Skip to main content

Is Giving Up Failing?

Where to begin?

This year has been crazy. Not just for me, but for a lot of my home schooling friends as well.

I thought that going into year five of this home schooling journey was a bit of an 'arrival' of sorts. That just maybe I had 'made it' and was on to smoother sailings.

Uhm.... no...

Getting rid of the dog lifted a huge weight of the constant responsibility- but at the same time the heaviness was still there. Like a daughter who would break out into weeping fits when she thought about the dog and still asks me when he's coming back or when I will get another dog to replace him. I expended copious amount of time trying to deal with and train him- and getting rid of him signaled yet another failure that was emotionally hard to deal with.

We also signed Elijah up with our local Air Cadet program and I have been volunteering with that as well. It's been interesting getting 'out' into the world again. For the past number of years our family has really isolated themselves with 'churchy' stuff and people. I had no friends that were not either home school or church related. It's taken a bit to get used to it, but I enjoy it (still working on the whole balance thing, though).

But at the same time, things just didn't seem to be working. So over the past few months I'd been looking into alternate schooling options.

There. I said it. I was looking into sending my kids back to public school.

I was done. I'd had enough of the constant fighting and bickering and whining, blah, blah, blah.

And it made me feel like a failure.

After much time and effort, and for a variety of reasons, even though I found a couple of schools that would probably have worked well for the kids- I didn't have peace about sending them back. I knew the problem was me- NOT them. Sending them back to school wouldn't fix that.

Like I said in my last post Filling the Wrong Bucket, for the past few months I have been chasing after my own will instead of denying it. And it's made everything go crazy (at least for me- I can't speak to why/how the other mom's I've talked to are having a hard time this year).

So I started trying to figure out some of the changes that need to be made in order for this to work again. For me to like my kids and teaching again. For us to not be fighting and arguing all the time.

The solution? Dropping our enrolled status and switching to being true home schoolers.

Up until now, we've been considered Distance Learners- not home schoolers, even though we do all our schooling at home. I have an assigned teacher that monitors our progress, assesses our work and writes up real report cards to judge how well we are meeting the Provincial Learning Outcomes just as if they were in a brick and mortar classroom.

And for that privilege, they provide some 3rd party funding to help pay for all the curriculum that we need as well as instruction for things that I can't provide or PE/lessons that you would normally have access to in a regular school.

But it's like dancing with the devil- you have to pay to play. And I'm done with it. Every time I add another child to the classroom (number 5 starts in September), I feel the noose tightening around my neck. More and more pressure to perform- for me as their teacher, for my kids compared to everyone else, etc. I don't want people to think they're stupid or that I can't teach!?!?!! I think we're all cracking under the strain!!!!

It's scary to think of what next year might look like if I actually go through with this. Yet at the same time, it's quite liberating to think that we can pursue those things that actually interest the kids instead of spending hours each day trying to get them to complete some stupid filler assignment just so I can put another check-mark on the list.

And more importantly, we can go back to why we started this in the first place- to train up our children to be Christ-like, productive members of society. Oh really, who am I kidding? I need it just as much as they do.

Keeping it real, by the grace of God...
Tammy

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

And Those That Were Willing...

I started a summer project. Oh yes, not like bringing home a puppy wasn't enough craziness for the summer- I've gone and added something else. I set a goal for myself- read through my bible in 90 days. At first I hummed and hawed about doing it. Would I really retain anything to make it worthwhile? Shouldn't I do a slow methodical study to get as much as possible out of it? Blah, blah, blah... Then I figured, anything that gets me at least reading my bible on a regular basis (whatever the outcome) would be a GOOD thing. So I started out with great enthusiasm and even got a day ahead of myself. Now, I'm behind (surprise, surprise). REALLY behind. Out of town visitors and a week of camping will do that, but I'm working on getting caught up again. Until then, I want to share a little nugget that I got from Ex. 36:2. "Then Moses summoned Bezalel and Oholiab and every skilled person to whom the Lord had given ability and who was willing to come and

Filling the Wrong Bucket

I didn't cave. I also should have just stayed off of Facebook, but I didn't cave. Last summer I chose NOT send my kids to summer camp- even though, seemingly, ALL their friends were going. The same week. All of them. Well, not really, of course. But honestly, with Facebook status updates coming in fast and furiously- it really did seem like it. And I wondered, 'Am I a bad mom because I didn't send my kids to summer camp with their friends?' At one point, I seriously thought about calling up the camp (after the week had started) and seeing if I couldn't somehow manage to get them in anyway. I let the thought pass- and didn't cave. But I still feel a tinge of guilt about it and I'm dreading the decision about this summer already. Fast forward a few more months- to February 7, 2014 to be exact. Pretty much anyone with even the slightest interest in Lego will know what that date means. The release of their first full-length feature movie.

Finishing Well

A couple of weeks ago I read this really funny blog post (found here  Worst End of School Year Mom ). It was really quite hilarious and so where I'm at these days. I have grand intentions every time I start something new. Things like school years, diets, exercise regimes, organizational to-do lists, schedules, habits, blog posts, etc. You name it and I'm pretty good at starting it- but finishing it, well, let's just say I'm not too good at that part. Elijah doing his first potato sack race at their school's sports day- he ended up wiping out and not finishing well. Trying not to come in last. For the past week and a bit (it's taken me a while to get this post written and up), I've had God gently nudging me with the scripture from Heb. 12:1-3: the whole thing about persevering right to the very end- putting my whole heart and soul into things until they're finished. Unfortunately, I usually peter out after completing only 5 - 10% of som