For example, when I’m at work I don’t feel like it, or if I do I can hold it back without any problem, but when I get home the urge seems to be uncontrollable and impossible to hold back.

  • OpenStars@discuss.online
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    2 months ago

    I think back when people had less space and fewer things, they would hold the good fancy items for special events. Whereas now everyone has far more than they need… except ironically health insurance, a stable job, oh yeah a place to live, food, etc.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Everyone everywhere stores their actual dishes in their built-in kitchen cabinets and have for longer than I’ve been alive.

      Since the dawn of the 20th century, the dining room cupboard went through the following stages of evolution:

      • That’s where we keep the dishes, and when we serve dinner we put the food there on the cabinet’s countertop so you can get your plate and serve yourself right there nice and convenient.
      • That’s the case where we keep mom’s good china, we use those for special occasions like Thanksgiving and Christmas and when the pastor comes over for dinner, the normal dishes we got from Sears are in the kitchen.
      • Those dishes were ordered from a catalog in the 1950’s for your grandmother and are therefore more sacred than the lining of God’s ballsack. Even thinking of eating off of them is a heresy.
      • Millennials are killing the fine china industry
      • 10 unbelievable tips for reducing generational clutter, number 7 will shock you.
      • I bought this mass produced coffee mug available at national retail chains for $14 from a scalper on eBay for $290. It says JOY written in Skellington Sans.