Sunday, February 20, 2022
Maintenance moment
I am VERY sorry not to have a better post today, but I have glitched something up and just discovered it.
I'll be back, better, tomorrow!
Best wishes,
Sandra
Saturday, February 19, 2022
Controversial topic
I didn't know, years ago, that unschooling could strengthen a marriage. I did know that a good marriage would strengthen unschooling.
photo by a waiter, with my camera, 2011
P.S. Why is that controversial?
I have been criticized, over the years, for encouraging people to be kind and compassionate to partners or spouses. I have also been thanked by people whose marriages became stronger because of those ideas, or by the use of unschooling principes in general.
Although I am sympathetic to people whose marriages have failed for reasons beyond their control, there are divorces that could have been avoided, and there are relationships still in the future that could benefit by being bathed in sweetness and patience, humor and positivity.
Friday, February 18, 2022
More and more learning
Gradually you will notice more and more learning, and soon it will be happening all the time!
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, February 17, 2022
Discernment
Decision making requires lots of data and thought and freedom and discernment.
photo by Holly Dodd
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
Energy, focus and choices
photo by Rosie Moon
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
Do the nice things.
If you just do the nice things, that's what good partners do.
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp
Monday, February 14, 2022
Getting warmer
Once some firewood yielded a surprise.
Think of love, and think of warmth. Remember warm love past, hope for warm love in the future, and help provide warm love now, if you can.
The world is irritating and frustrating these days. I try not to irritate or frustrate others. When I succeed, that makes their moments better, and mine too.
photo by Kelly Halldorson
Sunday, February 13, 2022
Live Lightly
Live Lightly.
Real Learningphoto by Sandra Dodd
See also:
Light on light; Sources of light; and Sun, or Moon, or Fire
Saturday, February 12, 2022
Music as healing
[T]his little ukulele has done for me what none of the stuff that I did as a child ever did, nor what my ranting and raving about my school experiences did. It has let me see how much I enjoy making music. And I enjoy the intellectual pursuit of the skill of making music. ...
So that's part of how I heal from school damage. I enjoy my life doing things that I couldn't do through school.
photo by Sandra Dodd (of Schuyler, with a different ukelele)
Friday, February 11, 2022
"Me-their-age"
photo by Karen James
Thursday, February 10, 2022
Prevention and healing
"Every time I prevent something damaging happening to one of my children, it's like healing a little bit of me. Every time I help my children achieve something wonderful, it's a little bit like healing that little girl that would've like that to happen for me! I love gifting my kids with that! It helps make me a better person to give my kids something better!"
(original)
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Wednesday, February 9, 2022
With patience and with gratitude
Be as good as you can be as often as you can be.
photo by Cátia Maciel
Tuesday, February 8, 2022
Goop, fire, snowballs
When one person says "I like science" and another says "I don't like science," I remember school science textbooks that had geology, astronomy, chemistry, botany, biology, agriculture and physics all in one book.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, February 7, 2022
Selflessly and sweetly
photo by Gail Higgins
Sunday, February 6, 2022
"What paths we will follow..."
but there were monsters, too
photo by Tessa Onderwater
Saturday, February 5, 2022
Happiness is better
"Being happy has never diminished my partnership, and being miserable has never enhanced it."
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp
Friday, February 4, 2022
Choices can abound
Choices can abound. Parents can arrange life so that their children have choices all the time, and learn to see their own actions as choices rather than "have to's," but none of them can give their children "the freedom" to do as they wish at MY house. Nor in a shop, nor a public place. Certainly not in a national park, or museum, or church.
photo by Amber Ivey
Thursday, February 3, 2022
Flow, sparkle, joy
(quote from 2014, preserved here]
photo by Nina Haley
Wednesday, February 2, 2022
Math without numbers
screenshot by Holly Dodd, of the game FlipPix
Tuesday, February 1, 2022
Fly when ready
So people hadn’t considered that they could totally avoid that, that that would be a natural offshoot of radical unschooling.
Keith and I did think, early on, we said what we are doing is inoculating our kids against the trait of some, or the fact of some kids leaving with the first person who says “Hey baby, you wanna live with me?” or “Oh, let’s go get a house”, or, you know, that sort of energy of young people luring other young people out and away, to other states, to other places, to dangerous neighborhoods. We said "It’s going to have to be a pretty good offer to beat what they have at home."
And so that becomes a safety factor too. If the children know that they can stay at home, then someone who comes and says, "Hey do you want come do something with me? Do you want to come live with me?"—it better be a good offer.
photo by Karen James
Monday, January 31, 2022
Look, now, today
Look for the good parts of today.
Look for the value in this moment.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Sunday, January 30, 2022
Nothing you "have to" hate

Try not to hate anything more than you "have to," and once you get to thinking more positively, you might find there's is nothing you have to hate.
SandraDodd.com/haveto
photo by Lydia Koltai
Saturday, January 29, 2022
Doing and thinking
When learning starts to show, in its natural state, you will see that children are processing what they do and what they think about what they've done. They'll be making connections to everything else in their history and surroundings, to other experiences and imaginings.
When unschooling begins to really flow, the process of learning is the processing of experiences and connections.
photo by Nina Haley
Friday, January 28, 2022
Fear doesn't have a stick
I responded:
Fear doesn't hit you with a stick in a dark alley.An additional problem, though, is that it also treats "fear" as something outside herself, that comes toward her and assaults her when she least expects it.
Don't use the word "assaults."
It's too dramatic and it makes you a victim.
Maybe ALL the negative words are doing that—personifying, or anthropomorphizing, an emotion as an external enemy. So some would say "it's just semantics," but it's a map of one's emotions that ranges outside the body and builds bad guys, I'm thinking.
photo by Ester Siroky
Thursday, January 27, 2022
Over and over and often
Make generous, kind choices, over and over, as often as you can.
photo by Nina Haley
Wednesday, January 26, 2022
A houseguest, or your child
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
Consider ideas
Live your life in such a way that you're not ashamed if someone quotes what you said, or tells something you did.
photo by Gail Higgins
Monday, January 24, 2022
Be more, do more
I'm not saying to prepare a lesson on cactus or coconuts or pineapples. I'm saying that if you're not already an interesting person with interesting information to share with your children, then you'll have to make an effort to be more interesting. The way to do that is to develop your own sense of curiosity, wonder, fascination, and enthusiasm.
It might have to seem a little artificial, for a while, if it isn't natural to a parent to just "be" this way.
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Sunday, January 23, 2022
Natural residents of Earth
photo by Olga Degtyareva, while visiting Stone Town
Saturday, January 22, 2022
Step thoughtfully
People can ruin their lives with unschooling if they don't know where they're going. If they just intend to make a bunch of wild decisions and mill around, it won't work. Their kids will end up needing to go back to school, and being clueless kids in school. So it's almost that big a project. You will have to take hundreds of thousands of steps. And so it's better to take a step thoughtfully, knowing what direction you're going, than to thunder around yelling, "I'm an unschooler! I'm an unschooler!" and not get anywhere.
So I think they need to understand the direction they're going, and why. And they can get there a lot faster and a lot more whole, and with a lot more peace and understanding, if they will Read a little, try a little, wait a while and watch.
I was speaking, not writing. You can listen (at 15:15), or read the transcript.
photo by Sandra Dodd, in Golden, New Mexico, March 2020
(the last time I left town)
Friday, January 21, 2022
Soft, peaceful, relaxed mom
"I'd just like to share that I have also relaxed my militant attitude..."I'm glad to hear that you are relaxing! I bet if your daughter could choose between a Militant Mom and a Soft, Peaceful, Relaxed Mom she would prefer the latter over the former. 🙂
photo by Rippy Dusseldorp
Thursday, January 20, 2022
The best friend you can be
Instead of "You're the parent, not their friend," substitute, "Be the very very best friend to them you can possibly be."
—Pam Sorooshian
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
Lively ideas; living language
Without becoming too critical or cynical, maybe consider, with your children sometimes, changes in knowledge (the platypus, Mars, Pluto, leeches, volcanic activity and virgin sacrifice compared to global warming's medicine men; anything smaller than an atom?), or geography ("Four Corners" has been in the wrong place all these years; the U.S.S.R. is still on maps in some public places) or spellings ("plough" or "plow"? wooly or woolly?).
Play lightly with these ideas. There's no advantage to getting huffy or angry about it. Just see it as the reality it is. People learn. People change their minds. Knowledge grows. Evidence is reclassified. Language is alive. People who are alive are changing and learning. You can resist that or you can ride it with gusto.
photo by Sarah S.
Tuesday, January 18, 2022
Moments to years
"As we get older and our kids grow up, we eventually come to realize that all the big things in our lives are really the direct result of how we've handled all the little things."
June 4, 2007
Always Learning
photo by Jihong Tang
Monday, January 17, 2022
Eye contact and communication
Non-verbal communication doesn't get enough credit. I used to be one of the people who thought babies couldn't communicate, or that pets couldn't, until I got older, had a baby, and started paying better attention to different ways to communicate.
Perhaps these animals wanted food, or were curious about visitors. Sometimes my cat wants food, or to be scratched or picked up, or put down, or let in, or let out.
Sometimes a child doesn't know what she wants, but she feels uncomfortable. If she looks at you, see if you can tell without asking what it is she might be thinking. I have tried things like offering food or water, singing, getting up and watering plants, or picking up toys, to see if she wants to help (or watch, in the case of pre-mobile children).
Too often, I talked. I began to see that my questions or verbal guesses weren't always the best responses.
photo by Ester Siroky
Sunday, January 16, 2022
Cocooning at home
I think in Howard Gardner's intelligence theory, this might perhaps involve more intrapersonal intelligence than average. But there are artists and writers who prefer a great deal of time alone, too. And even among those with kinesthetic intelligence, there are some who prefer hiking, climbing or skiing. There are those who practice sleight-of-hand and juggling for many hours alone. There are musicians who play a thousand hours in private for every hour they might share with others.
When such children are in school, they find ways to make themselves invisible if they can. The advantages of being home are abundant for those with such inclinations.
photo by Gail Higgins
Saturday, January 15, 2022
Relax back into learning
The way kids learn openly and honestly from the world around them can be hampered if parents have not deschooled well. If parents are still attached to school or schoolishness, if parents have prejudices or places they don't want to examine, they can't be as good at unschooling as parents who relax back into learning.
I've seen many families succeed, I've seen some wander off because it's not easy, and I've seen some fail.
I'm sorry the links didn't work, in the e-mails.
They should here, now.
Deschooling is the best next stop
though the quote came from a rougher place
photo by Colleen Prieto
Friday, January 14, 2022
Empty your cup
As we deschool ourselves, we must empty our cups of all the preconceived ideas, concepts, expectations and methods that prevent us from embracing unschooling. This seems like a simple thing to do, but it can be quite difficult in practice. At first we think we have emptied our cups but as we drink, we often detect a residual, schooly taste. And sometimes, even a little residue can curdle the whole pot of tea. So, it’s important to have a "clean receptacle," as it were, in order to taste the true essence of unschooling life.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, January 13, 2022
One easy step
photo by Jen Keefe
