photo by Jesper Conrad
Friday, February 23, 2024
A learning environment
photo by Jesper Conrad
Something looks like this:
reflection,
sunset,
vehicle
Thursday, February 22, 2024
Our own real thoughts
In your head, you have some repeating-loop messages. Some are telling you you're doing a good job, but I bet some of them are not. Some are telling you that you have no choice, but you do.
We can't really think until we think in our own words without the prejudicial labels and without mistaking the voices in our heads for our own real thoughts.
SandraDodd.com/voices
SandraDodd.com/witness
photo by Christine Milne
SandraDodd.com/witness
photo by Christine Milne
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
An interested and interesting adult
I admire his courage and his writings. ...Because John Holt was SO interested in children, every time he interacted with one, he saw a child interacting with a fascinated adult. THIS is one of the things unschoolers need to remember. When the adult brings boredom, cynicism, criticism and doubt to the table, that's what he'll see and that's how he'll see it, and it will be no fault of the child's whatsoever.
He wasn't married. He didn't have kids. What he learned he learned from other people's kids in classrooms and when visiting in their homes, and he was SO interested in kids that their lives were different just for his being there, so what he saw often was how a child is in the presence of a really interested and interesting adult. That's the part I want to emulate.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Something looks like this:
automobile,
display,
words
Tuesday, February 20, 2024
Be reliable
It will add calm, value, and solidity to your life if you're reliable, honest, and trustworthy.
(Thanks to Amber Ivey for saving a quote I could build from here.)
photo by Sandra Dodd

Monday, February 19, 2024
Compassion and kindness
I think that any time we get caught up in the idea that the child is "being disrespectful" (self-focused thinking) it can be harder to get back to thinking about what they are feeling, the need is they are expressing, and how to help them either fill the need, or cope with it being impossible right now, with compassion and kindness.
—Robyn Coburn
photo by Robin Bentley
Sunday, February 18, 2024
Enthusiasm for happenstance
Sandra's theory of "strewing" highlights the role of the parent, both in the support they provide children and how they reproduce enthusiasm for happenstance.
I really like the buildup to "happenstance," and the use of that word, but as picky as I am, I want to clarify that we didn't "reproduce enthusiasm." We HAD enthusiasm.
2009, page 80
SandraDodd.com/strewing describes strewing better.
photo by Gail Higgins
Saturday, February 17, 2024
Being safe, being trusted
If your default answer is no—by the *kids'* standards even if *you* feel you say yes a lot—then they're likely to 1) see the world in terms of impossibilities rather than possibilities or 2) ask someone else who may be less trustworthy.
—Joyce Fetteroll
Be their trusted partner.
photo by Rosie Moon
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