting go of that fear meant that I was a bad parent. My paranoia had spilled into every part of our lives.
—jbantau
(quoted with a link to the full original there)
photo by Colleen Prieto
Monday, March 17, 2025
Peace and change
When this was first published, November 18, 2014, the intro was:

Marty has an orthodonist appointment at 10:30 this morning, and works at noon. He has gone to ortho alone, and has taken Holly before. I asked yesterday if he wanted to go alone or me take him. He wanted me to go. He asked me to wake him up an hour before. He likes at least an hour before, and usually an hour and a half.
I forgot to wake him up, but I heard his alarm go off at 9:31 (and remembered I had forgotten).
He was tired and I offered to put a fifteen or twenty minute timer on and come and get him, but he said no, he wanted to get up.
There is a snapshot moment in the "don't have to" life of a sixteen year old boy.
I'm not saying that every child given leeway will be Marty.
I'm saying that every person who claims that leeway will inevitably cause sloth is proven wrong by Marty.
SandraDodd.com/sleeping
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Marty, a different morning in those same days
The story quoted below is from nine years ago and involves a sixteen-year-old.Today, in 2025, I update it:
Marty is twenty-five now and is getting married in a couple of days.
The story quoted below is from 20 years ago, and involves a sixteen-year-old.
Marty is 36 now, and is moving with his wife and two children to Anchorage, Alaska in six days.

Marty has an orthodonist appointment at 10:30 this morning, and works at noon. He has gone to ortho alone, and has taken Holly before. I asked yesterday if he wanted to go alone or me take him. He wanted me to go. He asked me to wake him up an hour before. He likes at least an hour before, and usually an hour and a half.
I forgot to wake him up, but I heard his alarm go off at 9:31 (and remembered I had forgotten).
He was tired and I offered to put a fifteen or twenty minute timer on and come and get him, but he said no, he wanted to get up.
There is a snapshot moment in the "don't have to" life of a sixteen year old boy.
I'm not saying that every child given leeway will be Marty.
I'm saying that every person who claims that leeway will inevitably cause sloth is proven wrong by Marty.
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Marty, a different morning in those same days
Sunday, March 9, 2025
Look directly; just look
photo by Sarah Peshek
Wednesday, March 5, 2025
Light and kindness
Kindness lights up the world.
photo by Sandra Dodd, in Australia, in 2014
I wrote at the time "The water was SO GREEN—green like light, like light through green-tinted glass."
Sunday, March 2, 2025
Privacy and dignity

This regards the way I helped make peace between kids when they argued:
The reason I used the method of speaking to each child separately, and ME going back and forth, rather than summoning them to where I was is that I was trying to comfort them and help them be safe and to be better people—people they would be glad to be. They don't like it when they're all frustrated. If I could tweak sibling behavior and comfort the aggrieved child, and then go to the other one with comfort and ideas, each was better prepared, in private, without a witness knowing what he was "supposed to do" the next time. That was important to me, to give them some privacy and some dignity, and some time to think without other people looking at them or praising my suggestion, or criticizing them further.
There's more on the topic on Joyce's site: Siblings Fighting
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Thursday, February 20, 2025
King of the Monsters

Sandra Dodd to Deb Lewis:
If I could describe all your writing in just a few words, it might be "Peace, humor and scary monsters." Dylan's life has involved a lot of Godzilla and that ilk. Scooby Doo and Godzilla.Deb Lewis:
Yes, a lot of Godzilla, beginning when he was very little. And then any movie with a monster, or any book about monsters. And then all kinds of horror and science fiction. Godzilla was the gateway monster, though, and it started with a movie marathon on television. I couldn’t have guessed then, when he was three years old, that he would find a lifetime of happiness in horror! And I didn’t know then that his love of monster movies would lead to learning to read and write, finding authors, making connections to other cultures, (and more movies and authors) and connections to music, theater, poetry, folklore, art, history... It turned out to be this rich and wonderful experience he might have missed, and I might never have understood if I’d said no to TV, or to Godzilla, King of the Monsters.
Before Dylan was reading or writing really well, he’d meticulously copy the titles and dates of movies he wanted, and request them from interlibrary loan. All that writing, and all the time spent watching movies with subtitles helped him read and write better. I remember the feeling of joy and wonder, mixed with some sadness and loss when he didn’t need me to read movie subtitles to him anymore. I learned so much about learning.
Montana to Italy via Godzilla
(an interview with Deb Lewis)
photo by Deb Lewis
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