In the world of homeschooling, being secular is too often synonymous with being alone. I’ve talked about this before, I know.
Isolation is everywhere for the rigorous secular homeschooler. Because we aren’t using religious-based curricula, we’re isolated from the large local communities of Christian homeschoolers. We’re oddities on the Well Trained Minds forums. If we aren’t unschooling, we’re even isolated from a good portion of the secular community, who think we’re anal retentive and don’t let our kids have any fun. We’re oddities at the secular co-ops and on the Mothering.com forums.
I envy Christian homeschoolers. Yes, I poke fun at some Christian curricula, but I really do envy them. They have community, not just for their educational choices, but for their whole lives. They have a place to belong. Being part of a community and staying close to your family is praiseworthy. As long as you ascribe to the same viewpoints as your religion, isolation isn’t really a problem. Some religions definitely err way too far in the other direction and become wholly intrusive into people’s lives in an oppressive way, but feeling alone, having no one like you, those aren’t problems for a Christian homeschooler teaching Christian curricula within a large Christian community. They have curriculum support from large Christian curricula publishers. They have support from their churches for protecting their children from exposure to wordly, immoral, or questionably secular things. They have support from peers, who are also homeschooling. They may even have been homeschooled themselves, depending on their church. They have support from homeschooling forums, where they comprise a significant majority. They aren’t an aberration. They aren’t alone.
The secular world, however, seems to place great value on the ability to be alone. Grow up fast. Move away. Be independent. Fish don’t need bicycles! Multigenerational living is scoffable — the quintessential “thirty year old man living in his mom’s basement” stereotype. We’re encouraged to segregate our child by age early on, as the emphasis on same-age peers is huge. Children themselves are pushed to be independent so quickly — give up the family bed, go off to preschool, spend the night away from home, and of course, mom must return to work as soon as all this happens. Culturally, we seem to value isolation…and then medicate the side effects of it.
I admit that I’m lonely. I have a few homeschooling friends, whose support I value immensely, but I sometimes wrestle with this feeling of being a pariah, both in the greater world of homeschooling and in the rest of my life. I’m way, way too liberal, “hippie,” and secular for Christians (or any religion, really) and Christian homeschooling. I’m probably significantly more moderate and mainstream than some of my secular friends, though — not alternative lifestyle enough, not “crunchy” enough, too minivan-driving suburban cop’s wife. I’m stuck in the middle with Patchfire, and we cry so many dramatic tears together.
Where’s the middle ground? Where are my people? I’m too much of a heathen for most of the homeschoolers and not enough of a free spirit for the rest of them. Where is my tribe?
Secular Thursday posted late this week due to computer crash last night.
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[...] though. It has its own host of frustrations and difficulties. I’ve written before about the isolation that a classical, secular homeschooler can experience, my frustrations with religion being so [...]










I’m ex-Christian. Southern Baptist at that. My husband still goes to church sometimes. Personally I think he’s too scared of the possibility of hell to leave the church, plus his whole family is really into it. Yes, yes, yes to everything you’ve said. You don’t happen to live near me in Charleston, SC do you? Probably not. I have friends, but none who homeschool classically and secularly.
Nope, we’re a Metro Atlanta family.
I agree with everything you say, as I often feel isolated in the homeschooling world. You have a great blog, and I am glad to have stumbled across it today.
I hear you. I’m not enough of a hippie and I’m not enough of a mainstream mama…at new moms’ group playdates, I’m the only one cloth-diapering, and at LLL, I’m the only one who doesn’t own a mei tai. And my mom worries that if I wind up homeschooling (because our local schools kind of suck) I’ll turn into a conservative Christian. :p
I don’t make my own bread from scratch or buy organic chicken. I don’t teach Jesus math. Where do I belong?
I have a really good bread recipe. It’s just that I’m kinda lazy to make it all the time.
You’re worrying me! I really want to hs my daughter (we are lightly this year for K though she missed the cut of by a couple of weeks) next year, but what you’ve said is the only thing holding me back from commiting.
Don’t let me get you down too much. It’s certainly not stopping me from continuing to homeschool! Finding a buddy is so important. I’ve gotten a lot of satisfaction out of the homeschool co-op, too.
Also, I was having a rather down week, so don’t think I feel like this all the time.
I was on my 21st year of basically isolated homeschooling. When I finally started a group. Now we have 12 families that were isolated too. We are all really bonding. It is nice to know that you aren’t alone.
That is nice to know! Good for you for getting out there and finding your people.
I’m the quintessential “suburban soccer mom”, and I didn’t homeschool from the beginning. After pulling my children from “excellent” public schools for academic reasons (the school’s failure for the younger, the child’s advanced needs for the elder) I’m now a secular homeschooler of (only!) two – and I definitely don’t fit in! I’ve discovered more levels of religious zealots than I even knew existed before we began this journey…
I’m a minvan-driving cop’s wife, so I’m definitely the suburban mom stereotype in many ways. I also pulled my son from a supposedly excellent public school (we’re in the same county, though I don’t know if you’re city schools or county schools where you are) because of issues with the teacher and complete failure of the school to meet Captain Science’s needs.
Patchfire says you two do band together!
Hey! Small world! Friend of Desi here!
“Where’s the middle ground? Where are my people? I’m too much of a heathen for most of the homeschoolers and not enough of a free spirit for the rest of them. Where is my tribe?”
I really identify with your comments. I frequently feel that we don’t quite fit in anywhere as far as parenting and homeschooling are concerned. Most ‘mainstreamers’ would see me as very crunchy/hippy because I home birth, breastfeed for more than a year, EC, home educate, don’t belong to a formal religion etc. But the crunchy types think I’m conventional because I’m not into radical unschooling, we (selectively) vaccinate the children, we don’t do non evidence based (AKA alternative) medicine, we aren’t vegetarian or raw foodists or any kind of special diet, etc. Being home schoolers is minority enough, but we don’t seem to fit into any of the normal home ed categories and it is very isolating. Sigh…
I worry about that being my future sometimes. I’ve known for a long time that I want to homeschool my future-children, even though I’m far off from having children still (must finish university first, oh, and that finding-someone thing, too).
I do a lot of research online about homeschooling. Often, though, I find too much religion mixed into curricula. I want the structure, but I want it to be secular, and I’ve had (have) a lot of trouble finding that.
Your blog is a nice place for me though, makes me feel at home