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Cut Knuckles What Will Teachers Do If Anything

Will my teachers care about my bruised and cut knuckles?

Well its school tomorrow, I'm 13 year old female and its my first year of high school, so I don't really know my teachers that well.

Let's start with some background knowledge: I have 2 older brothers (My oldest has ADHD and the other one has nothing wrong with him)

Anyway. I had gotten into an argument with my parents and they had went out to take my brothers somewhere, so I went up to my room and started punching the wall about 6-7 times. I was by myself at the time. My skin has peeled off and went red around the cut. I have 2 (1 large cut on my sweaing finger knuckle and one on the one to the knuckle next to my pinky finger which is quite small) However yoou can tell I've been punching the wall.

I'm in trouble at school for getting a bad lesson report for the day so I have to do another and my teacher and head of year are gonna talk to me about my behaviour tomorrow and I was wondering if they were to see my knuckles, would they really care?

Like I mean will they ask questions, send me to anger management sessions etc

My teacher notices the bruises but doesn't say anything?

im a 15 year old girl and have a black eye, honestly due to being accidentally elbowed. however i have anger issues and punch walls, i ALWAYS have cut and bruised knuckles, this one teacher noticed my eye AND knuckles all the time, however she doesn't say anything, does she care? she is a caring teacher to everyone else, do they think I'm a violent person? or are they scared?

What would you think of a girl with bruised/cut knuckles???!?!?!?!?

hi, straight to the point I'm an angry hormonal teenage girl and have always punched walls however my hand is worse than ever cut and bruised like I've never seen, i know its not normal but theres no way of hiding it and I've got school tomorrow and they have already noticed loads before but never asked so what would you say to teachers who ask? and what would you think if you saw a 16 year old girl with cut knuckles? would you think she's punched a wall? been in a fight? or fell over. curious. thanks anyway:)

How do I annoy a very controlling study hall teacher?

She doesn't want us to get up to do anything, she yells at us if we do, if we make any noise that's a little loud she'll overreact. Plus she looks very ugly. I mean we are in a freaking auditorium at least give us some freedom. Plus the study hall is two hours long everyday this week and we have to be in it because of a graduation test that the upperclassmen have to take.

How can I have powerful bare knuckle punches?

Rock-hard knuckles build your punches robust and forestall injury. Wolff's law -- pressure on bones makes them adapt and become stronger -- implies that boxing coaching will cause hand hardening, if you are doing it the proper means. Work accessible acquisition as an everyday a part of your boxing or martial arts travail. it's going to keep you from a sidelining injury, like boxer's knuckle or broken bones. Punch into a bucket full of rice and grab and twist the rice in your hand. Add a derogatory or counterclockwise twist to the movement to figure your wrists. Do ten reps on every hand 2 to fourfold per week. This rice grip technique conditions the knuckles and develops the hand and wrist joint. Perform push ups, as usual, however place your weight on the primary 2 knuckles of every hand. solely use your thumbs if you wish stability. Do press-up sets like this to eighty pl. of your capability 2 to fourfold per week. Punch the serious bag carrying solely your wraps. figuring out with the serious bag could be a typical a part of boxing and martial arts. build touch this bag a part of your hand-conditioning. Follow your typical bag-training routine -- invariably exploitation correct punching technique, distance and stance -- however leave off the serious gloves. This will increase the pressure on your hand bones, permitting your hands to strengthen and harden in line with Wolff's

If knuckle dusters are illegal, how are nice metal ones made, and how are they made without getting caught?

Two main reasons:Knuckle dusters are not illegal everywhere. They can be made commercially in places where they are legal.Knuckle dusters are actually super simple to make.They can be cut out of appropriate sized stock, or cast with the simplest of tools. You can make one in your kitchen with hand tools in under an hour if you know how. And learning how is simple; the knuckleduster is one of the first projects for an aspiring “weapons smith”, or even someone who is just looking to learn how to make stuff. They can be made out of virtually any material with almost every manufacturing technique. Metal is slightly more annoying to work with than other materials, but that does not make it any harder really.As far as your qualifier “nice” goes all that that takes is more effort at each stage of the process. More time spent in layout to get it exactly right. More time in stock removal or casting to get the best results. More time with a file and sandpaper to get the best finish. Yes, skill will make the entire process go faster and be more efficient, but even people with no skill can get beautiful results with enough time. Remember, this is often the first project people will take up when learning to make stuff, making it nice is part of the learning process.This is actually a trend that I noticed; people who do not make things think things are hard to make. The thought process seems to be “I do not know how to do that, so therefor it must be hard.” when in fact it is not. Most people who do make things know that the actual “making” is not all that hard at all. The hard part is making nice things fast. That is pretty much the only part that takes real skill. Everything else can be accomplished with enough time. And once you do now how to make stuff, even “complex” projects (like firearms) do not seem so intimidating anymore.Want to see just how easy it is (where legal of course)? Head out to your local hardware store and get a 6 by 6 inch square of 1/4 inch thick metal stock and a decent hacksaw:If you want through holes for the fingers grab a cheap drill and metal dril bit too (either hand or electric):Draw out the profile and start drilling/cutting:Contour and finish with a et of files:It is actually pretty hard to find a simpler project that makes a “useful” item.

What is the theme from the poem "teaching english from an old composition book" by gary soto?

It is Cantinflas - who is a popular Mexican physical comedian (a clown, like Charlie Chaplin).

Gary Soto is teaching English as a foreign language to Mexican immigrants. His teaching materials are old, and not very interesting. His students are tired; they have day-jobs. They find it hard to concentrate.

Suddenly Soto has a moment of inspiration. Instead of trying to teach the lesson, he begins to act it out - as if it were part of a comedy film. He makes a mime out of drinking coffee (to teach 'to get'); out of a funny walk in ill-fitting shoes (to teach 'to wear'); out of cutting up some chicken (teaching 'to cut').

When the students thought this was a lesson - they were tired, and could not concentrate. Now that they can see it is a game, everyone joins in:

Suddenly the class is alive—
Each one putting on hats and shoes,
Drinking sodas and beers, cutting flowers

When the language was a task to be learned - it was difficult. Now that language is a thing to do - it is much easier.

.....

What Soto has done in his language class, is what a poem tries to do.

Usually we try to think about language - we treat it as if it were about ideas. This makes language seem strange and dry.

A poem reminds us that language does things. It reminds us how words mean something, how they touch off real feelings.

(The word 'poetry' originally means 'doing').

.....

The theme of Soto's poem is that language is a doing thing, not a thinking thing.

Or at least, language works this way in poetry - and also in real life.

What new thing have you learned about cooking that you can teach me?

Not new stuff for me, either, but important knife stuff.Use good knives. Carbon steel rather than stainless steel and never serrated except for steak knives and bread knives.A sharpening steel shouldn’t cost you an arm and a leg. It’s a good tapered steel rod with a handle. Do look for one with a guard you can hide your thumb behind.If you don’t have a sharpening steel, you can use the back of another steel knife.Don’t buy ceramic sharpening rods until you know the difference in function between a ceramic sharpening rod and a sharpening steel. (And you also know about “backsteeling.”)When you cut anything with a knife, use your knuckles to guide the blade and not your fingers and you’ll rarely cut yourself. (The YouTube video is one of dozens. I googled “knuckles when cutting food” to find this but you can also look for things like “food chopping techniques” similarly.)BREAD STUFF:Always proof your yeast. Always. Make a poolish to get the yeast started and also to improve the bread overall.Don’t overknead (so easy to do).Some recipes look simple—and they are—but there’s a matter of technique that goes with them and until you get the rhythm juuuuust right, the bread won’t come out the way you want it.Check your oven temperature periodically with an oven thermometer to make sure what the thermostat says is correct.

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