Capturing the Charmed Life

A Homeschool Mama Will Benefit from Coaching for Homeschool (& Life)

I’m privileged to virtually walk alongside homeschool mamas just like you. So I know why a homeschool mama will benefit from coaching for homeschool (& life).

I am privileged to be invited into your homeschool, and be told about why you homeschool, who you homeschool, the challenges in your homeschool, and why you’re not sure you want to continue homeschooling or at least, why you’re finding it challenging.

You know that I’ve been there done that, that I’ve homeschooled four kids, our oldest is 21, our second, is 19, our third, is 16, and it’s only our youngest, 13, who is still homeschooling.

So why would a homeschool mama need coaching for homeschool (& life)?



Homeschool Mama Mini-Retreat

You’ve heard me share my story that somewhere in January of our third year of homeschooling I was done with homeschooling…

Or to be precise, I had enough of kid conflict, forcing kids to sit down, be quiet, stay motivated, focus on their studies, stop arguing, leave the scissors in the same place I left them, not speak out of turn, not speak disrespectfully…and a whole bunch of other stuff that pushed me to my brink of overwhelm.

But I’ve had more than one moment of questioning my homeschool choice.

I’ve had more than one moment of homeschool overwhelm and even life overwhelm. I’ve had moments of exasperation with a child or two or three, even seasons of exasperation…and worry.

And because I’m not from one of those strong family stories where I felt secure and was taught that who I was mattered or even that my feelings mattered, or that anyone even noticed I was there at times, well, I’ve been reparenting myself too, growing myself up right alongside my kids.  

Oh, and if it didn’t seem obvious already, I have plenty of stories where I’ve had to reorder relationships because I had to learn to instill boundaries in pretty much every relationship in my life at some point.

(Boundaries weren’t taught or instilled in my family of origin and I didn’t even explore them until I was 34, years after I began parenting.)

And when sometimes you hear me talk about homeschool mamas needing to find their identity, that experience was mine too. I remember attending my first writing conference and by the end of that weekend, I was in love and in awe: I found the love of my life, writing.



But I was always in love with her.

I’d always known her. Remember that I began writing when I was seven, in a little green-locked journal purchased from Zellers. But I didn’t spend enough time acknowledging her. So I didn’t develop her.

That weekend conference got me clear that I was not just a mom: I was a writer.

But how could I write? I’d surely have to ditch the other three loves of my life.

(And though I say that for your amusement, I was genuinely distraught that I’d made a mistake: I had a family when I first should have taken up writing. Turns out, the two are not mutually exclusive, but I’ve had to bring that element of my identity into regular practice, despite my rather consuming homeschool mom identity.)

And as you can imagine, coming into marriage and parenting, with rather colourful growing-up years, I wanted to capture a charmed life.

(Did I subconsciously name my website? Oh yes, I did).



I’ve lived Rachel Platten’s song:


“Like a small boat
On the ocean
Sending big waves
Into motion
Like how a single word
Can make a heart open
I might only have one match
But I can make an explosion

And all those things I didn’t say
Wrecking balls inside my brain
I will scream them loud tonight
Can you hear my voice this time?

This is my fight song
Take back my life song
Prove I’m alright song
My power’s turned on
Starting right now I’ll be strong
I’ll play my fight song
And I don’t really care if nobody else believes
‘Cause I’ve still got a lot of fight left in me”


I’ve had to practice self-compassion again and again.

And tell me the beautiful truth, as I tell you when we chat virtually, you were created, therefore you are worthy, you are valuable, and you are here for a purpose and a reason.

And now I see that despite the seemingly overwhelming challenges, Sara MacLauchlan’s song, Blackbird, has been mine & I believe can be yours too:


Blackbird singing in the dead of night,

Take these broken wings and learn to fly

All your life

You were only waiting for this moment to arise

Blackbird singing in the dead of night

Take these sunken eyes and learn to see

All your life

You were only waiting for this moment to be free


You may have broken wings, but you can learn to fly, and you can arise, and sing despite the most unusual circumstances, like singing in the dead of night.

You can learn that you are free.

So, as you can see, from the initial conversations I have with you during our virtual coaching sessions, you and I begin to uncover some reasons you’re struggling. And those reasons are almost never the original reasons we begin chatting.


I’ve learned that it’s often this…

And I’ve learned that it’s also this…

I’d be privileged to walk alongside you if you want to connect with me in the virtual Homeschool Mama Retreat or one-on-one coaching.

In this guided retreat, you can get away & take a breather.

You can dig deep into the things that are keeping you from enjoying your homeschool charms.

So you can show up on purpose in your homeschool days.

If you want to…

Then join me in a virtual Homeschool Mama Retreat…



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Teresa Wiedrick

I help overwhelmed homeschool mamas shed what’s not working in their homeschool & life, so they can show up authentically, purposefully, and confidently in their homeschool & life.

Call to Adventure by Kevin MacLeod
Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3470-call-to-adventure
License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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