We live in a world obsessed with efficiency. We track progress, optimize schedules, and measure achievement. But if you look closely at your children, their deepest need isn't for a new app or an earlier start on algebra—it's for wonder. And the soil for that wonder is not found on a screen or a spreadsheet. It is found, as it has always been, in the real, tangible world outside. John Senior, that great advocate for a richer culture, reminded us that true learning begins with poetic knowledge, with a kind of immersive innocence that precedes dry facts and analysis. It's the imagination, the soul's ability to truly wonder, that prepares the ground for wisdom. And as modern mothers, we have to fight to restore this imaginative ground for our kids. The Call of the Wild Wood Think about the classic books we cherish, the books that shape a child's moral imagination: The Wind in the Willows, Alice in Wonderland, The Secret Garden. What is the common thread? It is the tran...
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