Monday, November 30, 2009
Helping kids with anger
Disclaimer: I react very strongly to the anger of others and therefore often have trouble responding calmly. It should be noted then that the following process represents an ideal to reach for rather than a claim that I have any special ability to reach it.
Step 1: Stop the insanity. Or kick it up a notch. If physical violence is occurring, stop it. Be quiet and act. Intervention might mean stepping between two combatants, moving one kid away, or doing something so startling that the kids stop fighting to look at you. A sudden chicken dance might work.
Step 2: Reflect. "Whoa, you are really angry." This is SO important with small kids, I can't even begin to tell you. They are often so overwhelmed by their emotions that they don't have any words for them. Plus, you show quite clearly that you SEE them.
Step 3: Deflect. "Here, hit this pillow instead of your brother." A kid who is hitting needs an outlet, badly. To expect an angry kid to stop and stifle the way adults do is crazy, not to mention psychologically contraindicated.
Step 4: Provide deeper reflection and empathy. "I understand. I get so frustrated when things like that happen." Remember that anger is almost always a cover for some other emotion. You can help SO much by helping the child identify the underlying emotion.
Step 5: Suggest and model alternatives. "When I'm angry, stomping my feet helps." Then do some stomping. As the atmosphere lightens up, try for playful: "And when I’m REALLY mad, I growl like a giant."
Step 6: Love 'em up. What will reassure your kid that expressing anger is okay? Hugs? Quiet time playing with cars? Snuggles on the couch? A bike ride together? Whatever it is, do that.
Step 7: Repeat as needed. If learning to deal with anger were easy, there wouldn't be so many people in therapy. Remember that your child is not (NOT!) going to get it on the first try. You will (WILL!) need to go through this process again and again. Be patient. Take the long view.
Related post: Averting intensity
Step 1: Stop the insanity. Or kick it up a notch. If physical violence is occurring, stop it. Be quiet and act. Intervention might mean stepping between two combatants, moving one kid away, or doing something so startling that the kids stop fighting to look at you. A sudden chicken dance might work.
Step 2: Reflect. "Whoa, you are really angry." This is SO important with small kids, I can't even begin to tell you. They are often so overwhelmed by their emotions that they don't have any words for them. Plus, you show quite clearly that you SEE them.
Step 3: Deflect. "Here, hit this pillow instead of your brother." A kid who is hitting needs an outlet, badly. To expect an angry kid to stop and stifle the way adults do is crazy, not to mention psychologically contraindicated.
Step 4: Provide deeper reflection and empathy. "I understand. I get so frustrated when things like that happen." Remember that anger is almost always a cover for some other emotion. You can help SO much by helping the child identify the underlying emotion.
Step 5: Suggest and model alternatives. "When I'm angry, stomping my feet helps." Then do some stomping. As the atmosphere lightens up, try for playful: "And when I’m REALLY mad, I growl like a giant."
Step 6: Love 'em up. What will reassure your kid that expressing anger is okay? Hugs? Quiet time playing with cars? Snuggles on the couch? A bike ride together? Whatever it is, do that.
Step 7: Repeat as needed. If learning to deal with anger were easy, there wouldn't be so many people in therapy. Remember that your child is not (NOT!) going to get it on the first try. You will (WILL!) need to go through this process again and again. Be patient. Take the long view.
Related post: Averting intensity
Labels:
dances with anger
Birth dance
A lovely, lovely quote from Sara McGrath.
"I never felt drawn to the warrior woman approach to labor and birth. I didn't want to fight. I wanted to dance."
Full post
"I never felt drawn to the warrior woman approach to labor and birth. I didn't want to fight. I wanted to dance."
Full post
Labels:
birth
Sunday, November 29, 2009
More unschoolers
The unschooling community is growing and growing, and this is being reflected in the blogosphere. Accordingly, I've added some links to my lists of unschooler blogs in the sidebar.
If you're using my Updated Unschooler Blogs list to find recent posts, you might have to check it a little bit more frequently, or click the Show All at the bottom to make sure you haven't missed anybody.
If you're a blogging unschooler (or an unschooling blogger) and your blog is not listed, please let me know! I am not deliberately excluding anybody. I want your blog on the list!
If you're using my Updated Unschooler Blogs list to find recent posts, you might have to check it a little bit more frequently, or click the Show All at the bottom to make sure you haven't missed anybody.
If you're a blogging unschooler (or an unschooling blogger) and your blog is not listed, please let me know! I am not deliberately excluding anybody. I want your blog on the list!
Labels:
blognews
Sunday system check
- What I'm reading: Prince of Dreams by Lisa Kleypas - not one of her best but I was in the mood
- What I'm listening to: just finished talking to Cherie
- What I'm watching: a goal-line stand
- In the meantime: I am going to do some laundry today. I am, I am.
- What's for dinner: no plan yet, probably leftovers
Labels:
all systems go
Friday, November 27, 2009
Friday fill-in

1. Wait! Wait, don't forget to do your Friday fill-ins.
2. Sleepless nights are followed at once by coffee.
3. The trouble is like the beauty: in the eye of the beholder.
4. Molly and my nephews are too many miles away.
5. With a faint pop, her daydreams about January traveling came to an end. Except for Non-Con. She's still going to Non-Con. Dammit.
6. Most days in the Pacific Northwest winter are shadowy and ominous.
7. And as for the weekend, tonight I'm looking forward to continuing my entirely passive participation in Buy Nothing Day, tomorrow my plans include doing just whatever I want, and Sunday, I want to watch the Hawks win for once pretty please!
Labels:
fridays
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Thursday 13

13 Things I Am Grateful For This Year
1. Frank's voice. Our conversations. His jokes. His singing. His writing. His quiet words of reassurance when I'm down. All of these have been threaded through my life for more than half my life, and I appreciate them more every day.
2. MJ's walls. Song lyrics. Quotes in Latin. Her own art. Other people's art. Photos. Magazine clippings. Postcards. Posters. She's made her room into a temple of self-expression and creativity. Every time I go in there, I notice something new and get a lovely and intriguing little glimpse into her thoughts, dreams, preferences, or whims. It's fun and inspiring.
3. Chloe's imagination. Thanks to the discovery of an old notebook, we've been reintroduced to Chloeland these last couple of days, the place where everything works the way Chloe thinks it should. She started talking about Chloeland when she was very small, and we would regularly be visited by emissaries from there. It is a rich place indeed and but one example of how her imagination has added color to our lives.
4. Being laid off. It is more than synthetic happiness when I include this on my gratitude list. My layoff has led directly to a year full of personal growth and some much needed healing of some very old wounds. It has also given me the time for a year packed to the rafters with fun, family, traveling, and houseguests.
5. Having a job. It looks like I'll be returning to work sometime in December. Paychecks are good, too.
6. Stan Wilson. I wish this book were still in print so it would be easier for everybody to read it.
7. Friends. Above all, friends. So many people have helped make this year so fun. My gratitude includes (but is by no means limited to):
Exchanging e-mail with Steph. Steph is the one who loves me even though I share my lesser side with her.
Bra shopping with Dana. Finding the right support is important!
Making music with Shonna and Robin and Jacinta. My chicks! Even though Jacinta won't sing.
Visiting the gum wall with the Waynforths. Tasty!
Movie meetups with the Boswells. We are so compatible at the movie theater, we have even run into each other there accidentally.
Midnight concoctions with the Mayers. And everything that goes along with them.
Trick-or-treating Winkler style. This is SO fun!
Crashing in Corvallis. A home away from home with a ready-made unschooling community is a haven indeed.
8. Hard work by Flo Gascon and Mary Gold. Every unschooling conference I've been to has been special. The two I attended this year? Stunningly good! No year that includes LIFE is Good and Good Vibrations can be a bad year!
9. Hard work by cousin Sonya. Last spring, I helped in a very minor way to bring to a conclusion two years of effort by Sonya. The result? A lovely, lovely family cookbook, full of stories, photos, and some damned fine recipes.
10. Music and the people who make it. This year, we added three guitars and numerous percussion devices to our house, not to mention a variety of amps and cables and other paraphernalia. These represent a year of family musical learning and experiences that I will never forget! Discovering guitar with Chloe. Playing "I Don't Like Reggae (I Love It!)" with the family. The 2nd annual LIFE is Groovy drum circle. That first impromptu Greybeards performance. Several *extremely* fun Greybeards rehearsals. And then our exhilarating and hilarious dance party performance at Good Vibrations. Wow! Wow! Wow!
11. Facebook. I'm surrounded by friends every single day. It's amazingly fun. And the double entendres are hard to beat!
Poke!
12. Unschooling. Unschooling. Unschooling.
13. Relatively good news. Tom's cancer? Not grateful for that. That Tom's cancer won't be taking him from us? Very grateful for that.
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Conditional vs. unconditional friends
"In the long run, I find that the closest friends in my social network become more unconditional over time. My path of personal growth and exploration naturally weeds out the conditional connections, i.e. the people who are only willing to have me in their reality if I align with their particular prejudices." — Steve Pavlina
From his recent post about social networking
From his recent post about social networking
Labels:
acceptance,
quotes
Monday, November 23, 2009
(Meme)nto mori
Frank helped get this meme going around again. You're supposed to post the sixth photo from the sixth photo folder on your computer. Well, my computer doesn't have six folders of photos, but I grabbed the sixth photo in the last (third) folder. It's a good one!

This was taken at the first Maier family reunion in Manzanita, Oregon, summer of 2007.
Front row left to right: Aunt Loretta, Aunt Helen, Aunt Ruth, Aunt Grace
Back row left to right: Uncle Ed, Uncle Ferd, Uncle Pat, Aunt Jorene, Uncle Morrie
Ferd, Pat, Morrie, Loretta, and Grace are Marty's surviving siblings. Ed is Loretta's husband; Jorene and Ruth are Morrie's and Pat's wives, respectively; and Helen is Uncle Paul's widow.
This was taken at the first Maier family reunion in Manzanita, Oregon, summer of 2007.
Front row left to right: Aunt Loretta, Aunt Helen, Aunt Ruth, Aunt Grace
Back row left to right: Uncle Ed, Uncle Ferd, Uncle Pat, Aunt Jorene, Uncle Morrie
Ferd, Pat, Morrie, Loretta, and Grace are Marty's surviving siblings. Ed is Loretta's husband; Jorene and Ruth are Morrie's and Pat's wives, respectively; and Helen is Uncle Paul's widow.
The Doings Report
Time flies. It's been two weeks since my last Doings Report. This means three things:
We are really liking having an additional licensed driver in the house. MJ and Chloe get to go places, and Frank and I can stay home! Wow, wow, wow! They are no longer dependent on our energy and willingness, and we are guilt-free since they find going off on their own really fun! So far, we haven't had any car conflicts, but that might get a little trickier once I am back at work.
Which leads to that bit of news: It looks like I have a job. Nothing is finalized yet, but I hope to be returning to my old team for a longish-term writing project within the next couple of weeks. I have some mixed feelings, of course, because I LOVE being home with my family. But paychecks are good, too.
With their new freedom of the road, MJ and Chloe have been getting out and about some. They've done a little shopping, a little visiting of friends and family, and a little roadtripping. MJ has actually been up to Bellingham twice this week, once for an unschooler gathering at Village Books, and once with Chloe for a friend's music show at a coffeeshop. Due to some sort of mixup, the show didn't happen, but they had cocoa and a roadtrip together and it was all good.
The unschooler gathering MJ went to was notable because it was a visit with some women and their smaller children that was originally on my calendar. Then I came down with this cold and couldn't go. MJ decided to go up anyway, even though she expected to be the only teenager there. She had a good time and got to record her first solo roadtrip in her (imaginary) driving log.
Last night, the four of us went down to Seattle and had Thai food in Fremont. We met up with TJ, an unschooling dad from Vermont who has been here scouting out a new home for his family. His wife's brother Shane and Shane's girlfriend, Kalena, joined us. We missed Heather and the boys, but we had lots of good conversation and delicious food. It will be so nice having another unschooling family in the northwest fold!
MJ's NaNoWriMo effort continues. She announced this morning that she has to kill someone today. :-) Chloe has, I think, shifted her writing energy to the stage. She installed some script-writing software on the laptop, anyway! She's also been doing research into stage design. This included attending "Chasing Nicolette" at the Village Theatre with my grandma, and then returning on her own for a repeat performance. The set for the play is evidently pretty fascinating, being a rotating castle. She was thrilled at yesterday's performance when they experienced some technical difficulties with the set, and she got glimpses from her front-row seat of their busy repair efforts.
Frank has been writing, writing, writing. He's been blogging, beautifully, about things he's grateful for. I can't wait to see this Wednesday's effort! He's also been arguing a little politics and advocating a little unschooling, doing his part to make the world a better place. He's gaining quite a following in the unschooling community, something I find gratifying but he's not entirely comfortable with.
As for me, from one perspective, I have been doing next to nothing. From another, I have been learning a lot. It didn't really happen during our busy summer, but I think I've been discovering unschooling these last weeks, or at least deschooling. I read and read and read—a mix of fiction and non—and I watch a big variety of stuff on the television, and I look up all kinds of stuff on the Internet. I am aware of being idle, and a part of me (the schooled part?) is going, "DO SOMETHING," but I have never felt more engaged with my own brain. I think if I had more time without work demands I might move into the kind of creativity and activity that I see in my kids. Ah, well, maybe I can keep work from taking over too much.
Tom update: The radiation therapy is not agreeing with his guts at all. They have postponed his next round until his system settles down a bit. Please send him lots of "feel better" thoughts.
- My days and weeks are even more unstructured than I thought.
- Thanksgiving is in two and a half days.
- Christmas is really %*#(@# close.
We are really liking having an additional licensed driver in the house. MJ and Chloe get to go places, and Frank and I can stay home! Wow, wow, wow! They are no longer dependent on our energy and willingness, and we are guilt-free since they find going off on their own really fun! So far, we haven't had any car conflicts, but that might get a little trickier once I am back at work.
Which leads to that bit of news: It looks like I have a job. Nothing is finalized yet, but I hope to be returning to my old team for a longish-term writing project within the next couple of weeks. I have some mixed feelings, of course, because I LOVE being home with my family. But paychecks are good, too.
With their new freedom of the road, MJ and Chloe have been getting out and about some. They've done a little shopping, a little visiting of friends and family, and a little roadtripping. MJ has actually been up to Bellingham twice this week, once for an unschooler gathering at Village Books, and once with Chloe for a friend's music show at a coffeeshop. Due to some sort of mixup, the show didn't happen, but they had cocoa and a roadtrip together and it was all good.
The unschooler gathering MJ went to was notable because it was a visit with some women and their smaller children that was originally on my calendar. Then I came down with this cold and couldn't go. MJ decided to go up anyway, even though she expected to be the only teenager there. She had a good time and got to record her first solo roadtrip in her (imaginary) driving log.
Last night, the four of us went down to Seattle and had Thai food in Fremont. We met up with TJ, an unschooling dad from Vermont who has been here scouting out a new home for his family. His wife's brother Shane and Shane's girlfriend, Kalena, joined us. We missed Heather and the boys, but we had lots of good conversation and delicious food. It will be so nice having another unschooling family in the northwest fold!
MJ's NaNoWriMo effort continues. She announced this morning that she has to kill someone today. :-) Chloe has, I think, shifted her writing energy to the stage. She installed some script-writing software on the laptop, anyway! She's also been doing research into stage design. This included attending "Chasing Nicolette" at the Village Theatre with my grandma, and then returning on her own for a repeat performance. The set for the play is evidently pretty fascinating, being a rotating castle. She was thrilled at yesterday's performance when they experienced some technical difficulties with the set, and she got glimpses from her front-row seat of their busy repair efforts.
Frank has been writing, writing, writing. He's been blogging, beautifully, about things he's grateful for. I can't wait to see this Wednesday's effort! He's also been arguing a little politics and advocating a little unschooling, doing his part to make the world a better place. He's gaining quite a following in the unschooling community, something I find gratifying but he's not entirely comfortable with.
As for me, from one perspective, I have been doing next to nothing. From another, I have been learning a lot. It didn't really happen during our busy summer, but I think I've been discovering unschooling these last weeks, or at least deschooling. I read and read and read—a mix of fiction and non—and I watch a big variety of stuff on the television, and I look up all kinds of stuff on the Internet. I am aware of being idle, and a part of me (the schooled part?) is going, "DO SOMETHING," but I have never felt more engaged with my own brain. I think if I had more time without work demands I might move into the kind of creativity and activity that I see in my kids. Ah, well, maybe I can keep work from taking over too much.
Tom update: The radiation therapy is not agreeing with his guts at all. They have postponed his next round until his system settles down a bit. Please send him lots of "feel better" thoughts.
Labels:
doings
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Christmas in November
Jessica has crossed the equator and is rounding Christmas Island, concluding the first month and first leg of her 8-month nonstop solo circumnavigation. Her blog is fascinating, especially to sailors, teens, and parents of teens.
This is Jess undergoing her traditional salt-water dunking as she crossed the equator:
This is Jess undergoing her traditional salt-water dunking as she crossed the equator:
Sunday system check
- What I'm reading: The Secret by Julie Garwood - an old favorite
- What I'm listening to: the banter of teenagers
- What I'm watching: the humiliation of the Seahawks
- In the meantime: dropping Chloe off at the theater to see "Chasing Nicolette" again, front row center on her own nickel
- What's for dinner: Jai Thai in Fremont with TJ
Labels:
all systems go
Friday, November 20, 2009
Friday fill-in

1. We need world peace and health care for all. Sad that both seem so far out of reach.
2. I finally saw "13 Going on 30," and it made me smile. "Juno" wasn't a fluke: Jennifer Garner learned to act somewhere along the line.
3. If you want respect from your kids, stop telling them what to do.
4. I had to cancel/postpone two unschooler gatherings this week because of this stupid cold.
5. Massachusetts has a proposed 5% sales tax on elective cosmetic surgery; I think it's silly to get worked up about it either way.
6. Happy kids make
7. And as for the weekend, tonight I'm looking forward to hanging out with my family, tomorrow my plans include more rest so I can get well, and Sunday, I want to watch the Hawks and have some Thai food with TJ!
Labels:
fridays
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Joyce on chores
Wise words from unschooling advocate Joyce Fetteroll. The full post this comes from is on Sandra's site here.
Think about how you’d want a friend to ask for your help fixing a car or doing something you didn’t really enjoy. You could probably think of dozens of other things you’d rather do with your time. And that’s something your friend should realize and appreciate.
So how could your friend ask for help? And how should she treat you while you helped? And how should she treat you after, to acknowledge that she really appreciated you giving her some of your valuable time to do something she knew you really didn't want to do?
What if she asked you to keep her company and you spent a couple hours of pleasant conversation. What if she asked for you to hand her things and hold things while she worked? What if when you made a mistake or didn’t do something the way she wanted it done, she apologized for asking you to do something that wasn’t as easy or interesting for you as she thought it would be? What if she thanked you sincerely when she was done? And then invited you in for some tea and conversation or let you return to what you wanted to do or whatever she felt she could do as a sign of her appreciation? Would you feel like helping her again if she asked?
Now turn that around. What if you had another friend who demanded that you help her work on her car. You’re her friend and you have certain responsibilities. And what if you couldn’t help to her standards and she got angry with you when you failed? What if you really hated working on cars and wanted it over and done? And you felt like doing as little as possible so you could get out of there sooner? What if when she was done she was angry with you and said “You should be helping more and I shouldn’t even need to ask.
Which friend would you be likely to help next time?
Which friend is building a relationship with you and which is tearing it down?
Think about how you’d want a friend to ask for your help fixing a car or doing something you didn’t really enjoy. You could probably think of dozens of other things you’d rather do with your time. And that’s something your friend should realize and appreciate.
So how could your friend ask for help? And how should she treat you while you helped? And how should she treat you after, to acknowledge that she really appreciated you giving her some of your valuable time to do something she knew you really didn't want to do?
What if she asked you to keep her company and you spent a couple hours of pleasant conversation. What if she asked for you to hand her things and hold things while she worked? What if when you made a mistake or didn’t do something the way she wanted it done, she apologized for asking you to do something that wasn’t as easy or interesting for you as she thought it would be? What if she thanked you sincerely when she was done? And then invited you in for some tea and conversation or let you return to what you wanted to do or whatever she felt she could do as a sign of her appreciation? Would you feel like helping her again if she asked?
Now turn that around. What if you had another friend who demanded that you help her work on her car. You’re her friend and you have certain responsibilities. And what if you couldn’t help to her standards and she got angry with you when you failed? What if you really hated working on cars and wanted it over and done? And you felt like doing as little as possible so you could get out of there sooner? What if when she was done she was angry with you and said “You should be helping more and I shouldn’t even need to ask.
Which friend would you be likely to help next time?
Which friend is building a relationship with you and which is tearing it down?
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Mistakes
Much of my life has been spent denying that this is necessarily true, and striving, striving, ever striving to make it not true. But it is True, true with a capital T.
I err, therefore I am.
Enjoying a brief moment of accepting—nay, embracing—this truth, I said to MJ and Frank, "We all make mistakes every single day." Frank quipped, "Speak for yourself." MJ said, "Yeaaah," as in, "This is news?"
I love unschooling.
Labels:
acceptance,
unschooling
A literary feast
MJ brought home a treasure from the library: Erica Bauermeister's utterly delicious debut novel, The School of Essential Ingredients. The flavors and scents and feelings and dreams contained in this book are beyond description, and yet Ms. Bauermeister describes every one, in poignant and lyrical fashion. I give it my strongest recommendation, accompanied by the suggestion that you not read too much about the story before you read the story itself.
Here is just one very small sample of the numerous passages—pick a page, any page!—that moved me:
Over the hours, the labor pains had sharpened... She kept thinking the waves would slow or break for a moment, but they didn't, one after another until there was nowhere left to go but in, to dive down and hope for air on the other side, but there was no air, no way out, just a desperate reaching and grasping until finally she felt something deep inside her—not physical, not emotional, simply her—break into pieces. And into the arms of that cracked-apart person that had been Claire, they placed a baby and a love came out of her, through the pieces, that she didn't even know was possible.
Warning: After reading this book, you will almost certainly be headed for the market in search of your own essential ingredients. Buon appetito!
Here is just one very small sample of the numerous passages—pick a page, any page!—that moved me:
Over the hours, the labor pains had sharpened... She kept thinking the waves would slow or break for a moment, but they didn't, one after another until there was nowhere left to go but in, to dive down and hope for air on the other side, but there was no air, no way out, just a desperate reaching and grasping until finally she felt something deep inside her—not physical, not emotional, simply her—break into pieces. And into the arms of that cracked-apart person that had been Claire, they placed a baby and a love came out of her, through the pieces, that she didn't even know was possible.
Warning: After reading this book, you will almost certainly be headed for the market in search of your own essential ingredients. Buon appetito!
Monday, November 16, 2009
Now let's talk about breasts
New government task force recommendations about mammograms and breast self-exams: Wait until 50, and don't bother.
But wait! you say. Weren't you just telling us how skeptical you are of government health recommendations?
Why, yes! Yes, I was. The difference here is that these government recommendations match what my own research tells me.
But wait! you say. Weren't you just telling us how skeptical you are of government health recommendations?
Why, yes! Yes, I was. The difference here is that these government recommendations match what my own research tells me.
Labels:
breastfeeding
Vaccines again
As I have said in previous posts, or at least in comments on previous posts, I am not anti-vaccine. Most of the vaccines my kids have had, I would authorize again (if on a much different schedule). However, I do have vaccine concerns. This blog post from Bill Maher sums up nicely what many of those concerns are.
Vaccines: A Conversation Worth Having
Vaccines: A Conversation Worth Having
Labels:
vaccines
Sunday, November 15, 2009
Off the leash
When MJ was a toddler, Frank and I would take her walking in the mall. She would gleefully run ahead of us two or three store-widths, seem to reach the end of an invisible leash, come scampering back, and then do it again. And again. And again.
It was one of her favorite games.
What she was playing with was separation. She was getting her first small taste of life without parents, and we were getting our first small taste of the joy and discomfort that come with watching a child move into independence. We were also discovering a pattern of separation-and-return that has been repeated time and again over the course of our kids' lives.
That first invisible leash was MJ's own. She set the length, and it was well within my comfort zone. She had more stranger fear than I did, so I enjoyed (if I had but known it) a lovely little stretch of time where she never challenged my own standard of safety. Bliss!
And then she got older.
Yeah. That happens. Suddenly, she was tugging on my invisible leash, wanting to go farther in the mall, wanting to go around the block without me, wanting to walk to Safeway—three whole blocks!—alone, wanting to stay home alone, and on and on. And then I blinked, and she was 13, and her leash-tugging was about parties at boys' houses, and sleepover parties in hotels in downtown Seattle, and unaccompanied bus and train and plane trips to gatherings in other states.
Simultaneously with these more physical moves toward independence, she began asserting her dominion over her own mind. She wanted to think and dream and worry without talking to me about it. She wanted to hear my opinions only when she asked for them, thank you very much, and she didn't care to be burdened with all my endless worries, especially that dorky one about the disintegration of the parent-teen relationship.
The more I clung, the more I tried to shorten that invisible leash, the worse our relationship got. I panicked. I got emotional. We fought. She complained about me to other people. I was in despair, all my worst nightmares about teenagers coming true.
Interestingly, it was some advice I got about demanding respect and setting limits that snapped me out of it. That is what everybody says. That is what everybody does. Does it work? HELL NO.
Instead, I backed off. I said yes even when my discomfort made me want to say no. I started waiting for her to come to me. I started being really aware and somewhat cautious of when I touched or hugged her. I let her do the initiating (or not). When she talked, I tried to listen and enjoy without offering opinions. That last might have been key, actually. She wanted to try things her way for a while, without my two cents' worth. It was a reasonable thing to want!
As soon as I removed my energy (not my love) from the equation, it got a lot less dramatic. Things settled down almost immediately and improved by leaps over the next couple months. Slowly, she began talking to me again. She gave me credit for trying.
Eventually, she even talked to me about that time, about the pressure she had been putting on herself to grow up fast-faster-fastest, and how much she had been figuring out about herself and the world and interpersonal relationships. Turns out it was HUGE period of growth in her life. Oh, how I regret that I wasn't a calm shelter during that time instead of something else she had to wrestle with!
But she made it through even so. She is very strong, resourceful and smart. And nowadays, whether I like it or not, she's off the leash. The separation-and-return cycle has given way to a level of independence that lacks only material practicalities to make it complete. I am still here for her. I still provide whatever support I can (and always will), and when she chooses something that makes me uncomfortable, she sometimes still hears about it (and probably always will). There's no doubt which of those she appreciates more. ;-)
And we're friends-but-not-friends. I don't know that I will ever be one of her friends, one of those people you rely on for playtime and somebody to hang with and somebody to lend an ear when you need to complain about your mother. But I'm her mother with whom she is friendly, and that's a lovely thing indeed.
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For more of my writings about teens and unschooling, see my web site.
It was one of her favorite games.
What she was playing with was separation. She was getting her first small taste of life without parents, and we were getting our first small taste of the joy and discomfort that come with watching a child move into independence. We were also discovering a pattern of separation-and-return that has been repeated time and again over the course of our kids' lives.
That first invisible leash was MJ's own. She set the length, and it was well within my comfort zone. She had more stranger fear than I did, so I enjoyed (if I had but known it) a lovely little stretch of time where she never challenged my own standard of safety. Bliss!
And then she got older.
Yeah. That happens. Suddenly, she was tugging on my invisible leash, wanting to go farther in the mall, wanting to go around the block without me, wanting to walk to Safeway—three whole blocks!—alone, wanting to stay home alone, and on and on. And then I blinked, and she was 13, and her leash-tugging was about parties at boys' houses, and sleepover parties in hotels in downtown Seattle, and unaccompanied bus and train and plane trips to gatherings in other states.
Simultaneously with these more physical moves toward independence, she began asserting her dominion over her own mind. She wanted to think and dream and worry without talking to me about it. She wanted to hear my opinions only when she asked for them, thank you very much, and she didn't care to be burdened with all my endless worries, especially that dorky one about the disintegration of the parent-teen relationship.
The more I clung, the more I tried to shorten that invisible leash, the worse our relationship got. I panicked. I got emotional. We fought. She complained about me to other people. I was in despair, all my worst nightmares about teenagers coming true.
Interestingly, it was some advice I got about demanding respect and setting limits that snapped me out of it. That is what everybody says. That is what everybody does. Does it work? HELL NO.
Instead, I backed off. I said yes even when my discomfort made me want to say no. I started waiting for her to come to me. I started being really aware and somewhat cautious of when I touched or hugged her. I let her do the initiating (or not). When she talked, I tried to listen and enjoy without offering opinions. That last might have been key, actually. She wanted to try things her way for a while, without my two cents' worth. It was a reasonable thing to want!
As soon as I removed my energy (not my love) from the equation, it got a lot less dramatic. Things settled down almost immediately and improved by leaps over the next couple months. Slowly, she began talking to me again. She gave me credit for trying.
Eventually, she even talked to me about that time, about the pressure she had been putting on herself to grow up fast-faster-fastest, and how much she had been figuring out about herself and the world and interpersonal relationships. Turns out it was HUGE period of growth in her life. Oh, how I regret that I wasn't a calm shelter during that time instead of something else she had to wrestle with!
But she made it through even so. She is very strong, resourceful and smart. And nowadays, whether I like it or not, she's off the leash. The separation-and-return cycle has given way to a level of independence that lacks only material practicalities to make it complete. I am still here for her. I still provide whatever support I can (and always will), and when she chooses something that makes me uncomfortable, she sometimes still hears about it (and probably always will). There's no doubt which of those she appreciates more. ;-)
And we're friends-but-not-friends. I don't know that I will ever be one of her friends, one of those people you rely on for playtime and somebody to hang with and somebody to lend an ear when you need to complain about your mother. But I'm her mother with whom she is friendly, and that's a lovely thing indeed.
--------------
For more of my writings about teens and unschooling, see my web site.
Labels:
teens,
unschooling
Friday, November 13, 2009
For a friend
"It doesn’t matter how long I’ve been hurting this way: I can change. Perhaps not enough people have noticed my pain and taken it seriously, but I have noticed, and that is enough. My pain doesn’t make me alive, it shuts out countless possibilities by blocking them from my life. I deserve to be healed. I don’t need rescuing; I need help. There is always someone willing to help. I may not understand what is happening to me now, but if I undertake the healing journey, understanding will come." - Deepak Chopra
Labels:
quotes
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Selfishness at its ugliest
I just came across an article that suggested that we should not have public health care because of the quantities of currently uninsured people who are likely to flood into our country's already overburdened health centers, seeking the care they have long postponed.
Labels:
politics
Spreading the gratitude around
A cousin writes that she is "sending thanks out to everyone who has served our country or has supported family members in the military. They rarely get the credit and recognition they deserve."
My response: "I'd like to see them get more benefits. I think twice yearly national holidays with full media coverage, lots of speeches, assemblies in every school, and special attention at every major sporting event and performance is enough credit and recognition. No other group gets so much."
Beyond that, I think these twice yearly, lip-service-only holidays contribute to a culture of war by honoring only service in the cause of war. Here is my post from last year where I go into more detail about my feelings about this.
I refuse to celebrate [veterans of WWII] as the greatest generation because in doing so we are celebrating courage and sacrifice in the cause of war. And we are miseducating the young to believe that military heroism is the noblest form of heroism, when it should be remembered only as the tragic accompaniment of horrendous policies driven by power and profit.
~ Howard Zinn
Here is the list of some of the people I am honoring today for their service in the cause of equality and peace:
My response: "I'd like to see them get more benefits. I think twice yearly national holidays with full media coverage, lots of speeches, assemblies in every school, and special attention at every major sporting event and performance is enough credit and recognition. No other group gets so much."
Beyond that, I think these twice yearly, lip-service-only holidays contribute to a culture of war by honoring only service in the cause of war. Here is my post from last year where I go into more detail about my feelings about this.
~ Howard Zinn
Here is the list of some of the people I am honoring today for their service in the cause of equality and peace:
- Ella Baker - Godmother of Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
- Jimmy Carter - ethical President, effective advocate of peace
- César Chávez - founder, United Farm Workers
- Esmé Raji Codell - author, educator, friend to children and creative teachers everywhere
- Anne Nicol Gaylor - co-founder, Freedom From Religion Foundation
- John Holt - education reformer, father of unschooling
- Richard Oakes - key player in the Occupation of Alcatraz
- Margaret Sanger - activist for birth control freedoms
- Gloria Steinem - feminist, author, political activist
Labels:
politics
My new website
Thanks to some inspiration from Randi, I have created a new Web site on Google Sites.
Dragonfly Kaizen
The future direction of this site is still to be determined. But right now you can find there a hotlinked table of contents for my unschooling writings on this blog. It was pretty fun making that; I had no idea I had so much stuff!
Dragonfly Kaizen
The future direction of this site is still to be determined. But right now you can find there a hotlinked table of contents for my unschooling writings on this blog. It was pretty fun making that; I had no idea I had so much stuff!
Labels:
blognews
Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Monday, November 9, 2009
Sunday, November 8, 2009
The Doings Report
Oh, where to start?
As mentioned previously, MJ is now a licensed driver. She is very excited, and we are already reaping the benefits: she gassed up the car and made a run to the library one day, and today she took herself off to the beach for a last-minute gathering there that Frank and I c/wouldn't muster the gumption to attend.
Papa Tom received a cancer diagnosis that was initially pretty scary, but the news since then has all been good. It hasn't spread to his organs and it is a slow mover, which means he can live with it for years and years. He'll have one round of radiation next week to kill a tumor on or near his spine that is causing him pain. Other than that, his treatment will be drug-based, noninvasive and pretty easy. We are all so relieved!
The girls and I spent Halloween in Oregon while Frank held down the fort here. Halloween night, the girls were trick-or-treating with friends at "The Winch," a house in Portland occupied by once and future NBTSC'ers. Aside from MJ the Very Sexy Cop, they were all characters from their friend Zephyr's recent and much-loved novel, The Tomato Soup Chronicles. Chloe was Dr. Vincent and Lani and Qacei were Toxic Teen Lesbian Zombie Vampire Chainsaw Bitches. Yes, really.

I spent Halloween night at the Wahoo Winkler Bed and Breakfast and got to go trick-or-treating with two of my favorite girls, Vivian and Sabine. It was lovely! This is how conversations at doorsteps went:
Neighbor: "Oh, a zebra and a fairy!"
Vivian (firmly): "I'm a pixie." Then candy would exchange hands and the girls would run down the walk to greet us.
Sabine: "This is SO fun!"
Sunday, MJ, Chloe, Qacei, and I continued down to Corvallis for a visit with the Golds. Mary cooked (!), Karma the dog entertained, and some of us got a decent start on our NaNoWriMo attempts.
Monday, we attended a party at Diana's to celebrate Holly's 18th birthday. Scotty and his friend Jack played some music, I ran around with Jack's son, Miles (~4), and we all ate goodies and wished Holly a fond farewell. She is moving on to England for her next adventure.
I had a date with niece Ella Tuesday night, a belated celebration of her sixth birthday. We went shopping at Toys'R'Us and then came back here for some mac'n'cheese. It was so fun, I've decided to make Birthday Date Night a tradition with those nieces and daughters who are interested.
Chloe came down with the flu. It must have been the swine flu since, according to CDC stats, that's just about the only flu out there right now. She had fever for one day and head and body aches for three. That was it. So far, the rest of us are fine.
We have been in self-imposed quarantine the rest of this week, though. It's been pretty nice!
As mentioned previously, MJ is now a licensed driver. She is very excited, and we are already reaping the benefits: she gassed up the car and made a run to the library one day, and today she took herself off to the beach for a last-minute gathering there that Frank and I c/wouldn't muster the gumption to attend.
Papa Tom received a cancer diagnosis that was initially pretty scary, but the news since then has all been good. It hasn't spread to his organs and it is a slow mover, which means he can live with it for years and years. He'll have one round of radiation next week to kill a tumor on or near his spine that is causing him pain. Other than that, his treatment will be drug-based, noninvasive and pretty easy. We are all so relieved!
The girls and I spent Halloween in Oregon while Frank held down the fort here. Halloween night, the girls were trick-or-treating with friends at "The Winch," a house in Portland occupied by once and future NBTSC'ers. Aside from MJ the Very Sexy Cop, they were all characters from their friend Zephyr's recent and much-loved novel, The Tomato Soup Chronicles. Chloe was Dr. Vincent and Lani and Qacei were Toxic Teen Lesbian Zombie Vampire Chainsaw Bitches. Yes, really.

I spent Halloween night at the Wahoo Winkler Bed and Breakfast and got to go trick-or-treating with two of my favorite girls, Vivian and Sabine. It was lovely! This is how conversations at doorsteps went:
Neighbor: "Oh, a zebra and a fairy!"
Vivian (firmly): "I'm a pixie." Then candy would exchange hands and the girls would run down the walk to greet us.
Sabine: "This is SO fun!"
Sunday, MJ, Chloe, Qacei, and I continued down to Corvallis for a visit with the Golds. Mary cooked (!), Karma the dog entertained, and some of us got a decent start on our NaNoWriMo attempts.
Monday, we attended a party at Diana's to celebrate Holly's 18th birthday. Scotty and his friend Jack played some music, I ran around with Jack's son, Miles (~4), and we all ate goodies and wished Holly a fond farewell. She is moving on to England for her next adventure.
I had a date with niece Ella Tuesday night, a belated celebration of her sixth birthday. We went shopping at Toys'R'Us and then came back here for some mac'n'cheese. It was so fun, I've decided to make Birthday Date Night a tradition with those nieces and daughters who are interested.
Chloe came down with the flu. It must have been the swine flu since, according to CDC stats, that's just about the only flu out there right now. She had fever for one day and head and body aches for three. That was it. So far, the rest of us are fine.
We have been in self-imposed quarantine the rest of this week, though. It's been pretty nice!
Labels:
doings
Saturday, November 7, 2009
Hormones
I was privy to a fairly innocuous but nevertheless unfortunate comment about teens on Facebook today. A friend of mine, evidently after a small detonation in her house, had posted self-encouraging words about honoring her daughter’s will and just continuing to love her. A friend of hers responded with this:
Welcome to the teenage years! I think, regardless of upbringing, something temporarily happens to brain cells during “teenage” years. It’s payback time being on the parents’ side of it now. :-) I’m happy for the personal growth it creates in all of us...young & ‘old’.
Uh huh.
I don’t know what prompted my friend to post as she did. But I do know, with absolute certainty, that she is not dismissing her daughter’s emotions and desires as merely the product of biological development. To do so would be EXACTLY THE SAME as responding to a woman’s anger by saying, “Oh, is it that time of the month?” Anyone who has ever tried this tactic knows just how well it goes over (and by the way, how is your concussion doing?).
It’s disrespectful, and it’s dismissive. And since most kids can’t get away with braining their parents, it creates in them intense feelings of powerlessness.
This friend of a friend is not really wrong. I get it. In general, teens are experiencing surging hormones and undergoing some significant brain development, especially in the area of impulse control. And biological processes can definitely make our responses more intense.
But none of that changes the fact that the person in front of you is feeling frustrated, or sad, or excited, or angry for a reason. A nonbiological reason.
The other day, MJ was irritated with me.
Let’s stop there for a minute because that’s just what this woman did. She heard my friend’s daughter was upset and started talking about biology. Sorry, but upset+biology is not enough information! She forgot to ask "Why?"
The other day, MJ was irritated with me because I wascriticizing offering some golden nuggets of wisdom about her driving. I got irritated with her for being irritated. We snarled growled snapped reacted to these irritations and then gave each other the silent treatment took some time to cool off.
Hey, it happens (and yes, it is often my fault).
Later, we were able to talk it over and move on. But just imagine for a moment how much harder that would have been if I had thought or, heaven forbid, said something like, “This is just hormones getting in the way” or “Her brain isn’t developed enough to understand what’s really going on here.”
My skull and I are so glad I don’t think that way!
I can’t say MJ is glad because I don’t know that it has ever occurred to her that someone might try to dismiss her feelings because of her age. Good grief.
Oh, wait, I forgot what culture I live in. Yeah, she's probably glad.
What we've found is that the undeniable hormonal changes and brain development of the teen years don't ever explain away the emotions our teens feel or the desires they have. Knowing this helps us treat their experiences with respect, and treat their concerns as real and valid even when—no, especially when—we don't quite understand why a given issue is so important to them.
Welcome to the teenage years! I think, regardless of upbringing, something temporarily happens to brain cells during “teenage” years. It’s payback time being on the parents’ side of it now. :-) I’m happy for the personal growth it creates in all of us...young & ‘old’.
Uh huh.
I don’t know what prompted my friend to post as she did. But I do know, with absolute certainty, that she is not dismissing her daughter’s emotions and desires as merely the product of biological development. To do so would be EXACTLY THE SAME as responding to a woman’s anger by saying, “Oh, is it that time of the month?” Anyone who has ever tried this tactic knows just how well it goes over (and by the way, how is your concussion doing?).
It’s disrespectful, and it’s dismissive. And since most kids can’t get away with braining their parents, it creates in them intense feelings of powerlessness.
This friend of a friend is not really wrong. I get it. In general, teens are experiencing surging hormones and undergoing some significant brain development, especially in the area of impulse control. And biological processes can definitely make our responses more intense.
But none of that changes the fact that the person in front of you is feeling frustrated, or sad, or excited, or angry for a reason. A nonbiological reason.
The other day, MJ was irritated with me.
Let’s stop there for a minute because that’s just what this woman did. She heard my friend’s daughter was upset and started talking about biology. Sorry, but upset+biology is not enough information! She forgot to ask "Why?"
The other day, MJ was irritated with me because I was
Hey, it happens (and yes, it is often my fault).
Later, we were able to talk it over and move on. But just imagine for a moment how much harder that would have been if I had thought or, heaven forbid, said something like, “This is just hormones getting in the way” or “Her brain isn’t developed enough to understand what’s really going on here.”
My skull and I are so glad I don’t think that way!
I can’t say MJ is glad because I don’t know that it has ever occurred to her that someone might try to dismiss her feelings because of her age. Good grief.
Oh, wait, I forgot what culture I live in. Yeah, she's probably glad.
What we've found is that the undeniable hormonal changes and brain development of the teen years don't ever explain away the emotions our teens feel or the desires they have. Knowing this helps us treat their experiences with respect, and treat their concerns as real and valid even when—no, especially when—we don't quite understand why a given issue is so important to them.
Labels:
teens,
unschooling
Thursday, November 5, 2009
This is so cool!
XKCD's timeline graphs of some popular films. Click to see them big enough to read the very cool details.

Original on XKCD

Original on XKCD
Labels:
entertainments,
movies
Red Alert
"According to WHO, 28 countries—including Croatia, Ireland, Kuwait, and Portugal—have lower maternal mortality rates [than the United States]. Forty-one countries have lower infant mortality rates."
"Even in an elective cesarean, a woman is almost three times more likely to die than in a vaginal birth. Beyond the immediate health risks, having a C-section decreases a woman's chance to become pregnant again and doubles the risk of an unexplained stillbirth in later pregnancies. In 2 to 6 percent of cesareans, a doctor accidentally cuts into a baby. Babies born from an elective C-section are twice as likely as babies born vaginally to end up in neonatal intensive care."
From this article in the Utne Reader.
Warning: The article opens with a disturbing birth tragedy.
"Even in an elective cesarean, a woman is almost three times more likely to die than in a vaginal birth. Beyond the immediate health risks, having a C-section decreases a woman's chance to become pregnant again and doubles the risk of an unexplained stillbirth in later pregnancies. In 2 to 6 percent of cesareans, a doctor accidentally cuts into a baby. Babies born from an elective C-section are twice as likely as babies born vaginally to end up in neonatal intensive care."
From this article in the Utne Reader.
Warning: The article opens with a disturbing birth tragedy.
Labels:
birth
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