What happens to them that they need replacing?
Natter 72: We Were Unprepared for This
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
They just burn out and stop working.
I'm ready for my stick blender to die so I can get a more powerful one! I love what it does but it takes so long to do it. Still it's much easier than blending soups in the blender. The blender I mostly use for smoothies.
I cook so little now that I think my kitchen appliances will last forever. I need to start cooking more.
mac is giving up donuts for lent. he's adorable. He asked me what I am doing for lent so I better have an answer for him tonight. Daily exercise would probably be the best thing for me to add.
So here's a question: has Lent become more of a thing in the larger culture in recent decades than it used to be? I have always heard about it, but I grew up in a Catholic community with a Catholic family. My mother was saying that she was in a pre-Lent session at her (Baptist) church and most of the people in the group were saying they didn't really know what Lent was and/or had never heard about it growing up.
I grew up Catholic in a Catholic neighborhood, so I don't know.
They just burn out and stop working.
Rats, my stick blender is definitely not at that point.
It was totally a Catholic thing when I was growing up. We all commiserated with our Catholic friends for their chocolate or whathaveyou deprivation.
Wait, that's the giving up things for Lent. Other branches of Xtnity certainly recognize it, but not in that sense.
Jesse, I think so. I never remember doing anything with lent, and not being aware of it until college (I had never seen ashes on foreheads), but my Methodist church does ashes now and we have a special Ash Wednesday meal (less food, less meat). The Reformed Church I attended in NY did a whole series on lent each year and also did ashes.
I grew Presbyterian, and I knew about Lent from church, even though we didn't have to give anything up.
Jesse, I feel like a lot more non Catholic people talk about what they are doing for Lent now then they did when I was growing up. But I also grew up in a predominantly Catholic culture.