Doesn’t have to be a thing you bought. Just some thing you didn’t have but then once you did it expanded your scope of actions.

The first obvious example that comes to mind is a car. Plenty of drawbacks to prevalence of cars, but being able to go where I want when I want, and far away, is very transformative.

I’m interested in other examples of things that aren’t just useful, but that open new possibilities.

  • @angrymouse
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    41 year ago

    Taking lithium as a bipolar, my life started there

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      21 year ago

      I’m currently off my bipolar meds, against my will. Insurance change required a doctor change, and finding anyone who was available within a months time was not possible.

      I need shit to get back to “normal” in my brain. I’m not doing well. I wasn’t before, but yeah…

      Only a couple more days until my appointment. I had one last week, and they sent me to the wrong place, coupled with a whole slew of other issues, and I said fuck em. Thankfully found someone the second time around pretty quickly.

      • @angrymouse
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        51 year ago

        Dude I’m always surprised how shit health services are in some countries. I’m from Brazil and never got without meds in more 2 years of treatment. Now I’m moving to Portugal and I’m scared as fuck about it. But I always have the ER card. If I ever run out of medications I would run to an ER asking for more, I dont want want to die again, this is not an option where you are?

        • @xkforce
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          3
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          They’re american. No we dont have a functional safety net or healthcare system.