Archive for the ‘Homeschooling’ Category

Give Them a Chance

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

give-them-a-chance

One day years ago, I was walking though a homeschool vendor hall that was basically empty. This one vendor caught my eye because of the despair in his eyes. Since I’m good at cheering people up, I walked over to his table and let him give me his sales pitch. I had no desire to buy anything at his table, and he knew it. No matter what I said, the despair remained in his eyes. I finally couldn’t stand it any longer, and I grabbed a random product off his table and said, “How much does this cost?” He said, “Five dollars.” I took out my wallet and paid him. You should have seen the look of joy on his face. That look of joy was worth way more than five dollars to me.

You might not realize that small-time homeschool families have spent their own money to travel to your homeschool conference to be in your vendor hall. They have paid money for the vendor table, sometimes hundreds of dollars. They have a wife and kids to support (or the women need to pay back their husbands, who are now broke because of them). What will they tell their family when they get home, exhausted from the tons of work they’ve done, with less than no money to pay the bills? All because tightwad homeschoolers like you pride themselves on not spending money. You walk past their vendor table without even taking the time to listen to their sales pitch, even though they might have something super cool that you will never know about, that would make your life better. Meanwhile that poor homeschool family starves.

You know what these vendors deserve? I’ll tell you. During the homeschool workshops when there’s no one in the vendor hall, they should lock the vendor hall. The vendors could then choose between two rooms. Behind door number one would be bunk beds where they can take a power nap so that their utter fatigue and poofy feet can recuperate. The room should be pitch dark. Fifteen minutes before they need to return to their tables, the light should slowly fade on (so as not to give people a heart attack from being startled by a bright light). They can look in a mirror, comb their hair, and adjust their clothing. Fully refreshed, they can go back to work.

I bet you’re wondering what’s behind door number two. The second room should feel like a resort, with Hawaiian music and hammocks and crushed fruit drinks with little umbrellas. Dog gone it, these vendors have paid travel expenses. They deserve a vacation. Uh, huh. This is the way it should be…

You know what the funny thing is? That five dollar product that I randomly picked up was one of my children’s favorite things to do for years. That man with despair in his eyes was actually selling something good.

The Conference Comedy

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

conference-comedyFor those of you who were praying for my homeschool conference workshops last weekend, thank you. They went incredibly well. Once again, it seemed like the night before, there were several catastrophes. At least I wasn’t sick this time. Even my cough went away. But my husband was stuck at work until 1 a.m. the night before the conference, because the entire computer system went down. His boss and the one person above him were both out of town, so the entire (small) company depended on my husband to get the computer system up and running again. On the phone, he said to me with hopelessness, “I have no idea how to fix this. I don’t know if I’ll be coming home at all tonight.”

I said, “No matter what, God knows the answer. And God lives inside of you, so the answer is inside of you. So many times you’ve solved impossible situations. Just lean on God. The situation is not hopeless.” He felt slightly better, and we hung up the phone.

The other problem I was having the night before the conference is that I was trying to burn the DVD’s of my best-seller, “Organizing for a Fun Homeschool.” I’ve been selling it on my website for a year now, but I’ve never made any hard copies. Now that I’m on the conference circuit, I have to turn my products from digital to physical products. My husband had barely finished the master copy from the original (since it was a DVD, we wanted it to be a higher resolution). I was supposed to be burning copies of it while my husband was at work, but every other one showed an error. I had trashed 7 DVD’s before calling my husband. Of course, my husband was like a chicken with the head cut off at work, and I didn’t want to bother him, but our livelihood depended on it. My husband walked me through some simple steps on the computer, and nothing worked. I trashed two more DVD’s. “Just wait ’til I get home,” he said, but I knew he wasn’t coming home. I got on my face before God and said, “Why is it always this way?!” I called my best friend, and we prayed for my husband.

The next day was conference day. My husband had come home in the wee hours of the morning and was terribly fatigued. We figured out how to cut the DVD’s. We were cutting the DVD’s and printing the labels straight up to the last minute, when we needed to leave to set up our vendor table. My husband looked at me brashly and said, “Talk about running a business on a wing and a prayer!”

My husband still needed to print more price labels. Meanwhile I was gathering my costumes and props for my workshops. My husband loaded up the car, I said good-bye to my mother, and off we went. As I started to set up the vendor table, I soon realized what a horrible mistake we had made to not get a professional sign made. There was nothing to draw attention to our table.

My first workshop was “Integrating Art into History.” It was a full multimedia presentation, with powerpoint, speakers connected to the laptop, props, and a five-minute video clip, which was going to be my grand finale. Before the workshop, when my husband was hooking up my cordless mic, he said he had nowhere to clip the box. My medieval costume had no belt. I told him to clip it to my underwear, but to be quick about it. Needless to say, he was NOT quick about it, and enjoyed fishing the wire up my dress. I panicked as I looked at the door, but thankfully, no one came early.

Later when my husband left to get something else, I needed to go to the bathroom. It was very difficult to keep the cordless mic box from splashing into the toilet.

I have to say that it was the most fun workshop I’ve ever taught in my life. I had my audience laughing on and off the entire time, while covering an incredible amount of information. The video clip was so hilarious that people were doubled over in their chairs. They almost fell on the floor; they were laughing so hard. It was hands-on learning at its best, unedited, even with me screaming at my kids. I left it in because it was so funny. For some bizzare reason, I looked at the clock and still had 15 minutes left. So I took questions. I loved their questions, and I answered them all authoritatively. Even with the question and answer section, I had people laughing at my blunt answers.

People came by my vendor table and said they deeply regretted not coming to my workshop; that they had heard about it from other people. I told them it would be for sale in video form on my website hopefully within a month for only $10.

My second workshop was the next day. I was so, so sleepy. My energy dips in the afternoon, and I felt like it was the middle of the night. I said to my husband, “Quick! I need a jolt!” He gave me a 5-hour power drink. This was around 12 noon, and by 3 (the time for my class), he gave me another one. Okay, just so you know, I never drink power drinks. I felt so weird, like I had drunk way too much coffee. I felt like that cartoon squirrel in that movie, where he moved so fast while everything else was going in slow motion.

My workshop title was “Using Journals to Teach Writing.” I had chosen a dress with autumn leaves on it, with a pretty hat that looked artistic. My husband handed me my outfit, and I ran to the bathroom to put it on. It wasn’t until I looked down that I realized that I had forgotten to shave my legs. Oh, no! The slit on the side definitely showed my leg. There’s no way I could get away with this. I ran out of the bathroom and across the vendor hall, hoping my legs were too blurry for people to notice. I climbed up on a chair and yanked down my medieval costume. (I had decorated the empty space with costumes just to draw attention.) I sprinted to the bathroom, trying not to knock over the homeschool shoppers.

After switching costumes and putting on my own mic, I cried out to God. I threw myself upon God. I took a deep breath.

I began the class. Using the powerpoint, I showed many different ways to use journals. Not only was I articulate, but I added spiritual truth to what I was saying. I had not been planning to talk about spiritual things, but since I had come to the end of myself, I felt fully yielded to the Spirit of God. This was not a funny workshop. It was an information-packed, sometimes poignant workshop. At the end, everyone burst into applause. People who knew me before (but never heard me speak) looked at me with awe, like I was in a different league than they had thought.

I was so exhausted, but there was only half an hour left for the vendor hall to be open. I literally ran to my table. My table was crowded. One woman monopolized my attention for so long that everybody else left before I had a chance to speak to them. My kindness hurt my sales, and the woman didn’t even buy anything. I just wanted to cry. Those other women would have probably bought something if I hadn’t ignored them for so long.

Finally we packed up and went home. As soon as I walked through the door, I went straight to my bed and collapsed. I did not get up for a long time.

Oh Captain, My Captain!

Monday, March 28th, 2011

michael-farrisI had the immense honor of meeting Michael Farris this past weekend. When he walked by at the homeschool conference here in Spokane, I just wanted to stand up straight and salute him. Just in case you don’t know, he is the chairman of the Homeschool Legal Defense Association (HSLDA). This man has defended the freedom of homeschoolers all over our country, and he represents everything that is just and true. When I heard him speak on Friday night, I wanted to stand up and clap. And I wasn’t the only one. The whole crowd gave him a standing ovation.

Listening to him speak reminded me of when I went to Mount Rushmore with my family. With the presidents all lit up, and the fireworks popping in the night sky, I sang along with hundreds of Americans these words, “And I’m proud to be an American, where at least I know I’m free…” As I belted out the words at the top of my lungs, I felt a lump in my throat. That lump was patriotism, and it was the same lump in my throat that I got when I heard Dr. Farris speak.

Dr. Farris says that persecution is coming, and that homeschoolers are going to be so regulated by the government that it will become impossible to homeschool. He quoted many documents to prove his point, and since he is one of the best lawyers in the country, I believe him. Venomous people who are anti-homeschooling continually attack Dr. Farris, and he is under enormous spiritual attack. Please join me to pray for this great and godly man.

You might be wondering why I pay the HSLDA every year to be a member, even when I don’t have enough money to put food on the table. After all, I’m a certified teacher, so the chances of me being taken to court for homeschooling are close to zero. But my freedom means more to me than my stomach. You take away my children, you take away my life.

HSLDA lets us know when we need to make phone calls to stop bills from becoming laws. I remember the first time I called my senator. (It’s never the real senator, by the way. It’s just a secretary who writes down your statement. So have one sentence written out to tell her.) But then she asked me for my address. I stopped dead in my tracks. She wanted to know if I was a voter in the senator’s district, and the only way to prove it was to give my address. I’m very careful about giving my address. You see, in my “Declaration of Intent to Homeschool” that I file every year, I have NEVER given my address because it’s not required by law. I want to be off the grid.

So when she asked me for my address, there was silence. I told her to wait 60 seconds please, for me to decide if it was worth it to give a statement if I had to give my address. It only took me 10 seconds to decide, and I went ahead and gave her my address. I consoled myself with the fact that my family is trained in the use of firearms, and that my husband is ex-military. No one will take my children. Over my dead body.

But I thought to myself, if I’m a chicken (and I’m one bold, gutsy woman), then how will the normal homeschool mother feel about calling her congressman when the time comes? But let me tell you, it’s worth it to stand up for our freedom together, because if we don’t make those phone calls when we need to, all of our freedoms will be taken away. This will happen sooner than you think. And you don’t have to say you’re a homeschooler. Just say, “I oppose bill such and such because of this reason.” So it’s safe. There’s no way for them to know you homeschool. You are just a random phone call. They add up all the phone calls and see that thousands of people oppose it, and they might change their position based on the votes of the people. We live in a democracy (only just). But if you don’t exercise your freedom, the government will take it from you.

So there I was, shaking hands with Michael Farris, feeling that lump of patriotism in my throat, and feeling so emotional that tears welled up in my eyes. I stammered, “I will pray for you every day ’til the day I die.” I meant it. And I’ll do it, too.

Writing with Style

Sunday, March 27th, 2011

How come I got away with writing “Don’t Study Latin” without getting into trouble? And how come it was so darned popular? (I wrote it for the Homeschool Channel almost a week ago, and it shot up to first place for most-read article; and it stayed in first place for days.) Since I’m a creative writing teacher, I’ll go ahead and take this opportunity to teach you a few tricks about writing.

Most great journalism (especially in newspapers) consists of taking a stand on a controversial subject. You see, people from both sides are interested. How to take a stand without offending the other side is a delicate matter. I chose humor to diffuse the situation. Every time I hurled an insult or a rebuke, I hit myself with a tomato. How could anybody be mad at me? I already had my comeupance. You can’t hit a person who has already been hit. At least it’s not nice if you do.

I also complimented the opponent. This has to be genuine, and it was for me because I confessed that I myself had a classical bent. I told the reader that she was a “thinking person” and that she had chosen “a better, higher education.” Letting the person know that you are on the same side helps to break down walls.

Lastly, I gave two logical alternatives. One was the study of Spanish, which I presented as the best option, since you learned the Latin roots that way anyway. The other was a concession that they could learn a classical language that was actually still spoken, and that would deepen their walk with God.

But the most important thing to me when writing this article was to stop people from making a decision based on sinful motivation. Not all classical homeschoolers have sinful motivation when choosing to study Latin. Some of them have thought about it and prayed about it, and studying Latin is the right decision for them. But after schmoozing with homeschoolers for a decade, I’ve seen that many (if not most) classical homeschoolers do Latin as a matter of pride. If I see sin, I will call people on their sin, so help me God, even if I lose sales. Even if I tick people off. I took a chance. I hurled myself off a cliff, so to speak, to see what would happen. And the result was better than I imagined. People are being set free from a weight of bondage that they thought they were under. And for this reason, I consider my article a success.