I use a butter spreader for butter, but a spoon for jam/jelly. I don't think I would like the spoon for butter myself, but it's neat to see other people who use spoons to spread condiments.
In an analog, my college degree required me to read. A lot. Like, I devoured books as a kid, but this was a lot, every week, and it was a required reading. I enjoy it, but I didn't read after that. I've also heard similar experiences from my friends who went to law school, so much reading they've stopped reading. My husband knows several artists who go into graphic design and stop doing art in their personal time.
I just last month got back into reading. It's been over twenty years since college and I just got the ability to read through more than a handful of pages in a book.
When something is work, you don't necessarily want to do it in your offtime.
I've only ever bought their peach tea. It was pretty tasty, but not something I would get all of the time. It was a nice alternative to other teas you find in the gas station.
I didn't even know they sold water. I've only ever seen tea.
I guess you had to grow up playing Zelda games after Link to the Past in order to enjoy the gameplay. Coming from other systems, it was very unintuitive, uncomfortable, and basically unplayable since we couldn't remap the controls. Also, the world was just kind of dead?
It wasn't that they didn't know how to use the door handles. It was that the doors opened inward.
There were also ornamental doors that were an issue, but those weren't actually doors, so it wasn't that the victims couldn't figure out how to use the handles, it's that the "doors" weren't really doors. They were walls.
I was so happy I could get my cat off of Purina.