Achtung Baby
The last time I got hit roundly in the crotch was 5 years ago. I remember it vividly; my son was reaching for something on the shelf and my privates just happened to be in the way. It felt like a Nazi bayonet being shoved up my abdomen and I went down like a peasant paying tribute to a king. I remember vowing through gnashed teeth never to let something like this happen again.
Tough luck. I woke up this morning to the vibration of a different alarm clock, one in the form of a toddler’s heel crushing my bagpipes. My three-year-old daughter, sleeping beside me and perhaps dreaming of football, shifted in her sleep and accidentally hit me in the babymaker. I woke up the way they do in the movies when an actor has a terrible nightmare and bolts upright to the sound of clapping thunder. Except the lightning was in my bladder, my shriek as dull as the gray morning.
“My balls…!!!” I managed, clutching the family jewels to make sure there were still there.
The pain was like a killer tsunami. It began as a wave of unbearable hurt, much like watching an Adam Sandler movie. I assumed the fetal position and made some distant connection with my feminine side as the anguish gained momentum, looming large and bitter, making me wince and wish I’d written my last will and testament. I was engulfed in such a paroxysm of pain, it’s all that kept me from consulting the dictionary to check what “paroxysm” means.
My wife tried to help me by giving me a forlorn look and some words of consolation. Not that I could hear her; I was too busy trying not to drown in my own drool.
The pain eventually subsided and the sun came out. I gave up concentrating on dancing sheep and my glowing inner core. I turned to look at my still-sleeping daughter, wondering whether I should wake her and tell her how close daddy had come to enlightenment.
Any annoyance or remaining pain simply flushed away at the sight of my snoozing child. It’s hard to be angry when faced with a purring baby, especially one that smells like milk and morning sweat. I’ll miss her when she’s old enough to have her own room and Dora-themed bed sheets.
Parenting. I guess the occasional whack in the groin is worth it.
Homeschooling: Nuclear Education from the Comfort of Your Living Room and Backyard. Or Something Like That.
So the title confounds you. That’s good. It’s sort of what happens when I attempt to explain homeschooling to people. They do double takes.
“Homeschooling? What’s that?” If I had a dime for every time someone asked me those twin questions, I’d insist on Philippine pesos so I’d at least be able to spend my small fortune.
So anyway, homeschooling. What is it and what’s the big deal? I get this all the time along with other questions like, “What about your children’s socialization?”, “Won’t they end up becoming axe-murderers?”, and “Why does your facial hair grow so fast?”
I don’t tire of these questions; in fact, I relish them. Like most homeschoolers, I feel I’ve been appointed to change the world one query at a time and therefore have to provide the meatiest, most persuasive answers to all homeschool questions, friendly and hostile.
I have my critics too, you see. And let’s face it, walking through a mall with my kids when, by society’s standards, they should be sitting in a classroom copying notes from a blackboard does warrant a decent explanation rather than a simple wink of the eye.
Oh and did I mention the fact that my kids rarely sleep early at night, sometimes eat candy before meals, don’t always go to church, and love playing all day?
Sacrilege, huh?
When my friends/relatives/government officials/the CIA start showing up at my door with frowns and bludgeons, I find the situation easier to deal with when I have credible answers.
So how about those answers? I’m sure if you’ve read this far you’re interested in homeschooling to some degree. Or maybe you’re waiting for me to say something damaging that you can use against your homeschooler cousin-in-law whose six kids all manage to ace the local quiz bee every year, despite the fact that your kids are doing extremely well in school and yes, they are excellent spellers in their own right.
Question #1: What do you mean, “Nuclear Education”?
OK, I’m a writer. Frankly, the term “homeschooling” has become a little boring. In fact, despite its fairly obvious connotation, a lot of people still don’t get it. So I figure that changing it up a little won’t hurt.
Nuclear Education, while admittedly not the most earth-shattering improvement on the word “homeschooling”, implies dynamic, energetic learning. The kind of learning that doesn’t happen in a classroom. The kind of education brewed in the fires of the living room and backyard, where love and chaos are one and the same.
It’s the type of education that only a mother and father can give, boiled in tears and sweat, steeped in fear and optimism, fused together by a torrent of parental passion and love for God, culture, and all things beautiful and good.
You see, homeschooling is not about sitting in a classroom with 40 other same-aged students who are only allowed to speak or question the teacher at allotted times. It’s not about having kids eat their snacks and play at predetermined stages of the day. It’s not about creating well-behaved, cookie-cutter people who will eventually blend in with society as easily as their gray uniforms blend in with the winter sky.
It’s about letting a child discover the world with a different set of lenses. It’s about introducing them to your values while giving them the freedom to examine the beliefs of others. It’s about allowing them to interact with people of all different ages, outside a classroom where they can feel the sun on their skin and not have to pine for it through bolted windows.
In other words, homeschooling is about giving your kids as varied and natural a learning experience as possible.
This often means that our home looks and feels like the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse have just galloped through. I am daily vexed at how my kids can go from 0-100 in just 5 seconds and wreak havoc throughout the house before I’ve had my morning coffee.
But somehow, it’s all good.
They’re not in a classroom, forced to sit still under the threat of detention. They’re not required to read stuff they don’t like or engage in experiments they’d happily see go wrong, just for kicks.
They’re not coerced into mingling with foul-mouthed kids whose lurid stories rival the latest issue of Bandera.
They’re at home, working on stuff we all love, enjoying our time together.
It’s never dull or boring. For the most part, it’s a mess – books are everywhere, board game pieces are flying all over the place, colored ink adorns paper crafts and kitchen walls. Tensions are high, passions are raised, brains are worked, stuff is LEARNED.
It’s nuclear and the most frighteningly insane fun we have with our kids.
Question # 2: Are you mad?
I think so. You need to be, to a certain degree. Robin Williams once said, “You’re only given a little spark of madness. You mustn’t lose it.” I agree. And therefore I choose to channel my madness through some select things, homeschooling heartily included.
Look, educating at home is tough. First it entails NOT putting your child through conventional school. The grief this entails is enough to make most people curl into the fetal position and never emerge from a hot shower.
Not letting your child go to a “normal” school is like saying you’re waiting for the Rapture to happen and you don’t think education is that important anyway. Your friends and family will ridicule you. You may as well wear tin foil on your head and eat canned sardines for the rest of your life.
Not only that, but YOU become truly responsible for your child’s education. Which means that you need to really take an interest. No more coasting through life, taking a backseat as your child “learns” at school. One needs to own his child’s education and not just leave it to the pros.
For the most part, moms assume teaching responsibilities in a typical homeschool arrangement. We dads are trusted to bring home the bacon, cheer at sports events, say stern things when our kids screw up, and slouch on the sofa when we’ve had a bad day (so that mommy can say to her fledglings, “It’s tough being a grown-up little ones; it’s important we study hard so we can deal with the curve balls life often throws our way” or some similar object lesson.)
But just because mommy is on the front lines teaching math and other abominable subjects, it doesn’t mean that we can slink into the shadows and watch TV in the other room. On the contrary, we men have to stand up and show our kids just what responsibility looks like. Like how a man honors his wife, how we deal with crises, how we fix toilets and cook food when mommy is sick (without setting the kitchen on fire).
Homeschooling means stepping into the lives of our kids and influencing them for the better. No more abdicating solely to the teacher. No more relying on a school to be your kid’s all-encompassing yaya.
You can’t phone in your participation. You really have to be there. 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Like I said, madness.
Question # 3: Won’t your children grow into anti-social misfits?
As any homeschooler worth his salt will tell you, this is the quintessential homeschool concern. And I understand it, I really do. But let’s break it down shall we?
What do you think is more conducive to developing a child’s ability to function properly in society? Lumping him into a classroom with a mass of students all the same age or having him interact with everyone in the outside world, from the grocery stacker down at your local Puregold to scary Aunt Hilda who smokes like a trooper and still can’t get over the amount of shoes Imelda used to own?
Which more closely resembles real life?
I can understand if a child is raised by a pack of wolves. Or is home-educated but locked in a cabinet and fed cat food when the textbooks and whip are put away.
But this nonsense about children becoming dysfunctional because they’ve never set foot on school grounds… puhleaze.
If anything, keeping them out of school protects them from undue influence. I’m so glad my son is homeschooled because it means he doesn’t hurl invectives, tell crude jokes, or make fun of other people like his neighborhood friends often do. That’s not to say he’ll never ever do these things; you can’t completely shield a child from peer pressure and the world at large. It’s just that our strategy is different.
My wife and I do our best to teach a correct, Biblical worldview to our children so that they’ll be armed with an accurate way of understanding the world. That way, for example, if some kids talk to our son about sex outside of marriage, he at least knows what the Bible says about the issue as well as what we feel about it. Which is better than not knowing what to think and caving to peer pressure and compromise.
As a wise parent once wrote, it’s better to teach a right view of things at home than to correct wrong views learned outside the home. I paraphrase, but you get the point.
Question # 4: Why are you so confident you’ll succeed?
I’m not. Really, I share the same fears as most other homeschoolers. And that is, what if it all goes pear-shaped?
The truth is I don’t have any confidence in myself. I have a lot of confidence in my wife!
Seriously though, homeschooling is sometimes as frightening as when we first embarked on this journey 10 years ago. But it does get better and things do get more relaxed.
As you hit your stride and get a handle on how your child best learns, you begin to feel more comfortable and assertive. And as you begin to notice fruit (your child starts learning how to read, solve math problems, convince you to buy him load for his mobile phone coz he’s done x,y, and z and deserves a reward) you become less anxious and more excited about his learning trajectory.
It’s all very scary, for sure. But like all things nuclear, scary is part of the package.
Ultimately, all the passion you pour into your child’s education, all your energy, devotion, prayers, tiresome days and sleepless nights – the amalgam of these raw investments is a homeschooling experience that will shape your child in stunning and unique ways.
There are more questions, I know. And the answers will come.
For now, I’ve explained myself. So the next time you catch me at the mall, you know why the kids are tagging along. And why we’re all smiling.
Stuff! 05/30/10
After keeping us waiting for a century, Mark Twain will finally reveal all
“The creator of Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn and some of the most frequently misquoted catchphrases in the English language left behind 5,000 unedited pages of memoirs when he died in 1910, together with handwritten notes saying that he did not want them to hit bookshops for at least a century.
That milestone has now been reached, and in November the University of California, Berkeley, where the manuscript is in a vault, will release the first volume of Mark Twain’s autobiography.”
The Council of Trent – The Sixth Session: Justification Canons
It’s interesting to read Rome’s official stance on reformation doctrine, particularly the doctrine of justification by faith alone. All people who hold to this doctrine (that is all who believe that the gospel of Jesus Christ is salvation by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone) have been declared by the Roman Catholic church as accursed. And yet if we (evangelicals) are right on the gospel and Rome is wrong (and there can only be one correct view) then they have actually placed the anathema on themselves.
Is The Thickness of Two Short Planks A Forgotten Divine Attribute?
“None of the systematic theologies I own include `being as thick as two short planks’ in their treatments of the divine attributes; but it appears that there is a trend today to rectify this neglected aspect of God’s being.”
Pornography — The Difference Being a Parent Makes
“Ryan Tate got more than he bargained for when he made his protest to Steve Jobs. In a strange way, we are now all in his debt, because the response from Steve Jobs now puts Apple on the line. In the end, the real meaning of this media eruption is less about computers and “apps” and more about parents and kids.”
Mark Zuckerberg responds to privacy concerns
“We have heard the feedback. There needs to be a simpler way to control your information. In the coming weeks, we will add privacy controls that are much simpler to use. We will also give you an easy way to turn off all third-party services. We are working hard to make these changes available as soon as possible. We hope you’ll be pleased with the result of our work and, as always, we’ll be eager to get your feedback.”
And this guy says don’t believe it (Why you shouldn’t trust Facebook’s apology)
“Facebook isn’t sorry. It says it’s sorry, but it isn’t sorry. Sure, it’ll come up with tweaked privacy settings to defray criticism, just like it did in December 2009. And in August 2009. And in March 2008. And in December 2007.”
50 Freely Available Professional Fonts For Your Designs
Need some really neat and professional fonts? This here is a very good list.


Writer, designer, father of two, husband of one. Armchair theologian. Inconsistent blogger and photographer. Still, I try.
