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Flashlight Enthusiast
To begin with, I do not have many lights, maybe around a dozen or dozen-and-a-half at most. But everyone is special.
When you lose a light, it can mean several things:
1) you lose it as in gets destroyed and never seen again - in the river, some lake, more likely in the woods and when found, inoperable.
2) When it gets stolen
3) When you lose it on the street, someone is almost certain to find it.
4) Lost inside your home or premises or in the car or somewhere technically in your possession - you just don't know where.
I just lost something again yesterday, one of the compact Hound Dogs, looked everywhere and will repeat it. I am inclined to think it's number 4 and the last I saw it was in the car. I am trying to trace the steps like when was the last time you've seen it.
Number 3 is the least objectionable out of these, well, after 4 anyway, at least someone gets a new toy that may eventually find its home.
2 gets you mad and accept it and 1 you just accept and move on.
4 is endless frustration.
Back to the subject line:
Looking at it as creative destruction for all 1-4, e.g. you order a new one, about $200 in total and the seller benefits and then that spreads around the community. It's kinda beneficial in a sense, you know if you make window glass and someone breaks all windows, suddenly you have a lot of work and food on your table, right.
There is just more than 1 way to look at it.
When you lose a light, it can mean several things:
1) you lose it as in gets destroyed and never seen again - in the river, some lake, more likely in the woods and when found, inoperable.
2) When it gets stolen
3) When you lose it on the street, someone is almost certain to find it.
4) Lost inside your home or premises or in the car or somewhere technically in your possession - you just don't know where.
I just lost something again yesterday, one of the compact Hound Dogs, looked everywhere and will repeat it. I am inclined to think it's number 4 and the last I saw it was in the car. I am trying to trace the steps like when was the last time you've seen it.
Number 3 is the least objectionable out of these, well, after 4 anyway, at least someone gets a new toy that may eventually find its home.
2 gets you mad and accept it and 1 you just accept and move on.
4 is endless frustration.
Back to the subject line:
Looking at it as creative destruction for all 1-4, e.g. you order a new one, about $200 in total and the seller benefits and then that spreads around the community. It's kinda beneficial in a sense, you know if you make window glass and someone breaks all windows, suddenly you have a lot of work and food on your table, right.
There is just more than 1 way to look at it.