Many of these things I don’t understand how they are hobbies. Mechanical keyboards for example. I bought one, now I have one. That’s it. I love coffee, I drink it daily. But that’s not a hobby. I got a gaming PC, I game on it. And that’s it. I have a couple house plants, I water them sometimes. Done. I built a server with all the Arrs and Plex, and it’s awesome. But now it’s almost fully self sufficient, that hobby lasted about a week.
I figure it’s about how deeply you enjoy something that makes it a hobby. If you buy a mechanical keyboard because you need a new keyboard, it’s not really a hobby to you. But if you want to build your own keyboard, or like hotswapping, or making artisan keycaps? That’s a hobby.
Same goes for coffee. If you drink coffee because it’s your daily routine and preferred beverage, not really a hobby. But if you’re roasting your own beans and have a dozen ways to prepare it, then that’s getting into hobby territory.
You can say the exact same thing about knitting: I already have knit sweaters and scarves and hats and mitts, that’s it.
Or woodworking: I already have a table and chairs and cabinets and shelves, that’s it.
The point of a hobby though, as I’m sure you actually understand, is to enjoy the process of learning and making and exploring the depths of a particular thing, not just getting to a particular end product.
Interestingly, this list seems to be a close match with trending YouTube content. Perhaps there’s a discussion here about how social media and purpose engineered trends shape our hobbies (and even live purpose ig). Or maybe these topics just get lots of views naturally on account of them being good hobbies.
Also, obviously no offense to op and their interests.
Interesting observation - but I’m not sure if YouTube is the main driver here. Many of the hobbies listed here like photography, gardening, woodworking, knitting, cars etc. were popular hobbies even before anyone even thought about inventing the internet or even television. So it could also be that people are doing YouTube content for already popular hobbies, because people were doing all those things before YouTube.
Yeah, maybe I was seeing a connection where the was none here. I still think YouTube might popularize and normalize some of our hobbies, but perhaps not that much.
My list:
They all kinda work together and interconnect so I can make new things
Many of these things I don’t understand how they are hobbies. Mechanical keyboards for example. I bought one, now I have one. That’s it. I love coffee, I drink it daily. But that’s not a hobby. I got a gaming PC, I game on it. And that’s it. I have a couple house plants, I water them sometimes. Done. I built a server with all the Arrs and Plex, and it’s awesome. But now it’s almost fully self sufficient, that hobby lasted about a week.
I figure it’s about how deeply you enjoy something that makes it a hobby. If you buy a mechanical keyboard because you need a new keyboard, it’s not really a hobby to you. But if you want to build your own keyboard, or like hotswapping, or making artisan keycaps? That’s a hobby.
Same goes for coffee. If you drink coffee because it’s your daily routine and preferred beverage, not really a hobby. But if you’re roasting your own beans and have a dozen ways to prepare it, then that’s getting into hobby territory.
You can say the exact same thing about knitting: I already have knit sweaters and scarves and hats and mitts, that’s it.
Or woodworking: I already have a table and chairs and cabinets and shelves, that’s it.
The point of a hobby though, as I’m sure you actually understand, is to enjoy the process of learning and making and exploring the depths of a particular thing, not just getting to a particular end product.
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Legally allowable Unsuitable behaviour in public.
Extreme ironing.
Interpretive dance.
Wanking marathons.
Telling people the wrong information when asked.
Telling people correct information when not asked.
Street furniture restoration.
The list is endless.
I already do 4 of these lol
Is #4 legal?
Staying erect for 26miles sounds like a real challenge.
Depends where your venue is.
Interestingly, this list seems to be a close match with trending YouTube content. Perhaps there’s a discussion here about how social media and purpose engineered trends shape our hobbies (and even live purpose ig). Or maybe these topics just get lots of views naturally on account of them being good hobbies. Also, obviously no offense to op and their interests.
Interesting observation - but I’m not sure if YouTube is the main driver here. Many of the hobbies listed here like photography, gardening, woodworking, knitting, cars etc. were popular hobbies even before anyone even thought about inventing the internet or even television. So it could also be that people are doing YouTube content for already popular hobbies, because people were doing all those things before YouTube.
Yeah, maybe I was seeing a connection where the was none here. I still think YouTube might popularize and normalize some of our hobbies, but perhaps not that much.
For me it was reddit tbh