• Arghblarg
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    996 days ago

    True. It isn’t always about a cost/labour analysis. Sometimes I want to repair something to learn how to do it. Sometimes I want to repair something because even though ‘my time is valuable’, I hate the idea of throwing out something I know will rot in the landfill for a thousand years. Sometimes I’m just attached to the thing and afraid I won’t find a replacement that is as good (which is often the case).

    I hate our throwaway culture, it’s good to know how to fix things even if it isn’t technically ‘cost effective’ to do so.

    • @[email protected]
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      366 days ago

      All of these reasons but I also just enjoy the experience of fixing something. It feeds the soul in some deep way for me

    • SeekPie
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      55 days ago

      Also, I think that you shouldn’t put a price on your free time off work? You wouldn’t be working anyway, why put a price tag on it?

      • Arghblarg
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        65 days ago

        Absolutely – I hate how we’ve been raised to think of time in monetary terms; I have to remind myself on days off that “No, I do not need to do anything it’s my day off! I can sleep in… no need to be productive …”

    • @idiomaddict
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      56 days ago

      I was living in a shithole apartment with a noisy fridge that the landlord wouldn’t fix and complaining to my therapist about it. He suggested I fix it, which was a completely alien idea to me at the time. It was a lot less complicated than I expected, I learned a lot about how it worked, and my self-confidence and perceived control over my circumstances skyrocketed.

    • @inbeesee
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      45 days ago

      It challenges me, relaxes me, and I get a cool experience out of it

    • @[email protected]
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      6 days ago

      Me with all my Koss headphones (looking at you KPH30i!), and everything with a depleted rechargeable battery.