photo by Shannon McClendon
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Move toward "Why?"
photo by Shannon McClendon
Monday, March 6, 2017
Loving answers
Why does...? Who will...? When did...? Where are...? What is...? Do you...? Can I...? | Because... I think... Let's ask... We can look... As far as I know... Sometimes. Yes. |
Relationships are built of these things.
photo by Sandra Dodd
re-run from 2010
Sunday, March 5, 2017
Learning will happen
![]() | If life is a busy, happy swirl, they will learn. Learning is guaranteed. The range and content will vary, but the learning will happen. |
photo by Chrissy Florence
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Saturday, March 4, 2017
Brief retirement
Someone wrote once:
I was amused, but responded, in part:
Being "vigilant" sounds like absolutely exhausting effort. Relax. You do not "have to be vigilant." Especially not on yourself. That's you watching yourself. Way too much work. Let go of one of those selves. Relax inside the other one. Have a snooze. Don't be vigilant.
When you wake up, think. Am I glad to be here? Is this a good moment? If so, breathe and smile and touch your child gently. Be soft. Be grateful. Find abundance. Gently.SandraDodd.com/battle/
photo by Charles Lagacé, in Nunavut
"I really have to be vigilant on myself and try not to control."
I was amused, but responded, in part:
Being "vigilant" sounds like absolutely exhausting effort. Relax. You do not "have to be vigilant." Especially not on yourself. That's you watching yourself. Way too much work. Let go of one of those selves. Relax inside the other one. Have a snooze. Don't be vigilant.
When you wake up, think. Am I glad to be here? Is this a good moment? If so, breathe and smile and touch your child gently. Be soft. Be grateful. Find abundance. Gently.
photo by Charles Lagacé, in Nunavut
Friday, March 3, 2017
Positively trustworthy
They will trust you as long and as far as you are trustworthy.
photo by Eva Witsel
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Thursday, March 2, 2017
Generous and kind

You don't need to control yourself to keep yourself from being controlling. Make generous, kind choices, over and over, as often as you can.
photo by Hannah North
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
Stance and viewpoint
If there is a method to unschooling it's certainly not a simple one. It involves changing one's stance and viewpoint on just about everything concerning children and learning. That's not "a method." That's a life change.
SandraDodd.com/unschool/definition
photo of "the rock house" (small, at 10 o'clock), from Sandia Tram,
by Sandra Dodd
photo of "the rock house" (small, at 10 o'clock), from Sandia Tram,
by Sandra Dodd
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
That voice
![]() | "Be their support system. I want so much for my kids to grow up and hear that mommy voice in their head saying positive supportive things, not tearing them down, but encouraging them—and especially not a voice to be resisted." —Pam Sorooshian |
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, February 27, 2017
Ease up, to help

Try to ease guilt and expectation and pressure. Those don't help the family unit.
photo by Hannah North
Sunday, February 26, 2017
Lovely things
Ren Allen wrote:
Plato said: "The most effective kind of education is that a child should play amongst lovely things."
While I agree wholeheartedly, I think he should have said "The most effective kind of education is that PEOPLE should play amongst lovely things." Learning is for always. Playing amongst lovely things has the power to heal lives, heal families and liberate people. That's really what unschooling is in a nutshell—playing with lovely things, ideas, people and places. We say "living is learning" but "playing is learning" too.SandraDodd.com/rentalk

photo by Janine
Plato said: "The most effective kind of education is that a child should play amongst lovely things."
While I agree wholeheartedly, I think he should have said "The most effective kind of education is that PEOPLE should play amongst lovely things." Learning is for always. Playing amongst lovely things has the power to heal lives, heal families and liberate people. That's really what unschooling is in a nutshell—playing with lovely things, ideas, people and places. We say "living is learning" but "playing is learning" too.
—Ren Allen

photo by Janine
Saturday, February 25, 2017
When children choose foods

A mom named Evie wrote:
"Everything I've read about has really happened. The first couple of days, my youngest ate nothing but Twinkies and Spider-Man snacks. Then, amazingly enough, he got up the next morning and asked me for grapes for breakfast. You could have knocked me over with a feather! It truly didn't seem possible until I experienced it for myself."
—Evie
photo by Julie van der Wekken
Friday, February 24, 2017
Easy steps
photo by Karen James
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Thursday, February 23, 2017
Seeing peace
Words and photo by Belinda Dutch:

My teenagers who don’t always find it easy to ‘hang out’ together, sharing the fire. Dog is just out of shot. Louis is watching an instructional video on a game made by a friend and Olly is watching real people jumping horses. I ealised that this would normally be interpreted grumpily as ‘today’s teenagers always plugged in, should participate in the real world more,’ and instead I relish it as ‘my teenagers peacefully hanging out together and with me, while following their passions and engaging with the world.’
Thank you for helping me see that! And if you ever want to use the pic you are welcome :-) it’s nice and wintery….
Learning to See Differently
photo by Belinda Dutch

My teenagers who don’t always find it easy to ‘hang out’ together, sharing the fire. Dog is just out of shot. Louis is watching an instructional video on a game made by a friend and Olly is watching real people jumping horses. I ealised that this would normally be interpreted grumpily as ‘today’s teenagers always plugged in, should participate in the real world more,’ and instead I relish it as ‘my teenagers peacefully hanging out together and with me, while following their passions and engaging with the world.’
Thank you for helping me see that! And if you ever want to use the pic you are welcome :-) it’s nice and wintery….
photo by Belinda Dutch
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
Make the world better
If by "change the world" a person means "make the world better," then step #1 must be to decide right then not to make the world worse.

SandraDodd.com/philosophy
photo by Lisa Jonick

photo by Lisa Jonick
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Whole and healthy
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Monday, February 20, 2017
Don't make a big deal
Plan on doing most of the cleaning for awhile. Better yet, plan on doing ALL of the cleaning for awhile, and whenever someone else pitches in, you may appreciate it more. Try not to look at it as "I have to do it all!", because you don't have to do it all. There's always a choice. If you don't feel like cleaning today, then don't. Will the house get messier? Yup. Is it a big deal? Shouldn't be. ...
Cleaning doesn't have to be a big deal. Don't make it a big deal and your kids may be more inclined to follow in your footsteps.
—Lyle Perry
photo by Alex Polikowsky
Sunday, February 19, 2017
Are you joking?

People with younger kids who "are not writing," think again. Are they joking with you and others? When they ask questions, do they think a bit so they can word the question clearly? Are they starting to choose one word over another, for some dramatic or emotional or humorous or feelings-sparing reason? Writers need to do those things.
When they answer questions about a movie they've seen, do they take their audience into consideration? Who wants the short version, and who wants the long one? Who would rather hear about the characters than the action sequence? Writers need to think of those things.
(with samples of unschoolers' writing)
photo by Christina Kaminer Yarchin
Saturday, February 18, 2017
A little bit of magic
—Karen James
photo by Erika Ellis
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Friday, February 17, 2017
Loftier dreams
“How do you transition kids from rules and chore lists if the kids are older?”
Answer:
“Go gradually. Don’t enforce so much. If they say, ‘I’m tired,’ then say, ‘Go to bed.’ Don’t make a big announcement, ‘We’re now unschooling.’ Just start saying yes more. If kids can only drink one soda a day and have to go to bed at a specific time, they often grow up to have dreams of drinking lots of soda and staying up late — and don’t we want kids to have bigger, loftier dreams than that?”
photo by Chrissy Florence
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Thursday, February 16, 2017
Learning
In my life I put learning first. I always ask myself, which thing will help them learn more?
photo by Lisa Jonick
Wednesday, February 15, 2017
Choosing not to "have to"

Please don't think that you "have to." Then it won't be a fun choice you've made.
There are a few phrases that can keep parents from really relaxing into unschooling. Letting go of "teaching" and "have to" will go a long way toward seeing learning and choices. And not just seeing them, but feeling them comfortably, living with them, and with them in you.
photo by Eva Witsel
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Tuesday, February 14, 2017
Partnering and changing
"Partnering with my children and changing the paradigm in my family—that feels like the ultimate victory to me."
—Janine Davies
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Monday, February 13, 2017
Keep your strength up!
People used to say “you should be ashamed” lots, to and around me, when I was young. And I was, I just hadn’t found the reason for it yet. Shame is like an indwelling virus that surfaces when we’re weak, in those who caught it.
That's darker than some quotes, but read it in context:
SandraDodd.com/unexpected#shame
photo by Gail Higgins

That's darker than some quotes, but read it in context:
SandraDodd.com/unexpected#shame
photo by Gail Higgins
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Whole people, now
photo by Sandra Dodd, of Adam Daniel picking out a souvenir shirt
at the Rattlesnake Museum in Albuquerque
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Saturday, February 11, 2017
Untangling ideas

Clarity of thought is helped by clarity of language. Even when others aren't around to point at problematical terms and phrases, individuals can become more conscious of their thoughts by looking at, hearing, the words they're using to express those thoughts.
Rephrasing is untangling. If one cannot rephrase something, it very likely means they aren't clear on what they're talking about. When something vague or spoken from rote is turned into normal words the speaker/thinker actually uses well and clearly, it's like turning the lights on in a jumbly dark room.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Friday, February 10, 2017
Hardly any words
![]() | Unschoolers have experiences other homeschoolers don’t have. Unschoolers know things that teachers can’t learn in or around school. Unschoolers who start early enough can have relationships with their children for which there are hardly any words. |
photo by Janine
Something looks like this:
child,
instrument,
windows
Thursday, February 9, 2017
Teaching gets in the way
photo by Sandra Dodd
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