Why I chose to attempt the 1000 Hours Outside Challenge

Have you ever just felt called to do something? It isn’t often that I get this feeling but every once in a while, I just know I am doing the right thing. I felt it with being a mom. I felt it with staying home and homeschooling. I felt it with this. Notice how it all centers around my kids? Yeah. There are mistakes I have made in my life. So many choices I have wondered or known weren’t the best. But my kids are not even close to one of them. With them, I know I am meant to be their mama. And I know I needed to attempt this challenge.

I love my children dearly, but with 4 pulling me in different directions, we have gotten away from time. Time together, time to ourselves, and time with nature. In this digital age, everything is instant gratification. Everything is here and now. But in nature, you have to wait for the ground to thaw, the plants to bloom, the leaves to fall, and the sun to rise. It always happens but only on its own time. I used to feel a connectedness to nature. Like I was home when I was outside. Some of my favorite memories from growing up are from being outside. I remember being outside from the time I woke up to the time I went to sleep practically in the summer. I remember being on my bike the entire day, rolling down the neighborhood hills.

Grandma and I gardening

This past year we had a great school year. We did a lot more together, it was more organized and we had so much fun (well if you ask me, if you ask Monkey and Monster, they probably have a different idea of how it went). But I still felt like something was missing. Then I read Call of the Wild+Free by Ainsley Arment (not an affiliate, just a fan) and wow. Then I read Home Grown by Ben Hewitt (also not an affiliate). I felt such a purity in the way they were living life. Exploring nature, spending time connecting to Earth and each other, living off of their land and it just called to me. This is what is missing. In my wanderings through the internet, I came across 1000 Hours Outside page and a wonderful community started and growing through the efforts of Ginny Yurich. We all know how competitive I am, so naturally we were going to do 1000 hours. But see, I didn’t think about it. I didn’t plan for it, and we fell WAY short. Because 1000 hours outside doesn’t seem like much until you calculate that that is almost 2.75 hours a day! Do you spend 3 hours outside a day? Yeah, most people don’t. So it takes some serious intentional planning. So I’ve started my plans. And along the way it may turn into not having to. But right now I have to say yes, when I want to say no. I have to make the plan, when I want to stay home.

Monkey has a screen addiction, lets face it my whole family does. But screens affect his mood a lot more than the rest of us. He eats, sleeps, and breathes screens. Shows, games, now web searches, and it doesn’t matter what. Tinkerbell, Barbie, Pokémon, if a screen is on, it has his attention. So to break us all of the habit I decided to hit us hard with not only starting our 1000 Hours Outside challenge but also taking away screens at the same time (at least during the week) right at the beginning of our year!

Monster punting the football at 7am on a Saturday

They pretty hated me for two days because they got their chores done and *gasp* didn’t get screens afterwards (insert horror scream here). Instead they played with LEGO, we have gone to the park, we have ridden bikes, played football with the neighbors, and gone on a walk, made chalk pictures, and eaten ice cream. We started 6 days ago and already have almost 21 hours hours logged. They won’t hate it forever. Because soon it will become part of them.

Playing in the stream in the Smoky Mountains

They will see trees, sticks, streams, insects, and everything in between, as home. They will learn to observe nature, care for nature, and experience nature and all of its beauty. They will ground themselves in their surroundings, get natural vitamin D, learn to listen to their body, explore, learn, and live. Is it the right thing for us to do? I don’t know. But I do know that I have said yes to going outside a lot more than I have said no to screens in the past 2 days. And for that, I may just make it to 1000 this year.

Boys aren’t harder… Children are hard

So something set me off a little. Someone said teaching boys is “harder” than girls. Let me first say this, I have taught both at the preschool level. Girls tend to be quieter and calmer, but not always. Boys are a completely different beast than girls. Biologically, physiologically, psychologically, they are different. But does that mean they are harder? NO! A loud and resounding no!

We need to get it out of our heads that boys “being boys” is a bad thing or that they are trying to make things more difficult for us. Don’t get me wrong, I have two boys. They wear me out. They talk back, they argue, they fight, they never stop moving, and they make me want wine more nights than not. (Sorry, not sorry!) But you know what, my daughter is 2 and also talks back, and argues (as well as a toddler can), and fights with swords, and ALSO never stops moving. Those are not boy/girl qualities. Those are natural personality traits that also are taught or nurtured in them.

My boys are very different creatures. Monkey is 9 years old. He is a talkative but sensitive soul. He thrives on perfection and words of affirmation. He loves cuddles and kisses on his terms but he will do anything to help anyone at any time. He also is logical, loves to learn and is very susceptible to the messages being sent to him through body language, spoken words, print and anything else. Monster is 7. He is loud, never stops moving from the time his feet hit the floor in the morning until he passes out each night. He loves running, jumping, isn’t always talkative but loves to tell stories. He has an imagination like no one else and a confidence I could only ever dream of. He is the sweetest most caring kid in the world and he loves to snuggle. He is the definition of ride-or-die and is always along for whatever adventure someone wants to go on. He just wants to spend time with you and will do anything for attention.

With that being said there are a few things I have learned from teaching these two very different kids the past 5 years (Geez… how has it already been that long).

  1. Meet them where they are. Stop listening to what they “should” know. That is arbitrary when they don’t already know it. Your 5 year old doesn’t know their colors? Not a big deal. Spend a week sorting colors, doing color hunts, pointing out colors everywhere. Your 5th grader doesn’t understand multiplication? Spend the year really delving into it. Helping them understand the concept, then the basics, then the tables, then how to understand what a multiplication problem may look like in the real world. Just work with them on what they need for the foundations that go to the next step, whatever that may be. You would be surprised at how easy the next step is when they actually grasp the principle before it.
  2. If they are a mover, don’t try to keep them still. All this does is frustrate them and you. Monster learned to read jumping up and down at a table. He is a strong reader, even if he doesn’t always like doing it. Was it frustrating to watch him bounce constantly while trying to sound out words… yes. But it was more frustrating to try to stop him and him whine and complain that he didn’t want to do it. Now at some point do they need to learn to sit still. Yes. But that point isn’t at 5. Kids want to move. Let them. (Also, to this day he prefers to stand to do work or sit on a balance ball. He has stopped jumping though). No matter the subject, movement can be part of it.
  3. Keep it simple. The first 3 years (K-2nd) I keep it so simple: Math, Reading, and Writing. Then I add in difficulty as they are able to. History, Geography, Science, it all comes. In 4th grade, Monkey is doing some science and History. We are doing Geography through cooking. It is a lot of hands on. If your child reads to learn, give them lots of rich books about the topic you are working on. If your child learns by watching, documentaries or accurate movies are great.
  4. When you don’t know, learn with them. My kids will ask questions I don’t know. We look up the answer together. We both learn something new and they love that they stumped me. And they love that I take the time to do it with them.
  5. When the day is hard, stop. We have the luxury in our state, to not have to log hours or days. This gives us the freedom to do as we wish when it comes to timing. If I am having a rough day (as I do with my own mental health) I will try to take a step back. What is better for them in the long run? Learning those lessons with Mommy losing her mind with frustration (Yeah, I am far from perfect and I am still learning to not take out my frustrations on my family), or taking the day off so that I can focus on me and they can have fun. I can tell you, I don’t know what I learned on what day in school. I do remember being told as a senior in high school on a particularly stressful day, that I wasn’t going to school and I was having my books taken away from me. I was allowed to do whatever I wanted as long as it didn’t involve school. And that mindset shift led to me getting straight A’s for the first time ever.

I am not saying teaching boys is easier. But teaching boys isn’t any harder than teaching girls. It isn’t an issue with their sex. It is learning to teach to each child’s way of learning. That is why it is so difficult for public school teachers to teach so many students. What works for one, doesn’t work for the other. It isn’t their fault. They have 30 kids in their class with all different styles. I almost guarantee that we would have been told at least one of our children has ADD or ADHD or are even just “problem” children. Are they? Maybe. There are certain things like a lack of focus and inability to complete a task that may warrant a discussion. But they are 7 and 9. They are still learning. Just like Mermaid will still be learning at that age. Will it look different? Probably. Will it be harder? Not if I trust myself and listen to my child, even when they aren’t talking (no matter how rare that is).