Matching Tracksuits

fun in fours

Month: January 2026

Actual Snow 2026

afternoon

One Year Ago Tomorrow

A list of concerns about Trump 2.0:

2.0
  1. Cuts prescription cost-cutting measures
  2. Threatens to seize the Panama Canal
  3. Withdraws from the Paris Climate Accord
  4. Withdraws from the WHO
  5. Begins deportation process
  6. Pardons all insurrectionists
  7. Threatens to seize Greenland
  8. Expresses hope to make Canada a US State
  9. Does away with civil rights gains
  10. “Ends” birthright citizenship
  11. Threatens Columbia
  12. Fires inspectors general
  13. Mass firings of those who opposed in any way
  14. Freezes foreign aid
  15. Freezes grants with effects on everything from free lunch programs to housing subsidies, from Medicaid payments to child cancer research
  16. Offers to buy out federal employees

One year in, and he's done (or started) thirteen of them.

Ice Day

Snow 2026

Preparing for the Storm

From School Site

Today, we continued working on our critical thinking/problem solving unit with a gallery walk of riddles. Spread around the room were nine different riddles of varying difficulty:

  1. Two fathers and two sons are in a car, yet there are only three people in the car. How?
  2. Forward I am heavy, but backward I am not. What am I?
  3. What starts with T, ends with T, and has T in it?
  4. What is it that no one wants to have, but no one wants to lose either?
  5. Mary has four daughters, and each of her daughters has a brother. How many children does Mary have?
  6. Two in a corner, one in a room, zero in a house, but one in a shelter. What is it?
  7. I am an odd number. Take away a letter and I become even. What number am I?
  8. A word I know, six letters it contains, remove one letter and 12 remains. What is it?
  9. Poor people have it. Rich people need it. If you eat it you die. What is it?

Students moved in their table groups from riddle to riddle and discussed them as groups. Some of the riddles were quite easy for the groups (numbers 1 and 3); some were a bit trickier (numbers 2 and 5); one was all but impossible (number 8), which stumped all but one student, a sixth-grade girl.

We used three riddle classifications to identify them as we went through the answers:

  • word riddles, which contain hints within the words itself;
  • faux-math riddles, which are actually just word riddles;
  • pure riddles, which have no clues hidden in the text.

We discussed how the riddles work and how various riddles use language to trick our brains to ineffective ways of thinking based on how we usually use language.

Monday

Looking Glass Rock

World Reaction

France

UK

Sweden

Finland

EU Parliamentarian Valérie Hayer

Aegina Boats