Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 09, 2009

#best 09 " The Challenge of Unschooling"

Today's farewell 2009 blog post was a challenge "that drove you to the edge and then some." For me, there can be only one answer, because there is one challenge that encompasses all others.

My challenge, and my family's, has been unschooling. It has become our life, shaken us up and out of the complacency of "just the way things are", made our lives sing and soar.

It has also, at times, been a royal pain in the ass, a huge epic struggle to let go of old ideas, old "have-to's" and "supposed to's" - a struggle, sometimes, to let go, in general.

I used to believe I needed to do a great many things. Feeling as though I had no choice in the matter freed me from considering all the choices I did have, if only I could be brave enough to do so.




As we moved from my reading about unschooling to our first bumbling changes in our lives, I began to have some inkling of the freedom we might one day find. One day - but, at that point, we were a pendulum, out of balance, swinging far in one direction, then as far in the other.

Finding a natural balance has required me to go deep within myself, to find the frightened and stifled little girl I was, to listen to what she had to say with all the focus and attention I was learning to give to my own children. I needed to see her as she was, look once again through her eyes, return to live once more in her small and powerless body.






I needed to see Jim that way, too, as the little boy he was, not so frightened as I was, in childhood, but instead the child of divorce and remarriage and a blended family with three older sisters who dominated the time and attention of his home. That was a harder one - I know Jim in childhood only through his stories and some picture albums. And today he is a big capable bear of a man, bearded and strong, very much unlike a child.



I needed to give up all the expectations I had for my children, all the glory I'd hoped they'd vicariously cover me in. I myself was classified a "gifted" child, and thought it mattered whether my children were. Somehow, if they weren't, I would have failed in the making of them...

I've come to see, though, through this year of unlearning school conditioning, that they themselves are the gift.

Jeremiah, tw days ago, asked me, "Mom, what's an element?" He is 8. We went to a planetarium show during the winter, called "Molecularium", and, after, we did a lot of talking about molecules, atoms, and the smaller parts inside. So, using that, I explained that all the atoms in an element are the same, that helium and gold and silver and lead and copper are elements, and so are the hydrogen and oxygen in water.

He thought about this for a minute, then asked, "What's milk of magnesia?" I explained that as best I could, then asked where he'd heard of it. "Two places - Married...With Children and Family Guy," he answered. shows he's never seen that day we went to the planetarium. shows he will now stay up all night to watch, and from which he's gotten an irreverent tour of life and history and wit and irony and sarcasm and theatre of the absurd and satire and...today he informed me that Brian, the talking dog on Family Guy, is an atheist. "And so am I." he said.

I remember telling my own mother I was a atheist when I was about 15 and supremely skeptical. she became anngry and offended and told me I was not, and not to say so again. We were not regualr churchgoers by any means. I was a deep thinker even then; I knew what I meant, as well as what was in my soul, and being told I didn't made ME angry and offended.

iIt was the same thing with Star Trek, Men at Work, makeup, anything that I was passionate about that my parents couldn't understand. They might have embraced my passions; but, if they didn't share them, they would or could not. They might have simply tolerated them as things important to me that they would never understand (I have this type for Jim's 4x4 videos. I know they excite him, but all the vehicles and trails just look the same to me. Bet they wouldn't on horseback, though...).




What happened, and still does today, is that my parents actively deride my passions. Here's a sample conversation I've had more than once, upon being called by my mother.

mom: "What are you doing?"
me: "Watching M*A*S*H with Jim" (we've done this since the earliest days of our relationship, own the series, and still do today. You could say it's mildly important to us.)
mom: (sighs; voice gains a note of disgust.) "I HATE that stupid show!"
me (impatient, no longer really in the mood to talk) "I know you do, Mom, but we love it, and that's what we were doing. "

The result of this is that there are very huge chunks of what's important to me that I have never been able to share with my parents for no other reason than that they don't understand that these things ARE important to me, and scorning them keeps me a bit distant and reserved with them. I've never been fond of relationships that make me too often uneasy and guarded. it's too much work. I prefer the easy companionship of those who believe that each of us has things they hold most dear, and those things are very much a part of and a reflection of who they are.

I do not embrace all of my children's passions, and there was a time, not so very long ago, when many things (cable TV, video games, the freedom to choose when and where to sleep, when and what to eat, what to wear) were forbidden for no other reason tha that i could not see the importance of them. That old pattern I was raised within, that my parents still live within, was so much a part of my life, I didn't even realize I was repeating it with my own children.




Becoming conscious of it was the first, hardest part. Since I began to see, the revelations have been fast and furious. They keep deepening, as I see the children blossoming as their choices, their passions are honored and deemed equally as important and valid as my own...gorillas, stick ponies, Hubble telescope, Pokemon, intestines, Nintendo, kittens....the list will get longer as the days and weeks and months and years of living with "YES!" become deeper and wider and MORE.

Getting here is a huge victory, but there is so much further to travel, so much more to understand. It will be the work and joy and passion of my lifetime, making the journey!


Thursday, July 23, 2009

And more Freedom...




Enjoying Annalise's fifth birthday at Wilton Mall.
When last I wrote, I was describing the freedom we've begun to explore here. I'd meant to return within a few days with details on how the changes we've made have affected our lives.

One of the new freedoms I'm practicing these days is freedom from comittments that really aren't - those things each of us takes on or assumes we must do, although the assumption is only our own.

And so I freed myself to live my life for a bit without writing about it.

 I also write fiction for my own amusement, and the kids and I have been busy with a variety of projects at home and out. It's birthday season, for us, with the attendant whirlwind of excitement. Jim and I are nearing our anniversary, and really enjoying our life.

 Our life needed me.

I'm glad I took that time. The freedom I was writing about at the beginning of the month has deepened, taken firmer root. Like a seedling, it is growing, thriving, and becoming more itself ...it's growing here in our lives - and in my own soul.

Life isn't perfect. Life isn't. What it is is freeing and joyful, swirly and playful, fun and chaotic - and just so damned good that I - me!! - walk around picking up debris and maintaining with a huge grin on my face! I sing for joy and laugh out loud even if I'm all alone. I revel in the mess, because it's part of these people that I love...and they just wouldn't be them without it.

Her very own copy of the Koko's Kitten documentary brings birthday joy!

I've spent the last two days essentially doing exactly as I pleased. A little housekeeping, a lot of time with the kids, some for myself. Coffee, conversation, and romance with Jim. The kids did as they pleased, with me, with each other, and alone. They had their weekly Daddy Night with Jim. Life flowed easily, and so did we.

I'm beginning to see that all our days could be more like this. Letting go of what isn't important is all it takes.

Doing things out of obligation isn't important to me, anymore. Being in control, ordering my children's lives  to fit them comfortably into my life, isn't, either. Remembering that we share our home with two very unique young individuals is. Watching them become, not who I want them to be, but who they are, is. Being here, with them, as they explore their passions, is.

Seeing their faces glowing with delight, and the increasing kindnesses they show, the quick soothing of tempers with understanding, rather than the smoldering heat of angry frustration...that is freedom, and joy.
Figuring out how to run the ride - together.


This is evolution, for our family. It's lifelong, because it is life. We're not turning back, because that's not how evolution works. This is better. It works for us. Life is alive and alight with beauty, and passion, and laughter.

Right now, I feel something vast and wonderful opening up before us. I can't quite see it, yet. But it's like the Grand Canyon on a starless night. I can't see it, but I can feel it, and I know it's there.

I am the navigator of my family's journey, and I'm freely tending to that. It's the coolest thing I've ever done, and it deserves my full and best attention.

Tuesday, July 07, 2009

Freedom









Annalise and her donkey friend, Chester.
The word seems to be everywhere around the Fourth of July. Advertisers want us to believe that we simply can't have a free, independent life unless we buy the products they hawk. Politicians  use it, and so do extremists and activists, to attempt to sway public opinion. "Live free or die!" "Freedom isn't free."

Very often, we hear the word freedom, I think, and never really stop to consider what it is; what it means in our own lives.

Happy nibblers!


I've been thinking a lot about freedom, lately, in every area of my life. We've made some remarkable and profound changes in our lives, as individuals and as a family. As a unit, we are transformed, and transforming.

We are attaining a level of freedom I never knew (or even imagined!) exists. This freedom has nothing to do with the car we drive, the median value of homes in our area, the quality of the school district we live in, or our income bracket.
Annalise typing at my laptop.





We've found the freedom to do what we please. To help the kids to do as they please. To give up the endless stream of complaints and power struggles that often seem to define parenthood. To live our lives in a way that honors all of us, to share freely of ourselves, to laugh and romp and play in a bubbling-over of joy and delight. To live a life that we choose for ourselves, rather than one designed to look like a television show (we'd be an irreverent, sassy sitcom for sure, though, or a warped sketch show with elements of Python and Hill...) or a page from a magazine (I haven't found the magazine yet to define us - maybe MAD?)

Jeremiah fast asleep in the Papasan chair-shhhh.....


There are two guiding principles in our home:

 Everyone gets to be safe, and everyone gets to have fun.

These replace rules, which we used to have a fair number of, not so very long ago. Pretty much anything we need guidance for fits within those principles and still allows lots of options. You might notice that safety comes first; we're not going to let someone run out into the road without looking, and we aren't inviting any roof-jumping. And if one family member's fun is taking away from someone else's, there will be a need for understanding and compromise.




Giving her animal friends a bath!

There aren't punishments, chores, or bedtimes. There are agreed-upon quiet hours, for the sake of those who sleep earlier, and, if they aren't honored, someone may spend the rest of their time awake in their room rather than elsewhere in the house. But even this is an agreement instead of a punishment. There are requests for help, and offers of it. Requests, only, because the adults in this house don't like to be told what to do...and neither do the children (surprise, surprise!).













Annalise's doorway fort, made of cardboard and bedding.


When there is a problem, or a squabble, or some act of aggression, we're learning to see it as two young humans navigating their social structure and their place in it. after all, how many of us, as adults, are always, always in control of our emotions and reactions? Punishing a child for not doing so reveals a rather shocking lack of control  - in the parent. 

How is a child to learn control, or the complexities of human interaction, if the adults they love the most aren't modeling it?

There's more hugging going on, more time spent together building on the floor while the housework waits, a lot more finger food and fewer enforced sit-down meals (we mostly are all the type to have several projects going at once. Quick foods on a monkey platter can provide fuel on the go, leaving a lot more time for other fascinating things!), a lot more talking about what went right, or, if it didn't, what went wrong and how we could prevent it going wrong again.

Sometimes freedom looks like this!


How is this social experiment in limited anarchy (or so it might seem, from the outside!) going?

Well, it is 4am on a Tuesday morning. The rest of the family all drifted off to sleep within the. last two hours, each in a different room. I'm getting ready to put the laptop down for the night, take a shower, and join them in sweet dreams....so the details, beyond the thousands of words the pictures are worth, will remain a mystery, for now.....

May your dreams be sweet, and your waking hours sweeter! =)