Please take some time to share smiles and create memories with a loved one.
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
News or nostalgia
Today, something different. It's an invitation to smile, and probably to laugh. I'm sharing my secret stash of favorite cheer-up videos, collected for the days I need them. Dancing babies, mysterious Japanese philosophy, auto-tuned glory, Yoda, and the words of "a desert hobo" might make you think thoughts that remind you of the first time you thought them, or might make you wish this wasn't the first time you had sung along.
SandraDodd.com/fun
Please take some time to share smiles and create memories with a loved one.
Please take some time to share smiles and create memories with a loved one.
Monday, May 28, 2018
Loving presence
Each child, in the moment, doing something interesting in the presence of a loving parent... that works the same for anyone.
Marta Venturini saved this and quoted me in 2012.
photo by Ester Siroky
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Saturday, May 26, 2018
Find ideas you like
Find ideas you like, but remember that all parenting happens at your house, not online, not in groups, but within the parent. Your relationship with your child doesn't need to be approved by strangers. It needs to be the best you can do with your child, yourself, at your house. If you need ideas, the world is overflowing with good ones, and bad ones.
(Thanks to Robin Bentley, for quoting me on May 22, 2013.)
photo by Sandra Dodd
Friday, May 25, 2018
When to whine

If you notice you're angry or complaining, back away a bit, physically or mentally or emotionally, and see how big the problem really is, from a different perspective.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Abundance
Thursday, May 24, 2018
Peace is all about choices

If you want to live peacefully make the most peaceful choices. Peace is all about choices. Choose to breathe consciously. Choose understanding over ignorance. Choose to make choices. Choose awareness over oblivion. And make choices based on the principles you live by.
(Thanks to Heather Newman for quoting me, May 22, 2011.)
photo by Sylvia Woodman
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
Nature and construction

Nature, culture, ancient engineering, curiosity, a moment of still wonder...
People love bridges. Think back to bridges from your childhood, the oldest bridges you've seen, the simplest, the most elegant.
Think of memories, or images, of people and of bridges. Beauty and wondrous crossings, over water, over canyons, over little streams and ditches. I think this must be one of the most iconic motifs in human history.
photo by Annie Regan
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
Shame free
I didn’t expect unschooling to create a shameless life, but one day I said to Holly, joking, “Aren’t you ashamed?”
She didn’t know what “ashamed” meant. She was twelve; maybe thirteen already.

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.
I didn’t know people could grow up without having a wad of shame inside them, waiting to surface.
SandraDodd.com/unexpected
photo by Gail Higgins
She didn’t know what “ashamed” meant. She was twelve; maybe thirteen already.

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.
I didn’t know people could grow up without having a wad of shame inside them, waiting to surface.
photo by Gail Higgins
Monday, May 21, 2018
Quiet focus
![]() | Moments of quiet focus, and photo evidence of those, are both a bit magical. |
photo by Ester Siroky
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Sunday, May 20, 2018
Janine Davies, photos and some words

Janine's photos and a bit of text.
Saturday, May 19, 2018
Gail Higgins photos

Another collection!?
I'm getting well, but have two unexpected separate house guests, from two different unexpected situations.
(A couple have Gail-Higgins quotes and photos by others.)
photo by Gail Higgins
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Friday, May 18, 2018
A fun person
"Treat her like a fun person rather than like a kid." —Angela (NYCitymomx3) | ![]() |
photo by Chrissy Florence
Thursday, May 17, 2018
Seasonal doings
photo (a link) by Janine Davies
Wednesday, May 16, 2018
Colleen Prieto, images
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Chrissy Florence photos
Chrissy Florence sent me a Christmas card once, with this beautiful photo (and others). I couldn't stop looking at it. I still love to see it, every time it comes by.

I wrote to ask if I could use it, and if she had others. Yes, and she did.
Chrissy's photos show contemplation and exuberance. I hope you enjoy seeing them, and the quotes that jumped out to match them. Some photos were used twice, because of a Photobucket site glitch that caused me to lose some notes. That's okay, though. If a quote or photo comes by twice, it probably means it was worth seeing again!
I'm grateful for her eye and for her generosity.
Photos by Chrissy Florence
(Sick week, day 2)

I wrote to ask if I could use it, and if she had others. Yes, and she did.
Chrissy's photos show contemplation and exuberance. I hope you enjoy seeing them, and the quotes that jumped out to match them. Some photos were used twice, because of a Photobucket site glitch that caused me to lose some notes. That's okay, though. If a quote or photo comes by twice, it probably means it was worth seeing again!
I'm grateful for her eye and for her generosity.
(Sick week, day 2)
Monday, May 14, 2018
Karen James' quotes and photos
photo by Karen James
I need a few days of sick leave, please.
This will lead to posts with a photo or quote (maybe both in one, but not usually) by Karen James:
Karen James
Enjoy!
Sunday, May 13, 2018
Words can block thought
Have you considered putting limits on paper time?
Cloth time?
Other-human time?
I wrote that when the umpteenth person asked why unschoolers weren't limiting children's "screentime," without being able to break that down into what a child was actually doing.
photo by Cátia Maciel
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Saturday, May 12, 2018
Time flows
Every ghost town used to be alive.
Every "haunted house" was once new.
An abandoned car started with good tires, a running engine, and a happy owner.
Each adult was a child.
The flow of history
photo by Karen James
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Every "haunted house" was once new.

An abandoned car started with good tires, a running engine, and a happy owner.
Each adult was a child.
photo by Karen James
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Something looks like this:
automobile,
building,
museum
Friday, May 11, 2018
Moonrise

Sometimes it's good to see cause and effect, connections, relationships.
Other times, it might be best to gaze without speaking.
photo by Amy Childs
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Thursday, May 10, 2018
Solid and sunny
![]() |
Those conditions can arise in other ways, too. There can be a time of solidity and warmth in a relationship, in family finances, home maintenance, friendships.
Then there will always be more slippery, jarring days when the world is not as warm.
Store up the feelings and memories of the solid, sunny days. Remember they will come around again.
photo by Lisa Jonick
Wednesday, May 9, 2018
Around the corner
Sometimes there are deadlines and commitments. This week, for us, a baby shower, and a college graduation. If Keith misses his pain-clinic appointment, he might need to wait weeks.
Much more often, though, life has more options, more leeway. A path or choice might be reconsidered.
Be accepting, if you can, when you can, of surprises. We don't know for sure what is around the corner, no matter how familiar the road is.
photo by Cathy Koetsier
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Tuesday, May 8, 2018
Following trails
Don't hesitate to follow little trails, and to quit when something else is more interesting.
photo by Heather Booth
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Sunday, May 6, 2018
Intensity and focus

Pam Sorooshian wrote:
Is unschooling right for everyone? My answer is, "It depends." I think ALL children can learn and grow and thrive as unschoolers. But I also think it takes an intensity and focus on living life with a great deal of gusto on the part of unschooling parents. Unschooling parents work hard. For example, they must develop a very high level of sensitivity to their children to know what to offer, when to support, when to back off, how busy they want to be, how much solitude they need, when to nudge them a bit with encouragement, when to get more involved, and so on. AND parents need to be able to always have their kids and their interests in the back of their minds, thinking always about what would interest them; bringing the world to them and bringing them to the world in ways that "click" for that particular child. And it takes a great deal of trust that the child will learn without external pressure.
—Pam Sorooshian
I LIVE THEREFORE I LEARN: Living an Unschooling Life
photo by Cathy Koetsier
Saturday, May 5, 2018
Step back and think
In school, kids decide to declare that they like or hate "science," when really geology has very little to do with psychology or surgery. Same with "geography." Would someone who "likes geography" because he's fascinated by maps and mapping necessarily care about the major production of different regions of the world, or traditional costume of Afghanistan?
But as an unschooling mom, I think it's important for the parents not to say "I don't like... (maps/science/costume/psychology), because if you have fears and prejudices left over from school, it's a good thing to do whatever internal work you need to get over that, so you can answer your children's questions without showing (and maybe passing on) an aversion.
SandraDodd.com/subjects
photo by Ester Siroky
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Friday, May 4, 2018
Usually unusual

Even in New Mexico, it can be difficult to see a roadrunner. They don't live in groups and they don't make much noise.
A person might live in Texas for a long time and not see a live armadillo.
Don't worry if you miss seeing something cool, but be grateful for lucky sightings of mystery or beauty. Something normal near you might be exotic everywhere else.
photo by Holly's friend Eliza
Thursday, May 3, 2018
History's disorderly conduct

History can't be learned "in order," because it's never going to be orderly. It doesn't even happen in order, because often facts aren't discovered until years after incidents occur, and so the history of them unfolds and is clarified and expanded all the time. People knew zip about Pompeii until 1700-and-some years after it was buried. Someday people might know more about Amelia Earhart's disappearance or the assassination of JFK than they do now, after all who knew them personally will have been long dead.
photo by Lisa Jonick
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Wednesday, May 2, 2018
Nice!

My son is finishing his last semester of an economics degree. I helped proofread a paper Monday night and one of his section headings was "Trade Goods and Bads."That was cute, and was a good header, as the text went.
The next morning, my friend called from Clearlake, in California. I was asking about the neighborhood, and she said that up and around the lake was a place called "Nice." Nice!
Nicer things can make you smile. Smiling is nice.
photo by Amy Childs
This post used to end with "Smiling is better for peace and calm."
That's true, but I think the ending is better without it, rhythmically, poetically.
(Edited the evening of the day it went out by e-mail with the longer ending.)
Tuesday, May 1, 2018
Moment
It's better to think of good moments or bad moments, rather than to curse a whole day with "this is a bad day."
The next moment can be better.
photo by Colleen Prieto
Monday, April 30, 2018
A world that is kinder
![]() | "As I've gotten older, I focus more and more on kindness. I want to be kind, I want my children to be kind and I want them to be in a world that is kinder." —Jenny Cyphers |
photo by Sarah Elizabeth Douglas
Sunday, April 29, 2018
Limited time offer
I wrote this when I was frustrated, so it's not as poetic as some:
Kids have their whole childhoods to learn to tie shoes, wipe ass, make a sandwich.
Parents do NOT have that whole childhood to slowly mosey over toward being a little closer to unschooling. If you don't do it soon and well, it will be too late to do it at all.
SandraDodd.com/doit
photo by Ester Siroky
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Kids have their whole childhoods to learn to tie shoes, wipe ass, make a sandwich.
Parents do NOT have that whole childhood to slowly mosey over toward being a little closer to unschooling. If you don't do it soon and well, it will be too late to do it at all.
photo by Ester Siroky
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Saturday, April 28, 2018
Flowing thoughts

What you know can be added to, or amended, but rarely deleted.
Some things are best not learned, which is why it's so important to be careful what you say and how you say it (and to drive carefully, and all that).
Some people do try to encapsulate ideas or experiences and forget them. Sometimes other memories are shut off along with that. That’s a good reason for analyzing traumatic events and sorting through instead of trying to encase them. Too many "do not enter areas" in your mind will slow down connections, and also will inhibit the biochemicals that help make learning fun and easy.
photo by Ester Siroky
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Friday, April 27, 2018
Still

Still: quiet, calm; without motion, at rest, not moving from a place, not disturbed; moving little or gently; silent; not loud; secret; unchanging, undisturbed, stable, fixed; not vehement, gentle
"Still" has meant those things for a thousand years. Longer. Still.
Be with your child, still.
photo by Gail Higgins
Thursday, April 26, 2018
This is better.
"This is better. It’s just better." —Jen Keefe
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To read about what Jen found that was better, her writing is queued up here:
Becoming the Parent You Want to Be
photo by Heather Booth
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Wednesday, April 25, 2018
More and more connections

Each idea, object, concept, person, song, motion—anything you can think of—has personal associations for you. You have an incalculable mass of connections formed in your brain and will make more today, tomorrow, on the way home, and in your sleep.
photo by Ester Siroky
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
One interaction at a time

One interaction at a time. Just make the next interaction a relationship-building one. Don't worry about the one AFTER that, until IT becomes "the next one."
—Pam Sorooshian
photo by Meryl Rosenfeld Ranzer
Monday, April 23, 2018
Happy and healthy appreciation

If people live wanting what they think they "deserve," they will not be as happy or healthy as if they could live appreciating what they have.
photo by Kelly Halldorson
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Sunday, April 22, 2018
Note to parents:

Contented parents are more useful to children and their learning and living than are unhappy parents reciting slogans or rhetoric.
SandraDodd.com/politics
photo by Cass Kotrba
Saturday, April 21, 2018
Soft and gentle
Be soft and gentle
Helping a child learn to hold a kitten or a puppy isn't always easy, but modeling how to do it gently and softly helps. Parents can remember those factors when touching babies and children, too. Is he comfortable? Is he safe?
Someone who can gently handle a puppy, and a baby, might remember those things when dealing with another adult.
SandraDodd.com/better partner
photo by Rose Sorooshian
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Friday, April 20, 2018
Car keys and money
"Look for ways to be a helpful partner to your kids—you've got the car keys and the money, you can facilitate their exploration of the world."
—Deb Rossing
photo by Ester Siroky, from inside their RV
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Thursday, April 19, 2018
Defuse frustration

Joyce Fetteroll wrote:
Life *is* frustrating. Being mindful won't prevent kids from getting frustrated but it will be a huge step in the right direction. Seeing the world from kids' point of view will help you understand why they are reacting to the world as they are. Treat your kids as though they're doing the best they can with the knowledge and skills and understanding of the world they have. And often when they're at their worst, what works best is a hug.
—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Joshua Harkness
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Wednesday, April 18, 2018
Gently sweet, please
Don't anyone be mean to your kids today, please. There will be enough hurt without us adding to it.

SandraDodd.com/TinyMonsterscomment
photo by Sandra Dodd of younger Holly, in Driffield, East Yorkshire
A sweet repeat from April 2011.
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photo by Sandra Dodd of younger Holly, in Driffield, East Yorkshire
A sweet repeat from April 2011.
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Tuesday, April 17, 2018
Learning not to teach

For years I have recommended that new unschoolers stop using the word "teach" and replace all statements and thoughts with phrases using the word "learn" instead. I've gotten much flak back from people saying it doesn't matter, or that's "just semantics." What started as a theory with me became belief and then conviction. Unschoolers who cling to the idea of teaching will handicap their own understanding of how learning works.
photo by Annie Regan
Monday, April 16, 2018
Euphoria and elation
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Those things are said to justify hardship, control, and deprivation. They're said to glorify sacrifice, discomfort, yucky medicine and bitter vegetables (which kids probably will like and choose when they're older if they're not forced to eat them as kids).
If something causes biochemical euphoria or elation, and if the goal is learning, and peace, seek that out. Pay extra for that. Clear your calendar to help your child obtain that.
photo by Amanda Gattis
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Sunday, April 15, 2018
A long, quiet time

If your purpose is just to be with your child, and relaxed, and have a chance to talk, go with something that's non-verbal and takes a long, quiet time.
photo by Holly Dodd
Saturday, April 14, 2018
Shapes and angles

The same image, or toy, or building can be seen in many different ways. For a toddler, this could be a triangle, with a circle, and a rectangle. It might remind an older child of stories of magic houses, or of mysteries and adventures. Young adults' thoughts could be all about traditional construction, history, or "Is this for rent?"
Angles are more than just mathematical or visual things.
photo by Ester Siroky
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Friday, April 13, 2018
Find abundance

Neediness expresses itself differently with different kids. Abundance expresses itself similarly in all.
A family can learn to find abundance rather than lack, even if they're not wealthy.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Thursday, April 12, 2018
Free to behave nicely
My children are about as free as they're going to get, honestly. Always have been. Yet there are all these real-life limitations and considerations. They're free to ignore them. And the state of New Mexico (county of Bernalillo and City of Albuquerque) are not only free, but OBLIGATED, to protect other residents from any over-reaching acts of wild "freedom."
photo by Sandra Dodd, but in Maine, not New Mexico
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Wednesday, April 11, 2018
Gentle, thoughtful touch

Touch someone, or something, in a gentle, thoughtful way. Feel with your fingers, or cheek, or hand the warmth or smoothness or softness of something or someone you love.
Keith, Kirby, Marty and baby Holly Dodd
November 1991
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Tuesday, April 10, 2018
Bring on the Joy
"Focus on Joy. Really. That's all I need to do right now. It's vacation time in my home...bring on the Joy."
—Angela (NYCitymomx3)
photo by Jo Isaac
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Monday, April 9, 2018
Stay here
Stay in the real world! Both feet, directly, right in your house, in your town, in your country, in this moment on this day.
SandraDodd.com/being
photo by Janine
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