pull down to refresh

Yes, I'm not in that stage yet, happy to learn from the experienced ones ๐Ÿ˜‚
I think worldschooling is awesome, kids can interact with different kids from all over the world, it broadens their exposure to all kinds of cultures at the very least and gives them drive to potentially learn new languages too.
It can be, and tiring if it's keep traveling; I was actually thinking about where are the good places for the kids to grow up, haha, and I've learned you don't need to travel all the time to do that, he/she might prefer having long-term friends too.
The art is to balance, @nemo, but what do I know? I just met a 10 yrs old girl last night, speak fluent English and Turkish, and a bit of french, learning coding too, so cute - I'm just gonna hangout with more kids and mums to learn:p
reply
I agree with this. One of the things I am glad my mother did was never leave the city I grew up in. I was able to make and keep my childhood friends and build that life long bond. I think when you move around a lot itโ€™s hard to build those deep connections with people. Yeah technology makes it easy to stay in touch but it will never replace a hug or a high five!
reply
deleted by author
reply