Food
AUTUMN 2020: An Unintentionally Intentional Education
The word intentional is used pretty generously in progressive circles these days, often in the context of interpersonal interactions and movement building. However, this season’s gallery explores the term in the context of education. Particularly how the core of home-schooling is being intentional to some degree.
This gallery is a celebration of the intentional education that laid the foundation for me to develop the tools to visualize and self reflect. What does that mean, what does it mean to intentionally educate? And conversely what is the intent behind an education that is centered around tests, career, and competition if the outcome is loss of self for the sake of achievement?
Some of the galleries will explore these questions and others will not. All of this season’s galleries will be a buffet of lunch-time nostalgia of my home-school education.
Enjoy! :)
Buttery, flaky, and able to go with literally anything that’s spreadable or dippable. These are the reasons my love for butter crackers runs so deep.
A big batch of chili is, on the surface, a simple lunch I can make on the weekend. However, once I reheat it during my lunch at the farm, and sit down, for a moment I’m transported.
Although our attempts at making pupusas were hit and miss (leave it to the pros from South and Central America) we did get the hang of making our own corn chips to accompany lunch-time sandwich situations.
As a little girl I’d have been delighted to have known that a decade or so later I’d be able to enjoy the rain in New York just like Momo. After all my dad was always talking about New York, it seemed like the place to be.
Fond, but increasingly blurry, lunchtime memories surround oodles and noodles. Intense sibling debates about pop culture brewed, secrets were shared, loose pacts were made, sibling produced tv shows were performed table-side, and sometimes it was just nice to have food in the house and we were too busy eating to talk.
Freedom looks different for different people. For my parents freedom seemed to look like teaching their kids at home. Free to offer their kids a combination of curricula to suit each of our differing ages and learning needs and desires.
Home-school mis-Representation in the Media
Lunch-time Honorable Mentions
The following lunches didn’t get their own gallery and recipe because they’re so straightforward.
Hot Dogs