SHOW / EPISODE

010: The Classics and Cancel Culture, CM Lessons, Time for Rest

Season 1 | Episode 10
50m | May 23, 2021

After a month of hiatus, we are finally back to talk about books, Charlotte Mason, and life in general.


***Books, TV, Movie, Song, Anything Review***


We discuss the soon-to-be movie feature (but no dates yet!) The Midnight Library and Alan Jacobs' Breaking Bread with the Dead. We shared how these books made us feel and think about how they both apply to our lives at present time.


***Book Club Discussion #TFPR_HomeEducation***


We talk about our key takeaways Part V - Lessons as Instrument of Education and gave listeners a bit of a hint about what the next episode is going to be about.


***Mama Me-Time Plans***


Rest is vital and he we share our mama me-time plans for the weekend, making ourselves accountable to make time specifically for ourselves.


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**Wall of Quotes**


"You don't have to understand life. You just have to live it."

-Matt Haig, *The Midnight Library*


"The way that you expand your Now is not by treating the distant past as though it were present; rather, your task is to see it in its difference as well as in its likeness to your own moment."

-Alan Jacobs, *Breaking Bread with the Dead: A Reader's Guide to a More Tranquil Mind*


"There are many wonderful things about books, but among the most wonderful things is that you can lose them when you need to. It’s like being able to quit someone’s table instantaneously... it might actually be a good reason not to."

-Alan Jacobs, *Breaking Bread with the Dead: A Reader's Guide to a More Tranquil Mind*


"It isn’t the writer who’s the time traveler. It’s the reader. The author is not a guest at our table, we are a guest at hers."

-Alan Jacobs, *Breaking Bread with the Dead: A Reader's Guide to a More Tranquil Mind*


"Wisdom lies in discernment."

-Alan Jacobs, *Breaking Bread with the Dead: A Reader's Guide to a More Tranquil Mind*


"She was speaking to her country, her culture, and her time... she was speaking to the wordy Victorians and their successors, the Edwardians... to British parents who lived over hundred years ago... Does that make her principles unusable for us? Not at all. Principles do not change... Principles remain constant."

-Karen Glass, *In Vital Harmony*


"It is the very nature of an idea to grow."

-Charlotte Mason, *Home Education*


"We live in an age of pedagogy"

-Charlotte Mason, *Home Education*


"Why must the children learn at all? What should they learn? How should they learn it?"

-Charlotte Mason, *Home Education*


"Narrating is an art, like poetry-making or painting, because it is there, in every child's minds, waiting to be discovered, and is not the result of any process of disciplinary education."

-Charlotte Mason, *Home Education*


"Allowing each child to digest and narrate knowledge for herself is part and parcel of a larger philosophy that underpins the use of narration as an educational practice: a philosophy that sees each child as a person with a hungry mind that needs to be fed in order to grow, not a vessel to be filled."

-Karen Glass, *Know and Tell: The Art of Narration*


**TFPR Booklist**


Home Education, Charlotte Mason - https://amzn.to/3om8D85


The Midnight Library: A Novel, Matt Haig - https://amzn.to/3suG6i4


When Breath Becomes Air by: Paul Kalanithi - https://amzn.to/399RKY0


Breaking Bread with the Dead, Alan Jacobs - https://amzn.to/3pY4QOE


In Vital Harmony, Karen Glass 


Know and Tell: The Art of Narration, Karen Glass https://amzn.to/3e7V3kL

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