Hello from the beach!
My mother in law invited us to join her on a short trip to North Myrtle Beach so we hopped in the car on Monday to join her. I thought for sure 70 degrees would be too cold for the kids to get in the water but I was wrong, and the kids spent the afternoon with their pants and shorts rolled up running in and out of the water with the tide.
Adjusting to our new homeschool life has certainly had it’s challenges but the freedom to do things like this make it worth it.
In the past few weeks we’ve been to Shenandoah, Northern Virginia, Maryland, Jamestown and now South Carolina.
We’re still in that deschooling phase, adjusting to our new way of life. I’ll admit I was occasionally frustrated that after 2 weeks of “deschooling” nobody suddenly woke up saying “I want to learn calculus” or “I can’t wait to go on a 3 hour hike today!”.
When people talk about deschooling, or unschooling for that matter, the narrative always seems to be “we relaxed and now my child is reading above grade level/is a math genius/designed a rocket that actually went to the moon and back”
But we’re not focused on the product, we’re focused on the process. And lately I’ve noticed some little things that are telling me that we’re on the right track.
Max, who hates learning, is asking more questions. “What kind of bug is that?” “Can I listen to that book while we drive?” “Can I take a picture of that?”
Hudson, who used to cry every time he had reading homework, sleeps with a giant stack of books in his bed. He looks at the pictures every night. He’s sounding words out on his own out of curiosity. And he’ll sit and listen to me read until I have no voice left.
Hudson’s speech therapist remarked that he seems like a “totally different kid” that he walks in more relaxed and ready to work.
The kids are asking to collect things. They are keeping themselves more entertained outside. And I even heard the words “I’ve been on the computer enough today” come from my 10 year old.
We haven’t made actual rockets, nobody has discovered a secret hidden genius. But we’re learning, and that’s what our homeschool is all about.
It’s an amazing lifestyle, homeschooling. A 2 Litre of coke and a pack of mentos, there’s the kids rocket (outside where it can be messy). And you’ll see in no time that they’ll manifest in their own unique specialization a and know your socks off, because they simply have more time.
Beautiful! It’s a process for them. It’s a process for you. And it always will be! Seasons of interest and learning ebb and flow. Good for you for ebbing and flowing with them! If you haven’t already discovered Brave Writer, you would LOVE it. 🙂 (I forget … have we already had that conversation?)
I’m not sure we have chatted before but our older kids re part of an essentials in writing program. Each of our four kids are natural writers. I’ve heard good things about Brave Writer too.
My son is looking for a writing group or course! I’d love to hear more about it.
We haven’t talked about Brave Writer, I’d love to hear more about it!
twainautsin, Brave Writer is a writing program, but it’s also so much more – it’s really evolved into almost a homeschooling lifestyle/philosophy and an amazing, supporting mama-tribe community. Check out BraveWriter.com, and two places on Facebook: the Brave Writer page and the Brave Writer BraveSchoolers group. Also, my friend Mary has written tons on her blog about Brave Writer and the Brave Writer Lifestyle. You can find her at NotBefore7.com