Flashback Friday: Time Together All Year Long

As a small publisher, I spend a lot of time at the post office. After my visit there yesterday, I walked past our dentist’s office, just a few doors down, and noticed that it was closed up and dark, which is a strange sight in the middle of a weekday afternoon. Then I remembered that this week is Spring Break around here, and our dentist always takes his family on a trip for Spring Break. He has a wife, two teenaged stepchildren and a small son, and it’s a good time for them to bond as a family; the rest of the year, they are each busy with their own schedules, and there’s not much time to be together.

It’s got to be hard to create family time on such an infrequent basis. That’s why we homeschooling families are so fortunate to have as much time together as we do. Our teens and tiny kids have the opportunity to grow close despite the gap in their ages. My adult daughter regularly calls her younger siblings and hangs out with them. Would that have happened if we hadn’t been home together for so many years? I wonder.

The concept of homeschoolers having more family time was a theme in the recent movie “RV,” which we watched on DVD last week. I don’t normally watch Robin Williams’ movies because he becomes so frenetic that I want to shoot him with a tranquilizer gun. But he wasn’t as bad in this one. He plays the father of a family whose members are too busy with their own concerns to spend much time together, and he sees that he needs to do something about it. So he takes his family on a long trip in a recreational vehicle (there’s another reason for the trip, which is part of the plot, but I won’t go into that here.)

While on their travels, they meet another traveling-by-RV family that they find quite annoying…you guessed it, a homeschooling family. That family lives in an RV, homeschooling as they travel. The family’s members are portrayed as out of the mainstream, compared to Williams’ family. But over time, Williams’ character sees the closeness in that family and decides it’s what he wants for his own.

We homeschooling families are blessed to be together every day, and even though it gets hard sometimes (financially, personally or both), we have to remember that we have something rare and precious in this world: time together. Seeing how the rest of the world, like my dentist or Robin Williams’ character in “RV,” lives can help remind us of that. I’m so glad I never had to wait for Spring Break to have time with my kids!

Originally posted 3/29/07

How to Get Barb’s Book for Half Price

Guest post from a homeschool dad:

Has your Homeschool year started and things aren’t quite going smooth yet? Are you Moms finding it a little difficult to get yourself back on a good schedule? Are you having doubts about your curriculum or does it seem that everyone is asking if “you’re doing that homeschool thing again this year?” Is everything getting done? Is anything getting done?

Maybe you need to read what my wife learned (and how she survived) homeschooling for 25 years…and do we have a special deal for you Homeschool Groups!

 

 

 

Her book is called The Imperfect Homeschooler’s Guide to Homeschooling. I’m sure you’ve heard other moms mention it. Here’s how to get it for half price:  order 10 books at a time and get them for $5.95 each (reg. $11.95 each) plus you’ll get free shipping. Got a big group?  Order 20 books and get free shipping. Or order 30 books and get free shipping. So the deal is 10-book increments, ½ price for the books and free shipping.

The Imperfect Homeschooler's Guide to Homeschooling

 

She put a lot of information in her book too – no fluff – homeschool moms don’t have time for fluff – they “just need the facts.”

 

You can read more about the book here:

 

 

But to get the book at the homeschool group discount (½ price for increments of 10 books plus free shipping) you need to order from this page.

Her book really is packed full of information and advice.

Order securely with Paypal:

 

 

 

P.S. My wife is Barbara Frank

Please note: free shipping to continental U.S. only.

Summer Vacation Projects–Finished!

It’s been three months since summer began. Where did the time go?

I spent some of it watching my son swim in his pool, gardening, planning our daughter’s upcoming wedding and buying a vintage Bernina and playing with it. I also finished a couple of projects, including this needlework pillow from a kit I bought in 1987 but didn’t start until I finished homeschooling two years ago:

I also made this quilt from fabric I bought from Connecting Threads:

Like the back? It’s a like-new, made-in-Italy sheet I bought at Goodwill for $3.99. What a find! The look and feel of it is just wonderful.

And now my summer’s gone, and it’s back to work. I’ll post here when I can, but I’m also going to share some posts from my older blogs (I began blogging in 2005) that may help newer homeschoolers. You’ll see them on Fridays…..Flashback Fridays.

For current homeschooling news, be sure to visit my other site, Thriving in the 21st Century.

Summer Homeschool E-Book Sale Begins

Cardamom Publishers is having a sale! All three of my Stages of Homeschooling e-books are on sale this summer for just 99 cents each:

For homeschool newbies and maybes, Stages of Homeschooling: Beginnings (Book 1)

For homeschoolers with some experience: Stages of Homeschooling: Enjoying the Journey (Book 2)

For those whose teens will soon be homeschool grads: Stages of Homeschooling: Letting Go (Book 3)

Also, during July and August these eBooks will occasionally be offered free! Keep an eye on my Twitter feed to see which days that’ll happen.  🙂

Don’t have a Kindle? Here are step-by-step instructions for downloading a free Kindle app to your PC (or Mac, phone, etc.) so you can have free eBooks without having to buy a Kindle.

 

Sad News About a Homeschool Vendor

How saddened I am to learn that Randy Miller of Miller Pads and Paper passed away yesterday, leaving his wife, four children and five grandchildren.

The Millers run a wonderful company; if you’ve ever been to a homeschool convention, you probably bought something from them. My kids always looked forward to me bringing home all sorts of art supplies and a variety of paper after each year’s convention. We literally used their products for decades. In fact, we still do, even though we’re no longer homeschooling.

If you’d like to help the family, please visit their website and leave them a message; you could also buy something.