Never more nervous

ickplant@lemmy.world to Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world – 741 points –
35

So true 😞...

And then she comes back and says "yeah, we're out" and you're like "yessssss, see that b*tch, I knew it!".

For me it's a 50/50 chance that either it was right in front of my face exactly where I was looking, or we're actually out of it. No in between

Did you really say bitch though?

I looked her in the windows of her soul and I said biiiiiiisssshhhhhh

Of course not, lol, that whole paragraph is silently going on in my head πŸ˜‚.

To be perfectly honest, my wife scares the shit out of me, she's like 300 lbs, you don't want to mess with that πŸ˜‚.

3 more...

I realized that when I look for something, I have a precise mental image of what I'm looking for. If the real object doesn't match my mental image, it may as well not exist.

Case in point, my girlfriend asked me to get her allergy meds. I was looking for a box with blister packs, they were in a bottle. I literally moved the bottle aside while looking, before telling her that I can't find them

This is even more fun in a professional kitchen.

β€œBro, we had three people look and be unable to find it, add it to the 86 list.”

β€œI just saw some in the walk in” Goes to look

Like many people, I suffer from Refrigerator Blindness. My wife, however, does not. I learned to never assume we are out of something. I always assume I just can't see it.

As a married man, I just prefer to eat out and have hidden stores in high places of the house.

Tell her to make you a sandwich while she's checking, if she asks why tell her it'll calm her down and stop her from getting emotional.

My problem is, I'm often convinced we are NOT out of something when we are. Can be more painful when cooking.