Well, we are two weeks into the new school year and I’m already
behind. This is definitely a first for
me. I usually can stay on track for a
good, solid quarter before I start falling behind. By falling behind, I simply mean that the
calendar I created over the summer listing everyone’s lesson number they should
be on at any given point in the school year, is no longer the lesson we are on. Since for the younger kids, many of their
lessons cannot be done independently, when I get off track, they are off
track.
I’m not concerned about being behind, since I purposely schedule
my homeschool school year with plenty of catch up days scattered throughout
every month. But I had to catch myself
blaming “all these other distractions” as being the reason for falling behind. I had to remind myself that these “distractions”
aren’t really distractions at all. They
are just another part of my job that are equally as important as doing lesson
#6 in Language Arts.
I’ve had to remind
myself that in addition to being a homeschool mom, I am also a mom.
It is sometimes hard for homeschoolers to not get caught up
in the school part of their job, at the cost of all else. In the last two weeks the “distractions” that
threw me off my self-imposed schedule were things like orthodontist appointments,
car repairs, driving kids to various
activities, play dates, appliance repairs, long conversations with older kids
needing my time and attention, mother/daughter Bible studies and the constant, “Mom,
come swim with us” during this incredible heat wave we’ve been experiencing of
late. In hindsight, that I looked at any
of those things as distractions is embarrassing. In the blink of an eye there will be no need
for me to drive anyone anywhere, losing that confined time with them alone in
the car. There will come a day when no
one has any desire to swim with me, or think to even want to include me. The day is coming when I’ll long for an available
child to do a mother/daughter study with and once the play dates end, will I
ever really make the time and effort to spend a few hours with
girlfriends? All these activities are
not distractions. They are simply
another part of my ever growing job description, all of which provide
unexpected moments of blessing and encouragement. At the end of the day, I’d much rather have a
relationship with my adult children that results in their still wanting to talk
and spend time with me, over the satisfaction of knowing that I completed my
school year “on time”.
I know many of my friends are not officially starting school
until Tuesday, so you are one up on me already, even though I started earlier
than you. YOU are not behind! But as your school year starts and life dares
to happen in the midst of it, remember that finishing on time isn’t nearly as
important as how you handle all those life things that will come up. How you walked your daughter through her social
crisis, or the conversations you would have not had with your son as you drove
him from one event to the next, are the memories that will stick with them for years
to come. Those aren’t distractions. They are another, vital and significant, part
of your job.
Have a great school year!