Spring walk…

One of my favourite things about unschooling is the freedom…

After nearly 2 weeks of rainy and cloudy days the sun has come out and we are all feeling the great effects of fresh air and sunshine. These are not the days to be in the house or stuck in a building…

Spring...

After lunch, we headed out to some trails not too far from our house. As soon as we got far enough to no longer see the car, I took Wilhelmina off my back and let her follow us… she was so determined to follow her brothers and discover all that there was to discover…

Wilhelmina determined walk...

She walked and walked….

Wilhelmina

 

 

She ended up walking nearly 2 km before she finally just sat down and refused to move and as I was about to put her back on my back Xavier offered to carry her the rest of the way… I adjusted the ERGO for him and she had a big smile as she realized that she was going to tagging along with her big brother…

 

Xavier and WilhelminaBig Brother

It’s these little moments that erase the harder parts of being a parent…

My fabulous four...

 

Dry Ice Ice Cream…

We had so much fun at our friend’s house with dry ice…

I didn’t have my camera, but I did get some video of making the Ice Cream. Not the best video either with the light we had but is was too fun to not share.

In the bowl was an Ice Cream base made with eggs, soy milk, cream etc… The dry Ice was crushed and added to the mixture…

Dungeons & Dragons

Xavier’s interest in Dungeons and Dragons was sparked a few years ago…

(From March 2009)

reading before bed...

He found Simon’s old Monster Manual and started looking at it and memorizing all of the monsters and creatures. We bought him the new edition and we started to realize that he could read when he could name all of the monsters and tell us details about them that he could only know through reading. It was D&D that led him to reading at the level he can read now , playing D&D based games on the computer and reading the Monster Manuals and other related books. (to those who don’t understand how unschooling can work and how kids can learn to read by themselves… this is a prime example)

His interest soon went into the original role playing game (RPG) and both boys along with Simon started on their adventure.

(June 2009)

The boys playing D&D

Last month Khéna joined in the adventure and to our surprise, his attention span can at times can outlast that of his brothers…

If you know how D&D works, it is not a fast paced game. Each move is calculated and thought out. There is adventure, imagination, strategy a need for patience.

Playing D&D

Simon has been journaling their adventure here on a Blog called Kaleth’s Journal

This blog, in the form of a character journal, is a quickly-written summary of the D&D 4e campaign (in a customized version of the Forgotten Realms) I started with my two sons in 2009, and which my 3rd son joined in 2011. It’s compiled for their future enjoyment. Simon (35 years old) is the DM and plays a level 3 human wizard; Xavier (8 years old) plays a level 3 dragonborn fighter; Colin (6 years old) plays a level 3 eladrin ranger; Khéna (4 years old) plays a level 1 eladrin swordmage.

 

Xavier's Dragonborn Fighter The rest of the Party

roll of the dice...

With the family growing and time with Simon is somewhat limited, Playing D&D is a great way for the boys to connect and I love hearing their adventures as they play…

Anyone else a D&D fan?

Cabane à Sucre 2011

On thursday we headed to the Sugar Shack for our anual Sugar rush…

 

Cabane à Sucre

We go in the week when we can get a table left over from a group. There are not always all the activities, but the kids have the playground more to themselves, there are less people in line to eat and there are no crowds…

It was a beautiful Spring day and the Sap is running strong at the moment so keeping the sugar boiling is nearly a 24h/ day task…

Maple season...

 

(see those barrels of syrup there…. yummmmm)

Cabane à Sucre

(Sap boiling with a wood stove and the steam rises through a hole in the roof)

Making syrup...

Every year the meal stays the same… so you can see the older pics here

After the meal we head outside for some playing, seeing the animals and the anticipated “Tire sur Neige” or maple taffy, which is made from hot syrup being poured onto clean snow….

 

Swinging smile

Xavier

Tire sur Neige

(That stuff is seriously dangerous… I know you can make it at home, but I would rather remain ignorant to that fact)

Yummy...

What a fun day and it is definitely something we all look forward to every year!

Having fun at the Sugar shack

The Long-term Effects of Natural Parenting…

Years ago, in the near infancy of this blog, when I was still hosting an “AP” board on a mainstream site, the topic of CIO (Cry-it-out, the sleep training method) came up on a regular basis and at one of those moments, I wrote a post here recording my response on a thread and further comments on the subject.

My post led to somewhat a debate in the comments and in that debate this was said…

“10 years from now I challenge you to go down to the local playground. You will not be able to tell whether or not ANY of those kids were CIO babies, BF/FF, if they were pushed in a stroller or worn in a sling, or if their moms had epidurals! Differences in parents styles (whether AP or “mainstream”) are just that – DIFFERENCES. Neither one is right or wrong. It is simply a choice”

I responded that I would take her up on that challenge… and that debate, that comment, has been something that I have never forgotten over the years.

That challenge became part of my determination to continue and grow in the parenting style that I believe in. I truly believe that children are moulded from their experiences and that being born gently, being breastfed and nursed until they self wean, co-sleeping, being held close often, not being punished physically (spanking) or psychologically (time-outs) all become part of who they are and who they will be.

Not only do I merely believe it, but I am certain of it…

Child Rearing Practices of Distant Ancestors Foster Morality, Compassion in Kids

“Ever meet a kindergartener who seemed naturally compassionate and cared about others’ feelings? Who was cooperative and didn’t demand his own way? Chances are, his parents held, carried and cuddled him a lot; he most likely was breastfed; he probably routinely slept with his parents; and he likely was encouraged to play outdoors with other children, according to new research findings from the University of Notre Dame.

Three new studies led by Notre Dame Psychology Professor Darcia Narvaez show a relationship between child rearing practices common in foraging hunter-gatherer societies (how we humans have spent about 99 percent of our history) and better mental health, greater empathy and conscience development, and higher intelligence in children.

“Our research shows that the roots of moral functioning form early in life, in infancy, and depend on the affective quality of family and community support,” says Narvaez, who specializes in the moral and character development of children.

The three studies include an observational study of the practices of parents of three-year-olds, a longitudinal study of how certain child rearing practices relate to child outcomes in a national child abuse prevention project, and a comparison study of parenting practices between mothers in the U.S. and China. The longitudinal study examined data from the research of another Notre Dame psychologist, John Borkowski, who specializes in the impact of child abuse and neglect on development.

The results of Narvaez’ three studies as well as those from researchers around the world will be presented at a conference at Notre Dame in October titled “Human Nature and Early Experience: Addressing the Environment of Evolutionary Adaptedness.”

“The way we raise our children today in this country is increasingly depriving them of the practices that lead to well being and a moral sense,” she says.

Narvaez identifies six characteristics of child rearing that were common to our distant ancestors:

  • Lots of positive touch — as in no spanking — but nearly constant carrying, cuddling and holding;
  • Prompt response to baby’s fusses and cries. You can’t “spoil” a baby. This means meeting a child’s needs before they get upset and the brain is flooded with toxic chemicals. “Warm, responsive caregiving like this keeps the infant’s brain calm in the years it is forming its personality and response to the world,” Narvaez says.
  • Breastfeeding, ideally 2 to 5 years. A child’s immune system isn’t fully formed until age 6 and breast milk provides its building blocks.
  • Multiple adult caregivers — people beyond mom and dad who also love the child.
  • Free play with multi-age playmates. Studies show that kids who don’t play enough are more likely to have ADHD and other mental health issues.
  • Natural childbirth, which provides mothers with the hormone boosts that give the energy to care for a newborn.

The U.S. has been on a downward trajectory on all of these care characteristics, according to Narvaez. Instead of being held, infants spend much more time in carriers, car seats and strollers than they did in the past. Only about 15 percent of mothers are breastfeeding at all by 12 months, extended families are broken up, and free play allowed by parents has decreased dramatically since 1970.

“Ill advised practices and beliefs have become commonplace, such as the use of infant formula, the isolation of infants in their own rooms, or the belief that responding too quickly to a fussing baby will ‘spoil’ it,” Narvaez says.

Whether the corollary to these modern practices or the result of other forces, research shows the health and well being of American children is worse than it was 50 years ago: there’s an epidemic of anxiety and depression among the young; aggressive behavior and delinquency rates in young children are rising; and empathy, the backbone of compassionate, moral behavior, has been shown to be decreasing among college students.

“All of these issues are of concern to me as a researcher of moral development,” Narvaez says. “Kids who don’t get the emotional nurturing they need in early life tend to be more self-centered. They don’t have available the compassion-related emotions to the same degree as kids who were raised by warm, responsive families.””

University of Notre Dame (2010, September 22). Child rearing practices of distant ancestors foster morality, compassion in kids.ScienceDaily.

The most important thing about parenting in a traditional (traditional as our ancestors would have parented) way is that not only does it shape children into positive ways but it also feels right. When you take away all outside expectations of babies “needing” to do things that are not natural to them and therefore needing to “train” them, parent will naturally do what feels good to both of them.

Breastfeeding, holding, wearing, co-sleeping, responding to a childs needs etc… It just feels good, it makes a parent feel good and it makes a child happy. It is so easy to understand why parents that parent in such a way are so proud and love to share what they are experiencing.

I have never heard someone say that it feels good to make their child cry themselves to sleep, that it feels good to deprive a child of something they need, that it feels good to hit or punish a child. I have only heard that it “needs” to be done. There is no lack of support for the parents that do such things, there are thousands of books, millions of personal stories but for the children, they are left without support. I understand that many parents believe that it needs to be done, because that is what they have experienced and what they have been taught, but the damage that it is doing is frightening. It is hard to break the cycle, it is very hard at times, but it is very possible. We need to bring back compassion, we all need to go back to the basics and build our children up in a positive way from infancy.

I think that studies like these are bring the challenge to light, what we do to children does have an effect on who they are and the differences will show.

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