The Heartened Homeschool Mama

The Heartened Homeschool Mama Encouraging Christian homeschool moms to “take heart” in the Lord! I share stories, tips, and resources on my blog: https://bowenblogs.wordpress.com.

And I save even more helpful ideas on Pinterest: https://pin.it/q1nsj85zO.

Some wise thoughts here!
03/25/2026

Some wise thoughts here!

Oceans are such wise teachers. They immediately communicate reality — that you are small, that life is dangerous, wild, adventurous, exhilarating, peaceful, and soothing, all at once. A few days in front of one has provided the opportunity to observe some truths about humanity — our soul, our purpose, our nature. Specifically, boys and young men.

I’m not sure I believe in school for boys. Boys can be taught to read and do basic math without going to school. Everything else can be learned through curiosity and imitation and necessity and internal drive. Otherwise, their souls die.

Boys are meant for adventure. For doing crazy, dangerous $@% #. For potty jokes and testing the power of their arms and legs and endurance. For competing until they pass out. For running wild, as fast as they can, after a wave or a seagull or a bug. For playing games over and over and over again.

They are made to imitate men.

This is their education, for better or worse (choose wisely, women). Boys are built to watch and beg to try and do it themselves and participate. How to hook the bait, how to spool the fishing rod, how to shuffle the cards, how to stay standing on a moving boat.

They want to do it. They want to try. When they fail, they want to be shown how not to fail by a man (not a woman).

When they’re out of control, as they tend to be, they respond primarily to a man telling them so, honestly, sternly, sometimes a little too frankly for a woman’s taste.

This is the animal kingdom.

Young men are being killed by our culture and its norms.

My state, like many states, makes cannabis available everywhere in all ways and places. Not your granddaddy’s w**d at 15% THC. These are synthetically manufactured 85% THC oils and products, infused with endocrine-disrupting fragrances and flavors, burned directly into the lungs and, from there, changing the brains, spirits, and organs of our young men at a scale never seen in human history.

Their drive, their ambition, their adventurous souls are being snuffed out by these toxic levels of “sedative,” in the name of something “natural,” “plant-based” and “just like a beer” to help relax and deal with the pressures of modern life.

As young men, the boundless energy and curiosity, adventure and out-of-control-ness — so innocent and adorable at five or seven years old — are still in there, often manifesting as intense emotions, anxieties, hyperactivity, destructive tendencies.

These are now problems needing cures, control, suppression — they don’t serve them well in prison, school, or their mindless, entry-level jobs where they’re supposed to behave, sit still, conform, and obey.

Minimum wage in hyperinflationary metropolitan areas makes it nearly impossible for a young man to get ahead, or even to pay today’s bills. Saving, investing, owning — those are so out of reach and imagination that he doesn’t even dream or plan for them.

And yet. Young men can still emerge from the va**ng, gaming, minimum-wage grinding basement of their lives into the sunshine of a coastline that offers an enticing challenge, wave after crashing wave.

Their desire to conquer and master nature, whether by paddleboard, fishing line, or fire pit, dribbles out hope that the man they’re meant to be has not been altogether suffocated.

Monosyllabic communications turn into complete sentences. Zombie visages can melt into smiles like a sunrise. Disinterest in others can turn into coaching, correcting, ribbing, connecting.

With no one else to engage with, he can turn to the little ones as playmates.

Will he go too far? Will he be too harsh? As he cajoles the scared little girl into the ocean, as he picks her up to bring her to his playground, he doesn’t force or coerce. She cries. He puts her down and lets her make her own choice.

The masculine dignity that is both powerful and kind is in there. It’s been in there, waiting for the rhythms and majesty of nature to blow away the cobwebs of the modern poisons on the soul of man.

I say to the parents out there: it is worth being totally different. It is worth being annoying and weird. It is worth protecting the influence of nature (outside of them and within them) on your sons.

Keep them away from fluorescent-lit prisons run by adults who don’t love them and populated by children you don’t want them imitating. This is not the way they should spend the majority of time that the sun is up.

Keep their bare feet on the ground and their eyes squinted at the sun, their hair stringy from the rain, their fingernails dirty. Tell them stories around a fire, read them books born of adventure, teach them to use dangerous tools and do dangerous things. After a certain age, let their fathers and brothers and uncles and grandpas be their heroes and helpers and primary teachers of most stuff.

Humans are not built for gaggles of little boys to be caged behind a desk or sitting still in a circle, raising hands and repeating canned answers asked by a kind-faced woman who shares no history with them. Who wasn’t there at their birth or who doesn’t see through the dirt-smeared face to admire the heart of a lion that only comes out in private moments.

Manhood is scary. It requires risk and failure and humiliation. Anyone sensible, if left to his own devices, will seek to avoid that hard stuff, or medicate the anxiety of it with escapist screens or psychoactive chemicals — drugs, booze, ultra-processed food. That is obviously much, much easier than becoming a man.

(Nota bene: A nagging woman criticizing all this as it happens in front of her doesn’t change the trajectory, it only intensifies his impulse to hide from his birthright.)

Put a bunch of “peers” facing the same terrors and pressures together and see new heights of slavery and destruction caused by the worst habits metastasizing, ritualizing into elaborate self-justification schemes, unchallenged by reality or wisdom.

Humans are not built for armies of teenaged boys and young men to be isolated with each other, building their subcultures of misunderstandings, misplaced values, and mind-numbing habits. They’re meant to run with the men, and the little boys, in the sun and the rain, and to build things, to learn things that are useful, to teach those things to the younger ones, with their muscles and minds engaged.

As they read and watch and learn, those who are destined to pursue more formal education will emerge. Most already reject “higher education” as neither high nor educational in the things that matter or that give them a reason to get out of bed.

Over time, imitation and experimentation become skills, initiation becomes apprenticeship and play transforms into something that some might call work, but that he calls a purpose. That something — it makes him useful and interesting to a woman, and eventually indispensable to her and the little ones who start the cycle of wonder all over again. That feeling of being useful and needed and admired — that is the jet fuel for the masculine soul.

Many of us women know this, but we don’t know how to draw it out from what seems like an already-crushed soul of a son, a brother, a husband, a father. All we have on offer seems to come out as judgment.

And so I offer this to my sisters: you control the family schedule.

Take them away from school and “jobs.” These prisons will wait, even if they say they won’t. Even if these places threaten bad things if you do it. They are the bad things.

Bring them to the sun. To the mountains. To the water. To the woods. It may take a few days or longer for them to emerge. Which will annoy you. Be patient.

Do things that require their help, their muscles, their hands. Ask them to take the little ones into nature for a few hours, as a favor to you. Let them make all the decisions about what that looks like. Do your nails while you bask in the sun or rock on a porch or gossip with your mom. Be happy.

You are the writer of their destiny. You are the maker of worlds. You are the mother of men.

𝑊𝑟𝑖𝑡𝑡𝑒𝑛 𝑏𝑦 Katy Talento. 𝑃𝑢𝑏𝑙𝑖𝑠ℎ𝑒𝑑 𝑏𝑦 𝑇ℎ𝑒 𝑊𝑎𝑠ℎ𝑖𝑛𝑔𝑡𝑜𝑛 𝑆𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑑.

If you’re looking for some homeschool encouragement, here’s some info about this conference from a friend: We’re so thri...
02/23/2026

If you’re looking for some homeschool encouragement, here’s some info about this conference from a friend:

We’re so thrilled to have our keynote speaker is Christy-Faith! A dynamic voice in the homeschooling community, Christy-Faith is a social-media powerhouse with over 350,000 followers and millions of video views. She encourages and empowers moms to take the leap into homeschooling, stay the course, and rediscover their purpose. Whether you’re seasoned or just considering homeschooling, her message will inspire and equip you to build a homeschool your kids will one day thank you for.

🗓️ When & Where:
📅 Friday, March 27 – Saturday, March 28, 2026
📍 First Baptist Church, Hammond, LA — 401 W Morris Ave
✨ What else you can expect:
🛍️ A robust Vendor Hall with exclusive deals
📚 Encouraging workshops
👧 Youth programming
🤝 Fellowship with homeschool families from across Louisiana
🍽️ Catered lunch included with registration

Don’t miss this — come ready to shop, connect, and be encouraged, inspired, and equipped!

More info here:
https://homeschoollouisiana.org/2026-louisiana-homeschool-conference/

CLICK HERE to get our session recordings from the 2025 Conference 2026 Louisiana Homeschool Conference

02/23/2026

Take a minute, grab a tissue, and let this little story and song encourage you today.

Take heart, mamas. The Lord has you doing important work! ❤️

Okay friends, you know we’ve been using Touch-Type Read and Spell for a while now — and I’ve already recommended it — bu...
02/20/2026

Okay friends, you know we’ve been using Touch-Type Read and Spell for a while now — and I’ve already recommended it — but I finally sat down and filmed a full, in-depth parent walkthrough. After using it for six months now, I just have so much more to say about it.

Since we started using it, Grace has jumped in too! I was NOT expecting her to start so young, but she loves it. And the big shocker for me? I did not expect this program to support her speech work the way it has. To type, read, hear, and repeat each of these words has been impressively perfect for her.

Anyway — I’m just sharing because I absolutely love this program! I had heard about it for years in my dyslexia support groups and honestly only wish I had purchased it sooner for Ben. It’s really amazing that one program is working so well for all five of my kids — from age 6 to 15 — each with incredibly unique learning styles and specific challenges. 😳 In my decade of homeschooling, I never anticipated saying that about any one program!

If you’re curious (or want to pass it to someone who’s been researching typing/spelling/dyslexia support options), here’s the video:

➡️ https://youtu.be/gUvnbPPZajo?si=Q8A5d0omSugRYRbC

This program impressed me so much that I became an affiliate — the first program I’ve ever done that with. If you do decide to purchase, thank you for using my link. 💛
➡️ https://bit.ly/4fxVQe6

And of course, I’m always happy to answer any questions. I love talking homeschool.

If you’re considering Touch-Type Read and Spell (TTRS) but want to see exactly what it looks like before purchasing, this full parent walkthrough is for you....

02/18/2026

The saga continues.

Picking him up, this was our conversation…
And yes, I’ll fully admit — I can be a bit of the sugar police. 😅

We all have different reasons for homeschooling. This may not be at the top of everyone’s list, but for me? Teaching long-term habits — especially around food and sugar — is near the top.

So… enjoy the drama. 😉

02/18/2026

I love homeschooling. I love slow mornings.
Getting out of the house before 8am? That stretches me. 🤣

Does anyone else feel this level of craziness when you have to leave?

Huge applause to the homeschool mamas who do this regularly — especially my bi-vocational friends. Y’all are seriously impressive. 👏

And before anyone mentions it — the booster seat was a stuck seatbelt situation in the middle of the rush. It’s handled. 😉

01/08/2026

I am honored to finally get to share about The ULAT!

We use this Spanish program in our home, and I give it my highest recommendation. We so appreciate Steve Nesbitt and his 30+ years of experience teaching foreign language with an immersion-style program.

I finally put together a full video review walking through what the program looks like, how it works, and why after my own three decades of studying Spanish personally, I believe this is by far the best method of instruction. I’m genuinely grateful for the opportunity to share something that’s blessed us so much!

Find my full review on YouTube ():
👉 https://youtu.be/3EGY2grqZRE

Always happy to answer questions or chat homeschool curriculum. Happy homeschooling!

12/15/2025

Agreed! Use discernment, my friends.

12/08/2025

One of the things I’ve learned over the years—and now after a decade of homeschooling fully embrace with no second guessing myself—is that as long as my kids are learning and progressing, I don’t stress about what “level” they’re technically on.

If you asked me what grade my kids are in, I’d probably give you a simple answer based on age… but the truth is, they’re in different grades for different subjects, and they “graduate” to the next level all throughout the year.

Though I think the pressure of being on grade level is one of the hardest pressures to get over in newer homeschool parents, it’s actually one of my absolute favorite parts of homeschooling. Now having walked through teaching a child with dyslexia, another with ADD, another with speech delays, and then just the very normal varying levels of strengths, weaknesses, and preferences of 5 kids, the departure from my tradition classroom scope and sequence rigidity has been massive!

As an educator, I truly believe it’s one of the greatest blessings we can give our children as homeschoolers: learning at their pace, moving forward when they are ready. Sometimes that means they start early and soar ahead, and sometimes it means they take a little longer. But it always means they’re being challenged in the way that’s right for them.

So TODAY, this random Monday in December, my 8-year-old “graduated” from 2nd grade to 3rd grade… in math at least. 😆

I was in the middle of all the daily chores, trying to be productive, when I walked into the kitchen and saw my bread do...
12/02/2025

I was in the middle of all the daily chores, trying to be productive, when I walked into the kitchen and saw my bread doughs ready to be filled and rolled for their second rise. I dumped them onto the counter, fully prepared to rush through the process.

You see, I’ve added baking with freshly milled flour to my routine not because I love baking, but only because I’m convinced of the health benefits. It’s very important to me… but still just one more thing on a busy to-do list.

So my daughter walked in and excitedly asked, “Can I help?” I almost said no because I was in a hurry. Almost! Instead, I decided to pause the busy and let her join me.

She was so happy. It was messier, slower, and who knows how the loaves will turn out—but she loved every minute. When we finished, she proudly said, “I officially rolled my first cinnamon raisin loaf!” Then added, “Mom, when I grow up, I want to make freshly milled bread just like you… and then I’m going to teach my kids, and tell them to teach their kids!” 😳🥹

Though it was just a quick bread lesson, I was reminded that this is exactly what we’re doing as homeschool moms. We’re teaching things we hope will matter enough to carry on for generations. I can get so caught up in laundry and dishes, but I want to recognize the moments that are truly worth passing on.

Scripture tells us our children (disciples) grow up to be like us. “A disciple is not above his teacher, but everyone, when he is fully trained, will be like his teacher.” -Luke 6:40

It’s not only the lessons we plan, but the ones in between. Whether we realize it or not, for the good or the bad, they often grow up to resemble us.

I was keenly reminded to keep a close eye on the example I’m setting and not skip over those important lessons for the unimportant. From health habits to spiritual truths, I desperately want to impart things that matter through generations. I’m sure you can relate to the challenge. So, my friends, let’s take heart and ask the Lord to help us recognize the little moments that matter most. 💙

11/07/2025

When Ellie first asked to learn piano years ago, I had so many littles that adding lessons to our routine felt impossible. But I still wanted music in our home.

We found Hoffman Academy, and it became the thing we could actually do — in the real, everyday chaos of homeschooling with babies and olders at once.

Years later, every one of my girls has used Hoffman at some point. I see how it has helped them in dance and now even other instrument. Hoffman Academy has always been our starting point, setting them up to truly excel in musicianship.

If you’ve been wanting piano in your home too, check out my full YouTube review:

🎥 Full YouTube Review: https://youtu.be/XZGxuFsSFXk?si=7ISKJF4b2aSobA5h

🌿 Hoffman Academy Website (affiliate): https://hoffmanacademy.com/?via=megan81

No pressure — just sharing what blessed us! Let me know if you have any questions.

🎄 Your much-needed Non-Toy Christmas List has officially arrived!As a long-term homeschool family, we spend a lot of tim...
10/28/2025

🎄 Your much-needed Non-Toy Christmas List has officially arrived!

As a long-term homeschool family, we spend a lot of time in our home. Because of that, it has always been a high priority for me that our environment be filled with learning, creativity, movement, and meaningful play. I’ve wanted our backyard to rival the excitement and draw of any school playground, and our indoor spaces to spark imagination and curiosity — not boredom and screen-dependence.

Birthdays and Christmas have given us the perfect opportunity to add to our home with purpose. When relatives ask for gift ideas, I try to choose things my kids will genuinely love and that won’t break in two weeks or end up forgotten in a toy bin. I want gifts that truly enhance our home and can stand the test of time.

Some of our very best gifts have been “group gifts.” Instead of five separate $50 toys, grandparents have often combined their resources to purchase one high-quality item — and those have paid off in extraordinary ways. Our trampoline, for example, remains my #1 most enjoyable and enduring gift of all time. We are now entering our ninth year (seriously, almost a full decade!) of having this trampoline, and…

Head to BowenBlogs to keep reading:

Looking for Christmas gift ideas that actually last? In this post, I share our family’s time-tested list of the best non-toy gifts for kids — from outdoor play favorites like trampolines, zip lines…

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