“I would earnestly exhort all young mothers to keep a journal in which the gradual progress and unfolding of their children’s minds may be noted down. Even if they have no general views in so doing, they will derive much benefit from it; their ideas will become more collected, their plans more determined, and they will acquire a habit of thoroughly examining and endeavouring to understand whatever occurs to excite their attention.”
-from “A Mother’s Diary”, Parents’ Review, contributed by Miss Beale, PR Vol. 6, No. 11 (1895)
Charlotte Mason advocated the use of a wonderful journal known as a “Mother’s Diary” in order to keep track of a child’s growth. As I continued to look into this living notebook, layers of thought and possibility began to unfold. This was not about keeping up with a baby book, photo album, or scrapbook. This was about chronicling a child’s growth in such a way that the parent is drawn into the life of their child and can clearly choose to cooperate with the Holy Spirit in that child’s development.
“I would have it a true journal, in which an account should be kept of
every successive step made by the child; where every vicissitude in its
health, whether mental or physical, should be registered, and where the
measure of the child, in every meaning of the word, as taken at
different periods of his age, should be noted down. Words, ideas,
knowledge, feelings- everything in short which is either naturally
unfolded in the mind, or acquired by education, should be here recorded;
together with the first appearance of every endowment, and every
defect, the original source of which would thus be open to our
consideration.” – Miss Beale, A Mother’s Diary, PR Vol. 6, No. 11 (1895)
The idea for this Mother’s Diary is to have a special, designated book in which to record when your child shows development physically, mentally, or spiritually. As Mason knew, taking the time to record your observations by writing them down is a life-giving activity, a “form of vitality”. Each book should be the record of one child and entries could be daily, weekly, or monthly.
I introduced this new notebook during my workshop at the CMI conference, “Parenting the Young Child: Best Practices from Charlotte Mason for a Life of Wonder”. Keeping this particular notebook is one of the many important things mothers (and fathers, too!) can actively do to help facilitate the child’s development before the child reaches school age (6). Keeping one of these diaries for the child’s next years of life (6-12) would also be important.
I wanted to design a keepsake journal that would reflect the importance of what is housed within. This lovely version of the Mother’s Diary has the look and feel of a book from an earlier time but with a fresh color and exquisite custom artwork on the cover. It is a pleasure to use and a convenient size with the feel of traditional book cloth – a delight to pull down off the shelf and write in on a regular basis. Many skilled hands were involved in the production of this version of the Mother’s Diary from the custom drawn artwork by Cynthia Oswald, to the traditional hand-sewn construction and special care that went in to each individually stamped cover.
The diary begins with a dedication page repeating the beautiful hand-drawn artwork from the cover. Following that are two quotes from Charlotte Mason about the use of the Mother’s Diary. Next is a letter from me that outlines how you might use the diary and finally a reverent prayer that was found in an old Parents’ Review article. The prayer will help you focus when you sit down to write about your child and remind you to offer to God this holy work of raising children.
“As we cannot describe a child without relating his history, such a
journal would be enlivened by the little incidents of each day, and the
joys and sorrows peculiar to his age; nor would it be long before the
task of keeping it would become to the mother the most interesting of
employments.”
“The most interesting of employments” – I love that. If this is a journal that you think would be worthwhile to keep, if you love paying attention to each precious step of progress your child makes, if you don’t want to forget or lose the dates or memories – then I encourage you to start a Mother’s Diary.
Admiration, Hope and Love,
Nancy
Available at Riverbend Press.
Further reading:
A Mother’s Diary, Part I
A Mother’s Diary, Part II
Extracts From a Father’s Diary
Marco and Monique Laura says
Any idea when this is going to be in stock at Riverbed?
Polly says
Great! Because I just bought two! 🙂
Thank you-
Polly
Polly says
Nancy, I LOVE this concept! I keep a journal to record my thoughts TO each of my children, but that's different from observing their educational lives unfold. Would you (and Charlotte) recommend a separate notebook for each child, or to use one notebook for all children? I am pondering this. Perhaps separate notebooks would be best so that in the future they can each take their own into adulthood……
Thank you for creating these! It's a wonderful idea. My children are 9 and 5, so it's a great time to start a Mother's Diary. (If only I'd started at birth…..alas!)
sageparnassus says
Dear Polly,
Yes, I would use a separate notebook for each child!
Warmly,
Nancy
Bonnie says
Wonderful… wonderful. I have stacks of journals and this one is so lovely. I used a journal with each child to converse with and we put them under each other's pillows! This is when they could write. I like the photo with the pen to see how big it is!
sageparnassus says
Thank you, Bonnie. What a wonderful journal activity you did with each child. So inspiring!
Warmly,
Nancy
Unknown says
Nancy, your class on "Parenting the Young Child" at the 2016 CMI National Conference was wonderful! Thank you! I only regret that we didn't have more time so you could have shared the rest of your thoughts and information. The diary is a very special idea for a mother to use with each child. ~Sheila
sageparnassus says
Thank you, Sheila! That was a fun workshop. I am excited to give these as baby gifts in addition to starting them with my older children.
Warmly,
Nancy