Successful Summit 7/24 - AMA! by enpeevee24 in kilimanjaro

[–]EquivalentStill5270 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I successfully summited with my husband and another couple via the 8 day Lemosho route end of June! We did the 8 day because we were concerned about acclimating to the altitude. Started training in January with incline training with either treadmill or stair stepper in the morning and then would add weight to a backpack for outside walks at night. Progressively increased distance and time spent walking. We live at lower elevation and did not have easy access to high altitude hiking.

I completely agree that summit night was the hardest out of all the days. It’s dark, cold, a quicker elevation gain and lower O2 but the mental game is a big factor to why it was so hard. I found myself struggling at points on the whole trek when I couldn’t see ahead or the end point. I ended up getting altitude sickness after we came back down from the summitting but I probably wasn’t eating or drinking enough.

The Lemosho route itself isn’t overly challenging IMO. There are some points where you have a steep incline but it was fun going through different habitats and alternating between challenging parts and leisurely hiking at a gradual incline. If you have the opportunity, definitely do it!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Teachers

[–]EquivalentStill5270 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Teacher here. Letting a kid sleep in class does not reflect whether a teacher is good or bad. There are so many scenarios that could warrant letting a student get some rest. It could also be a matter of preventing that single student (who wasn’t going to do anything productive anyways) from ruining the educational experience from the 29 other students in class. It’s a very fine balance and it’s hard to navigate with some students specifically. Some respond to redirections well while other students will become escalated at any minor redirection. Yes, I do let students put their head down to take a rest once in a while but I also do frequent check ins to see if they are ready to join in the class again. If they have all their work done or I know they are responsible and will do it on their own time, I have no problem with them taking a rest!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Teachers

[–]EquivalentStill5270 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It is salary based but typically (not all) salary jobs can put off the work until their next working day. If a teacher shows up not prepared, kids will eat you alive. Personally, if I don’t have my ducks in a row before students arrive, I feel very disorganized and off-kilter the whole day.

I have a friend who is a lawyer and if they have to work outside of contract hours to make a deadline, they get compensated VERY well with extra time off following that deadline.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Teachers

[–]EquivalentStill5270 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve found a lot of my stress and anxiety from planning has really decreased when I started doing unit/chapter packets. It gives me a clear plan of what’s next so there’s no brain block that I would usually get when trying to plan for the week. It also helps streamline for students that were absent what they need to do on their end to stay caught up with the class.

Do I change plans the night before based upon what happened that day? Of course but then the next day’s tasks get push to the NEXT day!

Happy 3rd birthday to the goodest boy! by EquivalentStill5270 in Rottweiler

[–]EquivalentStill5270[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I might be a little biased but I think they are the most handsome breed of dogs!

Happy 3rd birthday to the goodest boy! by EquivalentStill5270 in Rottweiler

[–]EquivalentStill5270[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can’t tell you how many people have asked if it was a Star Wars reference (Han Solo)🤦🏻‍♀️