Also, the spice rack is not just an HGTV kitchen decoration.
Also, the spice rack is not just an HGTV kitchen decoration.
My personal fav (pls recall, I speak fluent sarcasm) is the awkwardly too long pause between video start and presenter realizing video has started. Dunno why. My therapist has a few ideas. All 7 of my alter egos can’t make up our minds though.dear YouTube content creators:
if your intro includes 2 of the following: "hey", "what's up/happening", "guys"
I will block your channel & never watch your content.
if your intro isn't original, I doubt your content is.
you know what the MOST RARE intro is? "hello & welcome"
Yup.Being a Dad:
I don’t want to brag or anything but my daughter knew everything I tried to tell her today.
Draining oil out of a broken refrigerant compressor I realized there must have been some liquid refrigerant left after a hurried vacuum.
Bubbling like a moat it reminded me of my sodastream and "how well will it carb" adventures. (It used to be "will it carbonate" but the answer is always YES for liquids. )
I'm starting to wonder how carbonated gravy might be for those savory dishes.
Or maybe a PB & Honey sammy with a little fizz.
Thanksgiving may never be the same. I scoff at fancy foam concoctions, bring on the carbonated cranberry sauce!
My personal fav (pls recall, I speak fluent sarcasm) is the awkwardly too long pause between video start and presenter realizing video has started. Dunno why. My therapist has a few ideas. All 7 of my alter egos can’t make up our minds though.
Reminds me of me. Moved into our very first house in 1983. In 2011 we were getting ready to list it and move. Found a still taped up box on a basement shelf from when we moved in, back in '83. Opened it and got rid of its contents.Things we found while cleaning one of the rooms in our house this weekend:
1. Daughter & son-in-law's wedding pictures. still needing to be framed. They were married in 2017. (We love them dearly but we're lazy like that).
2. Tempered glass screen protector for the nav screen in husband's car, still in package. He bought it in 2023.
3. 2 chairs from when we bought our dining set back in 2023, still in the box. (This is a large box that has to be moved anytime we need in a certain cabinet. It wasn't found so much as decided 'well maybe we'll get to that now').
Follow me for more housekeeping tips!
Things we found while cleaning one of the rooms in our house this weekend:
1. Daughter & son-in-law's wedding pictures. still needing to be framed. They were married in 2017. (We love them dearly but we're lazy like that).
2. Tempered glass screen protector for the nav screen in husband's car, still in package. He bought it in 2023.
3. 2 chairs from when we bought our dining set back in 2023, still in the box. (This is a large box that has to be moved anytime we need in a certain cabinet. It wasn't found so much as decided 'well maybe we'll get to that now').
Follow me for more housekeeping tips!
Reminds me of me. Moved into our very first house in 1983. In 2011 we were getting ready to list it and move. Found a still taped up box on a basement shelf from when we moved in, back in '83. Opened it and got rid of its contents.
I can help all y'all out.I can relate.
Brew on![]()
I get the sense that happened to you? At any rate, I solved that issue completely. Our current house has no basement. Saves on Rubbermaid containers.I can help all y'all out.
What you need, hear me out, is to store all this stuff in the basement.
Then one Spring, have the water table rise during a "once in a lifetime" rain event, causing artesian cracks in your basement floor.
Dumpster will be involved.
Along with tears, crying, gnashing of teeth, renting of clothing, general malaise and heartfelt remorse as you throw out so many things.
Now. Recover from that for about 10 years, only to have another "once in a lifetime" rain event. Now all your isht will be in Rubbermaid containers and up on 2x4 but you *will* have relaxed and started storing things on the basement floor again.
That will really, Really, REALLY, **REALLY** help clean the crap out of your house.
Follow me for more "ōsōji" tips.
Would use a basement but we don't have one, house is on a concrete slab (our development was built in the late 60's as low-income housing). Everything is either on shelves in the garage or in the rafters, or in random rooms in the house. Much of our disposable income over the years has gone to rubbermaid tubs, I have enough to start my own container store. Most of them filled with random things.
Your story reminds me of a Robin Williams bit, about hurricanes in the South. "We're gonna rebuild!!! Just like we did last year during hurricane season!!!" Or something along those lines.
Update: husband is now putting together those chairs. I'm hiding in the garage (not really, I'm always out here). The cussing is getting louder.
Been there too - dumpster and all. Was out of town when it happened, but the waterline on the basement wall said it got about a foot deep. A FEMA rep saw the dumpster, and stopped to ask if we needed assistance. I said we're ok, because I had seen some of the damage suffered by others that was so much worse.I can help all y'all out.
What you need, hear me out, is to store all this stuff in the basement.
Then one Spring, have the water table rise during a "once in a lifetime" rain event, causing artesian cracks in your basement floor.
Dumpster will be involved.
Along with tears, crying, gnashing of teeth, renting of clothing, general malaise and heartfelt remorse as you throw out so many things.
Now. Recover from that for about 10 years, only to have another "once in a lifetime" rain event. Now all your isht will be in Rubbermaid containers and up on 2x4 but you *will* have relaxed and started storing things on the basement floor again.
That will really, Really, REALLY, **REALLY** help clean the crap out of your house.
Follow me for more "ōsōji" tips.
Yup, no basement in current house.I get the sense that happened to you? At any rate, I solved that issue completely. Our current house has no basement. Saves on Rubbermaid containers.
I have one or two "Rubbermaid" tubs, but have no idea how many the wife has. Most of hers are either full of seasonal decorations, or gardening stuff.Would use a basement but we don't have one, house is on a concrete slab (our development was built in the late 60's as low-income housing). Everything is either on shelves in the garage or in the rafters, or in random rooms in the house. Much of our disposable income over the years has gone to rubbermaid tubs, I have enough to start my own container store. Most of them filled with random things.
Were one to measure and plot the items in my basement, Mine vs Hers, and vertical distance from the floor, one might possibly find that beer stuff, on average, is higher. Maybe.I have one or two "Rubbermaid" tubs, but have no idea how many the wife has.
Happens that way everywhere in my house. That fact that she is 4-11 and I am 6-1 has absolutely nothing to do with it...Were one to measure and plot the items in my basement, Mine vs Hers, and vertical distance from the floor, one might possibly find that beer stuff, on average, is higher. Maybe.
I read the articles that appeal to me.Alcohol is likely not very good for longevity.
I think you need to slow down and replace this:I've found that I don't doomscroll as much.
Cookscrolling, woodworkscrolling, coversofZepplintuneifplayedinthestyleofDireStraightsscrolling, yes.
Are they actually 12 inches now? For awhile there you could stack 5 of those bad boys next to Mt 4' 11" wife and she could probably see over them...It's weird to think that people who are 5 feet tall are only five Subway sandwiches long.
Subway sandwiches are not a foot long. They are a footlongIt's weird to think that people who are 5 feet tall are only five Subway sandwiches long.
Nope.Not sure, but in my mind they are. Curious though, did you actually try this with your wife?