Plants vs. Zombies image by Sandra Dodd (my gameplay, too)
Wednesday, June 14, 2023
Open the window
Plants vs. Zombies image by Sandra Dodd (my gameplay, too)
Tuesday, June 13, 2023
Provide more
How could doing better be worse?
You won't help yourself and your family be happy if you keep looking at what you *imagine* life could have been had you been mindfully parenting all along. You are where you are and right this moment you have the opportunity and a growing box of tools to be better. 🙂
When buckets have been empty for so long they've developed holes, it takes a lot of filling before those holes can start closing. But in the meantime having their buckets as full as you can make them will be better than empty. Maybe they won't ever be as full or lacking in holes as they could have been, but what's the alternative you have available right now?
with more, and follow-up
photo by Sandra Dodd
I used this photo once before,
but it IS bucket-shaped lacy water (with flowers), and seemed appropriate today.
Monday, June 12, 2023
Paleolithic unschooling?
(Hint: You don't actually have a choice.)
Paleolithic families had Internet and Netflix and PS3s? Did they have park days and YouTube? Were their parents distinctly turning their backs on the dominant culture and letting them learn in ways that felt kinder and gentler? Were they, in many cases, living at significantly lower income levels so one parent could stay home, at least part-time?
Unschooling is nothing at all like paleolithic life.
Unschooling has worked for a generation or two, but it hasn't been working for countless generations. That kind of thinking might get you all bound up in confusion as your son gets older and more aware of the modern world, and it may hinder your own ability to define what it is your family is actually doing.
SandraDodd.com/reality
photo by Karen James
Sunday, June 11, 2023
This "thing"
Do you use books at all, Sandra?SandraDodd:
What do you mean "use books"?That mom:
As in curriculum, textbooks, etc.SandraDodd:
I use books like crazy—we need to look at what you mean by "use."
A lot of the problem with discussing all this is philosophical—the definitions of "learn" and "know" and things like that.If we talk about what we "do" and "use" and "are" instead of what's happening in and with our children we dance around the "thing" without seeing the "thing" (and the next philosophical problem is: what is this "thing"?)
photo by Colleen Prieto
P.S. In the days of text chats, there would be ten or twenty people in the chat, rolling over each other. I wasn't saying I used a lot of texbooks; I was still responding to her first question. Reading chats is a bit different, but for those who didn't get to be in any, there was overlap and lag and confusion, and they were fun, too.
Saturday, June 10, 2023
Help with decisions
photo by Jihong Tang
Friday, June 9, 2023
Seeing gifts
We just watched a documentary called Lost Castles of England. My 10 year old loves Star Trek and so he was particularly thrilled that it was narrated by Leonard Nimoy. 🙂
We paused - oh - probably at least 25 times during the documentary to look up things ranging from "When was the Bronze Age?" and "What exactly is Stonehenge anyway?" to "Who were the Normans?" and "How exactly big is England?" and "They killed the garrison... What's a garrison??"
We also paused a bunch of times as he described how he's going to be getting up early tomorrow to start work in Minecraft right away - he plans to build a motte-and-bailey timber castle, as described in the documentary. He asked me to keep the documentary in our Netflix queue so he can refer to it as needed for the particulars.
When the show ended, he stood up from the couch and proclaimed "That was AWESOME. And the whole time it was Spock. Spock just GIVING you interesting history stuff!!!"
It hit me right away that he didn't say "Spock teaching you history" or "A show teaching you history" or anything about teaching at all. He doesn't see things in terms of Being Taught. In his mind, he received a gift of new knowledge and facts this evening. A gift given by Spock, which made it all the better. 🙂
Note from Sandra:
Colleen's son, Robbie, is twenty years old, as I share this. The story above has been on the page about "learning" for a long time, quietly helping others.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, June 8, 2023
Good for a long time
And, as well as being good for unschooling, it's also good for the parents themselves, their children, family and other relationships, and generations to come!
photo by Nicole Kenyon