Blogging through the Alphabet: D is for discombobulated

discombobulated

Oh there were so many words beginning with D which could have summed up my homeschooling family thus far…delusional comes to mind, along with daunting, daft and deficient.  Actually daft describes me rather than my home schooling journey.  On a more positive note, we could also be described as diligent, dazzling and domesticated, although that last one might be a stretch.

But I think discombobulated describes fairly well how we I feel on a daily basis.  To be discombobulated is to be confused, perplexed, puzzled or to be weird.  Yes, I think that sums us me up very succinctly.

The day begins with me feeling a little discombobulated from the night before.  Why is it that 11pm comes and suddenly the need for any type of caffeine leaves by the back door.  At around the same time ‘Bright-eyed and Bushy-tailed’ saunters in through the front door.  Suddenly I feel like I could conquer the world.  Honestly, if only the rest of the world (or at the very least my children) were awake to see this truly alive and very productive Claire they would  be astounded, not just by my energy levels but also by my incredible teaching nuances.  You see, past midnight?  I rock in every single way.  It is such a shame no one is there to see it…..

The next morning I am back to my ‘day light hours’ Claire.  Still easily excitable and full to the brim with things I wish to share but most of the time a little discombobulated.  My mother says I ‘have my head in the clouds’,  my girls comment frequently that I am ‘away with the fairies’, T teases me incessantly about my inability to retain any sort of name or number or, in fact, any piece of information in my head (my brain is basically the polar opposite of a didactic one – I wonder would I also be considered brilliant in my own way?) and Gary just shakes his head and I can see him thinking ‘bless’

I hadn’t realised it had got so bad or so obvious until this week.  I was helping C tidy up some of her bedroom, when I came across a leaflet explaining how to help someone with senile dementia.  I laughed, particularly because it was unclear if she had got it to help me or for herself (she has inherited my innate scattiness).  Actually, by the end of our highly amusing conversation it was still unclear exactly why she had it or how indeed it had come to be in her possession.

In my defense, I completely and utterly blame home schooling for my discombobulation.  I was intelligent, coherent and very reliable.  I was a prefect for goodness sake!  And I have a degree.  I can’t have faked intelligence that well!  I must have had it once.  But alas no more.  No, now I spend my nights reminding myself of how I used to be and my days in a confused, discombobulated state of existence, wondering where on earth I left my brain….

Blogging Through the Alphabet” style=

23 comments

  1. You’re doing very well for one who’s discombobulated much of the time! 🙂

    I’m convinced that I lost 50% of my intelligence through pregnancy, then lost a further 25% through raising a family. Now I’m operate at a maximum of 25% of my total intelligence on a good day, compared to when I was at the height of it many years ago.

  2. Oh…holding sides…rolling on the floor…must pull it together long enough to type comment. Thanks for the morning smile 🙂

  3. Giggles! That homeschooling mama brain does become a bit “discombobulated” and it’s always amazing that we function at all. You do an awesome job and I can only hope to function at your amazing level!

  4. Well it sounds like I’m the same. Ready to go and full of ideas and energy at night. By day, I’m weary and discombobulated and in need of much caffeine to speak coherent sentences or be of much use to anyone! 😉

  5. You brought tears of laughter to me this morning. My kids are gathering around to see what is so funny. I have a bit of discombobulation going on in my head as well.
    Blessings, Dawn

  6. What a well-written and enjoyable post! We often feel that way, too. In fact, Cristi and I often joke that we share a single brain cell, and when we need it, the other has it!

    1. It IS a great word isn’t it? Since writing the post my eldest twin constantly blames and confusion she has on the ‘homeschooling discombobulation issue’ we all seem to have!

  7. Funny post! You are definitely not alone, but unlike you I don’t find a boost of energy after everyone goes to sleep.

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