
There are so many good curriculum options.
So many beautiful programs.
So many “this worked amazing for us” recommendations.
And for a long time, I thought the goal was to find the best one.
The most complete.
The most enriching.
The one that would check every box.
But what I’ve learned is this:
The best curriculum isn’t the most impressive one.
It’s the one you actually have the capacity to use.
The Pressure to Do It All
It’s easy to build a homeschool plan based on what sounds ideal.
A rich literature study.
Hands-on science.
Deep-dive history.
Writing programs, language studies, all the extras.
And on paper?
It looks beautiful.
But in real life?
It can feel like too much to carry.
Capacity Changes Everything
Your capacity matters.
Not just your child’s learning style—
but your energy, your time, your mental load.
Because you’re not just choosing curriculum.
You’re choosing:
- how your days feel
- how much you’re managing
- how much pressure sits in the background
And if a curriculum constantly feels heavy?
That matters.
What Do You Want Your Day to Feel Like?
Before choosing anything, I started asking a different question:
Not “What should we use?”
But:
“What do I want our days to feel like?”
Calm?
Flexible?
Structured but not overwhelming?
That answer started guiding everything.
Honoring How They Learn—And What You Need
Your kids matter.
How they learn, what they enjoy, what helps things stick.
But you matter too.
If something requires constant prep, constant energy, constant involvement…
It might be a great program.
But it might not be a great fit for this season.
Building in Options (Because Every Day Is Different)
Not every day has the same capacity.
Some days you can:
- lead discussions
- dive deep
- stay engaged for hours
Other days?
You need support.
That’s where options come in:
- co-ops
- outside classes
- video-based curriculum
- independent work
Having layers means your whole day doesn’t fall apart when your energy dips.
Choosing What Actually Works
Now, I choose curriculum differently.
I ask:
- Can I realistically sustain this?
- Does this support our rhythm—or fight against it?
- Will this still work on a tired day?
Because a plan that only works on your best days…
Isn’t a plan that will last.
If You’re Reconsidering Everything
You’re not doing it wrong.
You’re adjusting.
You’re paying attention.
You’re building something that fits your real life—not an ideal version of it.
And that?
That’s where things actually start to work.
You don’t need the most impressive curriculum.
You need the one that supports you and your kids.
Right where you are.
Right now.




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