photo by Karen James
Wednesday, May 29, 2024
Doing (not not-doing)
photo by Karen James
Tuesday, May 28, 2024
Warmly attractive

There is something warmly attractive about children's toys and books, even if they're not our own.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Monday, May 27, 2024
Flower bed
Joyce wrote:
People who look at what they have and how they can work with it find the way quicker (and are happier) than those who look at what they don't have.—Joyce Fetteroll
photo by Amy Milstein
Sunday, May 26, 2024
Sharing the sun

It's a comforting feeling, for me, that we all see the same sun.
I hope everyone sometimes sees a balloon, or another special thing.
photo by Cathy Koetsier, in Norfolk, England
(click for full image)
Saturday, May 25, 2024
Artifacts
I have seen toys, in museums, just like things I played with as a child in the 1950s and 60s, and that my children played with in the 1980s and 90s.
History is happening all around and through us.
Seeing things from the past can trigger stories that might never have been told without the presence of those artifacts. I missed the days of radio dramas and serials. By the time I was listening to radio, it was all music. The stories had moved to the TV. All of my older relatives had radio stories—of war news, comedy routines, inspiring speeches and of mystery stories presented in several voices, and with sound effects.
We still want stories, news, humor and inspiration, but the sources change, and will change some more.
Antiques elsewhere here
photo by Sandra Dodd
I wrote this four days ago (what's above). Three days ago, I started listening to So, Anyway...: A Memoir by John Cleese (read by the author, who is best known as a member of Monty Python). He has talked about radio shows four times in eight chapters, telling stories of his childhood memories, and of radio producers who seemed to think, when television was new, that TV would not supplant radio programs.
Knowing this post was ready to go made those stories seem like magical coincidence to me. Jung called those coincidences "synchronicity."
History is happening all around and through us.

Seeing things from the past can trigger stories that might never have been told without the presence of those artifacts. I missed the days of radio dramas and serials. By the time I was listening to radio, it was all music. The stories had moved to the TV. All of my older relatives had radio stories—of war news, comedy routines, inspiring speeches and of mystery stories presented in several voices, and with sound effects.
We still want stories, news, humor and inspiration, but the sources change, and will change some more.
photo by Sandra Dodd
I wrote this four days ago (what's above). Three days ago, I started listening to So, Anyway...: A Memoir by John Cleese (read by the author, who is best known as a member of Monty Python). He has talked about radio shows four times in eight chapters, telling stories of his childhood memories, and of radio producers who seemed to think, when television was new, that TV would not supplant radio programs.
Knowing this post was ready to go made those stories seem like magical coincidence to me. Jung called those coincidences "synchronicity."
Friday, May 24, 2024
Entryways

Entries are literally and figuratively everywhere, past and future and in a minute.
When you see a place, a path, or think of something you could look up on the internet, you don't know exactly what will happen next, or how far you'll go. It might be just the first touch or glimpse, and you're back out again.
An entry-point at your house could be a "not interesting" to one person and a days-long rabbit-hole adventure for another. See that and accept it. Entryways to other things, people and places are coming up soon.
photo by Sandra Dodd
Thursday, May 23, 2024
Accepting help (and cake)

Deb Lewis wrote:
I always get in trouble with analogies, but I'm going to try one here. If I wanted to make a cake, and had never baked or cooked before, a cake recipe that just said "do whatever seems best to you, use your imagination" probably wouldn't be that helpful. If my friend, who always had lovely cakes (devil's food?) had given me this recipe, I would have to assume cake just didn't work for my family.
It would have been much more helpful to have an ingredients list and a plan for putting them together.
Ok, kids are not cakes, and maybe there's no ingredients list for unschooling, but I would hope, before I pour a bottle of vinegar in my batter, someone who knows about cakes would stop me. I would hope, before I add a text book or take away TV, someone who knows about unschooling would stop me.
—Deb Lewis
(original, on Always Learning)
(original, on Always Learning)
photo (and cake) by Sandra Dodd,
when this blog was ten years old
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