Category Archives: update

Unschooling, Today

28 days into the new year.

Three of the four kids have been sick (Paxton is still steadfastly drinking his Vitamin C and so far successfully willing himself not to get it).  We’ve had car repairs and front door repairs and dryer repairs.  Gymnastics started up again.  So did karate.  And Cub Scouts.

We decided we needed to repaint almost our whole house, starting with the living room and kitchen:

IMG_9149

And through it all, there’s been a lovely rhythm, the kind that reminds me why we unschool.

Spencer has been making good use of the tools he got for Christmas, spending much of his days  out in the garage.  When he’s not taking apart, putting together, or otherwise fixing his lawn mowers and weed wackers, he’s on the internet… soaking up more information, watching instructional videos, and trouble-shooting.

Paxton has been working hard teaching himself computer programming.  He has a giant book on Python (which I know nothing about, except that it’s a computer “language”) that he uses as a reference, and he also watches tutorials and videos on YouTube.  He’s able to program his own simple games from scratch now, and he sets himself a new goal every day.

Everett has been all about science and magic tricks lately.  The science is cool and everything, but I love watching how the magic makes him come alive. He’s getting really, really good at the slight-of-hand stuff, as well as things like forcing cards (says his unbiased mom) and I’m so enjoying getting to watch him perform and improve.

And Tegan…. honestly, is there anyone busier than a 4 year old?  With Tegan, I just need to show up, and keep up.  Whether it’s drawing, or singing, or playing board games, or Barbies, or ponies, or dress-up, or acting out her most recent favorite scene from one of her TV shows… she keeps me on my toes, and in the present moment.

And it’s a beautiful place to be.

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Filed under kids, life, unschooling, update

Expectations

 

For the past three years, the end of November has meant two things:  I’d 1) be furiously and joyously and manically finishing up my 50,000 word novel for NaNoWriMo, and 2) be going all gangbusters on the house, setting up the tree, getting out the decorations, hanging the stockings, and stringing up the advent calendar, painstakingly filled with 25 carefully planned out activities to do with the kids.

This year, I decided against Nano about 5 days in, just a couple of days before my surgery.  In hindsight, I’m very glad I made the decision when I did, because I would have been forced to make it anyway.  Even now, three weeks later, typing for any great length of time is still painful and exhausting.

And as for Christmas preparations?  We have no tree.  Our decorations are still safely abiding in their boxes in the garage.  We haven’t bought one present for the kids.  I haven’t planned a single advent activity.  And if I can be totally honest, just the thought of doing any of the above is, well…. painful and exhausting.

I don’t know what I was expecting when I signed on the dotted line for this surgery, I really don’t.  I just so very badly wanted to be better, wanted this 7 month ordeal to be over.  But it’s so much easier to tell you what I did NOT expect:

I didn’t expect the pain to be this bad, and this persistent.   As it turns out, knowing intellectually that I was facing a 3+ month total recovery time is a very, very different thing than to feel the stark reality of the pain and frustration of week three, knowing that I still have several more weeks (and possibly months) to go.

I didn’t expect to need powerful narcotics, beyond a day or two.  Again, I’m at three weeks.  The one night I tried to sleep without Percoset, I woke up in tears.

I didn’t expect to be so incapacitated.  I don’t know why I didn’t, because the past several months have shown me very clearly how instrumental our shoulders are in our day-to-day tasks.  But I didn’t.  I can dress myself (with some pain), shower (with some pain), brush my teeth (with some pain), and as of a few days ago, drive (with some pain).  But five minutes ago I had to call in the 12 year old to open a can for me, because the can opener was just too much.  There are multiple can opener-esque scenarios throughout the day, and it frustrates me.  Which brings me to:

I didn’t expect to be so frustrated.  With the pain, with the situation, with myself, with the need to just HURRY UP AND BE PATIENT ALREADY.

I didn’t expect the big black dog of depression, who’s once again been flirting with me for months now, to not just embrace me but engulf me… to suffocate me… to consume me… like an unwelcome old friend who won’t take “no” for answer.   A friend whose presence is so familiar and so easy that I’ve let myself fall deep, deep into its depths before I even realized it’s happened.   Because there’s a sick kind of safety in the darkness, and because it’s just too damn much work to take that first step to start climbing my way out.

But.  (And may I just say, thank God for buts?)

I expect that the pain will lessen, and God-willing, eventually go away completely.  I’ve learned that healing is very much a one step forward, two steps back process.  I can’t compare to yesterday, but I can compare to two and a half weeks ago.  Just because today is a bad day, doesn’t mean tomorrow will be a bad day too.

I expect that I’ll eventually be able to rest without the aid of any prescriptions.

I expect that with time I’ll be able to open cans again.  And do a downward dog.  And pick up my daughter. And be even stronger than before.

I expect that my current frustration will teach me great lessons, and that if I allow myself to feel it, that it too will go away.

I expect that I will take that step, and the one after that, and the one after that, until there’s not so much darkness.  And I expect that if I rest in the presence of where I am – fully rest, and lean, and breathe – instead of fighting, that it won’t seem so hard.  I expect that if I allow myself to feel how I feel – without letting it define me – that the promise of something better will find me, and meet me halfway.

Finally, I expect that this coming month, and the Christmas holiday in general, will be different than years past…. but that different is okay, even good.  This is a season of great growth and learning to be sure.   If the past three weeks are any indication, the lesson is HUGE.    And that’s better than a perfectly executed advent calendar any day.

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Filed under about me, being happy with what is, Christmas, learning, life, update

Gratitude in the Chaos

I had a friend in highschool who was constantly chiding me for being a pessimist.  “You’re so negative,”  he’d tell me.  “Why are you such a pessimist?”

“I am not a pessimist,”  I’d answer.  “I’m a realist.  There’s a difference.”

He eventually became my boyfriend for one tragic, drama-filled month of teenaged angst, before he dumped me on Valentine’s Day.   Because I’m a saver, I’m pretty sure I still have a lunch bag full of notes he wrote me (folded in that super-awesome neat little triangle style that was so popular in the 80’s and early 90’s) in a box in a closet, alongside yearbooks, pictures, certificates, notes from friends, and other useless memorabilia.

I’ve also stored away that “pessimist” label, never to be thought of again.  I’ve learned to think positively, I’ve learned to find beauty in all things, I’ve learned to have faith, and I’ve learned to trust.   I actually have a hard time dealing with constant negativity in other people now.  I’ve hidden more than one friend on Facebook when I’ve discovered that their statuses were an inveritable stream of “My life is so terrible.  Why me?  What else can go wrong??”  Focusing on the negative certainly never helped anyone, and allowing that kind of thing into your life only serves to bring both parties further down that ladder.

Still, I’m a little freaked out by people who are too positive… the ones who are all hyper spiritual, woo woo, life is all rainbows and sunshine and unicorns.  No matter how positive you claim to be, life is messy sometimes.  Life is hard sometimes.   Life is tiring sometimes.  Life is a run-you-over, punch-you-in-the-stomach while kicking-you-in-the-teeth assault sometimes.

All of that to say that the past couple of weeks have been a little…

They’ve kind of been….

They haven’t really…

Well, they blew.   And because I’m neither the 16 year old pessimist nor the woo woo rose-colored-glasses-wearer, I’m both acknowledging the fact of their suckiness, and acknowledging the good that has (or will eventually) come from them.   There are reasons to be thankful, even on the bad days:

1.  My shoulder issues reached a head, I finally admitted to my physical therapist that the therapy just wasn’t working, and a whole new ball started rolling.  In the span of just over a week, I had an MRI – along with a painful arthrography –  another visit to the sports doctor, and finally a consultation with a surgeon.   Surgery is planned and scheduled for three weeks from yesterday.   It’ll mean an obvious break from yoga, rehabilitation, and a full recovery that is going to take anywhere from two to three months.

But I’m thankful that the problem is “fixable”;  that there’s every reason to believe I’ll eventually be pain-free;  and that the technology exists to do so in an outpatient, 40 minute arthroscopic surgery, rather than something more invasive.  

2.  Several weeks ago, I applied to a brand-new bible-based natural health school.  I’m always excited to add on to my education in that area, and I thought, “Cool!  A school that combines both my faith and my belief in natural health.”  I was really looking forward to it, and to getting an official answer at the beginning of October.  It never even occurred to me that I wouldn’t be accepted.  But instead of an acceptance letter, what I got was a stark reminder that I’m no longer really part of that world.  (A much longer blog post on the subject is forth-coming)  They had issues with my yoga, and my essay on the subject had not convinced them that I was not in fact a part of “the occult.”  I could either further try to justify my position and my choices with an additional 1000 word essay, answering a host of questions that were quite honestly a little insulting – both as a yoga teacher AND as a Christian – or I could withdraw my application.  I chose the latter.  So, no new school for me right now.

But I’m thankful that when given an opportunity to bend to fit and conform to someone else’s ideas of what I should and should not be, I stayed true to myself.  I know that I’m following the path that God has for me, and I don’t feel any compulsion to justify that position to someone else just because they have the power to keep me out of their school.  There are other schools.  And a chance to take another giant step into authenticity is always a good thing, even if it comes in the form of a rejection letter.

3.  And finally, Everett (8 years old at the time of this writing) is going through a personal struggle unlike any I’ve experienced with any of the other three kids.  And while it is his struggle, like any mother would tell you… seeing your children hurting is in many ways worse than feeling that hurt yourself.  I’m walking some new territory as a mom here, and “new” sometimes means terrifying.

But I’m thankful that resources exist to help, and for the knowledge that we’ll both grow stronger through the struggle.  Just like a caterpillar, sometimes growth necessitates struggle.  And though we’ll have moments of fear and discomfort and even pain, we’ll eventually make our way out of the cocoon into freedom… beautiful, and able to fly.

(Photo by frontendeveloper)

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Filed under life, perspective, update

8 Month Dreadiversary

My crazy dreads are 8 months old! Here’s what they’re doing… And I apologize for all the “ums”. There’s a reason I typically write instead of, well, speak. 🙂

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Filed under about me, dreadlocks, update

Snapshots

Sleep has been eluding me again, which makes me 1) way too introspective, and 2) a little bit… well, crazy. I can’t be held responsible for anything I say (or blog) while in that state, so just to be safe, behold some highlights from the past few weeks in PICTURES:

Everett’s homemade duct tape wallet:

 Paxton’s 10th birthday party:

Dusting for fingerprints:

A visitor:

Making homemade root beer:

Camping in another beautiful corner of the world:

My new hobby:

September is just a few days away, and we’re all looking forward to a new month, new ventures, and cooler temperatures.

And sleep.

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Filed under pictures, update