An International Trend You Already Enjoy

Share this post via email










Submit

Sonlight families are on top of an international trend, and we may not even know it!

Have you seen articles online that ask people to look up from their electronic gadgets once in a while? I know I have. Many new studies talk about the risks of the ubiquitous distractions in daily life – higher stress, difficulty focusing, and decreased productivity.

One common antidote is to practice focusing on just one thing. Then I read about the new Slow-Reading Movement. In various forms, this popular trend calls us to focus on a book by reading for at least 30 minutes each day. It asks us to stop just skimming and really read. Looks like Sonlight might be just what the doctor ordered.

The Wall Street Journal reports that groups from California to New Zealand have cropped up to help adults read more frequently. These Slow-Reading Groups meet regularly to provide a quiet, communal place to get lost in a book. Club members turn off all their electronic devices and sit together in silence while they all read. They talk of the joy of becoming absorbed in the story, among many other benefits.

Maybe I should write to The Wall Street Journal and tell them that we have our own slow-reading groups. They're called Sonlight families! Every day, around the world, Sonlight families sit down together and read. Through Read-Alouds and silent reading, we sink into real stories. Rather than just skimming online articles, we let ourselves become absorbed in the characters and plot. For this special time every day we turn off the TV, close our computers and enjoy the pleasure of real books.

As if that joy isn't enough, I just saw a study that suggests reading for just six minutes can reduce stress by 68%! Remember this next time you have a frazzled day with the kids at home. Sitting down to read together can really help you regroup.

So let's carry on, Sonlighters! We don't need a fancy club to reap the benefits of reading. With Sonlight, we get to pause and enjoy a good story every day we homeschool.

Blessings,
Sarita

Share this post via email










Submit
Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

When You Really Are All Alone

Share this post via email










Submit

Her eyes are dry as she talks to me, her tears bored with their constant repetition. "I'm alone," she tells me. "I have no friends. My family is far away." She's also recently started school, the responsibility an unfamiliar weight. "Life's hard."

I pray with her. There's little more I can do. I ask that God bring her friends and encouragement. But the bosom buddy, the kindred spirit, the friend closer than family ... that person doesn't show. I lose touch with her while she walks the college life alone.

Then, a month ago, she appears, smiling, joking, telling both me and her husband that we introverts really can make new friends. "If you don't know what to talk about, ask about their dog," she suggests. Her husband gladly tells me about their new pet before they move off, arm in arm. And I'm left there, alone, wondering what happened. How did she get from there to here?

All-Alone
All Alone

I don't know that story. Wish I did. I feel like I'd have more to share with you.

My lonely years weren't that lonely. My abandonment issues were with God, not people. I have some empathy for those who experience isolation and the fatigue of carrying themselves day in and day out. But that utter loneliness, the experience of being truly alone? ...that I've never had.

Then Bethany wrote a post about being a control freak that spoke much more, to me, about the experience of being really alone. More than that, I think the post is about the experience of being completely alone as a new mother. And if I've read other blog posts correctly over the years, I don't think she's alone in that experience.

Here's the thing that's got me thinking: Bethany doesn't share the story of how she got from there to here. Wish she did. I feel like there'd be something super useful to share with you in that.

Instead, she glosses over those years of her life. She sums them up as years of "prayer, reflection, and conversations with good friends." I want the specifics because I have this nagging thought that there'd be a pattern in them, a secret, the secret to not being isolated, or -- at the very least -- how to survive the lonely days and nights and hours.

My guess is that the reason we don't know these stories and get to peek behind the curtain and find the nugget of truth is simple. The story is boring. The "secret" is common knowledge. The answer is simple, but painful: When you really are alone, you're not.

The Lord's sufficient grace is there.

'So what?' my inner trust issues ask. 'Grace isn't a real person, a hug, encouragement. It's not something that gets the laundry done or deals with your child's temper tantrum.'

You know what? I almost believe that guy. It certainly feels true.

But grace is embodied in a Person. And while it may be long spans between hugs, His Body is pretty good at giving them, at least at my church. And by His grace, I find myself encouraged by strangers and "e-maginary friends" on the internet.

Being alone isn't easy. But the story, if I had to guess, is one of slowly learning to draw closer to Christ. Bethany says it this way in her post:

I don't need to be in control. I just need to stay close to the One who is. I can't possibly plan around what He will send each day, but I can choose to accept it, humble, broken, and open-handed.

If you're feeling alone on your journey -- be it as a mother, homeschooler, or otherwise -- stay the course. What you are doing matters. What you are sacrificing is worth it. What you are losing is nothing compared to what you are gaining. And as you let "good enough" be good enough, you'll certainly learn how to do things better. And even if you are really all alone, you're not alone. If nothing else, there is a community here on this blog, on Facebook, on the Forums. And there are homeschool Advisors ready to answer your questions, weigh your options, and pray with you.

If you've come through a time of being utterly alone, do you have any wisdom or encouragement to share? I'd love to hear your story!

 ~Luke Holzmann
Filmmaker, Writer, Pseudo-Dad

Share this post via email










Submit
Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

"But Why, Mom?" The Value of Communicating Values

Share this post via email










Submit

Stark hair and makeup frame her pretty face. Metal protrudes from her ears and nose, lips, tongue. Regularly added tattoos cover her skin. And yet her beauty is still there, vibrant and loud, like her laugh which rasps -- marbles when you roll them down a bumpy Lego ramp. She's active on social media, regularly posting selfies titled "meh" or "so bored!" or "bewbs!!!" when the photo predominantly features her cleavage (which is, like, all the time). And she's recently taken up a new cause, passionately campaigning against slut shaming. Her posts of late include women covered by nothing more than small signs that say, "I have morals!"

Another girl I've known since she first attended church camp, posted a picture of her posing, arms up, back to the camera, with the caption, "She is clothed with strength and dignity" (Proverbs 31:25). She certainly wasn't clothed with anything else. The comments ranged from philosophical statements about humans pre-Fall to one guy who suggested she "turn around."

Before I go any further, I need to say this: These girls are on to something.

They correctly recognize a twist in our message. As Warren Baldwin shared, we who have been in the church a while want people to live up to "the challenges of the Christian life" and so fail to offer compassion, community and hope. They don't see the love of Christ in the modesty movement and so are pushing back against something they don't really comprehend.

Worse, we have suggested that the reason girls should cover themselves is for the sake of the guys around them; "Don't cause your brother to stumble!" This teaches boys that they are not responsible for their actions -- "she caused me to stumble" -- and it teaches girls that it's their fault if someone leers at them ... or worse. The "she's asking for it" mentality is a horrifying direct product of this kind of thinking.

It needs to stop.

As one rape victim once told me through tears, "No one is asking for that!"

I like how Jonelle put it in her post Modesty as Respect: When you respect yourself and your setting, you will not be immodest.

The value behind modesty, the reason why we put clothes on and don't make inappropriate comments, is respect (love, concern) for others and ourselves before God who loves us.

Why
But... why?

Kids regularly ask, "Why?" As parents, we can quickly become overrun by the reduction to ever more basic elements. "Why?" Because choking your brother is not nice. "Why?" Because it hurts him. "Why?" Because our bodies have mechanisms in place to help protect us against situations which could be detrimental to us, such as in the case of a restriction of oxygen. "Why?" Because God made us in such a way that we can respond to threatening situations. "Why?" For our own good.

It's much easier to simply reply, "Because I said so."

The problem is that "because I said so" is an unhelpful answer. Expedient, sure. But there is often a much deeper value influencing our response.

When we talk about that value, we change the tone of the conversation. In the example of modesty, if we say, "Boys, put on a button up shirt, we're heading to church," and they ask why, the answer is easy. "Dressing up for church, even a little, shows respect for God." This can launch even deeper conversations. "We want to look nice for church because dressing up reminds us that the Sabbath is a holy day, set apart by God for our benefit." Taking the time to work through this with your kids, and to do the difficult work of teaching such discipline, counts for a lot in the long run. Check out Carol's post Counting on discipline to produce amazing young people!

The kids I am blessed to know today don't have a foundation built upon values. They have "morals" but no moorings. The value of communicating values to your children is that they can see why you make the choices you do. And I pray that, as my wife and I get to hang out with "our kids," we will be able to share our values with them in a way that helps them move forward in strength and dignity.

 ~Luke Holzmann
Filmmaker, Writer, Pseudo-Dad

P.S. One more thought because I really liked Natalie's post Parents, ask yourself, "Will It Matter in College?" As we look at our values, we may find that some things that don't thrill us (like piercings or blue hair) aren't worth the fight. In fact, it could be that our value is not God-honoring ... like, "What would the people at church think!?" There is much value in thinking about your values.

Share this post via email










Submit
Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Doomsayers

Share this post via email










Submit

...or "Why Considering History is Important"

They show up at my door, the newest edition of their publication in hand. As with every sect or person who's willing to discuss life, the universe, and everything, I welcome them in.

"Isn't it horrible," one of them offers, showing me the magazine heading about the current state of the world, "how things just keep getting worse?"

Worse? Really?

This is a pet peeve of mine and I do my best to keep my excitable nature in check. "I don't think the world's getting any worse. People are still people, in desperate need of Christ, but we're not more evil today than yesterday. I haven't heard about anyone's house getting surrounded by all the men of a city demanding to be let at recently arrived guests. Have you? And even if that were to happen, that's nothing new." (I've blogged about these troubling passages in Scripture before.)

The-End-is-Nigh
The End Is Nigh

Judy touched on this topic yesterday as she discussed the hard things of life. Things appear more dangerous, more evil, more despicable than ever before! ...or, at the very least, than when we were kids. The tendency to look back and see something better than the present is common. Just one example: Turns out that "kids these days" have always been narcissistic, self-centered, immoral ingrates whose lives are being destroyed by modernity.

The sweet surrender Heather discusses in her recent blog post linked itself to this discussion. She describes the "crossroads of comfort and reality." We have this feeling that we can make things safe, secure, certain.

But we can't.

Lysa Terkeurst's post this morning beautifully echoes Heather's point: God is our refuge and fortress against fear.

The truth is that the world has always been a tenuous place, held together by nothing more than the will of God. And here, in Christ's will, is where we must live.

When we see the youth of today failing to live up to the standard of His perfection, I find it helpful to remember how God's grace and redemption has carried me this far ...and how much further it has to take me yet.

The constant of history is God's loving-kindness in luminous contrast to man's continued failures.

The more we learn of how He has worked in and through and with us, the more we can trust in Him and share the hope we have in Christ with the doomsayers. Our study of history provides us with a clearer understanding of not only the past, but also our future.

The end -- which has been nigh for more than 2,000 years -- looms closer, to be sure. But that's not where I want my gaze to fall. I want to keep my eyes on Christ, following where He leads, and see the people who need His love and hope through His eyes.

~Luke Holzmann
Filmmaker, Writer, Pseudo-Dad

Share this post via email










Submit
Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

Hard things . . .

Share this post via email










Submit

NewsIt seems that of late my phone is constantly alerting me to another disaster or impending doom. Perhaps it's just the combination of Ebola, assisted suicide, the Ferguson killings and the local raid on a meth lab ... or maybe it's just my age showing ... but the world seems a very scary place these days.

I remember when our babies started arriving, and we began planning for their future education, my mom made the passing statement that she was grateful she was not raising children during that time in history. The world, she thought, was a very frightening place to bring up kids. Some 20+ years later those babies are all grown and the first grandbaby has arrived. And I find myself thinking that I am grateful that I am not raising children during this time in history.

Solomon, in all his wisdom, once stated History merely repeats itself. It has all been done before. Nothing under the sun is truly new. (Ecclesiastes 1:9) It is good to be reminded that today's horrors are really no different than what Solomon experienced. It is also good to be reminded that homeschooling provides an excellent opportunity to wrestle world events with our children. Some of the most valuable moments in our homeschooling happened around the dinner table as we talked and debated current events and what they meant to us as a family/individuals.

While I don't claim to come close to Solomon in the wisdom department, I do think there is great value in investing time with our students reviewing and discussing what is happening in their world. Math and Science certainly have their place in a school day, but more and more I am convinced that a solid Worldview is going to be vital for our young people facing the future.

Not wanting to end my thoughts on a depressing note, tomorrow I will get to spend the day with my grandson (and his mama) and plan to snuggle him close and be reminded that the Creator who performed the miracle of his birth, is still in the miracle business.

Still on the journey ...
~Judy Wnuk

P.S. - If you're looking for a good Worldview resource, take a moment to look at our 520 World History and Worldview program. It's a great place to start the conversation with your students.

Share this post via email










Submit
Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Changing the world one bed time chat at a time

Share this post via email










Submit

The title of this blog post, and the inspiration thereof, is blatantly, unabashedly, and completely stolen from the Sonlight Moment of the same name. Please go enjoy that post first. <smile>

I don't remember bedtime chats except for the whispered conversations I had with my siblings after we were supposed to be sleep. But my family talked at dinner. We also talked as we read together doing Sonlight. I resonate with how talking about one book brings up another which sparks even more discussion.

As I think about these expanding conversations, I am reminded once again of my high school experience. You know, the one where our class nuked Cuba. As I mention in the linked post, our decisions were entirely present-based, working off current myopia and fear-mongering sound bytes [how well I understood politics even then...]. I do not recall any kind of historical context to the lesson. I don't remember any discussion about what actually happened or why. We convinced our classmates that a first strike was the best choice, our teacher was disappointed in us, and ...and that was it. I'm guessing the bell rang and we moved on to some other class.

How different my Sonlight experience!

Bedtime-Talks
Bedtime Talks

With excellent historical literature as our backdrop, every discussion was naturally grounded in the events motivating the decisions. We could discuss our modern biases and cultural misunderstandings. This provided an excellent framework for Scripture study, which also benefits from understanding the original context.

None of our discussions changed the world then and there. But they helped shape us kids to be the people we are today. And, Lord willing, we'll continue to be part of those who follow Christ's leading to bring change and redemption as He directs.

And that, as we see in the many missionary biographies we read, will change the world.

 ~Luke Holzmann
Filmmaker, Writer, Pseudo-Dad

P.S. Need some more encouragement today? Read more delightful Sonlight® Moments.

Share this post via email










Submit
Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Children Raised by Their School

Share this post via email










Submit

One of the benefits you enjoy by homeschooling is involvement in your child's life. You do more than merely educate. When you choose to homeschool you also choose to be active, to be there. This is why homeschoolers stay engaged even if their children eventually transition to a traditional school environment.

Your involvement is one of the most powerful elements homeschooling provides. And this shift in thinking sticks, no matter what else changes in your educational situation.

Sadly, I frequently witness what happens when parents aren't involved.

These are the kids who are "raised by their school" as my best friend put it while we drove for four days. He and I had been taking about some of "our kids" and the stuff they're going through. The similarities between their experiences are frighteningly redundant.

[NB: I'm not sure if this is something unique to this one particular public school or broader. I know different cultures impact different people in vastly divergent ways. What follows are some of my initial observations.]

School-Kid
School Kid

  • Lack of boundaries - they do things simply because it seems like the thing to do. When something goes wrong, they place blame everywhere but their decisions. Often the issue is with some authority figure or the person with whom they have a problem.
    One young man consistently finds himself in relationships with girls who were "just" a good friend. We tell him that he keeps "falling in love" because of the amount of exclusive time he spends with them. The relationships eventually break down because all the exclusivity happened "by accident." (Jason and I had been discussing the "courtship is flawed" article.)
  • Lack of authority - growing up socialized by their peers, these kids have learned to filter all suggestions and input by their own standards. Parents are not trusted and their statements are judged by the child's own internal parameters.
    One young lady told me, "My parents gave me one rule growing up: Don't come home drunk or pregnant. That's it. I had no boundaries when I needed them. So now my mom can't tell me to do anything; she gave up that right a long time ago."
  • Lack of trust - adults can't be trusted. What little interaction they've had with their parents lacks context and so seems arbitrary and stupid.
    Another young lady has shared how random her parents' actions seem. "I never know how they're going to react to anything," she told me. I've actually had the chance to chat with her parents and they seem like pretty normal, caring people. But the huge disconnect has grown over years of "going it alone" at school and much of the rest of life.
  • Lack of assurance - they come off, initially, as very assertive. But that is only a veneer they've learned to put on to avoid being seen as weak. This is different from the general lack of confidence I've seen in kids who have a great home life but felt rejected at school. Being left out is nothing more than a socialization ill common to any community arbitrarily divided.
    Kids raised by their schools are different. They have learned the bravado of "succeeding" socially but have failed to find a conviction. Without parental figures to speak to who they are and where they're going, they're left with nothing more than their own brave face. I think Billy Coffey's Future Kevin post depicts a child who may have even given up trying to fake it anymore.

These are just my initial raw thoughts about this. Have you met kids raised by their school? Where you?

I'd love your input and insights here as this is something I've only just started to think about.

Bottom line: The benefits of homeschooling are huge! As you take the opportunity to be part of raising your child, you can help them grow and thrive through all the confusing, frustrating, painful, and difficult parts of becoming the person God has called them to be.

 ~Luke Holzmann
Filmmaker, Writer, Pseudo-Dad

Share this post via email










Submit
Tagged , , | 2 Comments