Things never last
Well, that’s quite a negative title for me. But you can see it’s true. They just don’t. I remember my parents having these expensive kettles and they all broke within a year. I must admit mine (£4) lasted me from 2002 until 2009 and it was only because there was a flood in the flat and it MIGHT have got water inside I had to get rid of it.
But you think of products on the shelves - take this ipad for example. I think it’s a 17.IOS, We are being fed updates and use them once my husband checks there’s no problem with them before he loads it onto the screens for Johnathan and I to use, because Apple haven’t sorted out the bugs yet.
And there you go. Couches. Seriously, everyone. My parents-in-law bought one and had to buy another in its place. But you get an old good one or a refurbished one or a bespoke one, they DO lost.
I admit that solid silver candle holders last (but so does the stink of cleaning them out and get them back together again) them. And as far as I know, we are not possible and I don’t know if that has changed.
You see the older trades being slowly lost to us, although I do know his Majesty Charles III id very conscious of this fact and has given an estate to give creators have a go at them and has even been on the television on the Repair Shop.
TREASURE
Learning new to you skills (but made in centuries past( us a great blessing and we should cherish the opportunities given to us that we can pass them on to our children so they are not list in the midst of times.