What is something you can’t believe people enjoy doing?

124

Replies

  • Gossiping
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    Fishing, I just do not get the appeal of catching a live animal, throwing it back in and repeat.

    I like to fish. Sometimes I'll even put a line in. Non baited, I just like to look the part.
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    jenilla1 wrote: »
    Smoking. I can see how addicts would be driven to it, how they would physically need to do it to counteract withdrawal, but to actually enjoy it? How can purposely breathing in noxious chemicals be enjoyable?

    It isn't
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    x2 on smoking. I know it becomes a nicotine addiction and understand why people do it after they're hooked. But you have to make yourself inhale the smoke and smell it and overcome the yuck before you actually become addicted - which is why I don't understand why people do it.

    And kickboxing. I'd rather hear babies scream or be obese. No offense to those who love it.

    There was a time, believe it or not, where Dr's would appear in cigarette ads and recommend certain brands. The Marlboro man and Joe Camel were heroes, and grocery stores had ash trays at the end of each aisle. Also, if you grew up watching your parents smoke.

    The same things can be said about drinking alcohol. No one actually likes the first taste, it becomes an acquired thing.
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    Internet dating. WTF lol
  • your_future_ex_wife
    your_future_ex_wife Posts: 4,278 Member
    x2 on smoking. I know it becomes a nicotine addiction and understand why people do it after they're hooked. But you have to make yourself inhale the smoke and smell it and overcome the yuck before you actually become addicted - which is why I don't understand why people do it.

    And kickboxing. I'd rather hear babies scream or be obese. No offense to those who love it.

    There was a time, believe it or not, where Dr's would appear in cigarette ads and recommend certain brands. The Marlboro man and Joe Camel were heroes, and grocery stores had ash trays at the end of each aisle. Also, if you grew up watching your parents smoke.

    The same things can be said about drinking alcohol. No one actually likes the first taste, it becomes an acquired thing.

    like coffee
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    x2 on smoking. I know it becomes a nicotine addiction and understand why people do it after they're hooked. But you have to make yourself inhale the smoke and smell it and overcome the yuck before you actually become addicted - which is why I don't understand why people do it.

    And kickboxing. I'd rather hear babies scream or be obese. No offense to those who love it.

    There was a time, believe it or not, where Dr's would appear in cigarette ads and recommend certain brands. The Marlboro man and Joe Camel were heroes, and grocery stores had ash trays at the end of each aisle. Also, if you grew up watching your parents smoke.

    The same things can be said about drinking alcohol. No one actually likes the first taste, it becomes an acquired thing.

    like coffee

    Are we talking coffee coffe, or complicated milk based drinks with a dash of coffee for color?
  • your_future_ex_wife
    your_future_ex_wife Posts: 4,278 Member
    x2 on smoking. I know it becomes a nicotine addiction and understand why people do it after they're hooked. But you have to make yourself inhale the smoke and smell it and overcome the yuck before you actually become addicted - which is why I don't understand why people do it.

    And kickboxing. I'd rather hear babies scream or be obese. No offense to those who love it.

    There was a time, believe it or not, where Dr's would appear in cigarette ads and recommend certain brands. The Marlboro man and Joe Camel were heroes, and grocery stores had ash trays at the end of each aisle. Also, if you grew up watching your parents smoke.

    The same things can be said about drinking alcohol. No one actually likes the first taste, it becomes an acquired thing.

    like coffee

    Are we talking coffee coffe, or complicated milk based drinks with a dash of coffee for color?

    Straight up, black coffee that actually tastes like coffee. I contend it is an acquired taste - one which I have acquired.
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    x2 on smoking. I know it becomes a nicotine addiction and understand why people do it after they're hooked. But you have to make yourself inhale the smoke and smell it and overcome the yuck before you actually become addicted - which is why I don't understand why people do it.

    And kickboxing. I'd rather hear babies scream or be obese. No offense to those who love it.

    There was a time, believe it or not, where Dr's would appear in cigarette ads and recommend certain brands. The Marlboro man and Joe Camel were heroes, and grocery stores had ash trays at the end of each aisle. Also, if you grew up watching your parents smoke.

    The same things can be said about drinking alcohol. No one actually likes the first taste, it becomes an acquired thing.

    like coffee

    Are we talking coffee coffe, or complicated milk based drinks with a dash of coffee for color?

    Straight up, black coffee that actually tastes like coffee. I contend it is an acquired taste - one which I have acquired.

    I would agree. See above about Marlboro man and parents
  • your_future_ex_wife
    your_future_ex_wife Posts: 4,278 Member
    WSS. Black coffee....

    made me google 😁
  • brenn24179
    brenn24179 Posts: 2,144 Member
    going to school all the time, guess I am just not the intellect type.
  • corinasue1143
    corinasue1143 Posts: 7,464 Member
    ythannah wrote: »
    I will never understand how people feel the need to spend atrocious amounts of money on a vechile that approximately depreciates 20 percent of its value in the first year. As well as 15 percent each year afterwards, until after 10 years, in which it's worth becomes approximately 10 percent of what it originally cost.

    I bought brand new once, because I had the cash to pay for it outright... 19 years ago... I still drive it :)

    I don't think I'd splurge on brand new again, however. Late model secondhand most likely.

    Just where I’m headed. Have always bought new, but not upscale, careful about what I bought. (Read this as stingy as heck) This time bought a Camry, and I can’t let go. 10 years ago. If the motor falls out, I will buy new again, otherwise, I will just drive on.
  • laprimaJenny
    laprimaJenny Posts: 1,495 Member
    bojack5 wrote: »
    I will never understand how people feel the need to spend atrocious amounts of money on a vechile that approximately depreciates 20 percent of its value in the first year. As well as 15 percent each year afterwards, until after 10 years, in which it's worth becomes approximately 10 percent of what it originally cost.

    Well buying and living in a house is also a liability. Unless flipping or renting its very hard to consider the home you live in an asset But that doesnt change the happiness owning a home gives people.....even if it takes money out of their pocket every single month. I guess its that way with cars as well.....

    A car is not an investment and I would go as far as to say idealistically it should be paid with cash. If you cannot afford to pay cash for a house, it's okay to take out a loan, because the money you pay in interest will be negated by the appreciation of your house. Plus having a place to live is essential to life, but you could manage to live without a car. If you don’t own a house, you would have to pay rent regardless.
  • MrAcavano
    MrAcavano Posts: 197 Member
    Watching people play video games on YouTube. These kids today.
  • Internet dating. WTF lol

    ;)
  • accavallo wrote: »
    Watching people play video games on YouTube. These kids today.

    As we speak. I don't get it either.
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    edited July 2019
    accavallo wrote: »
    Watching people play video games on YouTube. These kids today.

    As we speak. I don't get it either.

    Same. Then I'll suggest letting me play and they can watch
    me, but nope. Gotta be Bricks O'Brien.

    On the plus side I went from spending $100~ish every other month on new games to $10 a month on YouTube premium. Just realized this so now I'll stop bitchin.
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    bojack5 wrote: »
    bojack5 wrote: »
    I will never understand how people feel the need to spend atrocious amounts of money on a vechile that approximately depreciates 20 percent of its value in the first year. As well as 15 percent each year afterwards, until after 10 years, in which it's worth becomes approximately 10 percent of what it originally cost.

    Well buying and living in a house is also a liability. Unless flipping or renting its very hard to consider the home you live in an asset But that doesnt change the happiness owning a home gives people.....even if it takes money out of their pocket every single month. I guess its that way with cars as well.....

    A car is not an investment and I would go as far as to say idealistically it should be paid with cash. If you cannot afford to pay cash for a house, it's okay to take out a loan, because the money you pay in interest will be negated by the appreciation of your house. Plus having a place to live is essential to life, but you could manage to live without a car. If you don’t own a house, you would have to pay rent regardless.

    The housing market is not gauranteed to appreciate. Also the longer you live in a house paying taxes, urilities, repairs, upgrades the more likely you will not get back what you pay for it no matter how much the market appreciates. Its true that renting costs money as well, but the financial risks of renting are minimal as are the expenses compared to that of owning a home. If you rent and it needs a roof, you dont pay for it, if the furnace or boiler goes....not on your dime either. Taking out a loan to buy a house you plan to live in of course is fine, juat as much as that fancy car......and both are liabilities and not assets. I flip houses, the longer i hold a property the more it eats into profit. However, I own a house....its a good house, worth almost double what i paid for it 18 yrs ago. And if i factor in what it has cost me to live in and maintain that house for 18 yrs.....if i sold it for twice what i bought it for.....id still lose money. But im ok with that, because thats the one house i bought not looking fotr a profit. Its my home.

    I try to think of it as a controller or CFO would.

    Mortgage/repairs = cap-ex. There's a return of value for the expenditure over time


    Utilities/tax/ = op-ex. Just the cost of running

  • dbanks80
    dbanks80 Posts: 3,685 Member
    The eating challenges. My husband loves watching these competitions. It's just not my thing.

    I agee. It makes me want to throw up. It's not appealing to watch people shoving a bunch of food in their mouths as fast as possible while it's spilling out on the sides and all. Yuck!
  • Darryl4126
    Darryl4126 Posts: 267 Member
    Starting drama an stirring up hate..
  • mattig89ch
    mattig89ch Posts: 2,648 Member
    Darryl4126 wrote: »
    Starting drama an stirring up hate..

    giphy.gif
  • bojack5 wrote: »
    bojack5 wrote: »
    I will never understand how people feel the need to spend atrocious amounts of money on a vechile that approximately depreciates 20 percent of its value in the first year. As well as 15 percent each year afterwards, until after 10 years, in which it's worth becomes approximately 10 percent of what it originally cost.

    Well buying and living in a house is also a liability. Unless flipping or renting its very hard to consider the home you live in an asset But that doesnt change the happiness owning a home gives people.....even if it takes money out of their pocket every single month. I guess its that way with cars as well.....

    A car is not an investment and I would go as far as to say idealistically it should be paid with cash. If you cannot afford to pay cash for a house, it's okay to take out a loan, because the money you pay in interest will be negated by the appreciation of your house. Plus having a place to live is essential to life, but you could manage to live without a car. If you don’t own a house, you would have to pay rent regardless.

    The housing market is not gauranteed to appreciate. Also the longer you live in a house paying taxes, urilities, repairs, upgrades the more likely you will not get back what you pay for it no matter how much the market appreciates. Its true that renting costs money as well, but the financial risks of renting are minimal as are the expenses compared to that of owning a home. If you rent and it needs a roof, you dont pay for it, if the furnace or boiler goes....not on your dime either. Taking out a loan to buy a house you plan to live in of course is fine, juat as much as that fancy car......and both are liabilities and not assets. I flip houses, the longer i hold a property the more it eats into profit. However, I own a house....its a good house, worth almost double what i paid for it 18 yrs ago. And if i factor in what it has cost me to live in and maintain that house for 18 yrs.....if i sold it for twice what i bought it for.....id still lose money. But im ok with that, because thats the one house i bought not looking fotr a profit. Its my home.

    I try to think of it as a controller or CFO would.

    Mortgage/repairs = cap-ex. There's a return of value for the expenditure over time


    Utilities/tax/ = op-ex. Just the cost of running

    In a healthy and thriving market non of this even needs to be considered. I bought my last house brand new and it doubled in value in one year. The last 10 - 15 years in the Toronto housing market has been a CASH COW... with no need to invest into the property really at all. Of course updates will only improve your return. Homes around here appreciate in value drastically making them no where near comparable to investing in a regular vehicle... so when you moving to the six Georgie? lol 😘
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    bojack5 wrote: »
    bojack5 wrote: »
    I will never understand how people feel the need to spend atrocious amounts of money on a vechile that approximately depreciates 20 percent of its value in the first year. As well as 15 percent each year afterwards, until after 10 years, in which it's worth becomes approximately 10 percent of what it originally cost.

    Well buying and living in a house is also a liability. Unless flipping or renting its very hard to consider the home you live in an asset But that doesnt change the happiness owning a home gives people.....even if it takes money out of their pocket every single month. I guess its that way with cars as well.....

    A car is not an investment and I would go as far as to say idealistically it should be paid with cash. If you cannot afford to pay cash for a house, it's okay to take out a loan, because the money you pay in interest will be negated by the appreciation of your house. Plus having a place to live is essential to life, but you could manage to live without a car. If you don’t own a house, you would have to pay rent regardless.

    The housing market is not gauranteed to appreciate. Also the longer you live in a house paying taxes, urilities, repairs, upgrades the more likely you will not get back what you pay for it no matter how much the market appreciates. Its true that renting costs money as well, but the financial risks of renting are minimal as are the expenses compared to that of owning a home. If you rent and it needs a roof, you dont pay for it, if the furnace or boiler goes....not on your dime either. Taking out a loan to buy a house you plan to live in of course is fine, juat as much as that fancy car......and both are liabilities and not assets. I flip houses, the longer i hold a property the more it eats into profit. However, I own a house....its a good house, worth almost double what i paid for it 18 yrs ago. And if i factor in what it has cost me to live in and maintain that house for 18 yrs.....if i sold it for twice what i bought it for.....id still lose money. But im ok with that, because thats the one house i bought not looking fotr a profit. Its my home.

    I try to think of it as a controller or CFO would.

    Mortgage/repairs = cap-ex. There's a return of value for the expenditure over time


    Utilities/tax/ = op-ex. Just the cost of running

    In a healthy and thriving market non of this even needs to be considered. I bought my last house brand new and it doubled in value in one year. The last 10 - 15 years in the Toronto housing market has been a CASH COW... with no need to invest into the property really at all. Of course updates will only improve your return. Homes around here appreciate in value drastically making them no where near comparable to investing in a regular vehicle... so when you moving to the six Georgie? lol 😘

    I'd move right now if it gets me out of this humidity. Another .25 percent increase and folks down here will need to grow gills just to breathe.
  • Tankiscool
    Tankiscool Posts: 11,105 Member
    bojack5 wrote: »
    bojack5 wrote: »
    I will never understand how people feel the need to spend atrocious amounts of money on a vechile that approximately depreciates 20 percent of its value in the first year. As well as 15 percent each year afterwards, until after 10 years, in which it's worth becomes approximately 10 percent of what it originally cost.

    Well buying and living in a house is also a liability. Unless flipping or renting its very hard to consider the home you live in an asset But that doesnt change the happiness owning a home gives people.....even if it takes money out of their pocket every single month. I guess its that way with cars as well.....

    A car is not an investment and I would go as far as to say idealistically it should be paid with cash. If you cannot afford to pay cash for a house, it's okay to take out a loan, because the money you pay in interest will be negated by the appreciation of your house. Plus having a place to live is essential to life, but you could manage to live without a car. If you don’t own a house, you would have to pay rent regardless.

    The housing market is not gauranteed to appreciate. Also the longer you live in a house paying taxes, urilities, repairs, upgrades the more likely you will not get back what you pay for it no matter how much the market appreciates. Its true that renting costs money as well, but the financial risks of renting are minimal as are the expenses compared to that of owning a home. If you rent and it needs a roof, you dont pay for it, if the furnace or boiler goes....not on your dime either. Taking out a loan to buy a house you plan to live in of course is fine, juat as much as that fancy car......and both are liabilities and not assets. I flip houses, the longer i hold a property the more it eats into profit. However, I own a house....its a good house, worth almost double what i paid for it 18 yrs ago. And if i factor in what it has cost me to live in and maintain that house for 18 yrs.....if i sold it for twice what i bought it for.....id still lose money. But im ok with that, because thats the one house i bought not looking fotr a profit. Its my home.

    I try to think of it as a controller or CFO would.

    Mortgage/repairs = cap-ex. There's a return of value for the expenditure over time


    Utilities/tax/ = op-ex. Just the cost of running

    US accountants wearing off on you, huh buddy? ;)
  • George_of_the_Jungle
    George_of_the_Jungle Posts: 3,316 Member
    Tankiscool wrote: »
    bojack5 wrote: »
    bojack5 wrote: »
    I will never understand how people feel the need to spend atrocious amounts of money on a vechile that approximately depreciates 20 percent of its value in the first year. As well as 15 percent each year afterwards, until after 10 years, in which it's worth becomes approximately 10 percent of what it originally cost.

    Well buying and living in a house is also a liability. Unless flipping or renting its very hard to consider the home you live in an asset But that doesnt change the happiness owning a home gives people.....even if it takes money out of their pocket every single month. I guess its that way with cars as well.....

    A car is not an investment and I would go as far as to say idealistically it should be paid with cash. If you cannot afford to pay cash for a house, it's okay to take out a loan, because the money you pay in interest will be negated by the appreciation of your house. Plus having a place to live is essential to life, but you could manage to live without a car. If you don’t own a house, you would have to pay rent regardless.

    The housing market is not gauranteed to appreciate. Also the longer you live in a house paying taxes, urilities, repairs, upgrades the more likely you will not get back what you pay for it no matter how much the market appreciates. Its true that renting costs money as well, but the financial risks of renting are minimal as are the expenses compared to that of owning a home. If you rent and it needs a roof, you dont pay for it, if the furnace or boiler goes....not on your dime either. Taking out a loan to buy a house you plan to live in of course is fine, juat as much as that fancy car......and both are liabilities and not assets. I flip houses, the longer i hold a property the more it eats into profit. However, I own a house....its a good house, worth almost double what i paid for it 18 yrs ago. And if i factor in what it has cost me to live in and maintain that house for 18 yrs.....if i sold it for twice what i bought it for.....id still lose money. But im ok with that, because thats the one house i bought not looking fotr a profit. Its my home.

    I try to think of it as a controller or CFO would.

    Mortgage/repairs = cap-ex. There's a return of value for the expenditure over time


    Utilities/tax/ = op-ex. Just the cost of running

    US accountants wearing off on you, huh buddy? ;)

    Always attracted to people who know money better than me holmes
  • smoofinator
    smoofinator Posts: 635 Member
    Watching reality TV. Nothing you see on those shows is "reality."
  • KosmosKitten
    KosmosKitten Posts: 10,476 Member
    Having more than one child, on purpose. Surprises and "happy coincidences" are fine, but I've never been able to understand what enjoyment parents get from having multiple tiny humans running around.

    It's just not for me, I guess.