Over the last few months, I have been seriously dodging questions about our schooling situation here at the miller manor. I have come up to a 99% decision that I was just not going to talk about it here – or anywhere, for that matter. It’s been a struggle and I have SO MANY emotions tied into what has been going on. I feel too vulnerable for judgement from others, I feel too protective of my own cubs to share, I feel like I might be/pretty sure I am failing at this in one way or the other. I wince when someone asks me in real life, I wince when someone comments on my instagram “SO ARE YOU HOMESCHOOLING OR NOT?!” (It’s probably not in CAPS, but it feels like it’s in CAPS to me.) I am avoiding this situation and all of you because I HAVE NO ANSWERS. I don’t know what the wrong or right way is to handle things at school. I don’t know if I have made huge, gigantic mistakes already and my children are doomed for an educational life, or if I have handled it the same way any mom would have. I am taking this a serious day at a time, but reguardless – I made the best choices I could with the best intentions possible.
Harlo started kindergarten this year and I was hopeful for a great school year. We have had such wonderful luck with preschool and a tremendous preschool teacher (I’m serious.. if I could think of a better word than tremendous I would use it here.) I was so hopeful for a worry-free year that I forgot to worry about “what if everything doesn’t go smoothly? What if we don’t like our teacher? What if our teacher doesn’t like us? What if Harlo hates school? What if I hate having her at school? What if she doesn’t do as well as I thought she would? What if she does TOO well and is bored? What if, what if, what if????” I didn’t think to worry about any of these things, I really didn’t. I didn’t think it because I almost NEVER hear moms talking about problems their kids are having at school. I didn’t even know those existed with regular old kids like mine. Over the last few months I have kept telling Brady “I just wish I knew someone else with this issue that I could ask about it!” I have said so many times over the school year “I never hear anyone saying they have problems with their kid’s schools WHY ARE WE HAVING PROBLEMS WITH OUR KID’S SCHOOL??”
So today, I am putting on my very brave big girl panties so if you happen to struggle with your kids in the first few months, or years, or forever in school, you will have remembered that one time I did too and you will feel like you are not so alone and that maybe your kids are just 100% as completely normal as you think they are. I am hoping that this post is reaching you somehwere, mom of difficult teachers, kids with attention disorders, bored/unchallenged kids, and those of you who’s kids hate school…
The weeks following Harlo starting school, I was seriously shocked by how hard it was on me. Getting her here and there every day, remembering all the 204 pages that needed to be signed and put in different pockets of different folders, and homework completed and signed, and the books read and signed and put back in the backpack, and the other books read were marked on the paper and signed and hung on the fridge til the end of the week and on friday to remember to add that to the backpack. School shirts on Friday, moms and muffins the 2nd monday of every 3rd month, sisters and sardines on semi-annual saturdays.. I mean.. it’s a lot to keep track of! A lot. A LOOOOOOOT. And it felt like a lot, all placed directly on my shoulders and the pile kept adding up.
I am the type of mom that reads all about how to build up your child’s character, and how to encourage their love of learning, and the important things to say and to not say to little girls.. all that stuff is important to me. So I kept a big huge smile plastered on my face and swore not to mention how difficult it had been on me and to “just keep swimming” and all that good stuff. But as the weeks turned into months, I could tell something was a little bit off. A number of events happened to reassure me something was just not quite sitting right. Except I had no idea what to do because not a single soul had prepared me for this.
So I prayed and prayed and prayed some more and the more I tried to fix it, the bigger the issues were getting. I was being misunderstood, I’m sure I was misunderstanding, I was faced with ugly labels and words I wasn’t comfortable or familiar with my children being associated with. The mama bear came out in me, and when I had finally had enough, when I finally felt my territory was being walked on, when I felt like I was getting no where at all… I made the last possible stitch effort, and I took her out of school.
You read that right, I took my 5 year old out of kindergarten. I’m not going into a lot of details because there are so many feelings involed, but I will just say that we were not on the same page and eventually I didn’t feel like we were in the right place. I had considered homeschooling years before, and knew I had it in me. It’s amazing what you’ll discover you have in you if you’re pushed hard enough. I mean that. I got online and in a weekend, after HOURS of studying and putting together a schedule and curriculum and reading all I could about homeschool, we started it. We gathered around my kitchen table on Monday morning, and started our first of many bible studies for our first day of homeschool.
I felt lighter that day than I had in months. We moved through our schedule as gracefully as possible until I had crossed each item of business off my list for the day. I laid next to Brady that night and said, “I think I’m going to really like this.” I was right. Day after day got a little bit easier and smoother. I began feeling more comfortable in my role and I noticed a huge difference in the girl’s behavior. School time was serious and they didn’t give me a bit of grief during our school lessons. As we read and discussed each day, I felt our whole family changing. I felt the conversations we were having to be more deep, I was feeling so good from the daily bible study and wonderful conversations about Jesus and His people we would have. I loved watching the girls experience not wanting to put a book down (Charlotte’s Web) and I loved meeting them where they were at academically and being present as their brilliant little minds grasped onto a certain concept. My life was blessed in so many ways during these first weeks of homeschooling. I watched our dynamic change as a respect and calmness in our family settled right in.
Although our inside life was going smoothly, it was hard to deal with all the judgement we faced on the outside. The school’s opinions, friends and family’s opinions, random strangers opinions every time my girls were asked (daily, I swear) what grade they were in or if they were already out of school or this or that. It made me uncomfortable to have conversations like this, and I could tell the girls felt it too. “Homeschool?! I didn’t know people still did that!” strangers would chuckle, “Well did you ever suggest a change of teacher,” another friend would offer, “What about private school?”. I know this about myself, but learned deeply that I have an issue airing my personal stuff just anywhere – namely, taking opinions about stuff that matters to me in life. Getting unsolicited advice was excruciating to me, because I already had so much guilt and so much confusion in my own mind and these words would just send my head spinning on whether or not we did everything we could. I carried on though and prayed for a bit thicker skin. Instead of thicker skin, God gave me a different sort of an answer. One I least expected.
Several weeks in to homeschooling, Harlo asked if she could go visit her friends at school. We would talk that out, and then the next week she would be asking again. She missed her friends at school, her classroom, being a kindergartener. All of that stuff that I could completely understand, but it broke my heart anyway. I felt like we were just settling into things, and here we were back to the drawing board. I scheduled play dates and planned more elaborate activities for school hoping this would curb her appetite for going back, but she just began to ask more and more. I saw something shift in her these weeks. She had done so well with homeschool, but now I could see that little light in her beginning to dim. Weeks of being at home by my side had taken it’s toll on her. She is the oldest of her siblings and relishes in having a bit of her own life outside our home. Stella continued going to preschool a few times a week and I could see Harlo’s longing for school every time we sent Stella off.
One night, as Christmas break was coming to a close, Harlo came to me and said “mom, can I talk to you?” My precious girl let me down easy and told me she liked having me as her teacher, but that she missed her friends at school. She missed the parties, and the playground, and the toys they had during free time. During this conversation, I had no anxiety. I had peace knowing she knew what was best for her. I realized that I could make up whatever she was missing academically, but that I couldn’t make up for the friends and atmosphere of school. The next day we called to meet with the principle (again). We had a great meeting and communicated better than ever before. It seemed like we were slowly getting on the same page. Harlo started back to school the following Monday. I cried each of those 7 nights.
I had a lot of feelings to process over the next few weeks. I felt the sting of failure and guilt. I had uncertainty and regret. I had hope for what was to come. Harlo did so well going back to school. She seemed to skip ahead and was suddenly just flourishing. Even for me, things didn’t seem as heavy and hard as before. We were taking it a day at a time, but finally things felt like they fit. At first I wondered if taking her out was the right choice, but it was the right choice for us. I’m starting to learn that making good decisions and making good decisions for us are two different things. We enjoyed our break, and our trial with homeschool. I think Harlo and I both grew in ways we needed to grow in those weeks. I think I needed that maybe more than anyone else. The bottom line is that at the end of the day, both of us are happy. A happy kid was always my goal.
Since Harlo was born, I felt like the Lord used her in my life to really direct me. From my initial finding out about being pregnant with her, God was using her as an important and crucial lesson in my life. Sometimes I feel like God is using me to uncover the road less traveled. It seems that this is the path for me at times. We don’t always seem to “fit” with the same beige shoes everyone else is wearing without complaint. We like the red sparkly ones with the pointy toes that give you blisters at first. I don’t mind, though. This is where faith comes and rescues me away. My God has not failed me yet. Not a single time. He has brought me through hell and back and I have been blessed times a thousand for my trials. I am willing to do what the Lord wants me to do, even when it means taking a big huge swallow of my pride.
So that is the story of our first year in Kindergarten. It wouldn’t be our story without getting off the beaten path at least once, I tell you what.
Marissa
loved reading your writing I know I am not a mom yet but I do think about how I will handle
situations in my future and I will remember this
Cass Miller
You’re so sweet rissa! Thank you!
Ashleigh
Thanks for going deep and putting this out there. I am scared to death to send my daughter off to kindergarten next year. She’s sooo bright. I know academically she will do well. And I pray she is not bored, because she already knows so much and learns very quickly. But I am mostly afraid they are going to throw ADD out there. She is such a social little girl. She wants to talk talk talk instead of doing her work. is that ADD? Her teacher now isn’t sure. And it’s not the ADD that I am afraid of, it’s of having a teacher who rushes her, or doesn’t understand her, or even care for her. I just pray we get a teacher who works well with her next year.
You are such a great mom. I admire you for doing what you did. And I admire you even more for respecting what your daughter wanted. So much to take from this. I wish you and Harlo all the best as the school year begins to wrap up!
Cass Miller
Ashleigh you pretty much just described my exact child.
I am wishing you the very best and will seriously be praying for you guys to get the right teacher for her, one that will celebrate that sweet little spirit she is! It is so hard sending a piece of our heart off into the great big world and being comfortable with where they’re going and who they’re going to is crucial.
I’m sure she’ll do great and your heart will be put to ease. If not though, we’ll chat.
Thank you for saying such sweet things! Making putting this out there much easier.
Xoxo
Ashleigh
Can I email you a question?
Also, I can’t thank you enough for introducing me to fly lady! Holy cow! It’s like taking care of the house became so much easier! I think with a very full plate to begin with, I get so overwhelmed with where to even begin sometimes. And her daily plan is so simple! I mean, it’s not overwhelming at all! And I ordered a planner, because I too am old fashioned and like it written out and find I can actually accomplish what I need to when it there all in front of me in a pretty little book. I love it do much. Life has been so much more organized since!
Daniella
Thank you so much for your words! My husband and I were both products of the public school system but I’m longing to homeschool our kids. Thank you for sharing Harlo’s desire to go back to kindergarten. I hadn’t thought about what my kids might want – just doing what I thought was best. We’re still years away from the decision, but I love hearing about how other families are doing learning. Xoxo.
Cass Miller
I hadn’t really thought of that either. I think if we had done homeschool from the start, they would have known no different. For now we’ll just take it year by year, day by day.
I hope I get the opportunity to homeschool again in the future, though. Such a neat, neat experience. 
Trish
Oh my word. The tenderness of that story made my tears come… I also really struggled with public school on many different levels. It’s such a personal choice. I also appreciate yor words on other peoples open opinions on yor personal choices. It can be so hurtful when the intention was not even there. Gentle loving tolerance can go along way! My son will graduate this year and so the end of school for me. I’m not sad about it. Hats off to you sweet mama for raising such a tender sweet soul of a baby girl who would come to you with something on her heart to talk it out. The sweetness… I also live in s. Utah so I love yor blog that much more!
Kelly
Oh my goodness, my heart aches, understanding so much of what you have been through. My oldest daughter’s first grade year was so hard. I started out wanting to homeschool her, but realized a week in that I wasn’t up to it (I was pregnant, tired, stressed and depressed.) So she started public school and all was well until two weeks in all of a sudden she had severe separation anxiety going to school. It was awful, so we pulled her out and tried private school for a week. That didn’t feel right (although I wanted so badly for it to be) and oh man, long story short, I just know how it feels to be so confused and concerned and misunderstood and criticized. I never anticipated any problems like this with my kids’ schooling. And then my second daughter, who I thought would be a breeze, hated kindergarten for the first half this year. Same back and forth in my mind, wondering what would be best for her. It’s so hard for people to understand when they haven’t had a problem with school. So easy for them to toss out ideas. We’ve stuck it out with public school for now. I feel like that has been my answer to prayer for this year. But I have learned that I can be in control of all the extra things that add stress. I don’t make my kindergartener do the homework (really! we just don’t do it!) She is above grade level on everything so what is the point? Some kids like the busy work but she is more of a creative free spirit. I read out loud to my second grader way more often than she reads to me. I know that is not what the teachers want but again, she is reading great and I’m not worried about her skill level. But she is stubborn when it comes to being forced to read, and I’d rather let her enjoy books by listening to them then for her to feel like they are a chore. I hope eventually she will love to read them on her own but for now, I’m not pushing it. So anyway, these are a few things I’ve learned to do that make our life less stressful but that seem lazy or unorthodox to others. My girls are going to be trying out the new Dixie Montessori Academy charter school in Green Springs next year. Again, a decision that not everyone in my life agrees with, but I am so excited to see if the Montessori method helps with some of my concerns. And I had to learn that even if I am making mistakes, they are MY mistakes to make. Sometimes we have to learn by trial and error. I could go on and on, but thank you for writing this post and know that while you may be a minority with this education business, you are definitely not alone! I’m always so happy to find someone who can relate. I hope things keep going well for your family.
Cass Miller
Kelly, thank you so much for sharing that! I have done the same with not doing homework and not slave driving books or what not. I want our home to be a fun place to learn and be creative, not another place for them to be work-work-working all the time. I have placed my girls on the wait list at dixie montessori. I have left it to the Lord for now and have just known what is supposed to be will be. I am thrilled for you guys though, and wish you the best next year! I’d love to hear how you like it.
We’re in this together, mama! xoxo
Casey
In my experience in the classroom, I’ve learned that you have to do what’s best for your child. Maybe it’s public, charter or home etc. Parents have more control in their child’s education than they realize. I think it’s good you followed your instincts in trying home school and sending her back. Just a little side note, even kids who are home schooled can be a part of public school. They can go to PE, library, computers, field trips etc. A student at my school is home schooled for math only. I’ve never experienced partial home school, but I know it’s possible.