🔌
It's hard keeping all your inanimate objects alive, but every couple of months—after growing tired of a subpar experience using your electric doodad as analogue —you can recharge them or replace their batteries, and life feels a little brighter.
recommendation image
13h ago

Comments

Make an account to reply.
No comments yet

Related Recs

📱
even if it’s just for a couple minutes while it reboots on a charger. I do this at least once a day and it’s freeing🤍 ((also good for your battery life))
Mar 29, 2025
😃
ever been out and your phone is running low? wtf shouldn’t be a bad thing but it kinda is. charge your phone before you go out
Nov 26, 2023
💭
I started doing this intentionally now and the reverse psychology of it all actually helps to ground me in real time out in the world doing whatever i'm doing outside of the house. Requires some thinking ahead but not much. You don't need apple pay; just bring your wallet. Once your phone dies let the world unravel at your fingertips. This trick works really well with laptops too. I don't bring my computer charger anymore when I leave the house to work because if I know my laptop will probably die within the next 2-3 hours I can fully lock in and work against the clock. I can actually send the emails I need to send and write what I planned to write with tab surfing and frequent news feed refreshing. I'm an Aries so obviously there is a competitive undertone here that's driving me even if it's just with myself
May 24, 2024

Top Recs from @mlooper

recommendation image
✂️
Almost every piece of printed material could benefit from having rounded corners. Imagine being served an official court document or a parking ticket with elegant little corners. “Harsh news with soft corners” could be a memoir title or a letter to your ex. I think it’s a lovely detail and design decision that will make you look thoughtful and intelligent.
Jul 7, 2025
recommendation image
🪴
For dramatic effect and also so they can gab.
10h ago
recommendation image
🌱
A humble countertop oasis that serves as a poignant reminder that growth happens slowly and in unexpected ways.
Jul 4, 2025