Destroying our Homeschooling Box

I’m normally a fairly structured person. I don’t do an hourly schedule or anything. More like a rhythm, routine, or flow. 

But lately I’ve still been feeling a little boxed in by our daily homeschool life. Does this ever happen to you?

Usually I’d just take a day or two off and refresh. Do a field trip, have a movie day. 

But that’s not even feeling like enough right now. 

I’m feeling time passing too quickly. 

Maybe because I’m turning 40 in 35 days. Or that my oldest is almost a teenager. Or because my baby isn’t a baby anymore.

Or maybe I’m just feeling like not everything I thought was super important is as important as I thought. Who knows?

But I want to have fun with my kids. Make memories. Learn in some hands-on ways. Help my kids earn some badges for their troops.

I’ve been having trouble finding time to do all that. Especially while doing more traditional homeschooling. Especially without getting all stressed out.

homeschool planet

So I decided to just stop. Why?

Because we can.

So we’re gonna take a week or a month or however long it takes and do all the things I feel like we can’t do because of all the trappings of the life we’re used to

We’re going to take walks, go on hikes, camp, play in the pool, go to some festivals, and museums, and the zoo. We’ll cook and bake and do campfires. And all the art projects.

We’ll lay on a blanket and watch the clouds and then the stars. We’ll visit the state parks and the historical places. We’ll play games and hop on rocks across a stream.

Because time keeps ticking.

I’ve been putting all this stuff off. Or trying to do a little here and there, spreading it throughout the year. But what happens when I push everything off till tomorrow? We never get to all those things

And honestly, why should I put it off? Because someone somewhere says we need to accomplish certain things in a certain amount of time. And I’ve felt like I have to do it a certain way. 

The truth is, I don’t have to. We can learn anywhere in any way. 

And I don’t have to pick just one way

I love books and curriculum. I think they are great frameworks to work from. Tools for teaching our kids. And I’ll still use them in the future. But they aren’t required. Not now.

You could call this unschooling. Or interest-led learning. Or a DIY curriculum. Or an extended field trip. But I don’t want to pull us from one box only to get into another box

Sometimes if you feel boxed in, you just have to destroy the boxes and explore the extremes before you find your place again. 

So we’ll just call it homeschooling in this season.

Every season is different. I don’t know how long this season will last, but we will make some great memories

You will never hear me advocating for everyone to throw off their plans and structures and routines in homeschool and just do whatever they want. Maybe just lighten up for a day. Or a week. Or a season. Because sometimes it’s needed.

When we have learned what God has put on my heart for this season and we’re ready to learn a different way, all the curriculum we’ve been using will still be there. I can pick right up where we left off in our homeschool plan if I want. My plan for this year could turn into a plan for next year too.

That’s ok. 

But maybe we’ll pick up some new habits and routines along the way. Maybe my plan won’t even be relevant any longer. 

See, it’s our homeschool and not someone else’s. I made the plan and I can change it. It’s just another tool

So here’s what I have decided is important for our homeschool, especially in this season (in no order):

  • Making memories
  • Gaining knowledge
  • Relationships
  • Diligence in everything
  • Exposure to new ideas
  • Following interests
  • Skill building
  • Learning endurance through hard things
  • Learning responsibility in life
  • Hands on learning
  • Life and learning aren’t just done with books
  • Having fun!

Because I’m pretty Type A, we’ll still do some math, and we’ll do some relaxed journaling about what we’re doing. Cause math and writing skills are important to me.

And you know what else? I’ll probably make some sort of a loose plan. 😊

Because I can.

I can’t slow time. But I can slow our pace. 

All About Reading

I don’t have forever to do things with my kids. But I do have right now

I don’t have to keep trying to cram everything in. So I won’t anymore

We’re going to do what matters to us right now. Because we can.

For now, we’ll make memories.

homeschool in the woods

Maybe you feel the same way. Boxed in by life or your circumstances. Maybe you need to just destroy the box and find a new way. 

Your kids are only with you a short time. You don’t need permission

Go make memories with your kids

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4 thoughts on “Destroying our Homeschooling Box”

  1. Love this. Wish I could be there and team up in the memory making❤️ Looks like y’all had fun with Amy! The pictures are lovely.

  2. . . . years of beginning a life, beginning a family, fixing up the fixer-upper, finishing school and starting a new career, moving away from the life you always knew, looking for your own life, seeing 40 in the low beams (yikes), moving to a new city in a new state, it’s no wonder that the world is spinning lately. So much change, and no time to just step back and figure out what you’ve done and what to do next. They expect food every day . . . several times. It never stops.
    These beautiful photos capture the moments, but by the time we see the photo, the moment has passed and they’ve moved into the deep water downstream. No time to take it all in; no time to cherish the moment; only time to sink or swim. Life.

    To think outside the box, you may have to get outside the box first.

    Sometimes all the learning from books can seem like good preparation for life . . . for some unknown future that we must be ready for. Sometimes we plan and prepare so much that we never quite get into the game. All the right equipment and all the skills, all dressed up and no place to go.
    The world around us these days seems to be changing so much so fast, we may wonder if the future we’re planning for will ever actually come.
    Maybe you’ve planned and trained enough at this point to go ahead and jump into the game, and live this life for all it’s worth. Tomorrow may never come. 2 days from now tomorrow will be yesterday, and what’s the point in knowing so much about life and living, unless you’re living it?
    You may just be taking some time to help your children understand how meaningful learning/school can be, growing their own passion for learning. You’re helping them establish life-long patterns for learning and setting priorities, teaching them to enjoy the world and the people around them, and take time for continuing to learn all at the same time, something we do for all our lives.
    God seems to have given you good instincts about the souls in your charge; keep listening to Him and follow His ways as you teach your children His ways and help them to find His plans for their lives.
    Happy mothering!!

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