Sukkah Day 17

This is a friend putting up our roof.

This is me sawing support beams.

This is all our plywood we accumulated.

1. Sukkot represents impermanence (something that should not be permanent). Explain if you believe or disagree that our Sukkah, which is safely standing on its own, is violating that. I do not think so. As long as our sukkah can come down easily than it should be fine.

2. Describe how this Sukkah project has changed your perspective (how has it changed, what has it changed about, has it changed for the better/worst). Well, it changed my point of view on yelling at people. When I yell it makes me feel bad but I just can’t stop yelling. In the beginning, I didn’t care “Aw whatever it doesn’t matter nobody cares” is what I said but now I think of it a very different way.

3. Explain how you have used your body thus far to build this Sukkah. I used the strength and I guess height to lift, hammer, screw, drag, etc, anything that needed to be lifted, hammered, screwed, dragged, or carried.

4. How do you plan on getting guests into the Sukkah? Well, I think they will come just because they are forced to and I do not think they will have a choice. But on a view of actually getting them in the sukkah, there is a door.

5. What are some activities you wish to do in the Sukkah? I wish to shake the lulav and have fun with friends in the sukkah.

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