This evening, teaching went remarkably well. This was my 7th grade class that is often very hard to keep in control (and by very hard, I mean that I often have rather little success, especially towards the end of the evening).  Add to that, that I was sort of unsure about my lesson plan, and was doing a little bit of improvisation as I went (I decided that the plan I had come up with was too open to running away in directions that  I didn't want, so I changed it once I got to the synagogue- it's a good thing that I got there early).   And yet somehow I managed to start things off in a controlled and organized fashion, and to keep a reasonable, interesting, and civil discussion going.  I think that starting off with a "sit and write about x for a couple minutes in complete silence" was a good starting point for that.  So- I'm proud of myself, and I'm proud of my students.

Other achievements of the day include 1. finishing a paper (using far more time than I really needed) (and which was quite nice because I used to to work out some ideas I've had for rather a while about revelation),  2. using patterns I found online, making two more varieties of crocheted flowers.  One sort uses three different colors, which is rather exciting (if not so good for doing while traveling, although it might be good for using scraps.)  and 3. opening a coconut in my rooms without resorting (as I did in <lj user="redlily">'s company after a variety of attempts to use a hammer) to throwing it out of the window onto a concrete surface and then running outside to pick up the pieces (ahh, the joys of living in a student slum- then, that is). 

From: [identity profile] margavriel.livejournal.com


Yay! Good for you. I'm happy that you had an achievement-filled day.

From: [identity profile] belu.livejournal.com


How did you manage to open it?

I remember the time when somebody was trying to open one and chose to hit it with a hammer while it was sitting on a hard surface: a bathroom sink in Usdan. That attempt was quickly abandoned; I forget what we did with the pieces of sink on the floor. I also forget how we ended up opening it.

From: [identity profile] debka-notion.livejournal.com


I used my hammer and a screwdriver that I used as a chisel to poke holes in the "eyes" of the coconut, and poured out the coconut milk into a cup. Then I banged fruitlessly for a while, and looked online, which recommended hitting it around the equator of the coconut, and by the time you've gone around 2-3 times, it should split open. It did indeed split open- although more in a 2/3 to 1/3 ratio than 1/2 and 1/2.
.

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