What causes you to do laundry.

You run out of ?, and it causes you to do laundry.

  • Shirts

    Votes: 12 28.6%
  • Underwear

    Votes: 26 61.9%
  • Socks

    Votes: 11 26.2%
  • Pants

    Votes: 3 7.1%
  • Other

    Votes: 3 7.1%
  • I have regular laundry scheduled

    Votes: 13 31.0%
  • Discard my vote.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    42
Hang on, though. That's the Soylent guy, right? Why does he need a freezer?

I can think of a few reasons:

Soylent tends to taste better if you let it sit in the fridge overnight after mixing.
Presumably the place he's renting to live in comes with a fridge/freezer.
Presumably when working on soylent he gets components that need to be (or that he wants to try) refrigerated.
 
Yes. I agree soylent needs to sit in a fridge. Or at least somewhere cool, overnight. My own experience with oats assures me of that.

And yes, he probably rents a place with a fridge/freezer. Ever so handy for his smelly garments!
 
I thought so too, but then I realized I was doing laundry based on some limiting factor. Getting new undershirts is really cheap, and each undershirt I get basically delays when my next laundryday is by one day. Over time, I think it actually creates a saving.
I'm skeptical. Besides, I've never heard of a charity that accepts soiled clothing. Anyone who has time to post on the Internet about they don't have time for laundry has time for laundry.
 
I'm skeptical. Besides, I've never heard of a charity that accepts soiled clothing. Anyone who has time to post on the Internet about they don't have time for laundry has time for laundry.

I imagine most people find it difficult to do their laundry at work.
 
I'm skeptical. Besides, I've never heard of a charity that accepts soiled clothing. Anyone who has time to post on the Internet about they don't have time for laundry has time for laundry.

I doubt charities can tell if clothing is soiled, it all gets washed anyway.

And he hasn't posted about it on the internet, it came up in an interview.
 
I put my laundry outside the shower when I'm done with it. Somehow it magically reappears in the closet all clean and fresh.
 
Somebody needs to invent Star Trek replicators, so there won't be such a need to do laundry. Just recycle the dirty stuff and replicate something clean.
 
How about clothing that sheds its own dirt automatically?

You can get Teflon-coated clothing. I've had a Teflon-coated... er... coat that's lasted nicely for the last 15 years. I have washed it frequently, though.
 
Usually pants. I bought extra underwear and socks so I only have to wash every other weekend instead of every single weekend.
 
Somebody needs to invent Star Trek replicators, so there won't be such a need to do laundry. Just recycle the dirty stuff and replicate something clean.

What better way to recycle dirty clothing than by doing laundry to produce clean clothing?
 
Replicators don't add phosphates and other pollutants to the environment. There's no need to worry about water temperatures, fabric type, drying, or soap.
 
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