photo by Jo Isaac, of a barking owl
Tuesday, January 9, 2024
Raised up
photo by Jo Isaac, of a barking owl
Monday, January 8, 2024
What peace feels like
Adults need to know what peace feels like too, though, and some feel it for the first time when they really start to understand unschooling.
photo by Colleen Prieto
Sunday, January 7, 2024
Greater clarity
If we don't move away from the extremes—those slightly blurry edges—we won't get to appreciate the crisp details of whatever it is we do hope to see and understand better.
That's true for most things, I believe.
Learn to recognize your own extreme thinking. See the nevers and the alwayses. 😊 Then, move around a bit, in search of greater clarity. That shift in thinking will help most relationships, I'm confident.
—Karen James
photo by Gail Higgins
Saturday, January 6, 2024
Next week, next year, next century
People DO think of next week. They think of last week. But they're doing their thinking from inside their present selves.
Balance depends on the fulcrum. Be solid. Be grounded.
Be whole, and be here.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Friday, January 5, 2024
Environmental factors
In the quote below, "it" could be replaced with
- home
- life
- your nest
- your children's day
- yourself
Make it happy and funny and comfortable and exciting so that they want to be with you. Be sparkly.
photo by Sandra Dodd
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Thursday, January 4, 2024
Viewpoint
What we perceive is seen through our own eyes. Even looking at a photo, we see what WE see, of what the photographer saw. Our thoughts can't be theirs. What it smelled like can't be conveyed, or how it sounded.
Some scenes and places and stories, dishes, houses, I have shared with my husband and children, but still their perceptions and memories can only be their own. This is a good thing, and good to remember.
photo by Ester Siroky
Wednesday, January 3, 2024
Sometime maybe
When people think "always" and "never", they get stuck in "always" and "never", and can't see the in-between where, most often, the details and valuable bits of wisdom are.
I've found that a lot of new unschoolers seem to get stuck in extreme thinking--the always and never lands. 😉 I probably did too. Maybe it's part of adjusting to a new paradigm of thinking.
—Karen James
photo by Marta Venturini
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