Category Archives: Morning Routine

Are You Allowing Suckers?

While I was gone to the CMI conference this year, there was some much needed rain at home, and upon returning my garden had gotten away from me. It was as though I had been gone for two weeks, rather than five days! I should probably acknowledge that I had indeed neglected it even before leaving, as preparation for the conference distracted me. Regardless of the why, I had some serious work to do.

My tomatoes are one of my most beloved garden plants, but also one of the most independent. Despite the tomato’s wish to be a weed, I conquer it by tying it to a stake and trimming any suckers that are drawing energy away from the main stem. They take up less room this way, allowing for more variety in my garden, and they produce better overall.

But here is the catch, sometime, when I have neglected things for a while, those suckers can become pretty hearty, and I battle with myself whether it’s really necessary to cut them off. I frequently have to give myself and the tomato a little pep-talk. “You need to focus,” I tell the tomato, explaining why we do not need all this bushy foliage. “Just get the thing done, and move on,” I tell myself.

It’s a bit of a regress-to-progress thing. It bothers me to cut off those suckers sometime, but I know it will be best in the end.

Despite this tomato-angst, gardening is a pleasant and quiet time for me. I am at leisure to think. I usually wander out there around 6:00 am, in my pajamas, with a cup of tea, just to look around. But then I don’t make it back inside for two or three hours. Of course, by then my tea is cold, I am filthy, and various parts of me hurt, but it’s still a wonderful way to start the day.

This morning as I was finishing the last of the tomato shape-up, I thought about how cutting off the suckers is like dealing with all the opportunities and responsibilities in our lives as homeschoolers. And how hard it is to deal with a sucker, once it has established itself well.

Sometimes those suckers even have a few wee tomatoes on them. That is when I almost have to close my eyes to do the cutting. I have to remind myself that I got the tomato into this situation by not looking at the plant regularly and dealing with the suckers when a mere pinch between two bare fingers would have sufficed.

Some people don’t cut their tomato suckers at all. Their plants are bushy and full, happy and produce tomatoes. So, I ask myself again, is this pruning necessary? I guess it depends on what I want to get out of this year’s crop. Is it enough to get some tomatoes, or do I want my plants to reach their full potential?

So, what are the potential suckers in your life, your homeschool? Are you using a method to teach reading besides what Mason says in Volume 1, pages 199-230? Are you cramming your teenager’s five days and 20 hours of morning lesson into four days, so you can leave Friday free for social time? Are you trying to keep each of your children in a different AO year, instead of doing more subjects together? Are you overlooking the blessing of having six children, because you are concerned that you are not getting enough done?

I’m sure there are a lot of other potential suckers. Only you know the ones that are likely to sneak up on you and your family. And maybe there are some that will make an appearance, which you didn’t see coming. Good things, but not the best thing, as my dear friend Natalie says.

Maybe you need to close your eyes and cut. Maybe you need to give yourself a pep-talk. I can tell you, that where suckers have been cut in our lives, we have never looked back with regret. I wouldn’t have expected that, but it’s true.

Related:
Initial Questions and Considerations, Scheduling
Summer is a Good Time to Practice
One Little Boy Prepared For the Day

Recalibrate Your Morning Routine

I always use summer and Christmas break to “recalibrate” my morning routine. You see, things change from time to time, and habits fall behind. A period of sickness will make me give up everything but the necessities during the mornings before school, and we all know that the habits we are talking about here can be broke in a few short days.

They say it takes 30 days to create a habit, but let’s face it, I can lose the habit of exercise in just a couple of days. Then I have to put in the 30 days all over again! So summer and Christmas break is when I do this.

Another important aspect of recalibrating my morning is figuring out when I need to start. For instance, if I want to start school at 9:00, and my morning routine takes 3 hours, then I must get up by 6:00. Periods of time with no 9:00 finishing line help me figure out how long my morning routine takes without additional stress.

First, I consider my wish list – what I want to get done in the morning. For me this list includes:

  • Quiet time (Bible and tea)
  • Exercise
  • Meals (breakfast, some dinner prep)
  • Pick up (my room and bathroom)
  • Laundry (a load or two)
  • Possibly a project (changing the kombucha, writing a blog, etc.)

Then I work out the best order to do all of this. I know exercise has to come early in my list, because if I work on a project, time will likely get away from me, and I won’t get time to exercise. On that same note, most projects have to be done last in my routine. It’s also much easier to exercise before the kids wake up and start vying for my attention.  After I exercise my feet move faster, so I find that’s a good time to do moving items on my list. For that same reason, sitting down to read my Bible or drink hot tea doesn’t work after exercise, so I plan to do it before. Also, my house is two-story, and I don’t want to go up and down stairs a lot, so I plan around that. In the end I find a pattern that works for me, and then I do it in that order every day.

“If you don’t plan out your behaviors, then you rely on your willpower and motivation to inspire you to act. But if you do plan out when and where you are going to perform a new behavior, your goal has a time and a space to live in the real world. This shift in perspective allows your environment to act as a cue for your new behavior.” -James Clear, jamesclear.com, author of the free guide Transform Your Habits

So, my routine becomes:

Upstairs –

  • Make my bed, put on shoes (I exercise in my pjs), and grab the dirty clothes pile

Downstairs –

  • Sort the clothes, start a load of laundry and fold what is in the dryer
  • Clean litter box (which is in the laundry room)
  • Make tea and read my Bible while enjoying a cup
  • Do 30 minutes of exercise (treadmill is in the laundry room)
  • Move now completed laundry to dryer, and fold what I removed (because I’m still in the laundry room)
  • Check calendar (so I can consider the best dinner plan and how I will dress)
  • Possibly start dinner or do some prep (at the least have a plan)
  • Make breakfast (wake up the kids)

Back upstairs – (take folded laundry with me)

  • Put laundry away
  • Shower and dress for the day
  • Wipe down my bathroom and head back downstairs

Back downstairs –

  • Work on a project if there is time

If I do this routine day after day and note how long it takes, then I know how early I need to get up in the morning to be done by a certain time. For a while, my morning routine wishlist meant that I would have to get up by 5:00! That was just too early for me, so I had to cut some things down. For instance, instead of exercising for an hour, I had to figure out how to exercise smarter for 30 minutes. Instead of participating in a Bible study that required 30-45 minutes to complete each morning, I just needed to read a chapter on my own. Instead of completing two loads of laundry, I needed to just get one done.

My list above works for me. I can complete it in two hours if I stay focused. By doing it in order, I don’t have to think about it. Which means it requires less will power.

Here’s the best part – as I begin my day, the part that begins after my morning routine, I have a bunch of accomplishments under my belt. I am already having a successful day! I have exercised! I have completed two loads laundry and they are put away! I have started my day with quiet time before the Lord! I’ve had a little “me” time before the kids have awakened. I am dressed and ready to go wherever I need to. I have a plan for dinner, if not an actual dinner started. I feel successfully and it’s only 9:00 am!

Think about using these last couple of weeks of summer to recalibrate your morning. (And think about me as I prepare to move to a house with no laundry room! My whole routine will have to change.)

Related:
Good Morning Sunshine!
Summer is a Good Time to Practice
A Mom’s Habit of Attention

Summer is a Good Time to Practice

My family owns a lake house that is only fifteen minutes from my house, and it is by far our favorite place to spend our summers. Some days it’s just our immediate family, and other times the whole extended family shows up, including guests, and it becomes a party!

There is a standing rule for dinner: each family brings their own meat to barbecue and a side dish that is enough to feed their own family. This way, if we end up being the only ones out there on a particular night, we have enough to eat. But if more families show up, we share our side dishes and have a potluck.

In order to facilitate this summer lifestyle, some planning has to take place, because once I leave the house with the kids, I do not return until bedtime. This can be a good thing if I’m prepared, or a bad thing if I’m not.

I get up in the morning and make dinner first thing. This may include throwing some things in the crock-pot (my absolute favorite kitchen tool,) or it may mean I just do all the prep work for dinner. I have to think of every detail, because I don’t want to end up out at the lake with my salad, but no dressing. Furthermore, I do not want to end up at the lake needing to do a bunch of prep work. I will not be very happy with myself if everyone is having fun swimming and I need to cut vegetables.

About this time my kids are starting to wake up, so I make breakfast. I want to be sure they have a good breakfast, because I know they will be expending a lot of energy during this day.

Once breakfast is finished, we all work together to pack a lunch and any snacks that we will want that afternoon.

With all of the meals for the day complete, the kitchen gets cleaned fully, to be left until the following day. Really! All kitchen work is done for the day, and we are all still in our PJs!

In our family everyone has a set of morning routines and afternoon routines. Basically it’s a list of everyone’s chores. These routines include personal hygiene, care of pets, including food pets, and housework. Because we will be gone all day at the lake, both sets of routines have to be completed before we leave the house.

Lastly, everyone makes sure they pack what they need for the day. Each child is responsible for themselves. This includes a swimsuit, dry clothes, and even a sweatshirt in case the evening is cool. They may choose to pack something like a sketchbook and paints, or a book.

And out the door we go! Our meals are done or prepared, (we take it all with us,) our chores are done, our house is clean, and we can have fun, with peace of mind, for the rest of the day.

I hope you made it this far, even if you don’t have a lake house to go to, because I suspect there is someplace you can go. Charlotte Mason said that, “A journey of twenty minutes by rail or omnibus, and a luncheon basket, will make a day in the country possible to most town dwellers; and if one day, why not many, even every suitable day?” CM vol 1 pg 44

Why not have a routine for the summer: Mondays at one park, Tuesdays at another, visit me on Wednesdays ;-), swim in the neighbors pool on Thursday, and spend Fridays in your own backyard. But don’t neglect the new morning routine just because you are staying “home” that last day. Do it all, and enjoy your day outside without worrying about what needs to be done inside.

“…make a new rule of life, Never be within doors when you can rightly be without.” CM vol 1 pg 44

I have several friends who say they will continue school this summer after taking just a short break. I think this is a fine idea, but if the actual reason is because they don’t want to lose their school momentum, and because they don’t want to get bored with nothing to do this summer, then I would make a suggestion. What if this summer were used to practice what Charlotte Mason says about being outside? What if you added a lesson to the morning routine I described above, and then as you got better at this new habit of preparing for your afternoon out, you added another lesson? Eventually you might find that you can do a couple of hours of school in the morning before you headed out for your afternoon in the fields.

You could use this summer as a time to practice. 

Imagine if you started the next school year as a professional-morning-routine-mom! Instead of kissing goodbye to summer, instead of gathering around the table to start another school year with an attitude of doom and gloom, you would be able to tell your kids, “Let’s keep doing the same thing we’ve been doing, with just a couple more hours thrown in for school.” In fact, as the heat of August sets in, you could just up the school hours by a half hour per week, and no one would feel the pain of the end of summer.

In the PNEU schools all students started at 9:00am. Students in grades 1-3 finished school at 11:30, grades 4-6 finished at noon, and the rest finished at 1:00. Afternoon hours were free from bookwork, and were supposed to be spent doing nature work, taking walks and playing games.

In order to pull off a schedule like this, two things must be in place: 1) a school schedule that you adhere to, and 2) a morning routine that frees up the rest of your day.

So think about what I’m suggesting. Think about using this summer to practice doing what needs to be done in order to implement a true Charlotte Mason education method in your home.

Let me repeat, that I venture to suggest, not what is practicable in any household, but what seems to me absolutely best for the children; and that, in the faith that mothers work wonders once they are convinced that wonders are demanded of them” – Charlotte Mason, vol 1, pg 43

Related: 
Good Morning Sunshine!
Out-Of-Door Life – An Outline