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Executive Summary for mind0vermadness.wordpress.com

556 Response Time (ms)
200 HTTP Status
48 Scripts
18 Images
28 Links
HTTP/1.1 Protocol

SEO & Content Analysis

Basic Information
Page Title
mind over madness | In a world of chaos, the only way to stay sane is to go mad.
Meta Description
In a world of chaos, the only way to stay sane is to go mad.
HTML Language
en
Robots.txt Present
Sitemap Present
total_urls: 182
SEO Meta Tags
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Page Content

mind over madness | In a world of chaos, the only way to stay sane is to go mad.

In one month, Florida schools will fully open and be flooded with children.Among the thousands of other educators throughout the state, every day we get closer to that opening day, the more anxious, nervous, depressed, angry, upset, worried, sad, disappointed, and unsure I get.Us educators and admin across the country rallied last-minute back in March and successfully pulled off virtual learning with literally zero training and zero warning (did you guys already forget how you were singing our praises back then? that was short-lived). While we rose to that challenge, just like we do with everything else, I think most of us can agree it isn’t something we want to have to repeat, especially to start a brand new school year. We miss our students, we miss our colleagues, we miss the support and sense of community we get being together at school. Virtual learning was a last ditch effort to slow the spread of this awful novel virus, a temporary one decided upon to protect the health and safety of our students (because no one ever worries about the health and safety of the teachers). But I think most of us would gladly take another round of virtual learning and the peace of mind that would accompany it than the uncertainty and fear surrounding schools reopening.Because if we had this logical, sound reasoning for closing our school doors back in March, why are government officials trying to force our doors back open now, when the only thing that’s changed since March is a huge spike in positive cases, hospitalizations, and deaths across the state (and nation)?Here’s what I’m worried about: I’m worried about the inability to enforce masks (that is, if they even make them required, because as of now they may just be a recommendation). We’ve all seen the ridiculous videos of 77-year-old ladies throwing tantrums in the middle of Costco because they refuse to put on a mask for the safety of others. We’ve laughed at them, we’ve made jokes, we’ve turned them into memes. But in all seriousness, there are far too many people in this country who really are that selfish and childish and ridiculous, who refuse to adhere to a temporary inconvenience for the good of the entire community (one that was recommended by medical professionals and scientists, no less). So what makes anyone think we’ll be able to require students, some of them as young as 6 years old, to not only don a mask before entering school, but to keep it on throughout the day, and keep their hands off it? All it takes is one student who can’t wear a mask for health reasons, or whose parents refuse to “buy in” to the idea of a mask, to show up to school and unknowingly breathe the virus into the air, where poorly ventilated rooms and broken A/C units will just recirculate it to the rest of us. Even if you can get everyone on board with masks, will there even be enough? Who will supply them? If I want to be safe from others’ germs, will I have to spend my own money, just like I do every other year on classroom supplies, to buy enough masks for all of my students?And what about this: they want us to socially distance our students, but have any of these politicians ever actually stepped foot inside a classroom these days? I’m just one of many teachers who have to make do with teaching in a tiny portable classroom. On a good day, with my bookshelves and desks arranged as tightly-packed as possible to maximize floor space, I still have difficulty navigating the room, squeezing between chairs and tables as I try to make my rounds and help every student, hoping my behind doesn’t end up in anyone’s face as I try to scoot past. So what do they anticipate a socially-distanced classroom to actually look like? Not to mention the fact that most secondary classrooms don’t even have individual desks, we have tables. So with two kids to a table, even if we had the space in our classrooms to spread out the tables, you will always have two students right next to each other at all times.And what about transitions between classrooms? As a middle school teacher, I can relate to the worries of other middle and high school teachers about the chaos that will surely ensue when the bell rings and students are dismissed into the hallways to get to their next class. Regardless of any safety measures teachers and staff put into place, what do you think will happen when students see their friends in the hallway, especially after so much time apart? Do you really think they will have the willpower to stay away from each other?And let’s say we somehow manage to get every single person, student and staff, to wear their mask diligently, and we’ve figured out the social distancing part. There will still be germs everywhere. Who is going to be responsible for cleaning every surface, in between every class change? Teachers, of course. Even if we had the ability to do this in the two-minute window between one class leaving and another entering, with what supplies will we be cleaning every desk and every doorknob? Finding a bottle of Lysol wipes in the store is like finding a needle in a haystack. Even commercial suppliers that our schools order directly through can’t get these types of cleaning supplies these days. If no one can guarantee me the supplies I need to keep my classroom (the space I live in for eight straight hours every day, five days a week) sanitized, what makes you think I want to agree to going back there?And what if someone gets sick? Do we all have to quarantine for two weeks? We’ll just end up learning virtually again at some point, so why prolong this outcome? Why put everyone in jeopardy when we’re just going to end up right back online at some point? Why not just start the year online, or some version of an online/in person hybrid until we finally find a way to rein this in?I could literally gone on and on about this forever. The list of questions educators are asking that aren’t being addressed is never-ending. All it takes is a quick google search, or scrolling through your Facebook feed to find how outraged and scared we are. We just want to know our health and safety, as well as that of our students, our colleagues, and our own families that we come home to, is being looked after. Because up until now, teachers have taken every piece of garbage that’s been thrown our way: budget cuts and lack of funding, pathetic salaries, lack of resources, disrespect from everyone and anyone not in the profession, we’ve handled it all with dignity and grace. But putting us in harm’s way? That’s where we have to draw the line.I’m not really a pessimistic person, I know how to find the good in life, but I’m definitely a realist who always considers the worst-case scenario, if for no other reason than to prepare myself mentally for what could happen. It’s possible I don’t get sick at all, or if I do, it’s a mild case. But as someone with asthma, all I can picture is laying in a hospital bed, hooked up to a ventilator, all because of some idiot politician was too selfish to think of the needs of those he’s putting at risk by forcing us back into physical school settings. While this rant will probably do nothing to actually change the course of action, at least I’ve done my part to make others outside the profession more aware of what educators are currently up against. And if nothing else, I’ve had a chance to get my frustrations and worries out on the page, so if the worst happens, I’ll know I said my piece.;

Network & Infrastructure

DNS & Hosting
IP Address
192.0.78.13
Reverse DNS
Not detected
SSL/TLS Certificate
Issuer
CN=E8, O=Let's Encrypt, C=US
Protocol Tls13
Expires In 65 days
HSTS Enabled

Technology Stack

Content Management Systems
WordPress WordPress (robots.txt)
JavaScript Frameworks
jQuery
Server Technologies
Generator: WordPress.com PHP (inferred from WordPress)

Services & Integrations

Analytics & Tracking
Google Analytics GA4 Google Analytics UA
E-commerce Platforms
Magento PrestaShop

CDN & Media Providers

Web Fonts
Font Awesome Google Fonts

Dynamic Analysis & Security

Dynamic JavaScript Analysis
Angular (Data Attributes) Bootstrap (CSS Classes) ES6+ JavaScript Features jQuery (CDN Detection) jQuery (Script Analysis) Single Page Application (SPA) - Suspected Web Server: nginx
Security Headers
HSTS
Server Headers
nginx

Resource Analysis

External Resource Hosts
0.gravatar.com
af.pubmine.com
assets.pinterest.com
assets.tumblr.com
fonts-api.wp.com
fonts.gstatic.com
gmpg.org
i.gr-assets.com
images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com
mind0vermadness.wordpress.com
pixel.wp.com
platform.twitter.com
s0.wp.com
s1.wp.com
s2.wp.com
scontent.ftpa1-2.fna.fbcdn.net
stats.wp.com
t4.ftcdn.net
wp.me
UI Frameworks & Libraries
Angular Material (Class Names) AOS Bootstrap (Class Names) D3.js Ionic (Class Names) Slate Swiper Vuetify (Class Names)

Social Media Integrations

Analysis Errors

Analysis Warnings & Errors
The following issues occurred during analysis:
  • Reverse DNS failed: No such host is known.
Analysis Complete

Analyzed mind0vermadness.wordpress.com with 5 technologies detected across 7 categories

Analysis completed in 556 ms • 2026-03-23 09:32:27 UTC