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"[Sherry] knew that special ed. was not rocket science and that with
information she could do as good a job as a teacher . . . As homeschoolers,
never has there been an opportunity like this to influence the culture of
death with the message of life."-Tom Bushnell, NATHHAN
When our daughter was first diagnosed with a learning disability, a friend
asked me, "Do you know about NATHHAN?" I know a few kids named
Nathan, but she was referring to the NATional cHallenged Homeschoolers Associated
Network-NATHHAN. I have since been incredibly informed and blessed by this
gracious loving group of individuals. It's more than a group. Really it's
an entire support network for families with special needs kids.
We have the great pleasure to speak with Tom and Sherry Bushnell, the current
lead caretakers of NATHHAN. Join us as they share their incredible story
and their vision for helping others.
TOS: Welcome, Bushnells! Tell us about your family, their
names, ages and stages of life.
NATHHAN: My name is Tom and my wife is Sherry. We live
in Porthill, Idaho, one mile from the Canadian border. We live in a log home
that we built on 46 acres. We farm garlic, alfalfa and have Alpine dairy
goats. We have 10 children at home and 1 in heaven. Our oldest is Jacob,
19 and attending Bible school in Pennsylvania. Our second oldest, Josh, is
age 17. He has learning differences and learned to read at age 13. Tally,
our daughter in heaven, is 15 and has Down syndrome. Jordan, our adopted
son, is 14 and also has Down syndrome. Sheela is 13 and was born without
eyes. We adopted her from India when she was 21 months old. Zack, our fourth
son is 11. Lynny, our daughter with cerebral palsy and autism, is 10. She
was adopted from India at 15 months. Zeph, our fifth son, is 9. Then we have
Sheraya who is 7, Mercy Grace who is 5 and Jayben, our 6th son, who is 1
year old.
TOS: Have you always homeschooled?
NATHHAN: Yes. Sherry was independently schooled instead
of attending a high school back in the 80's. She also knew that homeschooling
was what she wanted for her children even before our children were born.
TOS: What gave you the inspiration to start the ministry
of NATHHAN?
NATHHAN: We were homeschooling our oldest two, Jake and
Josh, and then baby Jordan, our son with Down syndrome, came into our lives.
Having worked in a special ed. classroom, Sherry was not about to have her
son babysat all day. She knew that special ed. was not rocket science and
that with information she could do as good a job as a teacher. Sherry got
in touch with a group called NATHHAN in 1990. Diane Macbeth was running it
along with Kathy Salars. They could not continue after the group grew into
the hundreds, so they asked for help. Our family took the job on and it has
grown like crazy ever since.
TOS: What does NATHHAN offer homeschoolers?
NATHHAN: NATHHAN's job is to equip parents to teach their
special needs children at home. Part of what we do is match families with
other families with like disabilities. We publish a magazine and operate
a lending library through the mail plus a large web page. Part of our job
also includes saving pre-born babies from death by abortion by giving birth
moms an option of a loving home for their baby (inside) with disabilities.
Many of our families in NATHHAN have adopted their challenged children. Many
are willing to take another. All homeschoolers are needed here at NATHHAN and
can work on the front lines against abortion by supporting families choosing
adoption instead of abortion for pre-born, special needs children. NATHHAN
offers support and the "how-to" for teaching families to care for
these challenged children.
TOS: Something near and dear to your heart is a new aspect
to your ministry called CHASK. Tell us about that.
NATHHAN: Our hearts go out to parents with special needs
pre-born children who have no hope. Have you ever thought about how to save
the pre-born special needs babies being killed daily? Many medical professionals
think that most people do not want pre-born, disabled children.
Today we are aggressively working to find mothers in crisis pregnancies
with babies who have special needs. There are loving families for these children
within NATHHAN. We are teaming up with Human Life to locate babies both born
and pre-born. You can directly help stop the abortion of pre-born special
needs babies with your support of CHASK / NATHHAN. Our organization, CHASK,
stands for Christian Homes Adopting Special Kids.
CHASK, through NATHHAN, offers families adoption with no agency fees .
As we continue to build our database of families who are willing to adopt
a special baby, moms are contacting us here to see if we truly do have a
home for their baby. NATHHAN's no-fee adoption services make it financially
easy to take a child into your home or to support a family in the adoption
process.
TOS: As an adoptive parent myself, I am thrilled to learn
about this work! How can our readers help or get involved?
NATHHAN: Here are several things you can do today to save
the life of a special baby:
1. Share about CHASK (Christian Homes Adopting Special Kids) with your local
Crisis Pregnancy Center or OBGYN.
2. Copy this interview and send it to your families and anyone else who
would be interested in sharing financially to save special needs babies from
abortion.
3. Fill out an adoption application form so we can share your name with
a birth mom . www.nathhan.com Click on CHASK.
4. Tell Christian families with special needs children where to find help
through NATHHAN.
As homeschoolers, never has there been an opportunity like this to influence
the culture of death with the message of life. With God's blessing,
we will change the way many professionals in the USA think of pre-born
special needs children and parenting the disabled.
TOS: What advice do you have for the parents of a special
needs child who are thinking about homeschooling?
NATHHAN: Find another parent dealing with similar challenges
that is homeschooling. We can help each other. Look for resources in the
home to use instead of spending a lot of money on teaching early learning
skills. Work on organizing one subject at a time, such as communication.
When this is under your belt, work on physical therapy or speech. Then tackle
reading or math, if possible. Communication is essential, as is character
training.
TOS: What about the parent who has been homeschooling for
a while and is facing discouragement or burnout?
NATHHAN (Sherry): In my house, burnout is a state of mind.
The Lord can order a day for me that is crammed full of visitors, overtired
messy children-a three ring circus of a school day, a busy office, freezing
weather outside and church in the evening. But, if my priorities are aligned
with God's in my heart and mind, this disastrous looking day can be handled
with ease. God's way for me is always best. When He is clearing my path,
I do not stumble. I ask myself this question, "What does God want me
to do right now?"
I have found some secrets that make for a more peaceful day. I will confess.
I do not get to enjoy a consistent blissful early morning devotion time,
although this has happened occasionally. I set my mind on a meaty Bible verse
and apply it to my day. I do see fruit. In regular prayer throughout the
day, waiting on Him for advice gives me a trusting relationship. I would
not trade a daily two hour Bible reading opportunity for the all day long,
one-on-one relationship with Jesus that I have. I stress the worst when I
am not trusting that He has ordered my day.
Second, planning my day, including the meals for several days ahead, helps
me cook with less stress. We are not a frozen casserole once-a-month cooking
type of family. We have a big meal at breakfast, lunch and dinner! All these
teens call for mega cooking lest my kitchen be ransacked. We eat a lot of
stews, soup and bread and BBQ venison or elk. This mother of lists has also
genetically passed this down to her offspring. My children appreciate a to-do
list in the morning. This eliminates my nagging them and their forgetful,
sidetracked stares. If we share the chore load and work together we are ready
for school by 9:00AM.
When we start teaching the first week, I start with one-maybe two-children. That's
it. We start on 1/2 the subjects the first couple days. When this
is going well and they are consistently doing well, we'll add another subject.
After those two children are working well (or is it that my brain is functioning
well?), I will add another child. When those three are working well and
the schedule is smooth, I will add another child and so on until we are
schooling all 7 at once.
Another way I can bring burnout upon myself is to set my standards for my
children too high. My expectations can be all wrapped up in my pride. If
my children fail, I take it personally. This is a never-fail recipe for anger
and burnout for me. Readjustment of what I can expect of my children in schoolwork
takes some objective input from Tom. I am usually so blind by my failing
standards that I cannot see past what is going wrong. I think I struggle
the most with this "too high of expectations" with my daughter
Sheela, who is blind. Somehow she seems so capable. Yet academically she
struggles. Without her strong determination to hang in there, I think we
would not have made nearly the progress. I have hardly had a month go by
that I have not had to re-think my attitude towards schooling.
There have been times in the past that I have needed to secure outside help
with housework or even schooling. An energetic teen or someone to share at
least a little of the busy time of the day can make the difference of how
I feel things are going. After a new baby I do not attempt school. When we
have lots of visitors, I do not attempt school (unless it works out that
we school together for fun). When some of us are sick, we do not have school,
especially if the one who is sick is me! If there ever is a time that school
cannot be done with dedicated time and attention for some reason, we are
reasonable. Our goal is two hours a day of sit-down seat work.
If homeschooling becomes a tension in the home, wait on the Lord. There
is a reason that things are not going well. If it is not apparent, or the
solution you thought would clear up the stress isn't working, talk with your
husband. If you are a single mom, get input from someone who is pro-homeschooling
and you can take advice from. Perhaps they might know of something that will
help.
Motivated learners are what make teaching fun. Motivated (not perfect) teachers
are successful. There are no perfect homeschoolers. In fifteen years of looking,
we have searched and searched and have not seen even one! This means that
we cannot truly think that others always have it together.
Have you ever looked at another homeschooling mom and said to yourself, "I
might as well give up, I cannot compare with her." The Lord has graciously
given us children to teach and a land where teaching at home is legal. I
am not so sure that God has a totally peaceful existence in mind for me.
The Bible tells me that when I am weak, He is strong. If I have got it all
together all the time perhaps I do not need to rely on God. From personal
experience there is something sweet about a desperate heart. Leaning on Him
when I am totally burned out leaves room for Him to replace my goofed up
mental state with a better plan. So, boycott burnout. Replace it with sweet
gratefulness.
TOS: What a testimony! Thank you for teaching us that
we can rejoice in all the challenges with which the Lord blesses us! Bless
your family for helping to equip so many others.
You may contact the Bushnells as follows:
NATHHAN/ CHASK, P.O. Box 39, Porthill, Idaho, 83853, (208) 267-6246, www.nathhan.com
Christine M. Field practiced law for eight years before becoming a full-time
mommy. She and her husband live and homeschool their four children in Wheaton,
Illinois, where her husband serves as chief of police. Three of their four
children are adopted: one through private adoption and two from Korea.
As special needs expert columnist of TOS Magazine's Resource Room ,
Christine welcomes readers' comments, personal stories, and questions.
Please contact Christine at RR@TOSMag.com.
As the author of books Help For the Harried Homeschooler, A Field
Guide to Home Schooling, Coming Home to Raise Your Children, Should You
Adopt? and Life Skills for Kids , Christine is a ready and
willing help to the homeschooling community. Crosswalk.com has featured
her a number of times as have other publications. For more information
on Christine and her resources please visit her website: www.homefieldadvantage.org.
" . . . I am the harried homeschooler as I seek to play the many
roles and meet the many demands in my life."
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