Author Archives: admin

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Where did neighbourhoods go?

The best part about buy­ing our first house 26 years ago was dis­cov­er­ing that we now lived in a real neigh­bour­hood. We were the first fam­i­ly with young chil­dren to move into our road in some years. Our neigh­bours were such a mixed bunch age wise, gay and straight, with or with­out chil­dren. My two […]

What’s the difference?

I was think­ing about the per­cep­tion of the world from the point of view of two dif­fer­ent pop­u­la­tions. What does a child with devel­op­men­tal delays under­stand about the world? They are often anx­ious and jit­tery and their speech is usu­al­ly delayed. Some­times they are ini­tial­ly thought to be deaf. But the world to them is, […]

Thinking about TV and Speech Delays

Sev­er­al arti­cles pub­lished this year have sug­gest­ed a rela­tion­ship between TV and autism. I don’t pre­tend to be an expert on autism but I have cared for numer­ous chil­dren younger than 3 years. My first rule in care­giv­ing is “no TV”. In house­holds where the par­ents use TV as a babysit­ter or as part of their […]

52 Ways To Bludgeon Your Child’s Physical, Mental, Social and Emotional Development Part 2

The next 26: 27. Nev­er be aware of nois­es that star­tle your infant/toddler/child. 28. Nev­er do any­thing about nois­es that star­tle. 29. Be impul­sive for your own needs, nev­er your child’s. 30. Always sat­is­fy your needs and guilt before your child’s needs. 31. Spend as much time away from your child as pos­si­ble; be it for […]

52 Ways To Bludgeon Your Child’s Physical, Mental, Social and Emotional Development Part 1

The first of a two-part blog today. This list is in no par­tic­u­lar order of impor­tance. The first 26: 1. Don’t talk to your infant or tod­dler in more than grunts, if pos­si­ble don’t talk to them at all, for as long as you can. 2. When and if they do start to talk repeat their incorrect […]

Horrors That Really Happened!

A tiny baby is left to cry for an hour each evening because “you aren’t sup­posed to feed babies more often than every 4 hours”. Tod­dlers are locked in their bed­rooms by their par­ents. Chil­dren are shut in dark clos­ets to dis­ci­pline them. Chil­dren are nev­er allowed to get ‘messy’, be it jump­ing in pud­dles, getting […]

A Number Worth Remembering

This post is the 225th arti­cle I have in my ‘blog bank’.  The num­ber is sig­nif­i­cant because it is the num­ber of the house I lived in with my par­ents and broth­er for 16 years, so in my mind it is more sig­nif­i­cant than the num­ber of the flat I lived in from birth to […]

Consciously Learning All The Time

‘Learn­ing All The Time’ was the title of John Holt’s last book, com­plet­ed after his death using mate­r­i­al he orig­i­nal­ly wrote for my ear­ly home edu­ca­tion ‘bible’, the newslet­ter called Grow­ing With­out School­ing. With the right atti­tude of mind you too can be ‘learning all the time’ no mat­ter what your age, despite going to […]

Take charge of your children – you’re the parent!

Can you stop your child from doing some­thing you think is unsafe with­out using the word ‘no’? Here are some ideas I’ve used: Does your child show extra­or­di­nary curios­i­ty when you plug in the vac­u­um? (In your mind he is ‘trying to put his fin­gers in the sock­et­s’). Did it ever occur to you to […]

Crabby dog, crabby child? — Crabby ‘parents’?

I can’t count the num­ber of times I’ve been in house­holds with noisy, irri­ta­ble and tem­pera­men­tal pets.  In just about every case the tem­pera­ment of the pets par­al­lels the irri­tabil­i­ty of the ‘parents’ – usu­al­ly with each oth­er! Then they top it all off by hav­ing chil­dren (usu­al­ly they get a dog and then decide to have […]