Love your advice. As for instant karma... when a child attempts to hurt his/her sibling... and gets hurt himself in the process... you just don’t feel so bad 🤷🏻♀️
Tell me what do you do when you left out perishables but you want to call it a night...
Yeah yeah. I did. All taken care of 😅. It was rough but I did it. My guilty pleasure is sitting here right now in front of my mess and ignoring it 😂! Nothing perishable but shabbos is a-coming! Break is over.
Tomorrow... it’s not tomorrow yet so it’s still too early. I’ll get all my kids through their zoom classes and hopefully take them out on a hike in a deserted spot so we can easily social distance.
Tell me the strangest or most unexpected thing you can think of that has been affected as a result of coronavirus
Oh gosh! I remember reading this and obviously because you’re asking it must be something random... alright I’ll look it up.
“ First Patented Can Opener
The first tin cans were so thick they had to be hammered open. As cans became thinner, it became possible to invent dedicated can openers. In 1858, Ezra Warner of Waterbury, Connecticut patented the first can opener. The U.S. military used it during the Civil War.”
—google
Okay, tell me if you had modeling clay, what would you create?
Haha! A turtle is what my 5 year old son just made with his class—if you need directions...! 😃
Oh gosh. I hardly know what the date and day of the week it is today! You must be joking asking me the day for two years ahead...! IyH I’ll be there to enjoy it!
Tell me why do you care to know what day of the week it’ll be. And if you’re not singleagain, tell me a day that has significance to you.
(So random but a few friends and I were doing a zoom chat catchup and we discovered that three out of the seven of us had the same anniversary! What are the odds of that? And two on the exact same day! That was pretty high odds right there...)
Even the most commonplace devices in our world had to be invented by someone.
Take the windshield wiper. It may seem hard to imagine a world without windshield wipers, but there was one, and Mary Anderson lived in that world.
In 1902, Anderson was visiting New York City.
"She was riding a streetcar and it was snowing," says the Rev. Sara-Scott Wingo, rector of Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Richmond, Va., and Anderson's great-great-niece. Wingo never met Anderson, but the story of the invention was passed down to her.
Wingo says while Anderson was riding the streetcar that snowy day, "She observed that the streetcar driver had to get out and continually clean off the windshield."
Naturally, that caused delays, and got Anderson wondering: What if there were some sort of blade that could wipe off the windshield without making the driver get out of the streetcar?