Unschooling can make life better. Really, fully unschooling becomes more philosophical and spiritual than people expect it to.
photo by Gail Higgins
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Unschooling can make life better. Really, fully unschooling becomes more philosophical and spiritual than people expect it to.
Principles of unschooling, once well understood and practiced, can be extended beyond the children. |
My kids grew up being able to do a lot more things than other kids they knew because their parents allowed for it to be so. We didn't have to, we chose to do that because we saw the benefit in doing that.
You'll be glad you did.
As we had been talking about natural learning, naturally I responded:
"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.
When parents are not honest and fair-minded, the children can come to disregard their information and advice. For unschooling, I think that's the greatest danger. |
Cameras can stop time. Memories can try. But really, the moment is gone and new moments are coming. Keep your balance, live lightly, be sweet. |