- cross-posted to:
- asklemmy@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- asklemmy@lemmy.world
You’re on a long train journey that lasts several hours, maybe most of the day. You brought simple food with you: slices of bread and slices of cheese, plus some ice tea to drink. Nothing fancy. You don’t count how many slices of either you brought. You don’t even think about it, because train journeys are cool and you’re just chilling out. You just assemble cheese sandwiches one by one, eat them during the trip, and enjoy the ride. Each sandwich uses exactly one slice of bread and one slice of cheese. When one of them runs out, the sandwich-making stops. You arrive at your destination and, naturally, the numbers didn’t line up perfectly. I mean, why would they…
Now you open your bag and discover that something is left over:
• either a few slices of bread with no cheese, or
• a few slices of cheese with no bread.
Which one would be worse? Standing there at the end of the trip, one of these outcomes just feels more annoying than the other, right?
Which leftover would bother you more, and why? Is it purely practical? Emotional? About mess, smell, value, or expectations? Or do you genuinely not care either way? I’m curious how different people experience this.
You obviously prepare sandwiches before the trip with more than just bread and cheese because you are worth it. Maybe im to german to understand the problem though.
Ideally, I would have made the necessary preparations. Turns out, I forgot a bunch of important things, so I had to improvise. Just before the trip, I went to the local supermarket and bought everything I needed: a bag of bread and some sliced cheese.
Also, I’m travelling fairly light, so I didn’t even bring my own thermos with me. I didn’t bring any hot water, can’t make any tea on the go, etc. I had to improvise with a carton of ice tea like an uncivilised barbarian.

