Tuesday, 12 February 2013

Home ed: An exciting journey

Last week I received a newsletter from a home ed blog I subscribe to; it described home ed as an 'exciting journey'.  Now I would use many words to describe home ed, but I can honestly say, hand on heart, that exciting would not be the first word that springs to mind.  Today, the word I am holding in my head is 'Hard'.  Frustrating might be another.  It has been one of those days.... you know, one where school is very appealing (as a form of escape for me), where tempers have been frayed and where words have been said.

You can have weeks where it all just flows, and then suddenly there is a shift, and the energy and dynamic is affected (two premenstrual women in the house doesn't help), where the days can feel challenging and full of friction; so how does a parent cope with their children 24/7? With difficulty.

It started well, but had gone rapidly down hill by lunch time: all the beautifully laid out learning plans where thrown out of the window (along with a child - almost); dog pee had been cleared up for the umpteenth time; the glue had been cleared off the table; the cake salvaged (cinnamon almost became Cumin but swiftly spotted at last minute); apologies made..... then made again; friends visited and children interrupted every 15 seconds(ish) making conversation difficult; mother shouted and sent all the children to their rooms.

And as if they day could get any worse.................hamma beads were presented for ironing.  Hamma beads have the ability to turn any capable parent into a shaking wreck: if you are familiar with hamma beads you will know that it takes AGES for your child to create a beautiful design (at least it keeps them busy for quite long periods of time), and that it takes just the finest puff of air to dislodge such design, as you carefully try to iron it.  Fiddly fucking patterns, that you then have to painstakingly reassemble without said child knowing you have ruined it as you knocked it with the iron.  I can still feel the sweat on my brow.

The day was saved by two things; Pancakes (yum yum yum) and My Big Fat Gypsy Valentines - Trashy TV at it's best (although not the best advert for home ed as most travelling children don't attend school).

Home ed - an exciting journey?  Not always.  Would I change it? ummmmm........... not yet!

angela xx

2 comments:

  1. This made me laugh a lot, Angela - sounds like a fairly typical day with Thea!

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  2. It got better as the week went on - talking to others always helps!

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