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Someone Asks What Current Trend Will Be The Most Regrettable 20 Years From Now, And 35 People Don’t Hold Back
Things are changing so quickly that it’s hard to keep up! As the world becomes more and more interconnected, we become aware of all the ways that the rest of the world lives. Trends that might have been fated to stay local a few decades ago now go viral and spread around the globe, powered by social media and the news.
However, much of what we take for granted these days might not stand the test of time. The future might be radically different, and people living years from now might look back at 2022 with a lot of confusion (and probably judgment) about how we did things.
Internet users shared their thoughts about what trends will be the most regrettable in 20 years’ time in an interesting r/AskReddit thread, and we’re bringing you their best insights to get your noggins jogging. From gender reveal parties to denying climate change, some trends are pretty darn bad. As you’re reading, have a think about what fads and ideas you think will go the way of the dodo (i.e. extinct) in the near future, Pandas, and share your thoughts in the comments.
Pop culture and lifestyle expert Mike Sington, from LA, was kind enough to share his thoughts on current trends, what's here to stay, what will (hopefully!) go away, and how the people of the future might react to the fads of 2022. Check out Bored Panda's full interview with him.
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Taking away women’s body autonomy. We will all pay for this.
Bored Panda asked pop culture expert Mike which current trends, in his opinion, probably won't stand the test of time. "Sharing personal photos of yourself, your life, your family, and especially your children will probably seem very peculiar in a couple of decades," he told us.
"People just now are becoming increasingly concerned about privacy on the internet, and it will be odd in the future to look back and see how much of ourselves we used to willingly share," Mike mused that, in the future, privacy will likely be a much greater concern than now.
Electing people to public office who have zero qualifications because they’re famous for some bullshit.
It also doesn't appear to be just about celebrity status. It's how much money you have and can afford to throw at a campaign. So the "average Joe" who actually might make a bloody good leader is unlikely to ever be in the runnings.
In the pop culture expert's opinion, no matter how much time passes, humor is "here to stay."
"Funny thoughts, anecdotes, and memes are popular now, and will have staying power on the internet. People often go online for escapism, and humor has always provided that. I don’t foresee that changing," he said that humor itself is timeless. People will always want (and need!) to have a good laugh.
Meanwhile, we were curious to figure out how to tell if something's a long-term trend or just a passing fad that'll go away in just a few years or even months.
"If something becomes popular quickly and seems to come out of nowhere, it’s more likely to be a passing fad," Mike, Hollywood's Ultimate Insider, shared his thoughts with Bored Panda.
Gender reveal parties and promposals
Good lord it seems they get more ridiculous every week. This s**t needs to go.
I hope: mommy bloggers who post constant pics and details of their children. Robbing children of privacy for likes and money is sickening.
Don’t even get me started on ones with sick kids…
Cruel pranks on strangers for views
It absolutely infuriates me to see these, "its a prank bro". No it isn't, it's harassment.
"Long-term trends with staying power seem to build more slowly, but at a steady pace. Be careful of jumping on the 'bandwagon' yourself, just because something is popular in the moment. That’s the scenario that’s most likely to haunt you in the future," he shared.
"Oh, and gender reveal parties? Get rid of them. Let me break it to you- no one cares what the sex of your child is, except you," Mike said, and we wholeheartedly agree.
Predicting the future is never easy. It can be done, but it’s never going to be close to 100% accurate. Well, not until we develop genuine AIs that can take into account trillions of different factors and how they play off each other and connect into a dynamic, ever-shifting whole, but that probably won’t happen for quite some time yet. (But if it already has, Skynet, we love you, please don’t punish us for liking social media so much!)
Mommy needs a drink and mommy wine culture — I hate this BS of normalizing alcoholism and these 'Poor me, my suburbia life is so rough, I can’t make it without wine o’clock.' Huge eye roll.
Climate change denial.
Global warming is one of those problems that we won't truly recognise until the damage has already been done. We are reaching that point.
In twenty years there will no longer be a façade.
I would argue that we have already reached that point as significant portions of humanity are just stupid to realise what is happening and what needs to be done. We needed action 30 years ago. My son is 14 and what world is he going to experience, his kids, their kids? It deeply saddens me.
Social Media.
It has negatively affected mental health, caused irreparable damage to grammar and the English language as a whole, produced multiple generations of narcissists.
Social media has its place. I use it to keep in touch with friends and family who are all now 5000 miles away since I moved to Spain. I also use it to keep track of goings on and available services in my area here where I moved. What I DON'T use it for is a daily ego boost or "influencer" platform. It's all in how you view social media. For me it's a tool.
Aaron Genest, from Siemens Software, explained to Bored Panda that we can get a good idea of what the future might hold, what technologies will be around, by looking ‘upstream’ in the investment space.
"For instance, it takes almost two years to develop and produce a computer chip and get it to market for a phone, and five years to get something into a new kind of car. So if we want to have a sense for what, for instance, the gadgets in our cars will look like in 2026, we just need to look at what the car manufacturers are asking their suppliers to design today,” he explained to Bored Panda earlier.
According to the tech specialist, industries that invest billions of dollars into particular technologies, e.g. 5G or particular chips, will want to recoup their investments. So it’s likely that the things they invested in will, at least in part, play some sort of role in the future of tech.
Eyelashes so fake they look like spiders.
Single use plastics
But.... straws 😢 I know some people won't be happy with this. I don't like excessive use of plastic either and try to avoid it. But paper straws are just gross, there's no other way for me to describe it. I need a better alternative :/
Filming everything you do. I was born in the late 1980s and this is just so weird to me since I grew up in an era of film cameras where every shot counted. It's so bizarre seeing some of my coworkers in their twenties film an average workday at the office like it's some sort of tourist attraction. Why would you do this?
Meanwhile, Ramona Pringle, from the Creative Innovation Studio at Ryerson University revealed to Bored Panda some time ago that while we don’t know for sure what the future will hold, we can count on some trends to keep going strong: “We love stories, and we love to be part of something bigger than ourselves. Be it oral storytelling, books, blogs, movies, or video games, we’ve never lost our love of narrative.”
According to the expert, people will always look for ways to be together, to be connected to one another. We long for communal experiences, whether in concert halls, being entertained in giant arenas, or remotely.
“Immersion and interactivity have long been goals for creators and media makers when it comes to how technology can influence entertainment,” Ramona told us.
Subscription-based everything. You can't own SHIT these days. Everything is a matter of 'You can have access to this thing, but only so long as you give us some money per month.'
"And we have the ability to add or remove it from the collection at our leisure, so hopefully you want it when we do."
Oh, and even though you already pay a subscription, and have been watching programs we offer without commercials, we’re now going to show them with the most annoying, badly timed (like breaking away mid-sentence then not returning to that exact same point so we can hear the rest of that sentence), and long running blocks of the same commercials, over and over again, unless you pay us even more. You know, like free TV used to.
Load More Replies...Just read that BMW is adding subscription based heated seats in their cars!?!!? What?! If you don't pay it doesn't work. WTH? The equipment is already in the darned car, and now you have to pay to use it?
It's a BS way for manufacturers to milk consumers. If I decide to buy the heated seats, I get to use them for as long as I want. What about the next guy? When that car is sold used, the next person has to pay for those seats again. Also, I lose that money because me purchasing the seats as a service means there is no additional value added to the vehicle. As a factory option, the heated seats would add resale value.
Load More Replies...One upon a time we owned our cassettes, cd's , video tapes and dvd's. You paid for it once, and that was it. Unless your old copy wore out, or an updated version was released. Now....you own nothing. I always hear people say "I bought so & so's album", and then they pull it up on Spotify. No....you didn't buy anything. You paid a streaming service to give you access to an album, until they decide otherwise.
I buy songs/albums on Bandcamp, or Amazon music if it's not on Bandcamp. Then I download the music on my own portable hard drive
Load More Replies...This is why people pirate content, I DO own a copy of all my favorite media, whether the law likes it or not.
I will never by digital books or music...I love the texture and the smell of a book, and album covers! The artwork, the liner notes...all lost when you do it through downloads.
I agreed with your sentiment but as an avid reader I realised my shelves were filling with books I would never read again and I live in a place where no one else will be interested in my books (a language thing) so I have gone the digital route for general books.
Load More Replies...I don't think it's gong away anytime soon, in fact I think that a lot more things in our lives are going to the subscription based model in the near future like features in the cars and probably cars themselves.
I think carfeature subscription is an impertinance. car subscription on other hand... clever! parked cars use so much expensive space in the city, its a shame. And most of them are parked waaay more than driven. also cars loose their value so fast, why investing in owning one? Tough I get that it is neat to have a moveable container/bed/... you can leave your stuff or take a nap at, whereever you are.
Load More Replies...Company: *makes item that lasts forever and has a ton of clever, handy features* Public: *buys item* Company: *makes gobs of money* (Time passes) Company: *sales decline* People: *item keep working and fit their needs* Company: *goes out of business because of market saturation* (Time passes) People: *item finally start failing. Goes to look for a new one, finds out they don't make them like they used to because making a cheaper lower quality item that breaks down more often and requires a subscription to use the wifi do-hickey makes a more sustainable business*
I remember the days when you could buy software (Photoshop, Word, Framemaker, etc.). You paid a nominal fee for an upgrade and got a DVD of the new version. Now EVERYTHING is leased. You don't actually own any software.
Yeah the days when I could buy a computer game and have it still work even if the company who made it went bust are gone. Now even with glue player games require server connection and accounts.
Load More Replies...TV has come full circle, Netflix was great for a while, almost everything you wanted for one subscription. But now everyone and their uncle is in on the act and it's just like having loads of different channels again, but you have to pay for every one.
And within 5 years, they will all have ads and no "ad-free" tier because I am betting that there will be a huge shift away from the ad-free version in the next year.
Load More Replies...yes, and then finding out this or that movie you really want to see is always on another subscriptionbased platform, so sometimes i just buy those old movies on dvd. you know, the ones i threw out thinking I didn't need them anymore because of netflix... #facepalm
I will never throw out media unless it's damaged and unusable. I have all of my DVDs, CDs, VHS tapes, cassettes (even the stupid mix tapes I made). I had a friend say that since he ripped all of his CDs to his computer, that he didn't need his CDs anymore and was going to throw them away. I said "Oh no you don't. You're going to let me take what ones I want and you are going to donate the rest to a library or something." DVDs also have bonus features that streaming doesn't.
Load More Replies...Pirate Bay everything and save it on an external drive or on discs [slaps EASY button].
I do not agree completely. Subscription based services are very old concept, before refrigerators delivering fresh dairy products was a thing, before TV delivering newspapers was a thing, and you had to subscribe to it. However, paying subscription to "unlock" additional features for physical thing you already purchased is seriously bad trend that shifts control from consumers to companies and I can't see any positive aspect of it.
The problem here, for me, is not the (non-)ownership of the media. It's more the astronomical amounts of electricity needed to power the server and transfer the gigabytes of data. Libraries are an old version of the "subscription based" consumption of media. Renting DVD/Bluray (and VHS before that) is a good model : you don't have to buy each thing you want to read/watch. Less things to produce if everybody share them. And you can still buy a copy if you really want to own it. So yeah, the concept itself is not new or bad in my eyes. The energy used streaming, that's another thing.
I'm going to hazard a guess that it may not use more energy to stream movies than to go to the library or Blockbuster.
Load More Replies...Even if you do buy it, it doesn't guarantee you will get to keep it. I bought my favorite version of Christmas Carol a couple of years ago on Amazon (digital version). When I went to watch it the following year, it had disappeared from my videos, because that's a thing they can do apparently.
And this sort of backhanded theft is one of the reasons I NEVER deal with Amazon. And do no streaming. Too much to do, and I own racks, shelves, and storage totes full of physical media I hope to find time for... my count has me almost 300 books behind; I'm afraid to calculate the movies and shows, because I suspect they total more hours than I have left to live. Passing 60 made me more aware of how I use my time.
Load More Replies...Yes, amen and you're so right about this ... I wanna watch the new Beavis and Butt-Head movie. Can't just do so, because you cannot subscribe to Paramount Plus in germany yet, so I'll have to figure out some do-around to get me to watch this damned film. This sucks! I don't like stuff that sucks!
Part of why I fell out of keeping up with each generation of gaming is that it's hard af to just *own* a game, a complete, fully done, fully content-loaded game. Like it's one thing to buy a whole game then get a respectable amount of optional DLC later on to tide you over until the sequel, but it's a blatant scam now to buy a game that's unfinished both due to rush and deliberately to milk more money out of the consumer (i.e. Javik was actually *in* the base game of "Mass Effect 3" but Dummied Out to bilk more money for greed's sake,) and consumers are all too willing to follow along just for their avatars to have shiny, useless skins.
I think using Netflix as the example photo was inaccurate- I would have gone with BMW
…because it costs a lot of money to produce quality content and subscriptions mean no ads, which is the other way for production companies, artists, etc., to pay for what you’re consuming.
Well, it means no ads untill they put in ads anyway. Cable TV was originally supposed to not have ads because you were paying for it, but look at it now.
Load More Replies...I stopped updating once Microsoft thought they should go subscribtion based. I hate subscribtions, and avoid them like the plangue, as that is just a way to let your account slowly drain without you noticing where your money goes. That financial model counts on people loosing track, and either being too lazy or forgetting to cancel things that they no longer need.
Streaming Netflix was great until everyone else wanted to get on the bandwagon. Now we need Pirate Bay again. But I would rather buy CDs than a subscription music service. And subscription software really bothers me.
When cable tv first came out, all of its broadcasting was without ads. That was the selling point. Then HBO came along at $5/month and we thought that was highway robbery. Never did we ever imagine that this many years later, we would be monetary slaves to in-home entertainment. It's unconscionable.
you don't have to do this you know. You can still buy DVDs , and books, and even most software.
You assholes took My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic and left ONE SEASON.
Ever since cassette tapes made it possible to copy a song and give it to a friend, the music companies have been having holy fits about losing a bit of revenue. They are ecstatic now to put everything on streaming so they alone OWN the music again. And everyone seems to be taking the bait. SO convenient. Until your content is not available.
I dont know... i think of movies, series and music as art. you cant own them anyway, you can only own a hard copy of it, which uses a lot of space and is kinda expensive. i love the broad program of streaming services. I can watch more for the same price. But i generally dont watch anything twice and i also dont care if there is an interesting film thats not offered, i just watch another one, so i might be the perfect customer for netflix and co. Same with music, it has always been such a hard decision to buy or not to buy a cd. do i like it enough to spend the money? Now i can listen a bit here and a bit there and still listen to songs i love most on repeat. its not very profitable for the artist tough which is a big minus :/
and it's going to get worse, car companies are now doing this with features on cars. Want access to the GPS System? Sure thing, that'll be $5.99 a month please? Want those heated seats to work? Sure for another $4.99 a month.
Can you just buy a Garmin and plug it into where the lighter used to go. We bought one about 10 years ago and use that.
Load More Replies...I feel like it's going to get worse. We may start having to pay "subscriptions" just to shop at a grocery store... Oh wait. That sounds like Costco. Or we may have to pay for "subscriptions" for clothing, basic essentials like water..... oh, right. We pay that with bills to the water company. ....One day, we may have to subscribe to work. Some companies already want you to make a profile account on their website in order to apply for a job.
The amount of people that drive full size trucks around is ridiculous. At least 90% of them could live just fine with a little 4 door hatchback. It's sad to think about all of the millions of gallons of fuel that has been wasted by those idiots.
Not sure why but I reckon vaping will prove to be a major health problem in a couple decades.
“For the last decade, we’ve leaned into virtual reality because of how it enables both of these. We can step inside a world and have influence over it, and the story or experience that unfolds. I think one of the things we can expect moving forward is, in a sense, the opposite of virtual reality. Instead, more of an enhanced reality or fictional reality, wherein the entertainment isn’t in a headset, but instead, all around us.”
She stressed that a decade ago, people didn’t talk to robots and now many of us do. “Siri and Alexa are some of the more common bots, but we already interface with non-human characters regularly. As technology advances, including augmented reality and mixed reality, I think we can expect that entertainment will be something we can engage with off of the screen, but out in the world, with characters and stories we can engage with throughout the day, or throughout our houses.” So while some fundamental things that people care about will remain the same, the way that we interact with the world—and each other!—can change incredibly rapidly.
Political polarization in America. I see either civil war or an authoritarian government taking over in the next 20 years.
I hate how there are blue vs red states. A friend of mine had to move because her parents wanted to live in a red state. It was a rude awakening. We really aren't United after all.
Too much plastic surgery, fillers and Botox on young people.
And on people who are already lovely (does smh mean shaking my head, if so, smh)
Not taking COVID seriously. I think the number of long-term health issues that will result from COVID is going to be huge.
Minimalist everything. Every house, closet, and restaurant looks the same now. In 20 years, it’s all going to change because we’ll all be bored.
I have so many stupid little trinkets around my house. Sometimes my inner minimalist wants to trash them to make cleaning easier, but then the room looks so naked.
Facebook has explicitly encouraged its users to break down privacy barriers between different aspects of their life, e.g. work, school, and family. This is not a theoretical effect but an intentional one; Zuck has explicitly said that in his view, people who maintain boundaries between different parts of their life "lack integrity" and that it's Facebook's goal to promote "integrity" in this specific sense.
This is deeply dysfunctional.
It's *normal* to have different social contexts in which you present yourself differently. That's how humans have always been, ever since we invented huts and can go inside a hut and be private with someone.
Boundaries between different parts of your life are healthy. You get to decide who's allowed in your hut. Tearing down someone else's boundaries is a hostile act, not a friendly one. (LGBT+ people know this regarding "outing" someone without their consent.)
It should be up to *you* to decide when you feel safe to bring down certain boundaries, e.g. to come out to your family as gay, to tell your coworker about your religious beliefs, or the like.
Facebook is an institution that sees its purpose as including tearing down people's boundaries. That's a problem.
It was so nice back in the days when your friends and family couldn't follow you to work and visa versa
The scaremongering about trans people
Ugh, yes. Can't we just let others be? If they're happy and they're not hurting anyone, why do people have to take offense?
Veneers. People are LITERALLY sawing down their teeth for pictures and likes.
…or maybe to help their own self esteem or confidence? Not everyone is social media obsessed. My husband has two because he was really uncomfortable with issues he’s had since youth. And yet, he he doesn’t have an account on a single social media site, go figure. 🙄
Letting companies freely track our online behaviors
(edit: moved this from a reply to a comment) @Anna Banana, my wife works in IT security and I work at a place that studies this stuff. It is a bigger deal than you are articulating. It is telling when the professionals who work in network security keep as much of their life offline as possible. 15 years ago, when a company contact balked at including his work email in a registration because of what he knew from his time in the NSA, I thought he was just overreacting. Now, I understand.
posting about almost every aspect of your life on social media. I posted some pretty cringe s**t as a kid that is still floating around somewhere, and that was before social media became big. I can't imagine what it's going to be like now
When I was a kid, I’m 60 now, I yearned for a life where I could be someone else. Now, with the internet, I can see how dangerous that would have been. I feel so sorry for people who’s persona is created entirely by what they can cultivate, manipulate, and then present to the world as who they are.
A lot of parenting and schooling trends will change. Just look at now vs 20 years ago.
Gentle parenting is big right now. The idea is fine but it leads to permissive parenting in most of the cases I worked with in daycare and as a nanny.
Not telling children “no” like ever. Not letting them fail. It’s going to lead to a lot of anxiety and stress in future children when things don’t go great.
Although it’s been getting better I still think the amount of homework some kids get is ridiculous. Specially younger children. I nanny a 4 year old. She’s still in pull ups and learning how to wipe. She doesn’t need homework from preschool.
I believe that homework is just a failure of the educational system. Kids already spend 40h in school. They should have minimal homework or none. Imagine if most adult people needed to work 40h plus every evening and part of the weekends for free. Unpaid overtime is a problem in adults but nobody realises that thats what the schools are forcing on children as well
The destruction of public education (squeezing and outright sabotage of public schools, prohibitive costs for secondary education). The normalization of being undereducated either through apathy or because of forces outside your control. The idea that opinion is equal to fact and that sticking to your original viewpoint is heroic. "Yeah, your studies may say that, but this is how I FEEL about it" and similar arguments.
The reason we are no longer a minor species of omnivorous hunter-gatherers is our ability to pass along knowledge to others. Each generation building on the achievements of prior generations is the path to progress in health, quality of life, equality, production and so much more.
Worse yet, technology now is at a level where if the masses are uneducated, they are also powerless. Small groups of people with specific knowledge have become outrageously powerful and this gap in individual power will only get worse with advances in fields like AI and robotics. If we allow whole generations to grow up undereducated, it will be very difficult for them to understand and affect their world. I feel the exponential growth of wealth gaps across the world is a symptom of this deliberate enforced ignorance.
I think people are just starting to regret naming their kids Danerys and Sansa.
In the future, all of the trans hate laws that are passing right now are going to be viewed the way people of today view Jim Crow laws.
Letting people under the age of 18 use social media.
That's never going to change nor is it going to be a "regrettable" trend because it's been a thing for as long as social media has been around. 20 years ago we were chatting on message boards, 15 years ago we were all on facebook, 10 years ago everyone was on twitter...all that's going to change is who dominates what platform.
Nearly all NFTs. Cash grab riding the hype of the 'underlying technology.'
Cryptocurrency will be known as a 21st century gold rush
Vaping at a young age. Studies are already coming out on the dangers of vaping in the short term. I can't imagine what will be shown with long term studies.
House/furniture/thrift items being flipped for a profit.
1. The amount of failed flips I see online is ridiculous. Cut corners, trendy designs, and sub par work done by people who sometimes have no previous background. In 20 years flipped houses will be the new "why did they cover the wood floor in vynil, and why did they carpet the bathroom," just on a much bigger scale.
2. Furniture and clothes from thrift stores or places like FB Marketplace are becoming ridiculously overpriced. Everyone assumes that you're a reseller and you wanna take their $30 coffee table and slap some black paint on it and try to resell it for $300. Walking into a thrift store and trying to find some affordable cute clothes? Nice try, we know you're just gonna sell it online so what used to be a $3 shirt is now $15!
Its ridiculous. It's not sustainable when used or flipped items cost almost as much as new ones.
However I you can upgrade a worthless product and put it back on the marked in a state where it is actually useful for someone, I think it is a great idea. That is a much better solution, than constantly producing more and more stuff. So if you put in the effort of sanding down and painting an old item, why shouldn't you be allowed to sell it at a profit? You put in work, and I think that is worth paying for.
The men's broccoli top haircut. I've heard it referred to as the "f**k boy" cut.
Insistence on using iPads/Chomebooks/etc. for everyday lessons in K-12 education.
Although we are saving paper, sure, and giving one more convenient way for submission of assignments, it has skyrocketed kids’ level of screen time, and often students find ways to be off task or download programs to occupy their time. Use of printed materials and referencing books is now being skipped as students believe everything can be found online (it can’t, and is not scrutinized for accuracy like printed materials). Furthermore, even amongst my “high achieving” students, information retention has dropped dramatically, as students are no longer getting the kinesthetic memory practice of copying notes or answering questions on paper as they used to.
Yeah Covid ruins everything, and yes kids need to be adept with technology, but there is definitely a brain drain I think is dramatically linked to the heightened reliance on personal devices.
I'm fairly certain a similar argument would have been made when every student got their own textbook instead of just listening to the lecture and copying down everything important. That having their own copy of the textbook would make it more likely that a student would slack off in class because they can simply review the information on their own time. Education trends are always going to change and someone is always going to be upset about it.
That weird licking your lips while recording yourself in selfie mode
Barn doors, shiplap, gray wood floors, the entire modern farmhouse aesthetic
Ok I feel like this is a little bit judgy. Some people like these things, and some of this stuff looks nice when used appropriately.
giant infotainment screens in cars. when they all look dated in a few years the resale value is going to f*****g suck for those cars.
Electric cars. Horribly bad for the environment, polluting, and non recyclable. Mining overseas for lithium destroys the earth. Still need coal plants to charge them up. Huge regrets for some.
I get that these are all very important topics, but when I saw the word "trend" I hoped this was a fun post about obnoxiously large eyebrows, wealthy TV idiots, and tiktoks.
- the cult-like worship of a certain orange real estate developer and former president..... also - the obsessive attention paid to any Hollywood celebrity
WHY HAS NO-ONE MENTIONED MASSIVE ASSES?! Oh how I'm gonna laugh when all those kardashian wannabes go back to surgery to get it all sucked back out again hahaha
#41: Bored Panda arbitrarily truncating threads with 50 or fewer entries
I have a feeling magazines and printed newspapers are going to be a thing of the past. I'm surprised so many still exist today.
People still like to hold it physically in their hands.
Load More Replies...I do get nicotine cravings. Should quit cold turkey. But I've found one inhale on an ecig lasts the same vs one full cigarette is a great trade off.
E-cigs and vapes are healthier than cigarettes. The problem seems to be that people took that to mean "E-cigs are healthy" which is not true. They are fantastic alternatives for people wanting to ditch or reduce a smoking habit, but it's not a habit a non-smoker should be taking up.
Load More Replies...#20: Social media has blurred the lines between personal and professional. Here's a ridiculous thing I run into: I work as a journalist. The trolls have told me that it's inappropriate for me to share my personal opinions because journalists are supposed to be neutral. In every aspect of my life? I think not. I'm not talking to you in my capacity as a journalist 24/7.
I get that these are all very important topics, but when I saw the word "trend" I hoped this was a fun post about obnoxiously large eyebrows, wealthy TV idiots, and tiktoks.
- the cult-like worship of a certain orange real estate developer and former president..... also - the obsessive attention paid to any Hollywood celebrity
WHY HAS NO-ONE MENTIONED MASSIVE ASSES?! Oh how I'm gonna laugh when all those kardashian wannabes go back to surgery to get it all sucked back out again hahaha
#41: Bored Panda arbitrarily truncating threads with 50 or fewer entries
I have a feeling magazines and printed newspapers are going to be a thing of the past. I'm surprised so many still exist today.
People still like to hold it physically in their hands.
Load More Replies...I do get nicotine cravings. Should quit cold turkey. But I've found one inhale on an ecig lasts the same vs one full cigarette is a great trade off.
E-cigs and vapes are healthier than cigarettes. The problem seems to be that people took that to mean "E-cigs are healthy" which is not true. They are fantastic alternatives for people wanting to ditch or reduce a smoking habit, but it's not a habit a non-smoker should be taking up.
Load More Replies...#20: Social media has blurred the lines between personal and professional. Here's a ridiculous thing I run into: I work as a journalist. The trolls have told me that it's inappropriate for me to share my personal opinions because journalists are supposed to be neutral. In every aspect of my life? I think not. I'm not talking to you in my capacity as a journalist 24/7.