photo by Gail Higgins
Monday, January 9, 2023
Positive, upbeat, hopeful, helpful
photo by Gail Higgins
Sunday, January 8, 2023
Choose not to snark
When I'm tired or hungry or don't feel well, I have to be more thoughtful about how I talk to my husband and how I think about him, because it's easy for me to slip into a negative place and to focus on the things he didn't do that I wish he had or the things he did that annoyed me.
One of the best things I've done for our marriage is to be more quiet when I'm tired/hungry/not feeling well. In those instances, I'm more prone to feel like snarking at my husband, or commenting on something he did / didn't do, or otherwise saying something that would be hurtful to him.
What goes along with that, for me, is to remind myself of the things he *does* do. And also to remind myself that "it's not all about ME!!" If the trash is full and he doesn't take it out when he heads outside, him not taking it has nothing whatsoever to do with me, in spite of what my tired/hungry/cranky brain may want to think in that moment. 😉
When you're feeling competitive with your husband, be aware of what you're thinking and be aware of how easy it could be, in that moment, to snark at him. Then make the choice to not snark at him. And make the choice to think nice thoughts about him, to think about the nice things he does for you and your daughters. Be the one to make the better choice in that moment, to not say or do something that contributes to the competitiveness.
—Glenda (wtexan)
photo by Cátia Maciel
Saturday, January 7, 2023
Friday, January 6, 2023
Transporters
Although it mostly goes to "older floors," there's one on my site, too. Someday, newer pages will be added, I hope. 😊
Came back in 2025 to say I think it's filled with ALL the pages. There are nearly 950 pages in the randomizer, and when new pages are created, I'm adding them immediately.

photo (top) by Shawn Smythe Haunschild
art (bottom) by Bo King
Thursday, January 5, 2023
How and why
People can only learn what connects to what they already know. The more one knows, the more one can learn. And THAT is how, and why, strewing works.

SandraDodd.com/connections
photo by Julie D


SandraDodd.com/connections
photo by Julie D

Wednesday, January 4, 2023
Gradually learning; seeing clearly
Read a little, try a little, wait a while and watch. There is no other way to learn about unschooling than gradually. There is no other way to learn to see clearly how it works than by trying it a bit at a time and seeing how putting learning first changes other things—how putting peace ahead of schedules changes things.
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Tuesday, January 3, 2023
In full flow
Confident parenting, in full flow, is made of courage born of successes of big choices and small decisions that were once tentative, and before that you hadn't even considered them.
Enough improvement and ease can cause good options to tumble and flow all around you.
photo by Rosie Moon
Monday, January 2, 2023
Variable speeds
Water freezes; ice melts.
The sun goes down; the sun comes up.
Children are still, and sit or lie down.
Kids jump up and run around.
When I was younger and I would change, I thought something was wrong with me. I was under the mistaken impression that personality and mood should be constants. Life is better when I think of those fluctuations as tides, or as the weather of the soul.
Cocooning and other stillness
photo by Diane Marcengill
The sun goes down; the sun comes up.
When I was younger and I would change, I thought something was wrong with me. I was under the mistaken impression that personality and mood should be constants. Life is better when I think of those fluctuations as tides, or as the weather of the soul.
photo by Diane Marcengill
Sunday, January 1, 2023
What's important
Page 205 of The Big Book of Unschooling that Holly was reading that day.
It's page 238 in the 2019 edition.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Saturday, December 31, 2022
Little tiny choices
I gave up New Year's Resolutions a loooong time ago.
I learned that grandiose resolutions rarely add up to anything that matters. Now I know it is the little tiny intentional choices made moment after moment that are good for me and my family and make our world better. Not just my world. The whole world.
How do I know? I am living proof.
Stories of Late-Night Learning
photo by Jen Keefe
Friday, December 30, 2022
Better? Good!
photo by Sandra Dodd
__
Thursday, December 29, 2022
"Seemed like overnight"
—Kathleen W.
photo by Tiffany Bliss
Wednesday, December 28, 2022
Learning informally and naturally
photo by Rosie Moon
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Learning is subtle
—Karen James
(that quote in a larger context)
(that quote in a larger context)
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, December 26, 2022
Lots of yes
[But she's asking even though I've told her she doesn't need to ask.]There are times it won't be a good idea. Say yes, sweetly, when she asks, instead of correcting her and making promises you might not be able to keep.
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Sunday, December 25, 2022
Trees and toy trains
Be warm, and help light up the world around you.
Every little bit helps.
photo by Shawn Smythe Haunschild
Saturday, December 24, 2022
Rejoice
Don't be afraid of happy connections and rearrangements. Rejoice!
Robbie Prieto's nativity scene, once upon a time;
photo by Colleen Prieto, his mom
Friday, December 23, 2022
Two or three nice things
What if a mom does two or three nicer things a day?
What if a dad were to do two thoughtfully nice things every day for each child?
Even after I got good at making choices toward what was peaceful and fun and funny and accepting, there were, and still are, times I wish I hadn't spoken or acted before thinking of whether there was a nicer way.
If you practice, the idea of doing only two or three nice things in a day will seem like much too small a goal.
photo by Janine Davies
Thursday, December 22, 2022
Distraction
If a baby is holding something dangerous or breakable and you want him to drop it, hold out something more interesting. He will drop what he has, to reach for the new thing.
And that is how distraction can work.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, December 21, 2022
Physical interactions
I have a granddaughter who doesn't love "touchy" stuff. Luckily for her, I totally understand it.
Some people don't get enough friendly touch in their lives, and what might look aggressive to one person might be fun to another—arm-punching, back-slapping, hand-holding, pushing back and forth while walking, arm-in-arm walking, playing slap games or thumb wrestling—those are all touching, and life can be warmer and better WITH those things than without.
It's good for parents (and grandparents, and friends) to be aware that different people are different ways.
photo by Cátia Maciel
Tuesday, December 20, 2022
"Real life"
—Sandra Dodd
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Monday, December 19, 2022
Stories and penguins
I saw the penguin above, and its accompanying rocks and another mystery thing in Bristol, at Alison's house. I didn't ask her to tell me about it. Now I wish I had. She told me many stories, and showed me places, and things.
Our internet is called RealPenguin, because of this fun kids' story, acted out by their dads: Salesman.
Little stories are parts of bigger lives.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Sunday, December 18, 2022
Quick personal status check
is to be physically self aware.
selfie(s) by Holly Dodd
(there were others)
Saturday, December 17, 2022
Embracing, trusting, learning
If you embrace it all *with* your children you will learn with them—more than you think is possible.
You will trust unschooling and learning because you will be learning right along your children.
—Alex Polikowsky
photo of child editing video, by Kinsey Norris
Friday, December 16, 2022
Photos of food
Along came small digital cameras, and now we can see what other people have made, or have been served at a restaurant or a picnic. It's fun.
Food that takes hours to make and minutes to eat can be preserved and revisited—not in an edible way, but in a manner that might inspire us to make something like that again.
Find joy in momentary visions that were not always possible to capture and share.
photo above by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, December 15, 2022
Make things better
I used to feel very uncomfortable with guilt. And I would dwell on it for days, at times.
I'm glad I learned how to not let it take me down but instead to make things better the next time around (with all my relationships, not just with my daughter)... It seems like a small detail, but it has been so important for me.
—Marta Venturini
photo by Jihong Tang
Wednesday, December 14, 2022
Compassion, for a minute
Looking for a quote for this post, I found something 11 years old. Part of it was this:
Each day for a year, could you add one minute to the time you spend with a child? Any child. One extra minute. If you can infuse that moment with love or compassion, bonus!
I suppose that would be a minute you could be doing something else, but I doubt it would be something better.
photo by Sarah S.
Tuesday, December 13, 2022
Small part of a big deal
From the point of view of your family (especially the younger members), where you live is HUGE, and detailed, and familiar, but the outside world starts off vague and hardly real.
All these perspectives make sense, depending on the moment and the context. Go with what is sweet and peaceful and feels safe and good.
photo by Monica Molinar
Monday, December 12, 2022
Wonderful warm feelings
When we stretch beyond seeing more than only one or two possibilities, our children's worlds become exponentially larger, with more potential for laughter and learning and wonderful warm feelings of connection.
—Brie Jontry
photo by Cátia Maciel
Sunday, December 11, 2022
Reading minds; thinking thoughts
When someone, or my cat, thinks about something I don't know anything about, the eyes, face or posture can't give me any clues, and my guesses are all wrong.
People can think thoughts, but they can't really read minds very well.
photo by Gail Higgins
Saturday, December 10, 2022
Bridges and reflections
In this photo, the arches are reflecting and making a round shape. That's always fun. There is also roundness in the tree to the right, and in its reflection in the water. The bank of the river has a rounded edge, and is covered with rounded pebbles.
Others, seeing that, might be thinking of what birds live around there, or other wildlife. If it's someone familiar with the area, they will know where the road goes, maybe who owns the land, and who used to own it before that.
Kids, seeing it, might wonder first "Could we get IN that water?" Wild swimmers (people who like to swim in naturally occurring waters) probably had that thought before any other.
Any scene is many things. The knowledge and perspective of each viewer is different. People spot different things and make their own connections.
photo by Ester Siroky
Something looks like this:
bridge,
reflections,
trees,
water
Friday, December 9, 2022
Careful steps
On the part of the path you can see, take a careful step when you're ready.
Running won't help. Be there, be aware, relax and appreciate what you see, and smell, and hear. Your family shouldn't rush into the unknown, but step together into the next moment.
photo by Gail Higgins
Thursday, December 8, 2022
Don't break the spell
Thoughts don't show. Provide opportunities and time. Watch quietly. Don't break the spell.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
Stunning desire to learn
—Hannah Megan Canavan
photo by Roya Dedeaux
Tuesday, December 6, 2022
Happy to be where he is
What is peace, then, in a home with children? Contentment is peace.
Is a child happy to be where he is? That is a kind of peace. If he wakes up disappointed, that is not peace, no matter how quiet the house is or how clean and "feng shuid" his room is.
Peace, like learning, is largely internal.
drawing by a younger Kes; photo by Janine Davies
Monday, December 5, 2022
Slack and choice
Feeling like a good parent is huge. The opportunity to be successful every day at something with immediate feedback (hugs and smiles and the little-kid happy dance) is rare in the world. But giving children more slack and choices creates more slack and choice for the parent, too.
If it's okay for a child not to finish everything on his plate, might it be okay if the mom only cooks what he likes next time? Or makes the best parts in new ways? Not every meal has to look like the centerfold of a cookbook. If children can sleep late, maybe the mom can too. If children can watch a silly movie twice, maybe the mom gets to be in on that. If a child (or a seventeen-year-old) wants to watch a butterfly for a long time, perhaps the parent will have the priceless experience of watching her own child watch a butterfly.From "Changes in the Parents," page 268 (or 309), The Big Book of Unschooling
which links to SandraDodd.com/change
photo by Sandra Dodd
photo by Sandra Dodd
Sunday, December 4, 2022
Individualized learning
Unschooling is the ultimate individualized learning situation, and comparisons are unnecessary.
photo by Holly Dodd
Saturday, December 3, 2022
How Learning Works
Unschoolers do not preplan a curriculum and we don't have predetermined lesson plans. What we have instead is an extremely rich environment for learning in which, for example, the globe sits on the living room coffee table and is regularly handled and part of our everyday life (not pulled out for a specific lesson). Learning is valued and constant. Connections are looked for everywhere and the whole family is involved and loves to explore ideas and gain new information and knowledge. Learning happens inside the learner's own head and is not always apparent to outside observers, but the proof, for me, is in the pudding. My kids think learning is what life is for. And I agree with them.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Friday, December 2, 2022
Level up!
Once Heather Booth joked to me, at a symposium, that she was there to "level up," in unschooling. 🙂
Renee Cabatic was there, too, and I remember smiles and a realization that it was a legitimate plan and goal.
People do it, all the time. I guess she wasn't joking.
photos by Sandra Dodd, of Raghu, who is also mentioned at that link
__
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

































