Written by Heather Caliri of A Little Yes
I looked at my monthly calendar and sighed.
It was the 25th, and that meant it was time to write down what had gone well—and not so well—that month for homeschooling.
Except I didn’t want to.
I knew I was supposed to. I was supposed to be tracking how my children were doing, taking notes each day about their interests to better help guide them towards things they were passionate about. I was supposed to be tracking academic progress and being intentional and clued in and—
I needed to be the homeschooling mom my kids deserved.
I sighed and opened up the document with the questions I asked myself every month: “What has she made that she’s passionate about? What does she want to pretend or play? Are there questions, activities, projects, or materials she wants to explore? Any trouble spots?”
A few months back I had simplified the list from eight questions to four, because I didn’t like answering them back then, either.
The truth was, I had been answering questions for more than a year, and so far, I’d never enjoyed them. I didn’t like spending my time on them, I didn’t like the feeling of inadequacy that plagued me as I wrote, I didn’t like feeling like a better mom would gain more insight out of answering them.
I looked at the questions and the blinking cursor, and I tried to swallow down my resentment again.
But a subversive thought occurred to me.
If I hated doing this so much, why did I keep trying?
I considered the answer. I wanted to be as intentional with my kids as I am with myself.
I set yearly and monthly goals for myself, and every month, I sit down and answer the same basic questions I resent so much when it came to my kids: What was I excited about? What went poorly?
My kids deserve the same attention and intention I give myself, don’t they?
I felt horribly selfish.
Except—there was one big difference between answering the questions for me, and answering them for my kids.
The goal-setting and questions for me have been helpful. No—they’d been transformative.
I had never found the exercise very helpful when it came to my kids.
Instead, it felt–useless. Discouraging. Draining.
I rarely wrote something down that I hadn’t already considered in my journal, or in my head. It added more time to the documentation I already needed to do for their once-a-week charter program. It usually left me feeling discouraged instead of energized.
I thought it should be useful. It sure sounded useful. I knew it was useful for other people.
But was it actually useful for me?
If I was being absolutely candid, the answer was no.
My eyes widened. That was the honest truth. I hated the questions because I felt like they were a waste of my time.
No wonder I felt resentful.
I sat for a while, thinking. Honestly, the idea of abandoning the practice scared me. We’re already very relaxed homeschoolers; to abandon one of the few structured elements felt foolhardy. I realized I had been using the questions to prove to myself that I was a Good Mother, and my kids were Going to Be Okay.
But being resentful of this one task leaked out into our daily interactions. I spent a lot of energy on quashing negativity, instead of being present for my kids while they worked.
Was it really worth it?
I shut my computer without typing anything and took a deep breath. Then I sent off an email to a friend who has a few more years of home education under her belt. I asked if we could talk about the whole idea of documentation next time we got together. I needed some wise counsel.
But already, I could feel the sense of bitter obligation slipping away from me, like a helium balloon I’d been clutching with an aching, sweaty fist.
I’ll be honest: I still am not sure what the right balance of documentation is for my family. I know the discipline of writing things down could help me pay more attention; I would love to find ways of being intentional that feel useful and empowering.
Photo by The Giant Vermin
But facing my resentment instead of shoving it under the rug helped me face facts: what I was doing simply wasn’t working for me, and no amount of feeling guilty or ashamed was going to change that.
As homeschoolers, we have to make up so much of what we’re doing as we go along. We ask friends for advice, purchase curriculum, read up on experts, or do what we think we’re supposed to.
And maybe what we end up doing surprises us with its power and efficacy. Maybe we find the perfect solution to the challenges of each day.
But maybe we don’t, and we keep going out of guilt.
I spend a lot of energy trying not to let negative emotions rule how I homeschool or parent. I want to have a good attitude, and keep going, even when it’s hard.
But persistent negative emotions are like lanterns. They shed light on what’s not working, on things that need to change, on the ways we’re feeling trapped and afraid. They prod us to be honest.
Oddly enough, resentment can be a gift: it can force us to make our kindness towards our children real, authentic, and deep-bone true.
Unquiet Time: A Devotional for the Rest of Us
A note from Jamie: If you’ve ever struggled with resentment in your faith as well, you might be interested in Heather’s new ebook, Unquiet Time, which releases today!
As the description states: “Do you love Jesus, but hate reading the Bible? Have you ever been brave enough to ask yourself why?
This little devotional guide is full of honest, aching questions about why and how and to what end we read the Bible. Your answers might surprise you—and lead you to new joy in Christ.”
Have negative emotions ever helped you figure out something important about your homeschooling?
Anne
For me this happened over learning styles. I was killing myself trying to create kinesthetic learning activities for one child, auditory lessons for another, visual lessons for another, and so forth and so on. I was exhausted and resentful and felt very much a failure. I finally decided to chuck the crazy lesson planning, strip mother-led lessons to the bare minimum and teach in a manner that didn’t make my head hurt, leaving the kids lots of time to do their own exploring in their own joyful ways after I was done. The kids have had opportunity to take more control of their own learning, in the styles they prefer, and I’ve felt more peaceful and hopeful.
(It’s been several years since then, but I still can’t read a book or blog post about learning styles! )
Anne’s latest post: A Week, Briefly (#11)
Heather Caliri
“I still can’t read a blog post about learning styles.”
Oh, this resonates with me so much. I get so fixated on “succeeding” even when I’m resentful that I usually burn myself out big time. I’m so glad that you found a joyful path forward!
Heather Caliri’s latest post: when you make peace with emptiness, you are ready to be filled
Brittany
What a great, commonsense (but not something I had really considered consciously) way to look at feelings of resentment! This can be applied to so much more than homeschooling. I would love to hear more about your monthly goal setting/evaluation process for yourself. Can you share more details or point me in the direction of where you might have already posted about it? Thank you!
Heather Caliri
I feel like ALL the lessons I learn homeschooling I apply everywhere else!
I learned about goal-setting from Crystal at Money-Saving Mom. I found her goal-setting worksheets really helpful (http://moneysavingmom.com/2013/01/how-to-change-your-life-by-setting-goals.html). And the monthly/annual review questions I adapted from Chris Guillebeau of The Art of Non-Conformity here: http://chrisguillebeau.com/how-to-conduct-your-own-annual-review/
I find resentment is a big guide for me personally with goals as well. I scrap as many as I actually follow through on 🙂
Heather Caliri’s latest post: when you make peace with emptiness, you are ready to be filled
Deborah
With you. Doing something like this on someone else’s behalf is guesswork that doesn’t help them experience the process that really makes a difference. I used to even do it (to some degree) in my relationships! What about intentionally doing this WITH the kids so they think this through for themselves, with guidance from you? Even if they are young, getting into the practice that you are modeling can be a level of self-awareness that they develop as they grow? I love that dialogue – and I also know that sometimes what I think I know about my kids is not entirely correct – they surprise me with answers. And I always learn something there, too. Thanks so much for your blog and book! I enjoy reading.
Heather Caliri
This is a great idea, and one I’ve tried a bit, with usually frustrating results 🙂 But like documentation, I think there may be seasons where it would work. I read Jamie’s post on the compasses with interest, but this close to my sense of resentment about documentation, I’m not sure I’m ready to try it yet 🙂
Heather Caliri’s latest post: when you make peace with emptiness, you are ready to be filled
Steph
I’m so with you on this. For a while I was making bucket lists for every season and I realized it was stressing me out way more than helping. What works for me is writing down what we’ve done after we’ve done it. But most importantly I figured out I don’t have to do something just because other people are…
Steph’s latest post: Life is a Gift, Not an Emergency
Heather Caliri
Absolutely! I’m trying to hold suggestions from other people lightly, because I take them SO SERIOUSLY that if they don’t work for me I feel like I’ve failed. And a bucket list does wonders for some people, or documentation, or a certain curriculum, or whatever–but I’ve never found something that worked great for everyone. So listening to ourselves is so important. We have to give ourselves permission to be quirky and weird and true to ourselves 🙂
Heather Caliri’s latest post: the gift of resentment: For Simple Homeschool
Kristi
I love this. We are extremely relaxed homeschoolers and it’s never occurred to me to do such documentation (and I won’t start!), but I really relate to trying to soldier through something despite negative feelings — b/c I “should” — and then when I’m willing to lay those negative feelings out in the open, God leads me in unanticipated ways. Those negative feelings turn out to be messengers of his freedom in Christ. And it feels so good to let them go 🙂
Heather Caliri
Amen! The more I’ve started being honest with myself about negative feelings, feeling not-okay, feeling angry or grieved or whatever, the more I’ve connected with Christ. It’s so counter-intuitive 🙂
Heather Caliri’s latest post: the gift of resentment: For Simple Homeschool