photo by Ve Lacerda
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Resting
photo by Ve Lacerda
Friday, March 25, 2016
Dial it up!
The edge of the ocean isn't a static, solid line. Waves and tides make it beach, and water, and marine habitat, and land, back and forth, up and down, neither all nor nothing. Learning is that way, too, if you can relax.
See if you have a dial in your mind that says "everything" at one extreme and "nothing" at the other. It's impossible for anyone to do everything or nothing. Maybe label it "too much" and "not enough" instead, and try for the midpoint. Replace any on/off switches in your mind with slide bars or dimmers!"
SandraDodd.com/balance
photo by Janelle Wrock
See if you have a dial in your mind that says "everything" at one extreme and "nothing" at the other. It's impossible for anyone to do everything or nothing. Maybe label it "too much" and "not enough" instead, and try for the midpoint. Replace any on/off switches in your mind with slide bars or dimmers!"
photo by Janelle Wrock
Thursday, March 24, 2016
Once you start looking...
photo by Chrissy Florence
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Wednesday, March 23, 2016
The turning point of deschooling
special
bright
gifted
open
calm
creative
sociable] as hers are."
The turning point comes when one sees the natural learning start to shine from her own child. Then she goes beyond trusting other unschoolers, and starts trusting natural learning.
or
Seeing the light with your own eyes
photo by Erika Ellis
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Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Being together
When a child lives with his parents, it's good if the parents appreciate and nurture what it is "to live," and if they can see the value of the "with."
photo by Jo Isaac
Something looks like this:
dad,
headgear,
ride,
snow,
wheelbarrow
Monday, March 21, 2016
Be a safe place
Here is how to make yourself a safer, more peaceful person, before you even finish reading this post:
Just let your breath out, and don't breath back in right away. Empty out.
You can't talk without any air in you.
That will seem like five seconds, if you're full of adrenaline. But it will be one second or less.
Then your body will naturally fill back up, whether you want it to or not.
And the breath you breathe in will be all new oxygen. Not that dirty used adrenaline cloud you had built up before that. It might not totally dissipate in one breath; it might take three.
Hold it in. Top it off. Hold it. Let it out slowly—all the way out. Huff out the rest. Hold it out. Breathe in slowly...
There are a lot of people in prison for life who might not be there if they had known they could let all their breath out, breath back in, hold it.
And there are parents who swat their kids, or yell at them, or say something mean the kid might remember for life, when they could have breathed out, huffed out the rest, breathed in a deep breath.
Deep breaths will probably help. You don't have to do it formally, and nobody even needs to know you're doing it.
SandraDodd.com/chats/breathing
photo by Rachel Singer
Just let your breath out, and don't breath back in right away. Empty out.
You can't talk without any air in you.
That will seem like five seconds, if you're full of adrenaline. But it will be one second or less.
Then your body will naturally fill back up, whether you want it to or not.
And the breath you breathe in will be all new oxygen. Not that dirty used adrenaline cloud you had built up before that. It might not totally dissipate in one breath; it might take three.
Hold it in. Top it off. Hold it. Let it out slowly—all the way out. Huff out the rest. Hold it out. Breathe in slowly...
There are a lot of people in prison for life who might not be there if they had known they could let all their breath out, breath back in, hold it.
And there are parents who swat their kids, or yell at them, or say something mean the kid might remember for life, when they could have breathed out, huffed out the rest, breathed in a deep breath.
Deep breaths will probably help. You don't have to do it formally, and nobody even needs to know you're doing it.
photo by Rachel Singer
Sunday, March 20, 2016
Life changes things
Noticing and appreciating change and variation is good artistically, emotionally and scientifically. Life changes things. See that, accept it, and flow. |
photo by Shannon Loucks
Something looks like this:
patterns,
reflections,
water
Saturday, March 19, 2016
...like it's 1999
This is the 1999th post, and it reminded me of the Prince song. That song came out in 1982, before I had children. It was quite futuristic, right? For most of 18 years, he was singing of something distant.
All the children born before then are adult-aged now. Most of the children of readers of this blog were born in the 21st century, and might need some explanation to appreciate that song.
You're living in history! It's flowing around you and through you.
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Holly doing something
more like 1899, but in 2015.
Friday, March 18, 2016
Live, see, and think
Unschooling isn't another version of a curriculum, that will take four hours a day. Unschooling is a different way to live and to see and to think.
photo by Julie T
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Most things are many things
See things.
Appreciate them.
photo by Lydia Koltai
__
Something looks like this:
flower,
pattern,
projection,
reflection,
water
Wednesday, March 16, 2016
Slightly new is new
Change one thing: timing, route, store, choices, order, station, dishes... One change affects other perceptions and connections. |
photo by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Spinning
photo by Chrissy Florence
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Monday, March 14, 2016
Just enough peace
Can there be too little peace? Yes, and in many ways. There can be too much noise, stimulation and chaos. So finding the balance place and the comfort level is part of creating a peaceful home.
photo by Andrea Justice
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Something looks like this:
child,
instrument,
playground,
tool
Sunday, March 13, 2016
Serious fun
—Deb Lewis
at the second link here: SandraDodd.com/scoobydoo
photo by Janine Davies
Saturday, March 12, 2016
Help on the journey
Shared from e-mail, with the author's permission:
"I just started to think and learn about unschooling late last year, and when I first signed up for Just Add Light and Stir I couldn't imagine how the kinds of things you post would help me understand unschooling. But as time goes by I feel like these posts are almost what has helped me more than anything! I find that I really look forward to reading them every day, and they accompany me on my journey into this new territory."
—Susan Walker
photo by Elise Lauterbach
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Friday, March 11, 2016
Happy heroes
When a parent has the heart, and soul, and confidence to stand heroically between a child and fear, that takes courage. Defending a child from criticism and negativity (even from our own) makes us bigger.
SandraDodd.com/deblewis/courage
(The words above are Sandra Dodd's, new today,
but the link is to "Becoming Courageous," by Deb Lewis.)
photo by Julie D
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Thursday, March 10, 2016
Special delivery
"Food you want, served to you by someone who loves you and brings it to you with a smile and a hug, has magical powers to heal and replenish the soul as well as the body." —Shan Burton |
photo by Robyn Coburn
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
Connect the dots
photo by Lisa Jonick
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
Look, learn, proceed
"Unschooling is really about learning without school. Radical unschooling includes all learning, not just academic learning. What encourages and supports learning in your child(ren)? Look at that. Learn from that. Proceed from that."
—Karen James
photo by Sandra Dodd
__
Something looks like this:
collection,
creatures,
museum
Monday, March 7, 2016
Time and support
Ronnie Maier wrote:
"Unschooling works because the unschooled individual has the time and support to follow the interesting byways that lead to real learning."
SandraDodd.com/socialization
photo by Talie Bartoe
"Unschooling works because the unschooled individual has the time and support to follow the interesting byways that lead to real learning."
photo by Talie Bartoe
Sunday, March 6, 2016
Lucky baby
photo by Ve Lacerda
__
Saturday, March 5, 2016
Sorting, sort of
Things will get better as you weed out negativity and focus on what’s good and positive.
The quote is from a private e-mail. This page is a match:
SandraDodd.com/deschooling
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a card from the singing game "Encore"
The quote is from a private e-mail. This page is a match:
SandraDodd.com/deschooling
photo by Sandra Dodd, of a card from the singing game "Encore"
Friday, March 4, 2016
Patterns built and found
People naturally look for similarities, differences, and patterns. We name and categorize. It's a natural part of learning, and it can be fun.
photo by Holly Dodd
Thursday, March 3, 2016
Warm home
Small moments of peace and calm can add up to contentment. Gratitude and acceptance contribute to satisfaction. Having a warm home isn't an absolute, and it's not magic. It's the accumulation of positive choices that create a nest for humans (and their significant animal others).
photo by Janine
Wednesday, March 2, 2016
Quiet antiques
Look around you for simple bits of older art, technology and history. See and appreciate these quiet antiques.
photo by Holly Dodd
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Calm acceptance
Sometimes the smallest thing can make child extremely happy. Sometimes parents can find joy in relaxing around fears and pressures. Without dress codes and early-morning school bells, or other kids to ask "Why are you wearing that?!", there can be leisurely days of choices and creativity, while parents practice saying "yes" and children play without worries.
Jenny Cyphers once wrote:
"The big upside of unschooling, in my opinion, was that it also created an unexpected peacefulness, fulfillment, and happiness for all of us."
SandraDodd.com/unexpected
photo by Julie Markovitz
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Monday, February 29, 2016
Brain food in abundance
Pam Sorooshian wrote:
Human brains are voracious and will feed on whatever is available. Unschoolers should be offering interesting experiences, ideas, stimulation, music, logic, conversation, images, movement, discovery, beauty, etc. Brain food in abundance. It requires effort. It requires attention to qualitative and quantitative aspects of learning. Depth and breadth—creating a lifestyle in which kids are offered the opportunity to learn a lot about some things and a little about a lot of things.
—Pam Sorooshian
Thanks to Marta Venturini Machado for finding and sharing that quote.
photo by Meghan Pawlowski
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