Oh flydena, you are not alone in this, and I don't think you are a control freak - we are called to be good stewards of what the Lord has provided.

That is a good quality to have! But, books are meant to be used, especially Bibles and guides, and always trying to keep them in perfect condition can really become a full-time job that effects you and your dc's days homeschooling immensely.

I think this idea you shared here would be a good middle of the road option to try...
flydena wrote:... In fact, I think I remember reading somewhere that someone took page protectors just on the two pages that were open for the day...to avoid spills and such. I may just do that. That'll atleast keep it a little bit safer!
This way your dc can use the guides themselves, but they will be spill resistant.

Or, you can just go into it with the mentality that you are going to keep each of the guides for your next dc. With shipping costs and inflation, not to mention the time it takes to advertise, sell, and then reorder guides again, you may come out about even anyway. Our dc are each 4 years apart, and it is very nice on the pocketbook to just pull off the shelf a used guide with all its resources from years past for both my middle and younger ds, and just have to order new for my oldest ds each year. If you are able to look at this as something to budget for, I really do think you'd find an immense pressure lifted off your shoulders, as the need to keep the guide perfectly intact for resale would be gone, but would instead be replaced by the satisfaction of seeing your dc successfully using their guides without so much stress.

Guides get used 140-175 days each year - by children - so keeping them looking new is quite a feat.
flydena wrote:My Mom is one that seems to put more emphasis on things and the taking care of things than on building relationships with people. We are very close, and I'm sure this is not what she intends, but I think I may have picked up some of this from her.
Both my dh and I can be this way. I had a switch in thinking when my cousin died in a trucking accident. His wife was going through all of their things, and they had a lot as they had 6 dc. She told me, "Do you know how many things Perry and I were waiting to use, saving for later? Here's the china we never ate on, it was too nice and we were saving it for something really special. Here's the new towels we bought for the bathroom that we decided to store until the ones we were using were really worn out. We have so many things like this. Do you know we never really had a honeymoon and were always going to go to Hawaii together? Well, guess what, I found these today, 2 plane tickets to Hawaii Perry must have gotten. He must have decided we weren't waiting anymore, but now they're expired, and he's gone. I'm not waiting anymore. Tonight we're having supper on our china dishes, we're hanging up these bath towels. Because life is too short to wait for its best."
Remembering this still makes me cry.

Obviously using a guide is a much smaller thing than plane tickets to Hawaii with a dh you just lost, but it made me think, really think, and change the way I was going about living. Just yesterday, Wyatt made monster cookies, which make a HUGE batch, and he was in the kitchen literally all afternoon until about 10 PM at night baking them. The kitchen was a mess. This upset my dh quite a bit, and he kept making comments like, "Look at this mess everywhere. Hurry up, Wyatt, it's time for bed", etc. Later that evening, I told my dh, "Either our dc can be good at keeping everything perfectly neat, or they can become good at doing new things and make some mistakes and some messes along the way. The kitchen bothered me too, and so did the fact that he got to bed late, but the fact that he tried something new of his own accord, was successful with it, and saw it through to the end - that is worth much more."
flydena wrote:I don't want to value things more than people, that is not my heart's desire, but sometimes the things that I do makes it come across that way. The manual is certainly not nearly as important as my chilren' or their education or growth in independence. Looking at it this way makes me feel a bit silly for being this concerned about it to begin with!

My dh and I have to be careful not to create an environment where our dc feel they can't try anything new, can't make some mistakes along the way, can't make some messes. We both like everything picked up and in its place, and those are good habits to instill in our dc, but when something is spilled I don't freak out anymore like I used to. Literally, when our dc used to spill something, they would look at my dh and I with big worried eyes and begin cleaning it up like crazy and apologizing like crazy. It hurt my heart to see. So, now, I have slowly trained myself to react differently, to take a deep breath and to get busy helping clean it up, and I usually try to say something like, "It's okay, we all spill sometimes. Nobody's perfect! It's just milk, hon'... or it's just a broken glass. These things can be replaced". I figure it's me trying to give a little grace, though it does not come naturally to me, I am slowly learning it.
In Christ,
Julie