We wake up in the morning about an hour before dawn, Zarra having a feed and a nappy change, in the process waking the twins who climb into bed next to dad. As dawn’s tendrils feel into the window in our bedroom, the other kids get in as well, so there’s nine in the bed, and Balthazar says ‘roll over…..roll over’, so we all roll over and Griffyn and Lilly fall out……to go and collect up cups and bottles, and put on the hot water to boil, and start the process of our greatest family ritual, the cup of tea, ecco, or hot chocolate in the morning. Then there’s seven in the bed and little Max says ‘roll over…..roll over’, so we all roll over and Spiral fall’s out……..to hop back in her bed in the loungeroom where the three big kids have been sleeping so they can tell each other stories as they go to sleep at night and hang out together. Despite many people disbelieving us, we all really like each other, and feel most supported and ourselves when we’re all together, either hanging out at home or going on an adventure. Then there’s six in the bed and no-one says ‘roll over……roll over’, cause it’s cold outside and Max and Zarra are asleep. A bit later there’s six in the bed, and mummy says ‘roll over…..roll over’, so we all roll over and Balthazar falls out to go and see what all the others are up to. Then there’s five in the bed and Merlin says ‘roll over……roll over’, but nobody does so he gets out. And we hear later on that he’s got a full nappy so Currawong gets out to change his nappy and pour the hot water. (With a slight detour to make sure that Merlin’s not beating the crap out of my laptop) So there’s three in the bed and Max wakes up and rolls over……rolls over, and gets out of bed to see where everyone is. And a bit later I hear that Max has a nappy that needs dealing with too, so I roll over…..roll over, and get out of bed to leave Zarra asleep on his own for a bit.
Babie’s are changed and climbing into the big bed in the
loungeroom with the other kids to consume their ‘hot juices’, ( another bizarre
family ritual, dating back to when Griffyn was about three and a total apple
juice nut, so everything to drink was ‘juice’, and cups of tea were ‘hot
juices’ ) Currawong and I take turns in the shower (swapping saucy comments as
we pass) to warm up and start the day fresh, while the kids are watching Saddle
Club from the library. I jump out,
dress warm, and mix up corn and rice puffs with honey and milk to feed the boys
as Zarra is still asleep. All the
other kids are in various states of consuming breakfast and a big discussion is
going on about how they hate the snobby girl in Saddle Club. I tell em I reckon she’s the best
character cause she’s got spunk and imagination, and the other girls are all a
bit too nice for my liking, and this starts up a conversation about how there’s
always goodies and baddies in movies, and the baddies never win, and then I ask
them if that’s the way it happens in real life. And it’s not hard to think that the baddies win far more
often than happens in movies, cause they’re running our corporations and
governments and militaries and all the other institutions that are messing with
our planet and it’s future. Zarra
wakes up.
Then us big people say ‘let’s do a big clean up, and we can
get it all done and then just hang out for the rest of the day’, and between us
all we whip around and get everything ship shape. I get a bit big animal growly with the kids when one of them
is wandering in a circuitous fashion to the bathroom carrying one sock for the
washing, but we get beyond all that and get the space sparkly. Lilly does benches, lots of compost and some general tidying,
Griffyn does the floors and a whip around which he’s a bit of a legend at,
Currawong does the recycling in the bathroom, and I sweep the floors. While Spiral’s holding Zarra, Balthazar
is wandering round having sporadic bursts of a tantrum about something or
another (he’s three…..no more needs be said), and the twins are doing their
best to merrily get in the way.
Max’s favourite trick is standing in the sweeping up pile, treading it
under his feet, and spreading it in pretty patterns. We get a surprisingly large amount done really quickly when
we do it all together.
For a while there’s general grazing going on, a few rice
cakes here, a few apples there, as the big kids go off for a walk down to the
Coffee Club, and the twins mill around doing cute twin things. Like sitting on the verandah hanging on
the rail and looking out at the sky and the birds and hoping to spot a Bush
Turkey. And watching the neighbours
cows who often free range on our grass. I take a moment to hang out with Zarra,
stare in each others eyes and smile lots.
The big kids go off on walks often, and adventure round Billen or just
make their own fun. Just lately
they’ve been getting into slapping foam pool noodles on the ground in a way
that makes a huge ricochet like a gun shot, they like listening to the echo,
and for a few days they filmed each other pretending to have huge punch ups,
and someone out of the shot slapping the noodle in time with the punches. Maybe a touch violent, but a fair call
too in a culture where the media is often about aggression, fighting, and the
eternal good versus bad.
When they’re back from the walk, we all move around between housey
pursuits. Merlin falls asleep on
the lounge. I spend some time
sitting on the computer replying to messages on facebook whilst feeding Zarra, and
then hand it on to Griff searching on the internet for nerf guns ( another huge
conversation that we all have about why he likes them, what they mean to him,
why we don’t like them, what they mean to us, how we respect his right to like
what he likes, how he can respect our opinions by using guns responsibly around
us, what the rules are for gun possession – even toys need to be treated as the
real thing if you want to develop a healthy relationship with them). Lilly sits on the bed on the verandah
drawing pictures, and Currawong reads Paul Jennings stories on the couch, while
Balthazar, Max and Merlin take turns bike riding the circuit round the verandah
and house. Lilly helps me write
this, giving me tips on the ‘roll over’ bit, and reminding me of stuff. Meanwhile Max goes to sleep now that
Merlin’s awake, as they often co-ordinate sleeping at different times these
days. Currawong gets a phone call
from a phone company and ends up talking about how he drums and I crochet and
write, and about homeschooling……as you do…….and a myriad other little things
and dynamics go on all the while.
A lot of people ask me about what we do with our kids, if we
do any formal schooling, are they socialised?, how are they
learning?...............
And it’s hard to say exactly what we do. It varies. And changes.
And most of our collective learning is what’s going on as we tumble
through our days. The
conversations we have about things that are going on and different ways of
looking at them. The discussions
inspired by the science that Currawong is consuming with an insatiable hunger
about our universe, and our earth, and it’s animals, and geology, and all the
rest of it. The answers to
questions that we all come up with together, consulting each other about how
else it could be approached. Like
what colour dinosaurs are, and what the biggest horses, dogs, and cats are, and
micro chips, and google glasses, and plasma. And it’s
amazing how much maths, science, geography, English, art, philosophy, history,
and music can be learnt about through interesting conversations that the kids
actually remember. The explaining
and demonstrating needed to translate between the little kids and the big kids
and what they are teaching each other by example. The talks me and Currawong have about what we’ve taught them
with our functional and dysfunctional family patterns, and how to change them
all if we need. The depth to which
we know our children, and their special needs and strengths and areas in which
we realise we have to really caretake them. The way how all of us reference and cross reference our
experiences and favourite learnings to each other. Adding layers to our combined stories that bring a new
lesson with it. The differing
measures of love and respect, and disregard and grumpiness that we all treat
each other with, and the working out between us all how to always do it
better.
And our adventures into the outside world! We go and hang out at the Bush Theatre
in Nimbin sometimes on a Wednesday for basketweaving, and there are other
homeschooled kids and parents, and lots of other women making fantastic fibre
artworks, and gorgeous crones and artisans teaching and showing how to weave
magical baskets. They’re all
colourfully and uniquely dressed, and bring rare and beautiful instruments, and
now and again at an unappointed time, everyone will draw close and break out
the music, as Currawong sits on his drums and gently keeps his drum song steady
within it. If we’re ever craving company or
conversation from others, we just drive into Nimbin and park our home away from
home – our van – on the main street.
And that’s all we have to do really. By the time the kids have erupted from the van and
instantaneously decided they need a lolly or a walk or have seen a friend or
want to pat a dog, I sit next to Zarra where I stay for the first 6 months or
so of my baby’s journey in vehicles, and someone is bound to come up and chat
to me as I pull him out of his baby seat and give him a feed in my comfy velvet
bound spot. I don’t even have to
leave the van to have deep and meaningfuls, and Currawong often just pulls his
drums out and drops some rhythms in the park, while we catch up or have chats
or co-ordinate who’s going where. There’s
all these gorgeous teenager girls in town who love our kids, and anytime we
rock up will pick up a baby and take them off for a walk, or let a whole mob of
them straggle along behind them as they do their thing on the street. We seem to have some seriously magical
parking karma in Nimbin. We always
manage to be able to pull up just where the action is. Like Michael Lusty’s wake, when we were
parked virtually on top of the drumming circle, all our friends and loved ones
standing round our van and hanging out with our little people while Currawong
drummed and I danced.
I read a quote on facebook the other day, that was written
in chalk on a blackboard that said “Forced Association is NOT Socialisation” And it made me think. Throughout the course of our days, we
come across anyone from brand new babies to grandparents and crones, and our
kids can slide along the age scale as easy as swinging on a see saw with anyone
our paths cross. Nobody scares
them, and they’re always willing to talk to anyone, respectfully and honestly,
like us, their role models, try to be with everyone we meet. I know where they are and am
personally connected with the people they hang out with. We all learn together and approach
everything in life with curiosity and imagination.
And when it all comes down to it, and after much reflection
about our children, society, and our choice to keep them at home, what’s most
important to me is that we protect our kids as much as we possibly can from any
external force that wishes to control, shape, or teach them how to ‘be’ in any
other way than they naturally are.
It’s taken me till the ripe old age of 41 to know who I am, what I’m
here for, and to have the confidence to be it in the world. I want my kids to be at this point a helluva
lot earlier than me!! All I want
really is that they simply have the confidence to be themselves.
Anyway, I got a bit off course. Back to our day.
Over the course of our day we’ve had three visitors, folks
from the community that just randomly pop in. One of the funkiest grandma’s there ever was, and the fella
who lives in her caravan in return for helping round her property. He gets by doing gardening for a cheap
rate, and joins with many of the other folk round here carving unique
lifestyles and paths towards income.
People drop in all the time
at our joint, for a quick and inspirational chat, or to give us clothes, shoes,
veggies, or other random generous gifts.
And we’re always open for people in need. Who need somewhere to stay, or some food, or some company……after
Michael Lusty’s death, the pact we made to not let anyone slip through our net
who is in need, has been regularly taken up. Our kids love visitors.
About this time is when we start getting ready for dinner,
another quick clean up happens (you’ve got no idea how much dross can be
scattered on the floor by twin toddlers and a three year old, especially when
one of their favourite games that’s almost impossible to stop them from doing,
is playing with the cold ash from the fire and making roads and railways in
it….)
And tonight is the first night that it’s cold enough to have
a fire, so the lounges get moved close, and the little kids watch enraptured,
as we’ve not had an open fire in our living space before, and when it’s lit,
the kids all go a little hazy and dreamy as they gaze into the fire. But Max and Merlin being Max and
Merlin, it’s not long before they realise that putting the lounges close to the
fire means they can jump up on the bench, so of course they do, and give dad a
bit of help cooking dinner.
Then after dinner it’s the time when we’ll sit around and
watch something – a documentary, or a kids movie, or a series that we’ve gotten
into (Darling Buds of May was a big hit, and so was My Favourite Martian and
Get Smart). Then it’s time for
some books before bed, and nappies are changed again, pyjama’s put on, beds made,
hot juices for the night furnished, and all the little sleepy babies go to
sleep nicely around 8…..we’ve trained them well……and Currawong and I get to
spend a little time conversing without interruptions, gazing in the fire, and
remembering all the love we have between each other that’s created such a wonderful
full life.
good morning my dear.thanks for starting my day with yours...love, babz
ReplyDeleteLove you Babz:)
Delete"what’s most important to me is that we protect our kids as much as we possibly can from any external force that wishes to control, shape, or teach them how to ‘be’ in any other way than they naturally are."
ReplyDeleteThis is so important to us too!
I think you have the most amazing, colourful, full, beautiful, genuine life! Your kids are going to have the best memories!
Thank you for sharing your day :)
Ain't it just the thing though!! We spend all our time going through school, being shaped, educated, formed, conformed, till we get to our late twenties and go 'what the hell! Who am I again? What did I want to do before you dumped all that junk in my head about who I'm 'meant' to be?' And then spend our later years undoing it, and healing from it, and buying expensive therapy. Why not just leave em alone in the first place?
DeleteThanks for your feedback gorgeous woman :) From what I can see, you're doing pretty beautifully in the genuine life thing too :)
Thanks again :)
Oh Hellena,
ReplyDeleteI love your days, so much togetherness.
Here in Germany society and policy goes ways now I do not like.
More and more very little children are in daycare, single mothers have to go to work when the youngest kid is older than three years old...
Often so much stress and very few family life.
I am interesting in the Australian social system.
Is it possible for you both to stay at home because you have so many children?
I wish you a blessed and joyful time.
Time with children is never wasted.
Susanne
Yeah Susanne, I've had a lot of German connections over the years, loved my time passing through there as a young thing, and the rules is what most folk I've met seem to have had the most problem with. And those rules are what our family does their best to flow around and with in a way that suits all.
DeleteThe Australian social system is awesome really. Probably one of the last strongholds of freedom left in the western world. To a certain degree anyway. And yes the amount of children we have creates more income from our government wages, but it's also how we choose to live, the goodwill and friendships we have around us based on gifting, trade and exchange, and for finding joys and learnings and adventures in the real world, and not the ones that cost so much money!
All good as far as I'm concerned :)
Such a beautiful bunch. It's lovely to hear of a family so happy in their own midst!
ReplyDeleteThanks darlin :)
DeleteOh Love.....how wonderful of you to share your day with us! It so reminds me of my own...except I now have teenagers hopping in bed with us....and 8pm isn't even close to their bedtimes!!
ReplyDeleteWould love to send Nerf guns to your Griff if you change your mind....my 14 year old is done with all of his and has offered to post them to you if you give the okay!
And drumming.....so many days I have my drum on my lap, it's my prayer, my language, my rhythm.
Much Love & Laughter!! Always, always, always!!
xoxo
Kelly
Oh Kelly, I got your comment when all the kids were about to go to bed, and read it out, and you shoulda seen the look on Griff's face!! He'd absolutely LOVE to get your sons Nerf guns if he wants to send em :) We actually let him get them, after all that research he did, and he's been really good with them. Going crazy often, but respecting when we all need a bit of time out from his guns and having a blast with his mates and sisters and brothers. And one of these days I'm going to work out how to get videos up here, and you'll love this one I've got of Currawong drumming with the twins taking turns to sit on his lap and help.....
DeleteJust send me an email and I can send you our address!
Thanks lovely one, and big love to you and yours too :)
Love you guys as ever, plotting ways to come and visit you in paradise... Xxx Elliecan
ReplyDeleteLove you toooo! And a visit would be grand.....lots of chatting and yummy foods :))
DeleteOhh thank you for sharing yoru warm cuddly inspiring day with us all.... So very rewarding to be you I can see :)
ReplyDeleteMy hats off to you and Currawong - and all your beloveds for supporting each other so deeply - I am genuinely moved by your sharing :)
Love Sufiyo
Thanks Sufiyo!! Glad I genuinely moved you :) And days around here are pretty wild, but always interesting!! Thanks darlin...
Delete