I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here?
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I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here? Lazyweb, a question:
On a whim, I've added zipper pulls to a bunch of my clothes and coats. It's such a small, inexpensive thing but it's an improvement I notice dozens of times a day, especially wearing winter gloves.
So I'm thinking about aggregating marginal gains now, and wondering what other options like this I have. What is the _smallest_ thing - in terms of size, cost, effort, whatever - that has made your life better in some way?
Keeping a pen and small paper notepad always nearby to scribble down anything that pops to mind, so I can trust my notes and keep my mind clear.
On a more digital note, making my downloads folder self-destruct did wonders to keeping my files clean and organized:
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I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here? Lazyweb, a question:
On a whim, I've added zipper pulls to a bunch of my clothes and coats. It's such a small, inexpensive thing but it's an improvement I notice dozens of times a day, especially wearing winter gloves.
So I'm thinking about aggregating marginal gains now, and wondering what other options like this I have. What is the _smallest_ thing - in terms of size, cost, effort, whatever - that has made your life better in some way?
@mhoye pumping up my bike tyres.
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Oh, another one: a jar of binder clips in the kitchen. Don’t bother with ties or big “chip clips” or whatever, just fold the bag over and put the clip on it, cheap and easy.
The jar lives on my desk, but there's a section in my silverware drawer that contains clothes pins & binder clips for this purpose.
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I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here? Lazyweb, a question:
On a whim, I've added zipper pulls to a bunch of my clothes and coats. It's such a small, inexpensive thing but it's an improvement I notice dozens of times a day, especially wearing winter gloves.
So I'm thinking about aggregating marginal gains now, and wondering what other options like this I have. What is the _smallest_ thing - in terms of size, cost, effort, whatever - that has made your life better in some way?
@mhoye dry-erase board on fridge for grocery items as well as meal plan for week
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Some of my answers to this include:
- A canning funnel. Cheap, and spill-free pouring stuff into containers is a lot easier.
- Oil all the hinges in the house.
- Get a slow-settling toilet seat, so it never slams down.
1. I keep an Olfa utility knife everywhere I need one so I can quickly open and break down boxes or get into stubborn clamshell packages without ruining scissors. I use the same blade on everything and keep a box of replacements.
2. Same as 1 but scissors
3. I've been using the same pack of microfibre cloths for years. I use them for cleaning glasses, lenses, computer screens, and etc. Wash gentle cycle, tumble dry low, no fabric softener.
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I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here? Lazyweb, a question:
On a whim, I've added zipper pulls to a bunch of my clothes and coats. It's such a small, inexpensive thing but it's an improvement I notice dozens of times a day, especially wearing winter gloves.
So I'm thinking about aggregating marginal gains now, and wondering what other options like this I have. What is the _smallest_ thing - in terms of size, cost, effort, whatever - that has made your life better in some way?
I'm too lazy even for that. (Note: all my shirts live on hangers in the closet.) I just paint/draw a mark down the top of the left shoulder, & hang all my shirts with tags (the back) to the right, so I can see at a glance which are the "good" shirts & which are the scruffy ones.)
Also makes the difference obvious coming out of the wash.
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@mhoye Stainless steel kitchen containers.
Cleanup is easy, contents don't spoil nearly as fast compared to plastic-only containers, and every part is replaceable. Flour, sugar, baking soda, all the core components sit comfortably inside.
Like, stainless steel *everything* in the kitchen is also good. Pans, tongs, measuring spoons, jiggers, etc. So many places sell cheap plastic crap that's a PITA to maintain, that the extra dollar or two makes a world of difference every day.
Same with a bag of clothespins, kind of like your binder clip suggestion but less effective.
Outside the kitchen? A power screwdriver. Just...why, *why* did I not buy this sooner? *Why* did I hate my hands so much, for so long?
A roll of tac-tape is also a godsend for securing all the things (cables, bundles, books, etc). It's everywhere, but I'm still on my first roll ever because it's infinitely reusable.
I keep a goodly stock of magnets on hand. The first instance was a cabinet door that would •not• stay open. Fortunately, the cabinet hangs next to the stove hood. Just stuck a couple magnets where the door hits the hood, then taped some steel plates on the inside of the door. Voilà: (mostly) invisible doorstop.
Handy in other uses: on the inside of the embroidery tin, so loose crochet hooks & needles don't go walkies between threads.
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I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here? Lazyweb, a question:
On a whim, I've added zipper pulls to a bunch of my clothes and coats. It's such a small, inexpensive thing but it's an improvement I notice dozens of times a day, especially wearing winter gloves.
So I'm thinking about aggregating marginal gains now, and wondering what other options like this I have. What is the _smallest_ thing - in terms of size, cost, effort, whatever - that has made your life better in some way?
@mhoye clear cycling glasses.
They make you look like a bit of a knob, but they’re really comfortable for biking when it’s raining or snowing.
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@mhoye clear cycling glasses.
They make you look like a bit of a knob, but they’re really comfortable for biking when it’s raining or snowing.
@slothrop Ah, this is a strong entry. Affordable, too.
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@mhoye eating some food with a spoon, an I'm not talking about soups, but more like stews and small pasta. If it's already bite sized, spoon.
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@mhoye I could go as far as eating sushi with a spoon. Sue me :-P
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@mhoye command hooks.
Got a thing that you use often but keeps getting buried? Stick it to the wall.
I do this with my keys so they do t get lost in the counter pile, and I’m less likely to forget them on my way out the door if they’re at eye level where I walk past
My keys live on a hook by the front door. They also have a chain loop that's •just• long enough to go around my hand, & live on my wrist when I'm out. There's also a safety pin, so that if I need my hand clear, I pin them to the inside of a shirt pocket. There's also a biner inside my pack, because my shirt pockets get full & I need my hands free at work.
I get very fucked up if my keys land somewhere other than one of those four places....
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@mhoye Carabiner clips (could double up as zipper pulls)
Reusable velcro strips (I travel with a lot of cables...)
And yes, binder clips (they even keep filled glass slide trays secure for transport)Something slightly larger - net curtains to keep the bugs outside open windows without faffing with window mesh
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@mhthaung Having a roll of velcro strip is great, particularly having a yard of it in the travel bag.
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@mhoye chip clips instead of bothering to try and 'ziplock' shut all the bags that have zippers now. I notoriously fail at zipping them. Now, I just fold clip and go.
Oh those f'ing "ziplock" things. I especially hate them on frozen fruit bags & whatnot. Were somewhat useable back when they used quality plastic on those, but nowadays—I just bypass the "proper" opening & use a clip to close it.
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@mhoye
1. A daily pill case, which sounds stupid because they're already so ubiquitous, but I tried for years to make a pill reminder app on my phone be a thing, and there's no contest. Spend $4 on the daily pill container. Do not try to use technology.2. The BIG eyeglasses cleaning cloths. The tiny ones they give you at the optometrist suck. Get the dinner-plate sized ones and never accidentally touch your lenses ever again.
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@Roundtrip @arclight @mhoye @jimfl
I date •everything•. I've also finally figured out a useful indexing system for my bullet-journals. Instead of page numbers (because repeats when the file gets too big & have to start a new one) the "page reference" is just the date-time.
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I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here? Lazyweb, a question:
On a whim, I've added zipper pulls to a bunch of my clothes and coats. It's such a small, inexpensive thing but it's an improvement I notice dozens of times a day, especially wearing winter gloves.
So I'm thinking about aggregating marginal gains now, and wondering what other options like this I have. What is the _smallest_ thing - in terms of size, cost, effort, whatever - that has made your life better in some way?
@mhoye
Kitchen shears to cut up herbs, green onion. Less motor control needed by aging handsSmall bins for fridge shelves. Better space use +easily pull them out to a counter thus saving my bending back
Scrap paper slips 2cm x4cm. I make freezer food containers. I write type+date on one end then slide the blank end under the cover edge. No sticky tape. Readable in a stack. Compostable. I provide frozen soups to some with memory issues they love this. They keep the tabs of their favs.
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I threw this up on Metafilter too, but why not here? Lazyweb, a question:
On a whim, I've added zipper pulls to a bunch of my clothes and coats. It's such a small, inexpensive thing but it's an improvement I notice dozens of times a day, especially wearing winter gloves.
So I'm thinking about aggregating marginal gains now, and wondering what other options like this I have. What is the _smallest_ thing - in terms of size, cost, effort, whatever - that has made your life better in some way?
@mhoye keep a dedicated hand broom next to the dinner table, to deal with crumbs and flour. Especially if you bake a lot.
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Get many, many boxes of tissues and then any time you find yourself getting up to find a tissue, leave a box there for next time.
Leave a full (6-roll) pack of toilet paper in the bathroom and replenish when it gets to 2 or less.
Maintain a pool of good rechargeable batteries, a charger, 'charged' and 'empty' bins, and put them in a high-traffic area so that you'll notice when the charger is done and put in the next batch.
Oh, this reminds me of my general policy wrt consumables: always have two in the cabinet. That way, when you empty the current one, you have the next in line to go to, & one for margin in case the store is out when you shop next.
Also, at least as important: the •minute• you empty [thing], it goes on the grocery list. "I'll do that in a minute/when I finish/when I come back" is a recipe for forgetting & running out.