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Jennifer Brockman
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Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
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Jennifer Brockman
When I was young, it bothered me so much when there would be toys all over or there would be, you know, like the house was just getting chaotic. And that's something I look back and I think, you know, I wish I could have just kind of realized this is pretty short lived. When I look back I think that's something that I could have just stopped the noise and I guess being able to see the beauty through the toys would have been a really great thing for me to like, experience. But that, that wasn't my experience. I only saw the toys. I only saw the mess.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
My name is Lisa, mother of nine and creator of the blog and YouTube channel Farmhouse on Boone. On this podcast I like to talk about simplifying your life so you can live out your priorities. I help you learn how to cook from scratch and decorate on a budget through this podcast and my courses Simple Sourdough and the Simple Sewing Series. I will leave links to these resources in the show notes in description box below. Now let's get into the show Foreign. Welcome back to the Simple Farmhouse Life podcast. Today I'm going to be chatting with Jennifer Brockman of A Country Life. We're going to chat all things homeschooling with a wide range of ages, special needs. Jennifer Brockman is the creator of A Country Life where she shares everyday life on her family's farm in rural Wisconsin. Along with her husband, Jennifer raises their children, homeschools, cooks from scratch, and works on their cranberry farm, all while documenting the beauty and reality of country living through her videos Recipes and cookbooks. She offers encouragement and practical inspiration for families who want a slower, more intentional home life rooted in faith, food, and togetherness. Jennifer's work gently reminds others that meaningful rhythms are built in ordinary days right where you are. I think you're going to find this interview very encouraging. I know I did. I love hearing from mothers who have been doing it longer than me and who have learned a lot. So let's dive in.
Jennifer Brockman
All right.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Well, Jennifer, welcome on. I'm really looking forward to chatting with you. We got a lot of great audience questions, you know, with homeschooling and different special needs and a large age range. So with that, let's start with introductions. Tell us a little bit about yourself and your family.
Jennifer Brockman
Well, Lisa, thank you so much for having me on. This is just such a pleasure to be here with you. I am, yeah. Jennifer. I'm from the YouTube channel Country Life, and I am married 29 years now, and we have seven kids. We have three grandchildren. And our kids range in age from. Our oldest is 28 and our youngest is 12. So we have seven kids in there, kind of a little, you know, we've got some close together, some further apart in there. We have one child with down syndrome. He is not quite in the middle. He's number five of seven. And, yeah, just navigating that. And we, we own and operate a cranberry farm here in Wisconsin. So that's just a little bit unique, I guess. I, I had never, I mean, before I married my husband Warren, I didn't know anything about cranberries. So that's been just, just a huge learning opportunity for me. And what else can I say? We've homeschooled all along. And, yeah, I think. I think that's it.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
That sums it up in so many sentences. But there's a whole lot more in that massive story. You're about 10 years ahead of me in motherhood and marriage, and it's so fun to hear from people that are further along in that because That's a pivotal 10 years. And you're very much still in the thick of it with little kids at home, too, that you're still currently homeschooling. Correct?
Jennifer Brockman
Correct. Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
So, yeah, we have a seventh grader, an eighth grader, and then our son Joseph, who has down syndrome. He's 17, so he is kind of a senior. Ish. Junior, senior kind of right in there.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
So you have a wide age range of children. I also do. So yours, let's see here. Yours is about quick math. What'd you say 28's your oldest.
Jennifer Brockman
28 to 12. So I have like 16 right there
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
with what I have. We currently it's. Ours was around 16 as well. She turned 17 shortly after the baby was born. But around 16 years is how old our oldest was when the baby was born. So it's the same age range. And I find that there's a lot of things that I didn't really anticipate. Not that like, oh, this is just, you know, I just, I think I just didn't even think about that like when I was having all these kids when I was younger and, and now too, I don't think I really thought through what that would look like when you know they're these ages. Like I think when you're a younger mom, for whatever reason, you always just picture all your kids little and it's hard to see like very soon you're going to have teenagers and very soon you're going to have adults. Like I'm still, I'm still in that phase because to even picture them being adults with their own kids, I think about it hypothetically, but not something that's happening like anytime soon. Even though if I look back and think I'm like, oh wait, that happened really quickly. So what were a few things that maybe you didn't expect or think about? When it comes to having a wide age range of kids or in the season of life you are right now with some married, some at home, what's something maybe you didn't expect about that?
Jennifer Brockman
Well, I mean, just going back to what you were saying, when all those kids are little, like even just our first four were little, you think at that point when you have a six year old, a five year old, what do they have a three year old and, or a two year old and a newborn, whatever it was, at that point you just think that, right, they're going to remain little and it's going to be this like difficult dynamic all the time. Everybody's gonna be so needy like this. And then all of a sudden like life just keeps going and you have more babies and all of a sudden you look and you're just like, oh my goodness, I have an 11 year old or a 12 year old and she's my ally. She's no longer like pulling on me in ways that, you know, make, make like more difficult. Right? They become your ally. And that was something that I just, I had never really thought about. And then with each year that passes, like another child becomes your ally. They're like helping you Out. They're, they're, they're just. It's a good thing. It's like a good dynamic. And that really is such a neat thing to see. And it's just one of those things with a big family that when you still have little, you know, there's still little babies and those older kids, like, they just jump right in. And I know some people will say, oh, that's just so terrible for those older kids. I don't know if you ever get that. You know, older kids, they have to take care of the little ones and things like that. It's like maybe they want to, maybe they're enjoying their little sibling. Not always, but for the most part, you know, they're enjoying.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
For the most part, that's been my experience. And, and people put that guilt on you. And so I'll say to my teenager, I'm like, hey, stop doing that. You don't have to do that. You know, but we live in the same house. And so, you know, they see a need, they jump in and you're not even telling them to do it. And you're like, hey, you know, just so you know, if you get older and somebody says like, hey, did you
Jennifer Brockman
have to do this?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
You, you're the one who just did
Jennifer Brockman
it without writing it, right? You, you did it.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
You need to go hide in your room. Go ahead.
Jennifer Brockman
Exactly, exactly. And that's, that's just one of those things where, I mean, there's just so, there's so many opportunities when you have those wide age range, have a wide age range of children. There's so many opportunities for growth in those kids because they do, they just, they get, they just understand like what it means to be part of a family. Not that when you only have a couple kids, they don't, but it's the wide age range. I think it's having a 16 year old and a 2 year old. You know, they, they just get so many opportunities to just sort of understand the way families work and understand how when you do participate and help out, how much nicer everything goes, you know, everything just works out, it's smoother, it's more fun for everybody. And yeah, I think just kids becoming like my ally, that was just such a turning point when I felt like they're on my side, you know, they're not just needing me all the time for every little thing. They're like actually on my side. They actually want to help plan things and they want to help be a part of things and, and take ownership in like family. Events or family activities and things like that. And that's. Yeah, yeah. So fun. We just had actually through our church, a lady organized a Christmas tea party and it was like for women. So you, you hosted a table. And like, I was a table host, but my daughter, so Maria, she's 12, she did like so much of the work, so much of the planning and the making the food and she did all like the table favors and like, she just did so much. And I think, wow, I, I don't. I couldn't have done it without her, you know, she was just so much help.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Yeah. I definitely have some kids that if we, we had that same situation where we had like a table and all, we would, I would definitely be like, okay, this is yours. You know, and I would just be able to completely step back and that would be their thing and it'd be fun. So. Yeah, I do, I do know what you mean. And I guess that's something you don't think about. I mean, you know, intellectually that all your kids are going to grow up. So you could like extrapolate out the years, like, okay, this is how it's going to be in this. But like, it just feels like it's never really going to happen, happen. It's like always a very far future thing. And so when you're there, you're like,
Jennifer Brockman
oh, you know, and then this is how this is. And then it happens. I mean, I'm at this point here right now. I mean, our three oldest kids are married, our oldest has children. And you're just like, wait a minute, when did that happen? How did we get to that point? And I know, you know, when I talk with other. I mean, even when I talk with our daughter, right. She has three little kids and she feels like we're never going to get out of this time period. Everything's always going to be three little kids. It's like, oh, wait, you just wait. You're going to look back and even though no one likes to hear that said, right. You're going to look back and go, that went so fast. It went so fast.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
And then they always tell you that, you know, but there's really like nothing you can say that'll really make it feel that way. Because I'm always telling that to my youngest sister too, because we had our last two babies at the same time, but they're my eighth and ninth. And then she, they're her first and second. And so it's, it's so interesting parenting the same age children, but with One, it being your first and your second, but in close proximity. And she said it's really helped her see a lot of things, like, we'll be somewhere and it'll be like, normally her friends would all be worried about a nap time because they all have little kids. And she's like, but you're there and your kid, is it napping at all because you're there with your big kids. She's like, so I guess they can skip naps. I'm like, yeah, I guess so.
Jennifer Brockman
Yes. As a mother. Yeah. Having a wide range of ages of kids, too. Right. It just makes you, like, relax, if that's the word. And it just.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Well, it does because they just have
Jennifer Brockman
to go along, you know, they have to, because you're not going to stop your life, you know, and you're not. You're sure not going to stop teenage life. I mean, they. They have to. They have to keep going. Teenagers have to. And so you just. They just go along and they just get used to napping on the go or not having a nap at all. You. It. It's just. Yeah, you definitely, definitely see what is important and what is not really the hill to die on. Right?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Yeah, you definitely do. You're like, man, if I could just go back and have that same mindset with the first couple, how easy those years would have been.
Jennifer Brockman
Like, they're just.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
They would have been so free and easy.
Jennifer Brockman
But yes, so different.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Work like that.
Jennifer Brockman
It would have been so different. So different.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Because I find that that was kind of what made those years difficult for me was worrying about a lot of things, like worrying about what they ate in nap time and just so many things. And now it's even worse. Just the amount of pressured things moms think of. What was it? There was something. I'm always. I always have a new thing I'm mentioning on this show of like, oh, now I heard about this and I'm like, I cannot believe moms are worried. Oh, what was. Was something like, if babies suck their fingers, it means they're not regulated in a certain way. And I was like, oh, you poor moms. Yes, you poor young mothers.
Jennifer Brockman
If that's what you're worried about. Yes, yes. I think having that vision forward. So, I mean, when I had just two little kids, right. I. I wish I would have been able to have more of a vision of what. Not just a vision of what the future was going to be like, but a vision of what I wanted my family life to look like. And it's like you want it to be peaceful and loving and you know, you want your kids to feel content and I think just like relaxing as you know, once you have a few children and you just learn relax, it's like everything is so much more peaceful. Everything is so much more like, it just feels like people are more content and there's more joy and that I think, you know, for the young moms, right, who are now seeing that, oh, if your babies suck their fingers, this is what it means. It's like if they can just pull back from that and say, what is my vision for what family life looks like even in today? Like what is, what is it that I want? And then try to set your expectations at that and just let everything else go. Just push it away. Push it away. There's so much noise.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Uh huh.
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Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Not available in all jurisdictions. Check local regulations before trading restrictions and eligibility requirements apply. Yeah, what are the big things? So in, in that, what, what would be examples of like what you wish you would have maybe from the very beginning thought, okay, this is the big goal.
Jennifer Brockman
So the, the big goal for family life.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah, yeah. Like what that would look like.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah. So I think, you know, the, the big goal would be to have husband and wife on the same page and to all be working towards kind of the same goal in your home. Having things run fairly smoothly, enjoying each other's company. Yeah, I think I, I think that's kind of it. Just things running smoothly, running smoothly for the most part and people wanting to be at home like, like enjoying walking through the door and wanting to be in that home, feeling good about that and you know, if, if everything is so stressful and one day you're worried about pacify your time and the next day you're worried about, oh, I don't even know, you know, next day you're worried about something nutrition and then there's always something worried about. Yes, you know, there's always something. And now, I mean, what are the things like I've been Seeing lately just like, like your finger sucking one. I mean there's, there's so many things out there and I'm always so many things. It's like push it away and, and just think what, what's our goal for our family here? And then set those your kind of like your priorities and your expectations to match that. Don't worry about what someone else's home looks like. That was a big one for me in those young years. That was really hard for me to just let go was like how my house looked. Oh yeah. And I am not, I am not a neat person like by nature.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
But it did for some reason when I was young. It bothered me so much when there would be toys all over or there would be, you know, like the house was just getting chaotic. And that's something I look back and I think, you know, I wish I could have just kind of realized this is pretty short lived. Granted you have a lot of kids so it is going to come up over and over and over again. Kind of that messy, chaotic toy kind of thing or whatever. But I, I really wish that when I look back I think that's something that I could have just stopped the noise. I didn't have to have my house look like at that time. There really wasn't Pinterest or anything or Instagram at that time it would have been Good Housekeeping magazines or something like that. You know, you look in those and it was just always so beautiful. And I guess being able to see the beauty through the toys would have been a really great thing for me to, to like experience. But that, that wasn't my experience. I only saw the toys. I only saw the mess. Yeah. And since I'm not naturally super tidy, it was a trick to try to keep things, you know, keep things at some kind of level of like we can still, we can still walk through the living room, right?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Well, I think there's sort of a genetic component too. Like I think if you're a messy person and so is your husband, I think you produce messy kids. Not necessarily because you modeled it, because I've modeled like since my adult life I've been very tidy, but I'm not naturally that way. Like when I was a kid, my younger sister used to like clean up after me because she. I would leave a path like between the door and the, my bedroom of just stuff. And so therefore my children, you know, nobody's naturally that way. Like I've grown into it. But even our oldest kids, like they're not, they don't look around their room and think, oh, it's a disaster. They just can sit and read a book. You know, that's just naturally how they are. So I think that that also can be a challenge. We have a large family and you have two people who aren't naturally clean. Then you have a bunch of children who aren't naturally like that too. Hey, you might laugh like it's not a real thing. My S and her husband produced seven naturally clean kids. Like when they're one, they like put their shoes where they go. Like they've never once had them just laying like outside or up in their room. Never once has that happened. And so I'm like, that's actually a thing. And I only know it by comparison.
Jennifer Brockman
You know, it's funny that you say that because when our oldest two were little, they were pretty good. Like not so much with toys, but just their, like their coat, their mittens, their, their boots, their shoes. And one time my husband's uncle was over and he actually commented that he couldn't believe. I think they were three and two at the time they came in from outside, they were probably hunting or something and they took their coat. They weren't, but they were with, you know, their. Yes, the adults who were hunting. We have to clarify that. Yes, you do. Three and two year old road hunting. Yeah. But they came in and they hung their coat up on these two little hooks that we had hooks low for them. And they hung their coats up and they put their little boots, little rubber knee boots there. And I just remember my husband's uncle, like looking at me and looking at the kids going, what is this? And so I've had some that are more naturally. Okay.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
I produced one. Not one that would do that.
Jennifer Brockman
Oh, yeah, I'm sorry.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
I mean, it's okay.
Jennifer Brockman
I just.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
You kind of almost have to like, sort of give up. Like, don't expect that your house will look a certain way. And it's not that, you know, you can tell them what to do. And we do and they help. Like if when I tell my kids, I'm like, hey, we're all gonna do this and they'll do it. But it's not like it's a innate thing like where my sister's kids, like they, they all were that way. Like they put, they just. It, it came like wired in to do that.
Jennifer Brockman
Right. It's just it. They almost yearn for it. Like it's their own personal desire for the things to line up versus mom's desire. And we'll line them up when. When she tells us to. Right?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah, exactly. Yeah. I think, I don't know how we got on this rabbit trail, but it's a constant thing that my sister and I like to talk about because it's, it's just so interesting to watch how different two people's kids can be. Just like from the beginning, like age one, taking off the shoes and putting them in the right spot without anybody ever saying, hey, this is where the shoes go. We do this thing.
Jennifer Brockman
Right, Right. Yeah. Because I mean, I have one for sure that their shoes are never together. I mean, not one item of theirs is ever together, able to be located. Well.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
And that's the thing is it can really be like a large family logistics thing when you need to leave the house and you can't find what you need to leave the house. It's. Yeah, right. It can be a challenge to.
Jennifer Brockman
It can be a huge challenge. And that is one of the things I would say that I learned over the years to kind of lighten up on too, is that like we go to church now. I mean, now I have a 12 year old and 14. I mean they, they can deal. Handle it.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Even though she's everything.
Jennifer Brockman
Right. Yeah, they can, they can handle it for the most part. Right. But I mean, when they're seven and eight.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yes.
Jennifer Brockman
You know, one of those things that I got to. It's just like, you've got shoes on fine.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
They don't care the right tennis.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
They're not your Sunday, your suit.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah. But it, for a while that was important to me. And that's another one of those things where it's like the more children you have, you just start to see that is so unimportant because nobody cares.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
Nobody out there, nobody at church, I sure hope not, Goes home and says, oh, did you see those kids that had tennies on with their dress? Nobody cares, you know?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
And so that's, that's one of those things where with each child I learned to loosen that up. You're like, okay, we're going to go with the flow. Rather than get worked up about these types of things. Just go with the flow and oh, life is so much better.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yep. There's definitely some things that you have to let go when you, you kind of figure out your family's capacity, figure out, you know, who you are and, and, and do your best. Within that, like, I sometimes think people take personality, like, well, it's just me, I'm just not, you know, but within that, like there might Be some things that you're. You're just gonna have to let go. Yes, I'm with you on that a hundred percent. Yeah. And so you're fifth born. What has down syndrome. Now, that probably adds another element of, like, trying to figure out how we're gonna homeschool with the special needs. And then, you know, I don't know exactly what that looks like, but I'm sure that added another element of, you know, you have your age range and then you have your different ranges of. Of, you know, like, special needs. How did that look like with homeschooling and everything, for that matter?
Jennifer Brockman
Sure, sure. So, I mean, at first it was scary just because there's all these things running through. At least for me, there was all these things running through my mind. And they all started with, he's never going to be able to. He's never. Right. He's never. He's never. And then all of a sudden, like, you realize, wait, he's. He's a baby. He's a baby. He's doing all the baby things and he's one. And maybe he's doing. He's doing things maybe a bit slower, but it's not never. It's just slower.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Okay.
Jennifer Brockman
And so once I kind of. I was able to get into that sort of mind shift. I mean, things. It's. It's. It's good. It's good. Does it add a layer? It adds a layer for sure of sometimes difficult, sometimes silliness, sometimes, you know, just all the things. But one of the things for sure as far as homeschooling that I really lean into is just progress and.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Right. Not like, stop. Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
There you don't have to have, like, this is first grade and second grade and third grade. It's just, these are skills. And some skills we might learn at 5 and some skills it might take us till 12. And that's okay because. And that's where I kind of came back to like, just myself. It's like, there's skills even in motherhood, right, that you want to learn a new skill. You don't know every single skill. At the beginning of your marriage, you learn skills kind of when you need them, when they feel important to you. And that's kind of what we found too, with, with Joseph. It's same thing. It's kind of like just progress. And one of the things that. That I've done all along for him is just to pick, like, three little things, three simple goals, and we really break it down. And that might be the goal for an entire month. So rather than have, you know, we're gonna do science and social studies and all these things with him, it's just a lot of skill based learning. And so that really has taken, I think the stress off of it too. I mean, I think it's taken the stress off of it. And I just base that on what I've compared with like friends who have kids with special needs who are in a school, like the stress that they experience from IEP meetings and, you know, things like that. I think the homeschooling and just really breaking it down and focusing on progress instead of. He's has to be. Yeah, this is where he should be. He doesn't need to be anywhere. He just needs to be making progress. I mean, if he was, if he wasn't making any progress, that would be a difficult thing. And I'm, I think there are situations out there where kids do probably kind of stagnate a little bit. But for us, this, it's worked. It's just worked. At least for me. Inside of me, I know that, you know, every week, every month, we're making progress and, and that's, that's where I focus. Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
I mean, it'd be like if, for adults, if you said, okay, you have had children for 12 years. This means that you need to know, XYZ, you are on grade whatever of parenthood. You know, we don't do that. But with kids, it's a very standardized thing. And that's the beauty of homeschooling too. No matter what the ability is. Because all kids are different. All different levels, different skills. People have strengths and weaknesses.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, everybody has their own thing that they're interested in too. You know, like sometimes when, you know, you have conversations, like I have conversations with my kids, right. And someone says, I'm not good at math or I'm not good at this. And it's like I say, you know what? I'm not good at repairing car engines. But I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna get all worked up about that and feel bad about myself. It's not a, it's not a desire. It's not. And you know, it's not something I desire to know about. And so I'm not going to put my effort. Now it's a little different, right. With kids because there are some skills that they just kind of have to at least get to a certain level. Everybody has to know it's a good, it's just a good lesson for kids. I think when like we, as as mom and dad say, there's things we're not good at too.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Right.
Jennifer Brockman
And that that's okay. There's things we're not good at. There's things we could get better at if we wanted to, and there's some things that we just don't. And you'll never have to figure out.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
You know, there's things that you'll never know. You can outsource it.
Jennifer Brockman
You never have to know.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. So.
Jennifer Brockman
Right. And you can look it up.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
There's so much that you can look up when you want to know it.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. I was actually having this exact conversation with one of my sons this morning in the car because we were driving to the build site and back and I was telling him we were having this exact conversation because I was like, well, what if you did this? Like, well, I don't, I'm not good at that. I'm like, well, you're just not interested in that. And I have things that I'm not good at because I'm also not interested in them. But if I needed to know, I could do it. But, you know, maybe I don't ever need to. And maybe. Yeah. I think it's important to sometimes think about the big goal. Like you were saying with your family life, thinking about the big goal. I think homeschooling is the exact same way.
Jennifer Brockman
It, it totally is. It totally is. And, and again, I mean, I just always come back to. With each child I learned that a little bit more and more you're just like. And especially when you start to have those teenagers and, and maybe they start to go out into the working world, like part time jobs and things like that, you start to really see, and they start to see kind of what the important things are too. And you know, the things to kind of focus on. One, just one example of that kind of thing years ago I had made, especially when all seven kids were at home and everybody had to kind of take responsibility for a room and tidying it up. Well, not the tidy part, but more of the cleaning part. And so I made, I printed up like kind of the steps of what needed to be done in each room. And inside some cupboard, door of whatever room, I just taped that. So then when it was their turn to go in the bathroom, they kind of knew. Wipe down the mirrors, wipe down, you know, I had like a little list of maybe six things that they had to do. And our, our one daughter, you know, she, sometimes she'd be like, oh, you're such a control freak because you want Us to wipe down the mirrors and do it this way or whatever. Right. Well, she went off and she got a job as a. Like a car hop at a little outdoor, little, you know, little restaurant, like a hamburger stand kind of a place. And one of the things that they had were these checklists in a binder. And the checklist was the closing checklist. And she had come home and she was complaining about someone, someone who was working there, and how they had checked stuff off but hadn't actually done it. And I was like, oh, there's checklists that you have to complete in order to close down the restaurant at night. And. And she's like, yeah, they're just like the ch. Necklace do you have in the bathroom? And it was just funny because it. All of a sudden, it, you know, it. Finally at that point, she was pretty young, actually, when she got that job, I think, like 14 or something. And. And it just like hit her like, oh, that's important. I see why you have check checklists so that everyone doesn't have to go around and check up on every other person. Right. You just. Right. And when you don't, when you don't pull your weight, what, what a problem that can be for the other people. Because they all wanted to leave work. Right. But they couldn't something here because it wasn't getting done. So then all of a sudden she's like, oh, I see. I see why that, you know, happens. So anyway.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Well, no, it's just all those logistic things like managing a large family where, you know, your house, every square inch of it is touched by someone when they were all home, like, they're all using the house, which means that there's a lot of wear and tear on a house when there's that many people, like, no matter how good housekeeper you are, turn around and it's just all dirty again. Right. So you have to have the help and the systems in place to do that. Yeah, it makes a lot of sense. Now, one of the questions I bet you get asked a lot, because I get asked this. I don't have any children with special needs. But how you're able to give attention to all the children. So specifically, somebody asked, how do you balance meeting the needs of a child who requires extra support while still caring well for your other children? I think a lot of moms have this fear.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, I. I do get that question. And definitely it's the fear. Yes. Because we are part of some different groups where, you know, everyone has a child with down syndrome. And of course when it comes up that we homeschool, it's right away, it's all the, oh, I could never do that. Because how do you. I mean, xyz, I mean, right. Anything. How do you. Anything pops into that question. So one thing that I guess I always say is just number one, I. School doesn't have to be done at a certain time. There isn't. You know, I mean, I'm a product of public school and I feel like school should start at 8 o' clock in the morning and we should all be getting it done. Let's just. Even though I homeschool, my brain still always wants to get up, get it done, and then we can move on. Yeah. But I have come to realize that that just doesn't always work. Some kids, especially if they need that one on one, I may have to let Joe just kind of do his own thing. Play, listen to music, dance, all the things he loves to do. And I might be working with my other like, typical kids, Right. And then once they're kind of off doing their own thing, then I may grab Joe and then it's time for me to kind of work with him. And so it doesn't have to. You don't have to homeschool every single child at the same time every single day altogether. You know, kids can be, you know, our son could be out checking his traps and on the snowmobile and doing whatever. And our one daughter, you know, we only have the three at home. I mean, she could be doing her math and I could be doing something in the kitchen, and Joe could be just dancing and listening to music. And then in 20 minutes, everything changes. Now all of a sudden, the girl is like setting a puzzle. You know, our daughter's setting a puzzle and I'm working with Joe. And, you know, it can just, it can vary. And so, and I mean, I'm good with that. I. I like that schedule. I can bounce back and forth pretty easily doing things like that. And so I think that's. That's kind of it. Did I. Did I get that question just kind of how?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah, you do. I think it's just so hard to really imagine what it looks like for each individual family. And when you're on the outside, you're kind of picturing like. Like we're picturing you there. Or I imagine sometimes people hear you. You have seven children. It's like there's these seven little kids just everywhere, and it's just crazy. And they never imagine that you're just in your house alone with Joe. Which happens. Like, I have those times, too, where this kid's doing this, this one's doing this. Luke has these four over at the farm. And it's like, oh, okay, I'm just home with a couple. Or, you know, a few are. Maybe one's napping, and there's just a few here. Like, it's. It's just kind of hard to picture what it might look like. So I think it's one of those questions that you kind of understand when you're in it more.
Jennifer Brockman
Definitely, because. Because, like, even relatives, I'll get that question, you know, how do you homeschool them all at the same time? It's like, well, I don't necessarily have to homeschool them all at the same time. We can if we want, but we can. We can bounce back and forth. And I think they picture, like, imagine seven of them at home. I think they're picturing seven little desks, and they're picturing me teaching spelling to a first grader and a second grader and a third grader. And, you know, they're picturing that, and they're thinking, how in the world. And then that's when they say, oh, you must be a saint.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
And, yes, I know. I know. Yes.
Jennifer Brockman
No, that's not how it is. It's not how it is at all.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
And you might, you know, also, like. Like a lot of women, you do what you got to do. And so people like, okay, you have a Down syndrome, son. You have all these other children. You must be. And you're like, well, I'm just doing what I got to do. Like, this is what God gave me, and I'm just doing what I'm doing,
Jennifer Brockman
you know, doing what I have to do. That's exactly right. And, like, with that, sometimes it's just setting the expectations for yourself. Like, you know, sometimes as women, right, we. We think there's these expectations on us to homeschool a certain way or have our kids, you know, maybe have their. Their hair and their clothing look a certain way and our house look a certain way. It's like, take those expectations away. You know, just set your expectations. Something that works for your family and just lean in and. And. And do it. Just do what works for your family. You know, it doesn't have to look like everybody else's homeschool family or everybody else's big family. You know, we have a lot of big families at our church. And I mean, every. Every family looks different. Every family does things different. You know, you have some kids that are public school and some are homeschool and some are, you know, at the private school. And it's just, you know, every family looks different and just lean in and do it.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
How do you avoid comparison? I think it's harder for younger moms these days because, you know, you're you and I and you especially because you're 10 years further than me on this whole thing. You're kind of more like, there's like a little bit more confidence because you already had your family. Like you've already seen fruit on the other side of it. You have married children with grand, you know, you have grandkids and all of this. And so it's easy for you to kind of maybe be like, yeah, well that works for you, doesn't work for me and kind of let it go. But for, for younger moms, I don't think they can do that so well. Like a lot of times they want to see like, well, you know, how do I measure up? Like, what metric should I, you know, use for my success? How do you tell maybe your daughter, who's the oldest, I guess, how to like stay in her own lane and not do that?
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, sometimes when things come up like that, I just, sometimes just try to be a little light hearted about it. When, because I'm often the oldest mom in like our homeschool co op. I'm pretty sure there could be another.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Well, yeah, with a 16 year age range you end up being that way because most people have their children like, you know, maybe like 35 and younger. And then if you're like me or quite a bit older than that when you had your last one.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, yeah. So oftentimes I just kind of make a little joke about it, like, oh, once you get to my age, you don't even care. Which is not really a joke. It's actually true. I mean, yeah, I found a big shift, like probably around age 45, a big shift. And just this is me and take it or leave it kind of thing. And then I mean, once I surpassed 50, I'm just like, this is this, I don't care. I'm just like, yep, you can be worried about pacifiers or all these whatever it might even be, you know, it's
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
just like training, potty training, curriculum, whatever.
Jennifer Brockman
Yes. I mean even I, I do try to dispel some of the little things,
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
like,
Jennifer Brockman
yeah, her daughter. So one of one of hers, and I don't even remember which one, but was using a sippy cup or something like that. And the pediatrician had Mentioned something to her like, oh, you know, don't you think they're a little old for a sippy cup or this is going to happen or that's going to happen. And she was, you know, like, bothered by that kind of like, oh, my gosh, what am I going to do? I said, look, do you ever put a lid and a straw on your cup? She's like, yeah, I do. And I was like, yes, don't worry about their sippy cup.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
I give all my kids sippy cups because otherwise they spill smoothie everywhere.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, I'm just like, we all do it. What is, like, the number one selling item out there right now? Right? Water bottles.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Stanley or whatever.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, Stanley's and oalas. And. Because everybody wants a lid on their drink. So I was like, just don't even fret about it. And so sometimes if I do hear something specific, I'll just speak up and say something to that younger mom, like. And I don't know if it works. I don't know if it doesn't work, but I do. I am at that point where I'm like, I'm going to speak up because what do I have to lose?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Right? Well, you know, and stuff changes. So you're probably not up with the current, you know, recommendations.
Jennifer Brockman
That's right. I'm not up with the current. But. But I have raised children. I, you know, sometimes when they're like, oh, well, that's not how it's done. It's like, well, you know what? It's always going to be how it wasn't done, you know, but still, people make it to adulthood. Somehow it happens.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yes. No, I think it's wise for younger people to listen to mothers who have, who have, you know, gone before them. Because I know when I was a young mom, too, I heard things. And then I heard other moms say, oh, you know, you can't spoil a baby or you can't. They'd have things that I had heard otherwise. And I'm like, you just don't know. That was so dumb. Like, what did I know?
Jennifer Brockman
You know? Right, right.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
And I think it's. It's worse now than ever. And I think. I think we also have a lot of people who really want to figure everything out before doing it. Like, you didn't know what it would look like to raise seven kids or to be a grandma or to have a son with down syndrome, what it would look like when he's 17 and, you know, 12 and all these different ages and stages. And I think because we have so much information available to us now, we think we can like get all the info, then do the thing and avoid every failure. So therefore, people like, I have this discussion with my little sisters all the time because I have a sister that's 11 years younger than me. And so it's really interesting to compare, like, the way they view motherhood the way like we do, because it's, it's not a generation, but in. It's very. It's like halfway through a generation between the two of us and the, the things that they have to like, make a decision on. Like, it's like a thing like, okay, we are parents who xyz. There's like these decisions that are made that we didn't even think about. Like, they just happened. And then all of a sudden, you know, yeah, I guess I am a sippy cup mom or a, you know, potty trained at 18 months mom or whatever. And so I think there's just so much information that I think people really overthink everything. And have you noticed that as well?
Jennifer Brockman
I 100% agree with that. Overthinking things. When once you get through whatever it was that you just overthought and then you think about it for a moment, you're like, this would have happened even if I hadn't overthought it in the first place. Does that even make sense? You know, it's just, yes, yes. So much overthinking of things all the time. Whereas I feel like we would. Which I think puts a lot of undue pressure and stress on us because we feel like we have to make that. I mean, I guess I don't really feel that, but I think, you know, mothers feel like they have to make the right decision the first time when
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
it's just like no room for error.
Jennifer Brockman
You don't have to. You can make one decision with this child and then, you know what? If you want to next week, change your mind and if your kids are
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
old presented with new info or whatever.
Jennifer Brockman
Exactly. And if your kids are old enough to like, experience you changing your mind, just tell them why. Well, we changed our mind because of this reason. This is why.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yep, we know.
Jennifer Brockman
We know new information now. Or we found out that what we did know was faulty, or I.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Or we tried it and it just simply didn't work. And we realized, wait, that's not going to work for us.
Jennifer Brockman
We're gonna try something else. And yeah, I, I do think that. I mean, just in general, I think that people would be far more, far happier if they were just. Especially with the fertility, you know, if we bring in the whole idea of family planning and everything into it, I think just. Just let nature take its course and I think people would be so much happier. I do. Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Well, then, yeah, there's just like, oh, man, there's so many decisions to be made these days where people have to declare, like, what kind of mom they are. And you know what we're making a decision about, about these very, very minor things that. Oh, man, it just. It makes it hard. And everybody's got a hot take because, you know, that's what works on the Internet too. Like having a hot take about something. So then you say something that'll get people's attention when it's like, like the finger sucking thing. Everybody's kids suck their fingers, you know, maybe not like mine never did it lasting. Like they never. But when they're little, they're kind of playing around. And so.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. You could see how, like, okay, this will work. Like, I'm gonna get some serious attention on this reel if I say, did you know xyz? Because everybody can relate to that. Like. Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
And then it makes people start overthinking it or wondering. Oh, wondering what they did wrong.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
What supplement didn't they take during their pregnancy?
Jennifer Brockman
Yes. Yes. Oh, my gosh.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Oh, man. Yes.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
It's exhausting being on the Internet. I don't know. It's mentally exhausting. Do you feel the same way?
Jennifer Brockman
I do at. I do a little bit at times, but I really, I tried to be on Instagram more actually, as like, you know, as like part of my job. Right. You know what I mean?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Not a consumer.
Jennifer Brockman
Right. And I tried, and it just doesn't work well for me. I. I'm not an Instagram person and so I am a consumer of Instagram a little bit, but it's. I think maybe it's just my age too. It's so easy for me to just pass over a lot of what I consider to be just fluff or noise or. Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Or when you got real world stuff to do. Like, when it comes down to it, you know, we're talking about you're a grandma. Like you, you know, I'm sure you're involved in your grandkids lives too. Like, you.
Jennifer Brockman
Right.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
You had seven children that you raised and are raising in the now. You're probably taking a pretty active role in being a grandparent.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah. They don't live too far from us, so it's, you know, it's great to Be able to. It's great to be able to see them, which really does bring up something that is an interesting. One thing that I have found interesting at this age here is that, like, a lot of our friends waited, so had to wait for grandchildren. You know, their four kids all moved off. You know, they went to college, Some of them got married, some didn't. Right. They're waiting for grandchildren. We haven't ever had to do that. And that's. I do have a friend who's in the same situation as us. It's so different talking with that friend versus friends who had to wait for grandchildren. Okay.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
You know what I'm. What I'm saying? Like, we still had kids at home, so. Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
You never had a gap where it was just like, there's no kids to tend to at all.
Jennifer Brockman
Right? There's no children. There's no little. There's no little ones. You know, when our daughter had her first one must have. Our youngest was. Was seven.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Okay.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah. And so I think she was seven. Six or seven, I think. Oh, boy. And so you. We still had, like, little. You know, she's still little at that age.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Little kids, they need a lot done for them.
Jennifer Brockman
That's really a different dynamic. That just one thing for us, I think it's kept us young. That's for sure. It makes us feel young because, like, our friends who would be like, you know, similar ages of us, but they didn't have that wide range of children and had to, like, wait for all the kids to go to college and wait for them all to get married and wait for all of that to happen. You know, some of them had 10 years before having that first grandchild, and just what a different. Even as a grandparent, it's different because
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
they kind of get out of the, like, the. The phase of, like, not as familiar with little kids anymore, maybe.
Jennifer Brockman
Right. Not as familiar with little kids. But even that. That strong yearning for having. Having a grandbaby, and then everything is just like cranberry, grandbaby, grandbaby, grandbaby kind of thing. Whereas, like, for us was still having young children at home. It was kind of like, oh, she's married and they're having kids. We've got grandbabies, and it's super exciting. And I love having grandbabies. But when you have these little kids, too, those grandbabies, like, love their aunts and uncles. They. Yeah. You know, whereas, like, so somebody comes home and there are no young children at home. They go home, they go to see grandma and Grandpa and grandma and grandpa get to like spoil them and do all these things. It's a little different when you have young kids at home still because yeah, they come, those grandkids come over, they're like, oh, hey grandma, hey Grandpa. And then boom, they're like with their aunts.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
It's almost like cousins. Really. I mean, right?
Jennifer Brockman
It's like cousins. Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Uncle, six years older than you is essentially like a cousin.
Jennifer Brockman
Exactly. And so it's, it's definitely a different dynamic. I mean I love it, it's just super fun. But it is something, you know, because when you think about being grandparent, you always think, you think you're going to be old. Old.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
And you think you're not going to have any children and you think they're going to come over and you're going to like, they're going to sit on your lap and you're going to read them a story and you're going to
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
sit in your rocking chair with your curly hair.
Jennifer Brockman
That's not how it is at all. Not at all. They come over, they're like, hey, yeah, good to see you. Now we just want to go play with our aunt and uncles, you know, that's who they want to play with. So it's just, it's a different dynamic, but super fun. Super.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Well, it was recent that I was calculating how old my mom was and my mother in law was when I had our first and I was like they were in their 40s, like both of them. Like I, you know, that's, I'm 40. So just to think that that's like, yeah. You know, you think that your grandparents are so old, you're like, wait, it could be in their 40s having grandkids.
Jennifer Brockman
Yes, yes. I mean that my grandma. Right. I was the third grandchild. Yeah. I think my grandma was like 41 years old or something like that.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
And yeah, that's the interesting.
Jennifer Brockman
Even though in my mind she was still my grandma and she was old, you know, but. Oh yeah, just the dynamics, family life is. Just the dynamics of family life I think is just, it's so fun, so fun to see, you know, as your kids get married and I mean you're not at that point yet. But it really is fun. I know some people have mentioned to me, oh, that's so hard, you know, you've got like a daughter in law and you've got son in laws and stuff. But I think it's great, it's just great to watch the family grow.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
It doesn't make sense to view it any other way because it's not like you're going to change it. Like, that's what I always tell myself. I'm like, no matter how, like, what way I feel about this, what makes it not that I can always, like, you know, make my emotions do what I want them to, but it makes sense to embrace family life in the forms that it takes and the way that it evolves and almost just. You can't even predict what it's going to look like. So just appreciating it as it comes, as it happens.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, I agree totally.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
And it can be, you know, it can be beautiful along the way, even if you can't figure it all out. Because, you know, a lot of these questions have to do with like, oh, you know, the, the how to's. How did you do it? And even that question's kind of difficult to answer because right now you're in the season that you're in, and when you were in the other season, you kind of, you know, when you had seven kids at home, it looked different than it does right now. Like, right now it's probably a little more laid back, trying to get everything done with the children you have still to home, school. And so you know the how to. Well, I guess you just kind of figure it out.
Jennifer Brockman
Right, right, right. And, you know, that's one thing that, that I even. So when I first started YouTube, I was like, talking more about what it was like to homeschool and feed this large family. And then as that family grew and, and, you know, and moved and everything, and we're now only five people at home, I am very, like, careful, I guess even when I'm talking on YouTube that I always say, like, the other day I was like, working on a sewing project and I was like, it, it wasn't like this, you know, I'm always like, you know, moms out there. It wasn't like this when everyone was little. You know, I didn't have. I couldn't just set everyone up for school and then run into the sewing room and, and work on something in the middle of the day. And it's, it's definitely something that I, like, don't take for granted in the sense I try not to take for granted, because I remember how that was when, I mean, even with the best routines and the best, best rhythms kind of in place and, and everything, things still are hectic. They can still get hectic. I mean, it's just how it is. And, and I really try not to take that for granted. And like, when I'm sharing with other moms, I try to. It's like, you don't want to be just like, oh, yeah, it's so laid back now. And I can sew when I want, and I can leave the house when I want. And, you know, you still are. Like, it's going to happen for you, too. I'm always. I'm always prefacing it like that. I'm always like, it's going to happen for you too, too.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
You know, I was there.
Jennifer Brockman
You're gonna get to. Yes, I was at that point. Right, right.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yes. And you remember and you. You're just so aware of how different. These different seasons just like, come and go. And like you said, I tell people that too, because I've had somebody say, like, oh, you know, we want a large family, but, like, we don't want it. We don't want any chaos. I'm like, oh, cannot tell you that that won't happen because no matter what you do, I mean, you know, I talked about my sister and like, they're orderly. They're still, you know, they might have their stuff in order, but it's loud and it's chaotic and they're like, at dinner time, people like, okay, like, this is the time where you're supposed to, like, regulate and digest your food. It should be quiet. I'm like, well, you should see my dinner table.
Jennifer Brockman
Right?
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
It's chaos, like, in, you know, that it's. It's not that, you know, like, of course there's always could be improvement on, like, you know, the discipline and all this kind of stuff. But like, I think just when you have that many people in a room, like, let's be realistic, like if you have 11 people or whatever, nine people over for dinner, what do you think it's gonna look like? Well, that's every day for every meal, Right? So.
Jennifer Brockman
Right.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah.
Jennifer Brockman
Multiple conversations going on. Not everybody wants to have the same conversation. So you've got, you know, conversation here and conversation there, and it's loud and someone forgot to put a fork on the table. You know, they didn't do it on purpose, but they. They forgot. Yeah. Somebody wants water. Somebody wants something else. And I mean, it happens. Elbows bump things and it spills and it. It happens. And it's kind of like you just embrace that. That it's gonna happen. That's kind of what's supposed to happen. If it's just boring and everyone's sitting and no one's sh. Sharing and no one's Moving.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yeah. Yes.
Jennifer Brockman
That's not fun. Yeah.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
What's. What fun is that? I love it when it's chaotic at dinner time. But. But in all reality, I think, you know, this is. This. It's all a learning experience. It all helps to shape, you know, who. Who you are. And there's lots of challenges with it along the way. And, you know, I think that you share it all beautifully. I had some people reach out to me, and they were like, oh, she's encouraged me so much because I have a son with down syndrome. And I think a lot of people do come to you for encouragement on that, especially younger moms who maybe have a Down syndrome baby. So tell us about where you share what you share about where people can best follow along with you and your family and all the things you're doing.
Jennifer Brockman
Where I share the Most is on YouTube and my channel is a Country Life. And so, you know, I suppose you'll have a link someplace, but it's just YouTube.com country life. That's how people can get there.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Okay.
Jennifer Brockman
And I. I've shared on YouTube for. I want to say it's been seven years now or something like that. I really share family life. That's what I try to share the most of in the sense of just encouragement for moms. I had originally intended to share more homeschooling, but one thing that kept coming up over and over and over, because when I started, you know, we had. Everybody was living at home. One thing you do a lot of is cook. And so people started asking a lot of cooking questions and meal questions and stuff like that. So my channel really did morph a lot into kind of day in the life. Sort of food centered, though.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yes.
Jennifer Brockman
And so that. That would be where I share what I share. I try to just be a source of encouragement for mothers. And I've also found, actually, I don't. This is just maybe different conversation, but analytics. It's really interesting that I have a lot of older women, older than me. Okay. Who are part of our community. And I've gotten from many of them that they just enjoy. You know, a lot of people don't have grandchildren or they don't have family nearby, and so they enjoy being able to just see the kind of antics of family life. So that's really what I do. I am on Instagram very lightly, and. But you. YouTube is where it's at for me. And so if people are interested to see my channel or visit with me or whatever, that would be where they'd go. And then in the course of all of that, I did put together two cookbooks. And so I also, you know, that's, that's a part of my channel as well, is just cookbooks and recipes.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Great things like that reference for all the things that you're making because just, you know, everybody's always looking for new ideas as a family, it's like, okay, I want to have something. It's fun to see what other people are making all the time because then you think of things that you can throw into your rotation. I love, I love that about YouTube. So. And then looks like you do like a lot of farm life too, because. Yes, you're actual cranberry farmers.
Jennifer Brockman
We are actual cranberry farmers, yes. And so I do, yeah, I do videos sometimes. A few times my husband has taken the camera and he's done some videos that's been a lot of fun. He hasn't done that in a while, so it's probably time I try to talk him into doing that again. But so especially around cranberry harvest, so that would be September and October. I share a lot of cranberry related videos and just harvest and just kind of what that looks like and just what. Working together as a family and just that type of thing. Just kind of doing that. So.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Yes. Awesome. Okay, well, I will leave links down in the description box or the show notes below to put, depending on where you are watching this interview, to your YouTube and to your cookbooks. And thank you so much for sharing. I know that there's plenty more for people to dive into over on your YouTube channel as well. Thank you so much.
Jennifer Brockman
Yeah, thank you, Lisa. This was a lot of fun.
Lisa (Host of Simple Farmhouse Life Podcast)
Thanks as always for listening to the Simple Farmhouse Life podcast. My husband Luke and I and our kids work together side by side on our farm in Missouri and use our blog, podcast and YouTube channel to reach other homemakers, home cooks and homesteaders with practical recipes in daily family life. For everyday sourdough recipes, make sure to check out our blog, farmhouseonboon.com and to dig deeper, we do also offer a course called Simple Sourdough over at Bit Ly Farmhouses. All one word. We also teach people how to ferment vegetables and mill their own grains through our courses, Fresh ferments and Freshly Milled Grains. We will leave links for all of that down in the show notes below. Wherever you go, whatever they get into, from chill time to everyday adventures, protect your dog from parasites with Cridellio Quattro. For full safety information, side effects and warnings, visit credelioquatrolabel.com consult your vet or call 1-888-854-5973. Ask your vet for Cordelio Quattro and visit quattrodog.
Jennifer Brockman
Com.
What Older Moms Want Young Moms to Know | Large Family Life, Homeschooling, and Letting Go of Pressure
Host: Lisa Bass
Guest: Jennifer Brockman (A Country Life)
Date: February 24, 2026
In this heartfelt conversation, Lisa Bass sits down with Jennifer Brockman of A Country Life to unpack the wisdom gained from decades of motherhood, homesteading, and homeschooling in a large family. Jennifer, a mom of seven (now grandmother as well), shares candidly about raising a wide age range of children, homeschooling a child with Down syndrome, embracing imperfection, and letting go of unrealistic expectations. Together, they offer practical encouragement to younger moms who may feel overwhelmed by pressures from social media, comparison, and the chaos of daily family life.