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So say you just moved from England to the US
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and you've got your old school supplies from England
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and your new school supplies from the US
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and it's your first day of school and you get to class
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and find that your new American paper doesn't fit in your
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old English binder.
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The paper is too wide, and hangs out. So you
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cut off the extra and end up with all these strips of paper.
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And to keep yourself amused during your math class
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you start playing with them.
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And by you, I mean
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Arthur H. Stone in 1939.
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Anyway, there's lots of cool things you can
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do with a strip of paper. You can fold it into shapes.
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And more shapes.
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Maybe spiral it around snugly like this.
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Maybe make it into a square.
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Maybe wrap it into a hexagon with a nice symmetric
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sort of cycle to the flappy parts. In fact, there's enough
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space here to keep wrapping the strip, and then your hexagon is pretty stable.
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And you're like, "I don't know, hexagons
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aren't too exciting, but I guess it has symmetry or something."
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Maybe you could kinda fold it so the flappy parts are down and the unflappy parts are up.
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That's symmetric, and it collapses down into these three triangles, which collapse
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down into one triangle, and collapsible hexagons are,
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you suppose, cool enough to amuse you at least a little bit during your class.
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And then, since hexagons have six-way symmetry,
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you decide to try this three-way fold the other way,
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with flappy parts up, and are collapsing it down
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when suddenly the inside of your hexagon decides to
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open up. What? You close it back up and undo it.
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Everything seems the same as before,
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the center is not open-uppable.
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But when you fold it that way again,
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it, like, flips inside-out. Weird.
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This time, instead of going backwards, you try doing it
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again. And again. And again. And again. And-
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You want to make one that's a little less messy,
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so you try again with another strip and tape it nicely
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into a twisty-foldy loop. You decide
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that it would be cool to color the sides, so you get out a
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highlighter and make one yellow. Now
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you can flip from yellow side to white side.
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Yellow side, white side, yellow side, white side
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Hmm. White side? What? Where did the yellow side go?
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So you go back, and this time you color the white side
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green, and find that your paper has three sides.
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Yellow, white, and green.
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Now this thing is definitely cool.
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Therefore, you need to name it.
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And since it's shaped like a hexagon and you flex it
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and flex rhymes with hex, hexaflexagon it is.
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That night, you can't sleep because you keep thinking
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about hexaflexagons.
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And the next day, as soon as you get to your math class
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you pull our your paper strips.
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You had made this sort of spirally folded paper that folds
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into again, the shape of a piece of paper,
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and you decide to take that
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And use it like a strip of paper to make a hexaflexagon.
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Which would totally work, but it feels sturdier
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with the extra paper. And you color
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the three sides and are like,
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Orange, yellow, pink. And you're sort of trying
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to pay attention to class. Math, yeah.
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Orange, yellow, pink. Orange, yellow, pink.
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Orange, yellow, white? Wait a second.
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Okay, so you color that one green.
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And now it's orange, yellow, green. Orange, yellow, green.
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Who knows where the pink side went?
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Oh, there it is. Now it's back to orange, yellow, pink.
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Orange, yellow, pink. Hmm. Blue.
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Yellow, pink, blue. Yellow, pink, blue. Yellow, pink, huh.
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With the old flexagon, you could only flex it one way,
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flappy way up.
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But now there's more flaps. So maybe you can
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fold it both ways. Yes, one goes from pink to blue,
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but the other, from pink to orange.