Sunday, November 24, 2013

Chat without me, if you want to!

No formal chat this coming week; if you want to hang out in the chatroom, though, please do!

Keith and I are going to Las Vegas and during the chat time I expect to be on a tour of the power generators at Hoover Dam. That night, we'll be seeing Penn & Teller. I'm pretty jazzed!

Have a good week, all!

The week after that will be the last of the Big Book chats. :-)
Then we can go to some other series of topics, or ways to choose weekly topics, so if you have ideas, we can talk about it in the chat on Wednesday, December 4.


If you're reading this by e-mail and you need a path to the chatroom, click on the title to get to the blog, which has a tab up to the left with the link and password.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Unexpected Outcomes, November 20

November 20, Unexpected Outcomes (page 269), and a few pages following (spouses, trees, pets might be touched upon).

This and one more chat will finish the book, because we're up to the resources, quotes, essays and interviews.

November 27: no chat. I'll be at Hoover Dam with my husband, Keith, as a side trip from Las Vegas where we're going to see Cirque du Soleil and Penn & Teller.

December 4: Joy (page 275), Values (276) and Wonder (279)

Here is page 269's text for those without the book:

Unexpected Outcomes

When my children were young I knew their lives would be different, the differences were greater than any of my expectations. I hadn't known then, either, to predict how different my own life would be, and my husband's.

I didn’t expect this to change my children’s ability to make eye contact with people.
It surprises me that they have friends of such a range of ages.
I didn’t expect them to learn so much without me.
I didn’t expect Kirby and Marty to be offered jobs they didn’t even apply for.
I didn’t know that our relationships could stay so good even when they were teenagers.
I didn’t know they would be so compassionate.
I’m impressed at their real-world courage and principles.
I didn’t expect to like to lose arguments.
I didn’t know I would be so accepting of kids saying “no.”
I didn’t expect it to make things so sweet between me and Keith.
I didn’t expect unschooling to make the grocery store so fun.
I didn’t expect to see school so differently.
I didn’t expect this to improve my relationships with pets.
I didn’t know how much people could learn without reading.
I didn't know we would have friends all over the country, and later all over the world.

http://SandraDodd.com/unexpected


If you're reading this by e-mail and you need a path to the chatroom, click on the title to get to the blog, which has a tab up to the left with the link and password.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Unschooling parents becoming better people

Changes in the parents—how unschooling can make a parent a better person.

I'm going to use two pages that aren't right next to each other in the book:
268 Changes in the Parent
271 Healing

Those pages recommend reading http://sandradodd.com/change and http://sandradodd.com/parentingpeacefully


If you're reading this by e-mail and you need a path to the chatroom, click on the title to get to the blog, which has a tab up to the left with the link and password.

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Young adults, saying "yes" to grown children

Young adults, saying "yes" to grown children, pages 264-267 in The Big Book of Unschooling

On the website, two of those three sections correspond to (but they don't duplicate) http://sandradodd.com/youngadults and http://sandradodd.com/yes/


TIME CHNANGES: Daylight savings time has come here now, too. Double check times, please. Noon in New Mexico (mountain daylight time).





If you're reading this by e-mail and you need a path to the chatroom, click on the title to get to the blog, which has a tab up to the left with the link and password.