photo by Jihong Tang
Wednesday, June 7, 2023
Which direction?
photo by Jihong Tang
Tuesday, June 6, 2023
Softer
If you can find softer words, you will experience softer emotions.
photo by Vlad Gurdiga
Monday, June 5, 2023
Aim high; be generous
Don't aim for 50/50.
If 50% is right, then 49% is wrong, and 65% would be something get angry about.
If you both aim for more than half, you'll meet around the middle, around half the time. If you want the other person to stick around, "around" is the goal.
photo by Dan Vilter
Sunday, June 4, 2023
Moment of sweetness
—Deb Lewis
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Saturday, June 3, 2023
Power and worth
Marta Venturini quoted me, on Facebook, in June 2011, and I can't find the quote elsewhere, to link to. It might've been on a recording or in a chat that was never published, maybe.
What's most interesting to me is that yesterday's post here was me (in 2009) discouraging someone from a focus on "power" (It's not about power), and the day before that was about things being "worthwhile." (Is it worthwhile?)
Here and there, over the years, I have reminded parents to avoid situations in which a child feels powerless. Life has realities, and we don't always have choices. Parents should avoid casual neglect of providing options for unschooled kids at home. You probably have the power to do that.
photo by Cátia Maciel
Friday, June 2, 2023
It's not about power
Once upon a time, a newer but enthusiastic unschooler came to a discussion explaining the "we" (all of us) should agree that unschooling was about power—power over oneself, and the power to decide what to learn and when (and more dramatic power-based rhetoric).
Some of my response is below, and near the photo credit is a link to the full post.
We don't talk about power here much, but we have given our children a
life of choices. It's not "power," it's rational thinking,
considering all sorts of factors and preferences. They don't need
power over themselves. They need to BE themselves.
SandraDodd.com/being
"The power to decide what to learn" makes a pretzel of the straight
line between experience and knowing.
My children don't "decide what to learn, how to learn, and when to learn it." They learn all the time. They learn from dreams, from eating, from walking, from singing, from conversations, from watching plants grow and storms roll. They learn from movies, books, websites, and asking questions.
Power over oneself, unschooling and "politics"
photo by Amy Milstein
Some of my response is below, and near the photo credit is a link to the full post.
My children don't "decide what to learn, how to learn, and when to learn it." They learn all the time. They learn from dreams, from eating, from walking, from singing, from conversations, from watching plants grow and storms roll. They learn from movies, books, websites, and asking questions.
photo by Amy Milstein
Thursday, June 1, 2023
Is it worthwhile?
When I'm reading a book, I decide by the moment whether to keep reading or to stop.
Even writing this post, I could easily click out of it and not finish, or I could finish it and decide not to post it. Choices, choices, choices.
photo by Luna Elizabeth Short
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