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Sue M. and Family, Homeschooling
on the Farm


We are a family with five children. Two sons, 19 and 14; and three daughters, 18, 16, and 11. We have lived in extremely rural America for the past ten years farming and homesteading. We left TV behind when we moved and have never looked back. The children have in this time learned to read, write, do advanced math, carve wood, computer program, draw, paint, build houses, plumb, run wires, sew clothes, toys and quilts, hunt with bows and arrows and guns, drive cars, trucks and tractors, keep bees, raise milking goats, care for orphan calves and goat kids (including injecting medicines), go to college, play, make up inventions, make us laugh and just plain hang around some times.

Instead of TV, we live. We don't have to handle others, they have to conform to us! When anyone comes here, they get swept up in the activity as well—if they're bored, well then, too bad.

How do we manage this? We are not complete Luddites. We do have a large screen TV and DVD player. We do watch movies during the long winter nights. Summer is too full to get involved with movies. It was a compromise with my husband, who really is very fond of movies and I being one who would rather read in my spare time. So rather than fight it, I said OK, then joined. When our children watch movies we always always always watch with them. We laugh, we examine, we boo, we cheer and we shut it off when it is too dumb! In this way, our children are very culture savvy without the advertising—they see it coming and know how it works. They have been able to learn how the technology is powerful and what it does. They do not thirst for it, and they aren't addicted to it. TV on at grandparents' homes is an insult and they often choose to go elsewhere then sit all night in front of Gramma's TV. It is sad, but for whom?

Comments I hear about my children are: "They are so well-behaved." "Obviously someone spent some time with these children." "How did they get so smart?" "You have such nice kids." And a final one about my oldest from his college prof: "Your son is intellectually gifted." All of this from two regular people grown up in the culture of the day who chose to take responsibility for their quality of life and get the most out of it.

Other parents can really think about what they are doing and why they had children in the first place. Really examine what you want. What does time to yourself really mean? How can you incorporate a small child into what you are doing? Let them have knives and cut up veggies for dinner, let them sit next to you or on you as you (try to) read a book or the paper. Give them lots of paper and paints, and opportunities to make a mess. Don't be a neat-nik with little ones. Get down and dirty every day. If you have a yard, have a dumptruck full of sand delivered next to the swing set every year. This is guaranteed to produce an engineer! Go swimming with your children (if you hate bathing suits, wear exercise clothes). Don't let others do for you what you could do. Forget lessons and endless car trips. Just do it yourself. Kids are supremely resourceful. So are you, if you just give it a chance.

As my children are getting older, I do look back with amazement at where the time went. I am grateful that we did homeschool (by the trust-your-instinct method!) and that I still have an 11-year-old girl who has a stable of toy horses and dolls under our pool table that she plays with everyday. I am so shocked to witness the creativity of a rather old child who has not been jaded by society and feels so free, she plays and makes up all kinds things and then becomes grown up when she reads to me a story she thinks I'd enjoy. And she is right.

You really know you have a life when you don't have TV.

I just remembered something else that is interesting. My children have not seen full-screen TV images of the Sept. 11 attacks. They only viewed video clips on CNN on the computer. That was more than enough. I am glad they don't have images of bodies and death and destruction in their brains. They have been able to comprehend this disaster by reading about it and asking lots of questions. When they are ready, they deal with it. They are not afraid. They are concerned and are learning as much as they can. I think they feel more able to control events—instead of being bombarded with misery and helplessness.

Anyway, that is how I see it.

Hope this helps you and maybe some others to consider turning off the tube!

Sue

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