Hey, sometimes you just don’t know that there are easier ways to do things…
And you shouldn’t feel bad about that!
A little dumb maybe, but don’t feel bad, okay?
And I think these responses from AskReddit users about what they did the hard way for a long time will make you feel better!
1. Oh!
“As a kid, whenever my bicycle wheels got warped (I crashed into stuff a lot), I would fix them by smashing the rims with a hammer. It mostly worked.
Eventually I learned that you can just tighten and loosen the spokes to straighten warped wheels. So much easier, and much less destructive.”
2. Thank you!
“Ctrl shift + left or right arrow = Highlight a word
Shift + home or end = Highlight to beginning of sentence, highlight to end of sentence
Ctrl + shift + Home = Highlight to beginning.”
3. It’s good stuff.
“Parchment paper.
No more scrubbing off baked- on cheese and sauce. If it goes in the oven, I use parchment paper.”
4. Stay dry.
“Put an absorbent-fabric scrunchie on each wrist before washing your face.
They stop the water from running up your arms when rinsing and getting the insides of your robe sleeves uncomfortably wet.”
5. A new way to get it done.
“I’ve been opening pistachios with my thumbs for 30 years until I saw my wife use half a shell to wrench her next one open and then my mind exploded.”
6. Save some time.
“Up until just the last 6 months or so, if I wanted to do a Google search I’d always type http://www.google.com into the address bar and to to the actual Google front page before doing the search, even though we’ve been able to just type searches directly into the URL bar for quite a long time now.
One of those old, ingrained habits I guess. Though if it helps redeem me slightly, I didn’t actually type the full www. and .com, because of a trick a friend showed me in ~2005 where you can just type a word into the address bar and press Ctrl + Enter so it automatically puts them there for you – so I’d type google and press Ctrl + Enter.
I remember thinking that was wizardry when my friend showed me haha, even if it’s mostly redundant now.”
7. Don’t shake it.
“Keep shaking the shaving gel and struggling to more than a quarter of the can out…till it dawned on me that they are pressurized and every shake causes it to lose pressure therefore makes dispatching it harder…
I’ve now used many and actually got the bottom of every can by simply not shaking them…I’m 40 and also an engineer.”
8. Good one!
“Hanging pictures.
I used to meticulously measure and line up so my nails so they’d match the hardware on the back of the frame.
Now I just use a piece of painters tape, lay it on the back of the frame, mark hardware on the frame and then remove the tape and place it on the wall and that gives you the exact placement for your picture hanging hooks and nails.”
9. Look them up.
“I’ve learned over the years that if there’s something you want to do in Excel, there’s probably a function or macro to do it easier/better.”
10. Brilliant!
“My dishwasher is across the kitchen from my utensil drawer.
For years, while unloading the dishwasher I would stuff as many utensils as I could in my hands. I’d inevitably drop some, and there are a few knicks in my hardwood floor from dropping forks and spoons.
One day at work, a coworker unloaded the dishwasher and removed the utensil basket and carried it over to the utensil drawer. I never felt so dumb.”
11. Thanks, Mom.
“When I was a kid I was bad at nail clippers. I knew to put my nail in the chompy bit at the end, but I didn’t realize that the handle/lever folded out.
So I would just squeeze really hard until I broke my nail off in the blades. This went on for an embarrassingly long time before my mom saw me and taught me how to open the lever.”
12. Who knew?!?!
“For dusting things like baseboards, windowsills, and picture frames, the best tool is a (clean) paintbrush.
I always used to either use a cloth or something made specifically for dusting, but the paintbrush is much faster and easier. I keep a cheap 2-inch paintbrush exclusively for dusting now.
Also works great on cobwebs.”