Mom-ninja. Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 while you're driving 7+ hours with your kids you hear, "Have we reached our destination yet?" about 1,000x. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tree House Academy Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 LOL! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BikeBookBread Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Your 5 year old says, "I am most displeased!"* *she's been watching Pride & Prejudice and thinks Catherine de Burgh is a big old meany-face. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dcjlkplus3 Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 a 5 year old who comments on the "spectacular rainbow" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jean in Newcastle Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 a child who does not run and play but instead "leaps and frolics". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jenn- Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 while you're driving 7+ hours with your kids you hear, "Have we reached our destination yet?" about 1,000x. See in my family, this would mean Mommy relies too heavily on TomTom to get her places. :blush: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
plimsoll Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 A ten-year old says, "Grandma, it was a figure of speech!" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ThatCyndiGirl Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 We rarely have to use Pedialyte and I had no idea that it had to be refrigerated. So, I used it in the winter of 2005 and put it back into the bathroom cabinet. You know, the bathroom that is hot and moist. So, when we needed it again in 2006 I took it back down from the cabinet I noticed a large black furry chunk of mold floating most beautifullly around in the bottle. I thought it was so cool that I called all of my homeschooling mom friends to see if their kids wanted to look at it, too! We were making plans to buy agar plates and coils until my dh reminded me that culturing an unknown might be dangerous. Party Pooper! :glare: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dooley Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 You might be a homeschooler if.....you find a dead ray at the beach and bring it home to dissect. ....you prick your finger to bleed on the slide for all the kids looking at the new microscope.....you all eat corn and time how long it takes to "come out the other end".... I could go on... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johnandtinagilbert Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 a child who does not run and play but instead "leaps and frolics". I enjoyed them all, but particularly liked that one :) I'm envisioning my children leaping and frolicking! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ncmomo3 Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 You ask your dd-12 to complete some task and she replies "Yes, most certainly." :001_huh: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Garga Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Your four year old uses the word "incidentally" in everyday conversation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MamaT Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Your son's fellow baseball players ask him to stop using "big words" so they can understand him. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthwestMom Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Your son wants to walk his new puppy past the neighborhood elementary school..... coincidentally at recess time. And maybe eat a candy bar while he does it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lionfamily1999 Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Luke fears "dangerous creatures" in his closet :rofl: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mirth Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Your five y.o. recites "Jabberwocky" for fun. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
momto2Cs Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Your 8 year old son's favorite word is "misnomer", and your young kids say things such as "that is most inappropriate". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
inactive Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 your son "helps" the appliance repair man. :lol: (It was SO cute -- he was right there talking the man's ear off while he was testing something electrical...telling him all about circuits and current, etc.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Carrie12345 Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 Your 11yo organizes a class on the history of baseball. Your 7yo knows both definitions of "socialize". Your 6yo wants to teach her 2yo brother addition. Your 2yo's favorite toys are math manipulatives. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thescrappyhomeschooler Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 . . . your kindergartener uses "literally" and "figuratively" in everyday speech. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scarlett Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 If your 9 year old son loves the shirt I bought him that says, 'I only go to school for the girls.' Somehow that just cracks him up....I'm the only 'girl' in his school. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kalanamak Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 You have a mummified fish that smells of rosemary in your dining room. Child takes mummy to a 4th of July party. You have a lifesized drawing of your son's insides above the stairwell, and he had to counseled out of telling people "Look, my testicles are purple". Your child, 5, on being encouraged to feel a fetus kicking, looks up at the happy mother and says "That's some borborygmi." Your child, at 4, convinces a group of little boys to run through the woods in fear of Medusa, and when they come upon a little girl with a huge head of bright red ringlets, all come screaming out of the woods like a wolf is upon them. Your child makes strangers in a 20 foot radius clutch their purses by drawing in his breath dramatically and following it with "I know that painting" or "I know this music". When you tell your co-workers your 2 year old heard music in a store and rushed to tell you "That's Bach", and they reply "What's a Bach?" When you hear your child tell a peer "Well, you CAN eat cake, it is physically POSSible to eat cake, the question is if we MAY." When your child asks what muscle just made him vomit all over his bed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NorthwestMom Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 These are cracking me up! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lionfamily1999 Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 You have a mummified fish that smells of rosemary in your dining room. Child takes mummy to a 4th of July party. You have a lifesized drawing of your son's insides above the stairwell, and he had to counseled out of telling people "Look, my testicles are purple". Your child, 5, on being encouraged to feel a fetus kicking, looks up at the happy mother and says "That's some borborygmi." Your child, at 4, convinces a group of little boys to run through the woods in fear of Medusa, and when they come upon a little girl with a huge head of bright red ringlets, all come screaming out of the woods like a wolf is upon them. Your child makes strangers in a 20 foot radius clutch their purses by drawing in his breath dramatically and following it with "I know that painting" or "I know this music". When you tell your co-workers your 2 year old heard music in a store and rushed to tell you "That's Bach", and they reply "What's a Bach?" When you hear your child tell a peer "Well, you CAN eat cake, it is physically POSSible to eat cake, the question is if we MAY." When your child asks what muscle just made him vomit all over his bed. Loled all over your post. You win! Some are so familiar (can/may, or the deep quivering draw of breath), others are so hillariously yours alone ;) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Impish Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 You know you're a home schooler when: Your 4 yo asks another child at the playground, "What language were you and your Daddy speaking? I know it wasn't English, French, or Spanish..." When you open your door to find several preteen girls who, rather than asking if Diva can come play, asks if she can bring out her 'really cool science book' When your husband brings home an old wasps nest from work so the kids can have a neat science experience When your husband tells you the guys at work beg him not to discuss curriculum, why public schools are inferior, or any more 'of that homeschool stuff' When describing something in history, your 4 yo cocks his head suspiciously at you, and announces, "I just can't visualize that!" When your kids ask the nurse if we could be in the other exam room, since Princess has an ear infection, and there's a poster there on the wall about ear infections, and they want to see whats going on. When your 4 yo is having his chest listened to at the Drs, and asks him, "You do know that its my throat thats the problem, not my heart or lungs?" When the same 4yo sighs and says, "Figures. Just another virus." When coming back from the Drs, the children demand to pull out the biology text from my college to see exactly what the problem the Dr says is, what the definition is, and if he's right about treating it. When your 4yo uses the terms, 'ignorant' 'visualize' 'sarcastic' properly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HarbourLights Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 When your doing a mosaics craft on a rainy day with the "singers & standards" music station on and one four year old boy looks up and says "It's so quiet... this is very relaxing!" and the other four year old boy states "I like this music, it's makes me feel peaceful." and they both turn back to their mosaics deep in concentration. Seriously?? I am LOVING homeschooling! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibraryLover Posted September 16, 2009 Share Posted September 16, 2009 (edited) Your kids say, "Thank God! We do not have to get up early and be on a school bus by 6:30!"" Edited September 17, 2009 by LibraryLover Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LibraryLover Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 . . . your kindergartener uses "literally" and "figuratively" in everyday speech. LOL Sweet. There was a little girl in our old neighborhood, who was in the neighborhood school's kindergarten at the time. She once said to me, "Your dogs are so cute, but they make me feel ambivalent. They are so sweet, but they are also so energetic! They worry me". She was the cutest thing and I've often wished I could count her in among the homeschooling. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Loupelou Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 ... when the 5 and 6 yr. old discuss their favorite composers, Tchaikovsky or Mozart ...when you have more than one science experiment on your kitchen windowsill, the dead dragonfly found on the porch, or the piece of banana being observed for signs of mold ...when dd saves a bit of tongue ripped out by her retainer to study under the microscope and ds 6 swallows it by accident ...when dd finds some copper piping, nylon rope, and old tent material, lashes it all together and makes a beautiful tepee ...when dd hunkers down in the basement with a vast number of newspapers and fashions a geodesic dome ...when dd 5 states to a playmate that her "behavior was very inappropriate and unacceptable":001_huh: ( I think that may be a reflection on my parenting) ...when your children say things like "it's an honor", or "I am so pleased" ...when dd 5 wants to point out the McDonald Islands or Chile on the world map for all of your visitors ...when the dining room table is used more often to build rockets, airplanes, and helicopters than for eating purposes ...when a trip to the grocery store is a cross curricular activity involving budgeting, handwriting, spelling, basic math skills, food group discussion, finding easy words to read, etc. ...when the only way your dc can recite the months or math facts is with a song ...when you have pictures of the family star gazing, in sleeping bags, in the snow, at midnight, in December ...when you take a trip to the park the kids bring their nature journals and baggies for any specimens they may collect Somebody needs to take this stuff and write a book! :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alphabetika Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Your 15-year-old dd is lying on the front lawn, cradling her newborn sister, reading (voluntarily, not for school), George Orwell's 1984. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alphabetika Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Your 10-year-old flops down on the bed next to you and says, "Don't you love the word 'vicinity?' I do, but not as much as I love the words "vainglorious' and 'Arkansas.'" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
eternalknot Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 For the past year, the running joke between you and your 8 year old is to end random conversations with, "And my opinion is Carthage must be destroyed!" ... through which two of his non-homeschool friends became hooked on Ancient Rome :) my son has his own lending library, and loves that his friends are able to share his enthusiasm for historical fiction of that era. Your 3 year old thinks "going to school" means taking a read-aloud to Starbucks on Mondays and Wednesdays. Her friends started pre-K this year and she doesn't understand that they "go to school" very differently than we do! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mama2cntrykids Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 ...if your 8 y/o corrects his grandma's grammar usage, lol! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
runamuk Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 ...if your 5yo askes you not to take pictures because the "flash is blinding". Or tells you that touching his head as you walk past is disturbing him. Or if he only uses "right" to indicate direction or position and "correct" any other time. Or will stop to listen to classical music and then ask me to buy the cd. ...if your 9yo has to explain a pun to her grandmother. And takes her magifying glass with her everywhere, in case she sees an interesting "specimen". Or says "the Nat Geo special on Ancient Egypt" when asked what her favorite movie is. Or would rather look under the microscope at things she's gathered from around the house than play Barbies with the neighborhood girls. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hsmom3tn Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 (edited) ... your children are constantly pointing out other people's grammatical errors. (respectfully, they don't do this to adults, but will always tell me about it later) .... your family grows mold in the house - on purpose, (in petri dishes, of course :D). .... your children are always searching for the irony, similes, metaphors, etc., in everything, so that they can see who can be the first to point it out. .... your children would rather watch Animal Planet or Discovery Channel than anything else on TV. .... your 9 year old daughters ask to watch Pride and Prejudice, and then go on to point out that the columns on Bingley's house are Ionic style. .... your girls would rather play with bugs than Barbies. .... by the age of 10, your kids have already read more books than you read during your entire childhood and half of your adult life. .... you keep a box of Ziploc bags in your car/van incase you find a really cool (dead) insect in a parking lot somewhere. .... you have 75-100 library books in your home every day because you go to the library almost every day to return books, but leave with just as many, if not more. .... your children's favorite "class" in school is not lunch or recess, but poetry. :001_smile: .... you, or many people that you know, raise chickens. .... you get soooo excited about meeting Linda Hobar or Uncle Josh, but don't care at all that you literally bumped into Justin Timberlake in a Target store. .... your children don't know who Justin Timberlake is (or most other "pop icons"). .... your children hear The Four Seasons playing and they say, "Hey Mom, it's the red-headed priest!" Edited September 17, 2009 by hsmom3tn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kirch Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Your three year old informs you that the water in the toilet made a vortex when he flushed it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amber in SJ Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 You might be a homeschooler if.... Your 4 year old says "my pleasure," after you say "thank you." Your 8 year old refuses to have her head x-rayed for a severe sinus infection until the technician can explain how the machine works. When that technician cannot explain it she finds another, and another until there are 4 technicians, a doctor and the receptionist in the room arguing over how the machine works. The same 8 year old begs for (and receives) her own set of the X-rays of her head. Your 6 year old is asked by another child how the baby got in her mommy's tummy and she answers with all correct anatomical terms and then comes to get her sketch book so she can add diagrams to the conversation. Same 6 year old says to Grammie at Thanksgiving dinner, "Did you know I have ovaries inside me, right now!" Your 15 year old, who belongs to a book club where she is the only homeschooler, discovers that no one read the book the month it was her turn to choose because it was too "thinky." The book was "The Screwtape Letters" The group had previously read "Twilight" and "Austenland." Your 5 year old is Eloise for Halloween and no one knows who she is. She even had a stuffed Weenie and a Skipperdee. Morning sickness becomes a science project. Your children say things like, "You ate iceberg lettuce almost 2 hours ago. How can it still be whole? The oranges are much less recognizable," as they peer into the toilet. And, of course, you might be a homeschooler if you have really nice shoes. These are so much fun to read. Amber in SJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Slartibartfast Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Everyone at the library knows your children, not only from sight but the sound of your case wheels you use to haul the books around. :lol: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
funschooler5 Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Your 11 year old, while eating cranberry sauce with real cranberries, says: "This is a lot better than the gelatinous goo we eat at Thanksgiving." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dooley Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 I love the stories of the smaller ones and their speech. My 9 yo said this morning - "I didn't want my hair like that, per se..." We have numerous cicada "shells" lining our bookcase. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KidsHappen Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 You are the neighborhood library. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chelle in MO Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Your son's fellow baseball players ask him to stop using "big words" so they can understand him. Ha! That EXACT thing happened to us last year! Ds is now on a team of only homeschoolers! Chelle Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FriedClams Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 your early ed kids try to put each other down with comments like, "yeah, I know what a suffix is - it comes at the end of a root word, duh!" Ahh - grammar slams - gotta love it! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
secular_mom Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 7yos says, "Every time I disassemble something, I have a really hard time trying to reassemble it." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MarthaT Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 7yos says, "Every time I disassemble something, I have a really hard time trying to reassemble it." LOL :D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jonnia Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 ...your six-year old snuggles up beside you on the sofa in the morning with book in hand and says, "Let me read you some poetry, Mom, while you have your coffee." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scarlett Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Love all these academics, but mine all seem to involve something he gets to do in the middle of the day that school can't. Such as yesterday when it was pouring rain and the dog (who lives 95% of the time indoors) dug a gigantic hole in search of a mole I think...and she was IN the muddly hole and covered with mud...So ds9 put on his swim suit and swim shirt and went outside in the pouring rain and hosed the mud off her. Then he went into some maniacal mode and ran around the yard in the rain shaking his fist at the sky and laughing. Then he decided it would be hilarious to throw mud against the window right by where I was sitting. I about jumped out of my chair! He cleaned it all up with the water hose and then he and the dog came in. I dried the wet stinky (but not muddy) dog and the boy went and got a hot shower. Fun times. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
paula j Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 You are the neighborhood library. This was me until I got some friends together and we opened a town library so I would have a place to store my books.:001_smile: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CookieMonster Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 Your 8 year old refuses to have her head x-rayed for a severe sinus infection until the technician can explain how the machine works. When that technician cannot explain it she finds another, and another until there are 4 technicians, a doctor and the receptionist in the room arguing over how the machine works. That's hillarious! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nrg Posted September 17, 2009 Share Posted September 17, 2009 YOu get a call from a senior citizen friend that your 16 year old volunteered to fill in playing violin in a senior quartet, carried all of the equipment, walked the ladies in on his arm, and sent thank you notes for giving him the opportunity to play with them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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