The wild + free family Forging your own path to a life full of wonder, adventure, and connection

Ainsley Arment

eBook - 2022

Cultivate a Wild and Free family culture in your home and build wonder and adventure into your children's daily routine with this essential guide from the founder of Wild + Free, packed with practical suggestions and imaginative ideas. While every family has its own culture, Ainsley Arment believes that being intentional about how we raise our kids is one of the most important things parents can do. Drawn from her own family's stories and those shared in the W+F community, and filled with inviting full-color photos throughout, Wild + Free Family focuses on ways any parent can create an environment where wonder and adventure are part of the everyday fabric of family life. Wild + Free Family isn't just for parents homeschooling... their kids. It's for all parents looking for a better, more intentional way to connect with their kids. Ainsley teaches you how to set up workable (yet forgiving) routines that can help kids thrive and offers ideas for creating traditions that they'll fondly remember and want to share with their own children.

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Subjects
Published
[United States] : HarperOne 2022.
Language
English
Corporate Author
hoopla digital
Main Author
Ainsley Arment (author)
Corporate Author
hoopla digital (-)
Online Access
Instantly available on hoopla.
Cover image
Physical Description
1 online resource
Format
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
ISBN
9780062998255
Access
AVAILABLE FOR USE ONLY BY IOWA CITY AND RESIDENTS OF THE CONTRACTING GOVERNMENTS OF JOHNSON COUNTY, UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS, HILLS, AND LONE TREE (IA).
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Parents can "live a more meaningful, adventurous life" with their families, l, advises Arment (The Call of the Wild and Free), creator of an online homeschool community, in this gentle look at "carving your own wild path in the midst of modern culture." Twelve years ago, Arment, her husband, and their two kids left their life in the Atlanta suburbs serving a "company's purpose, society's purpose, the school system's purpose" and moved to Virginia Beach, where they began their homeschool community. Insisting that parents get to choose whether their kids grow up stressed or peaceful, Arment covers such topics as misbehavior (suggesting a three-step process of "calming... connecting... and communicating with" kids), creating a family culture (laying out "your values and vision"), embracing adventure as a classroom (getting outdoors), and how to "not grow weary" as a parent (accepting help during difficult times is a good idea). While readers in search of statistics and case studies won't find them here, Arment nonetheless offers a wealth of personal anecdotes and feel-good wisdom--understanding kids, she writes, "is realizing, as they grow, that they don't merely change but become more themselves." For parents looking to "cast aside convention," this is just right. (Aug.)

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