Saturday, December 8, 2018

Coming Home


My life is filled with interims.  This last 12 months was a big one.  I spent almost a full year working as a Teacher’s Assistant in a public school setting.  The reasons are varied and complicated though the lessons have been many and valuable.   I gained a deep friendship with the teacher I worked with along with insight into the system that I couldn't have before as a life-long homeschooling mother.  I got to see, firsthand, why so much of the school experience is classroom management and even why passion about a subject could be a difficult to handle situation.  I was able to see why so much emphasis is placed on state mandated standards and why parents are so far removed from their children’s educational experience.  And I definitely witnessed how children associate learning and school in a negative light.  I won’t imply I have correctly identified solutions to any of these scenarios, although the first-hand experience has been insightful and real.   

I did however feel like I was participating in some psychological experiment.  You know, the kind where participants are asked to do something by someone of supposed authority and in order to fulfill that assignment, they do things that they never would have done on their own. (ie. The Milgram Experiment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOYLCy5PVgM )

Stanley Milgrim with his shock machine

What was disturbing and confusing the first week I was there, became commonplace, even understandable.   I was trying to wrap my mind around why things were done in a certain way and with the outside requirements of state funded standards, parents supposed best interest of child, burned out teachers from dealing with discipline issues and unrealistic expectations, and children who are over stimulated and over entertained, I was not having much luck processing the components.  And unfortunately, it was easier simply to obey what the authorities said than to make sense of a complexity that was beyond me.

Recently, I was listening to one of Dr. DeMille’s addresses when he talked about the National mentality versus the tribal mentality.  Briefly outlined, the nation’s objectives and accomplishments were on the wealth and success end of the spectrum whereas the tribe’s objective and accomplishments leaned more toward relationships and true happiness.  Although, I didn’t necessarily want to put my children in the public school, I was trying to make the best of the situation by submitting to the strengths it had to offer.  Most everybody else was doing it and even I was a product of the public school system, so surely my children would fare alright since that is what I had to do.  Eventually I had adjusted to the routines and systems and had integrated in fairly nicely, I thought.  But at the back of my mind and heart, I was not content.  When I realized that I was utilizing a system that failed at accomplishing relationships and happiness, I could see why I was struggling internally.  I definitely prefer the tribal mentality.  Here I was wanting to have the perfect balance of relationships (with academic content, with the children and other teachers, with my own inner peace) in an environment that was pursuing job training, conformance to outside pressures, and regimented studies that makes learning a drudgery.  I already knew this but experiencing it has brought a new depth to my understanding. 

I recently went to Parent Teacher Conference and although I enjoyed visiting with some of the teachers, the majority of the experience left me feeling belittled and managed.  The teachers were VERY good at managing the classroom, managing the children’s inappropriate behavior, managing the schedules and the required standards, but I didn’t feel that they were capable of managing a relationship (or maybe a better way of saying it was they were capable of controlling a relationship but not simply experiencing one).  There was nothing organic or real or love-based about the encounter and I left feeling concerned about my children’s ability to associate good feelings with learning. 


Fortunately, my circumstances changed enough (maybe internally more than externally) that I quit my job and came home.  At present, my children are still attending school until more things are in my favor, though I anticipate their return eventually.  It has been such a sweet experience to “Come Home”.  After trying to convince myself (more like LIE to myself) that everything would turn out alright, I am serving my family once again by being a guardian of the home.  Preparing meals, cleaning house, reading stories, and interacting in a reduced stress manner never felt so glorious.  My running faster than I had strength has finally ended and I’m feeling the relief of breathing freely again.  The transition will not be complete until I bring my children home and we once again become a unified central unit rather than simply a docking station in between outside social obligations, but I feel a wonderful sense of peace at stepping outside of that “national minded” system.  Leaving the “What” of education and returning to the “Why” is bringing me joy, inner peace, and excitement that I couldn’t experience within the ‘system’.  My “Why” is to nurture relationships, prepare for mission, and be consistent to what I know to be true.



Sunday, May 13, 2018

Peaceful Anxiety

Tax season has always been a pain in the neck.  This year more so than any other time.  My husband has his own business and to be painfully honest, we are not so great at separating personal expenses from business expenses.  Due to the hassle of shuffling funds from one account to another (as well as non-dependability of receiving said funds), purchases were made from what ever account had the money.  So at tax time, I was scratching my head pretty hard.  As I added up the personal expenditures and compared them to the amount of tithing that was paid... there was a significant discrepency.

Unfortunately, debt is not a new concept for us, however being in debt to the Lord was.  My covenants were not being fulfilled, and the idea was absolutely appalling to me.  I thought for sure there was some error... at least in the amount of debt.  At tithing settlement, for the first time in my life, I had to admit that we were not full tithe payers.

And of all the gall, the bishop just shrugged it off and said, "yes, and I'm sure you will get it caught up so that you will be full tithe payers as soon as you can".

Grady already was working way too hard and things were super tight to have any hope of incrementally getting caught up. The painful realization was becoming crystal clear.   I had to go to work.

This wasn't the type of situation where it is wiser and even more profitable to start my own business.  I knew that concept already.  What I needed, though, was a steady amount of budgetable income.  A J.O.B.  As I considered my options, I knew I couldn't take just any job because I was still accountable for four children.  The harsh reality became painfully obvious.  They had to go to a public school...  Just kill me now. 

As I was considering my employability, I knew I wanted to be at the crossroads for them.  Transitioning from full-time homeschooler to latch-key children was simply too much for my mother heart to handle.  So I looked for employment in the school systems which would make it possible for me to have the same hours as them.   Afer all, I did major in elementary education and I'd worked in education for the past 20 years. It only seemed logical to pursue that course.  All of us were going on a grand, new, scary adventure, but we were doing it together - as much as possible.  Fortunately, I was employed at the very charter school that my youngest children were attending.

And you know what.  It has been one of the best and worst experiences of my life.  I am learning so much and we are having experiences that were not possible on the previous path.  None of my children want to go back to homeschooling (at present) and I'm not so sure if I would want to do that myself.   Of course I am struggling with feelings of self-betrayal and abandoning all that I've stood for.  But at the same time,  I'm experiencing the peaceful anxiety or the serene chaos of trusting the Lord is at the helm in the midst of tumultuous waters.

Image from Following the Voice Within


I won't claim to have any clear vision of the destination of the path I'm on, though I know that all things will turn out well.   I'm sure this internal turmoil is minor in comparison to the trials that others have had to endure.  I recognize that and am grateful for my own version of my refining fire.  But it is STILL a refiners fire and uneasy growth is taking place.  It's not what I planned for or even desired, however, the  peaceful anxiety is evidence of God's involvement in my life.  And that makes everything okay.



Thursday, March 22, 2018

Are Children Inherently Malicious?

Picture by Amazon.com


Through some unforeseen chain of events, my children are attending a public school and I am working outside the home.  And like most things, I’m sure the Lord is teaching me lessons I wasn’t aware (or desiring) that I needed to learn.   Fortunately, I have been able to be employed as a TA (Teacher’s Aid) at the very school my youngest children are attending.  I get to be involved in what my children are experiencing as well as make money on the side.  Win-Win, right?

And while this may only be a temporary interim employment, it’s all coming back to me why I didn’t feel the desire to continue pursuing my elementary education major.   I recall it had something to do with the amount of politics that were involved in education – and very little to do with teaching children.  Now that I’m in the thick of it, I’m seeing a good deal of the teacher’s role… is classroom management – with very little to do with igniting a fire in the heart of the child to love learning. 

I get that a room of 20 plus children is similar to herding cats and it would be impossible to instruct them unless there is some semblance of order.   I get that children are young and inexperienced and need to be guided in how to behave appropriately.  And I also get how I am working with elementary aged children and the lessons they are learning now will set the stage for the rest of their schooling experience and so the lessons are more about self-control and less about academic content.

But what I don’t quite understand is why addressing inappropriate behavior makes me feel like loving kindness, long suffering, and patience ought to be replaced with the stern “LOOK”, zero tolerance, and no opportunity to connect with the child’s heart. 

I’ve seen, first hand, why teachers might lose their love of teaching because of the difficulty in managing a classroom.  Let’s face it, sometimes kids are tyrants.  The teachers develop the furrowed brow, the low tolerance for disorder, the no allowance for individual expression because it downward spirals into community chaos.  (The same thing might apply to parents.)

So I’m curious…Are children inherently malicious?

I’ve known some people who view them this way.  Give them and inch and they’ll take a mile. 

A milder, yet similar assumption might be that children are innately immature.  You know, the whole Id, Ego, and Superego assumption.  
Picture from simplypsychology.org

They are ego-centric and incapable of monitoring themselves without staged “lessons” to direct them into appropriate behavior – commonly called discipline.  With that premise, it is the teacher’s (or parent’s) responsibility to cause them to behave contrary to their juvenile nature in order to grow – correct? 

I wonder if that popularly adopted theory doesn’t take into account the dual nature of the being – spiritual… as well as physical.  Our spirits are quite mature and developed – they’ve passed the first estate and have learned all they could learn in Father’s presence.  Now we are experiencing a veiled spiritual memory and awareness while simultaneously working with the undeveloped natural body.  It’s quite the juggling act when you think about it. 

When children misbehave, it isn’t necessarily a result of them solely being selfish and inexperienced, but a navigating of how to work this undisciplined portion of their physical nature while not wholly remembering their disciplined and mature spiritual self. 

I get that it is difficult to see the greatness of a person who is defiant and unwilling to cooperate with what we view as a more noble objective.  (That probably needs to be put into different perspective as well.)  Requiring everyone be quiet so they can hear what I have to say is helpful, but helping the child connect with their mature self and desire to want to be respectful is a much more powerful, useful, and life-changing lesson.

 
Picture from slideshare.net
Those two hidden assumptions about children,

1)      A physical being going through a development from instinctual response to moral based decisions

and

2)      A combination of both a mature spiritual and immature physical being going through a process of becoming unified – to remember the one and develop the other.

may sound very similar, I know, but understanding the underlying assumption for a behavior is huge in determining the appropriate response to that behavior. 

You have to admit that we respond differently when we believe something was done with intent rather than it being done innocently or accidently.  Of course, both theories take into account that the behavior is done innocently and in need of improvement.  However, the latter is a much more complex process and so much more is going on than simply caveman to civilized behavior.

And if children are simply immature and need directed into appropriate behavior, then the teacher/parent takes on the role of controlling or manipulating the child in order to train them to behave in their best interest.  That sounds a lot like Satan’s approach.   But if children are already giants of character that are struggling to balance the outside forces that are placed upon them, then the teacher/parent takes the role of leading them to find their innate greatness.  Both approaches are done through discipline, but the premise and motive is completely different.  Control versus loving persuasion.

Discipline alone trains the body, however, runs the risk of offending the spirit.  Discipline with a heart connection, takes into account the dual nature of children while preserving one’s own desire to behave in a Christ-like manner. 

“No power or influence can or ought to be maintained... only by persuasion, by long-suffering, by gentleness and meekness, and
by love unfeigned; By kindness, and pure knowledge...

Reproving betimes with sharpness, when moved upon by the
Holy Ghost; and then showing forth afterwards an increase of
love toward him whom thou has reproved, lest he esteem thee
to be his enemy...
                                                        (Doctrine and Covenants 121:41-43)