You have hydroxide in the scheme in your first post. You can't get a bottle of -OH, you need a positive counterion. That cation is your coordinating metal ion.
Awesome Dan, thanks a lot! My coordinating metal would be Na in this case because we used NaOH in the lab!
I don't agree with your drawing of the enolate, look up the conformation of cyclohexenes.
Ok, thanks discodermolide. I never knew cyclohexenes had a different conformation than cyclohexanes. I just did a little bit of reading up on, and my cyclohexene would look like the drawing I have posted below.
In my "3" position I would have my enolate, in the "4" position I would have the coordinating metal, Na in my case, and finally at "5" I would have by hydroxide!
So when I am looking for the geometry of the enolate, what would I say? The enolate and hydroxide are opposite? There must be a nice word that describes this geometry! Or would I simply draw this cyclohexene conformation and that would be a good enough description of the geometry!
Thanks discodermolide for pushing me in the right direction, it was awesome!