
2.2M
MIPicture this: a classroom full of brains buzzing like caffeinated bees, and me—the fearless conductor of chaos—turning confusion into enlightenment (and maybe a little panic). The human brain has 86 billion neurons, which is a lot of tiny decision-makers—some cooperative, some throwing wild tantrums like toddlers on a sugar rush. My mission? To teach them without starting a small neurological war. Thanks to neuroplasticity, I get to play brain-plumber: rearranging connections, unclogging doubts, and occasionally sprinkling in a joke so funny that a neuron might actually high-five another neuron. Honestly, being a teacher is like being a magician who also does biology experiments and stand-up comedy at the same time."
"And let’s talk about the butterfly effect, because apparently, even a sneeze in a classroom could change the future of the universe—or at least your student’s lunch plans. If I inspire one student, who knows—they might grow up to cure cancer, invent a teleporting scooter, or finally figure out why socks disappear in the laundry. I want to be that invisible hand, the secret superhero behind the next big discovery, armed with a whiteboard marker and a ridiculous sense of humor. Teaching isn’t just about textbooks—it’s about creating chaos, curiosity, and occasional explosions of laughter that somehow lead to genius. Basically, I want to shape minds, change the world, and make sure nobody ever falls asleep in my class… well, not for long, at least.
@milaa.noir










