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Many parents with families and people
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planning their families have realized
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that there are many alternatives to the
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mainstream schooling system.
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Whether it be homeschooling, unschooling,
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Waldorf or Montessori, just to name a few
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options, there are so many out there.
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Today I am going to introduce you to my
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friend, Lucy, at Life Without School
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and she is going to share 6 reasons why
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she chooses to unschool her children.
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Here she is...
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Lucy: Hi everybody! I'm Lucy.
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I live in New Zealand in a yurt with my
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2 children, Ramona who is 9 and Gina who
is 7.
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And my partner, Tim.
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One of the more radical parts of our life
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is that we live a life totally without
school.
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In fact, we live a life totally without
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any curriculum whatsoever.
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Some people call this unschooling, some
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people call it whole life learning, but
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it's really just living as humans have
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lived for millennia. Which is learning by
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doing and learning within your community.
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Learning from those around you. Simply
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experiencing rather than sitting behind a
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desk being taught stuff that you're not
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really that interested in.
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It's really a paradigm that exists totally
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outside of mainstream education.
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And today I wanted to share with you
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6 of the main reasons that we do it.
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There's actually loads and loads, but
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I've tried to distill them into 6.
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When we became parents, one of the main
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things we wanted to do is to provide an
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environment for our children where they
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could just blossom into who they were
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inside without any of our molding or
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shaping of them. I don't really think
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that that is the the job of the parents.
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I think the parents main role is to make
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space for this unique human that has been
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brought into their life. For us,
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unschooling is really an extension of that
philosophy.
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We just want to support our children and
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the way they want to learn and what they
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want to learn. Without them feeling any
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need to conform to what we expect or what
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we think, arbitrarily, they should be
learning.
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So, the number 1 reason is that we want
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our children to be able to learn in a way
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that is free from shame. So, you know,
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85% of adults have had an experience of
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shaming in their school years that so
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effected them that it impacts their adult
life.
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That's 85%.
That's a huge majority of people.
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And that's because mainstream education
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uses shame and punishment as a way to get
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such a massive group of kids learning what
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teachers think is important. Shame can
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have a pretty catastrophic impact on your
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ability to really be yourself. So we
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wanted to provide an environment where
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our kids didn't experience that.
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Even when they were learning in a way that
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seemed pretty random or messy (laughs),
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we could just make space for that
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learning and how they wanted to do it.
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I think because of the mainstream
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education system we've made shame and
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punishment quite an everyday part of the
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human experience. We've kind of
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normalized it and that has been done to
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the detriment of our ability to create a
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fair, just, and beautiful world.
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Okay, number 2. Unschooling is curiosity
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based learning. And we embrace that
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because all of the studies show that
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learning that is done where there is self
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motivation, or a kind of seed of curiosity
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is one, much more effective for learning
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the actual thing that you are trying to
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pick up, but also activates parts of your
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brain that makes it easier for you to
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learn anything that is coming up while
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you are in that state. Also, thirdly,
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studies show that curiosity allows
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learning to be stored in your memory.
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So, the learning when you are curious is
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like a long term thing.
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I can imagine that quite a lot of you
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watching understand that on some level,
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because how much of your schooling do you
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actually remember?
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For me, it is very little. I am a writer
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and I have to google the difference
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between noun and adjective (laughs)
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on quite a regular basis.
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The 3rd reason that we are unschoolers
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is because we want to create a learning
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environment that's totally stress free.
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Just like learning without curiosity,
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learning in a stressful environment is
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such a waste of time. Stress has a huge
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impact on your amygdala, which essentially
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ends up sending information to the wrong
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part of your brain, not to your higher
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brain where you can rationally look at the
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information and create a learning journey.
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But it sends it down to the fight or
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flight zone when you are in stress, so
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your brain actually doesn't know what to
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do with information when you are in a
stressful state.
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There are some statistics about this,
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saying that 65% of 12 year old school
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children are stressed because of their
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school environment. Obviously, that has
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a massive impact on what they are actually
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taking in, what information they are
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actually taking in while they are in the
classroom.
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But also, huge impacts on their mental
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health and their physical health.
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I just think that trying to raise
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children in a constantly stressful
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environment, because of testing and
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competition, because of shame and
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punishment, is just a super unhealthy
thing.
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So, a typical day of unschooling might
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involve us hanging around here. It often
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involves us meeting up with friends and
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doing different unschooling groups and
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exploring the wild. It's always fun.
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There might be conflict, but there is
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space to figure out the conflicts so it
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doesn't become a genuinely toxic or
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stressful scenario. We're joy seekers
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rather than stressed out learners.
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4, we are unschooling because we believe
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that you are learning all of the time.
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Learning doesn't begin at 5 and ends
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at 18 when you leave formal education
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But most parents get this, right?
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You don't try to teach your child to walk
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or talk, you just know that they're
going to
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pick those things up by being in a walky,
talky
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kind of environment. And we just believe
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that that continues on. Nothing needs to
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change when they turn a certain age.
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Our kids are 7 and 9 now, and they are
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reading, writing, doing art, creating,
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making things, doing heaps of math,
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like genuine love of math. And they are
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just doing it by living. There has never
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been a sit down, formal class for my
children.
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They always just learn through their
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experience of being human. And, actually,
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as adults we do this all the time. If we
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want to learn something new as an adult
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we will just find a way to access it.
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In the last few years I have taught myself
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how to play the ukulele, I've taught
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myself how to make electronic digital
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music (laughs). I've built a business.
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I've done absolutely loads of things like
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moving almost into mastery of some of
those things
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simply by accessing the resources that
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will help me. Even doctors do this when
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they get presented with a case that they
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don't really know what's going on.
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They might ring some colleagues, they
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might look up online, or delve into their
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books in order to get to the bottom this
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new illness or this new case.
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That is really essentially unschooling.
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It's learning through doing.
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The 5th reason we are unschooling is
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because we just trust our children and we
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want them to learn that they can trust
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themselves. Our children know that their
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instincts are good, that their urges are
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good, that their needs are valuable.
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Whereas I think mainstream education can
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really undermine a child's trust in
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themselves. They're told to learn this in
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this moment, and then a bell rings and
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they're told to switch their mind over to
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the new thing and learn that thing.
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They're told to mistrust their body's
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desire to move when it wants to move.
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We even ask children, through schooling,
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to trespass on their own boundaries, both
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mentally and physically, quite a lot
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through mainstream education. And through
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unschooling we kind of do the opposite
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of this. We say, what you are feeling is
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good, your needs are good, I trust you and
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you can trust yourself.
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And that leads me to the 6th reason
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that we are unschooling and that's all
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about world change. When i first began
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this whole unschooling thing I just
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thought, ya we're doing this because this
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is what works for our family and this is
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the path we've been called to. But the
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more that I'm immersed in this world,
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I've actually come to believe that
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unschooling and other forms of alternative
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education are really the embodiment of
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the just and peaceful, loving world that
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I think is possible. I believe that
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mainstream education, as it stands, with
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it's shame, punishment, testing,
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competitive nature...you know, ranking
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kids against each other...I believe that
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is like the seedbed of some of society's
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most problematic issues. We're coming
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into this understanding that we are
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actually not born competitive.
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We're born cooperative, that's our human
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nature, I really believe that. I think
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through the schooling system we pit kids
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against each other and that bleeds into
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the rest of society. There's almost like
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a collective societal wound from our
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school days and it makes itself known in
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individuals in a different way. So, some
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people are people pleasers, some people
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are afraid of authority or afraid to rock
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the boat. A lot of people feel that they
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are just not intrinsically good enough.
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A lot of people struggle to rest and play.
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This is all stuff that we learn through
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our schooling years, when we are being
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shunted from one activity to the other
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with our minds placed in somebody elses'
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hands. These days I tend to think that
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mainstream education is one of the
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strongholds of capitalism.
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Raising people who are so
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unhappy and mistrust themselves so
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much with so much mental anguish that we
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have to consume and fight in order to
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feel okay. Oooh, got a little bit heavy
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there (laughs). But for me, that makes
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sense, when you place children for 15,
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or more, of their formative years into an
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institution that's kind of what you get.
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Those are 6 of the reasons that we've
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chosen unschooling. I'm super happy to
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answer any questions that you have and the
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unschooling world is very friendly, so if
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you want to jump on board this ship we
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would welcome you with open arms.
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That sounds a bit weird and cult-y, it's
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not really like that. There's too much
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anarchy for it to be cult-y. (laughs)
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Rob: I hope that you got a lot out of that
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time with Lucy. If you did, make sure to
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subscribe to her channel where she shares
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a lot of valuable information on teaching
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children in a home setting.
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And make sure to subscribe to this
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channel, as well, for a lot more great
videos to come.
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I love you all very much and see you again
real soon!