Tips for car living with no kitchen.

Published 2021-03-18
The negative loop stops today. I am proud that I made it work living in my car for almost 2 years now trying to start over after coming out as my real self.

I watched    • the negative cycle you're in , ends t...   video of Hindz and this is what I was able to come up with since I don’t have a kitchen.

I am still going to change the world because I LOVE YOU. 😘❤️ 👍

All Comments (8)
  • @MetalHomestead
    This season, too, shall pass. Way to stay positive.  Hang in there.
  • @soilmanted
    I recently bought some Great Value Colombian instant coffee at Walmart. In fairly small print on the rear label it says that it is "freeze dried." That's the only kind of instant coffee that I like. I don't remember how much I paid for it. I prefer to brew coffee myself, from roasted and ground coffee "beans" – I find the fastest way to be putting the ground beans in a filter paper "cone," inside a Melitta funnel, and dripping hot water over them, but freeze-dried instant is the next best thing, in my mind, to fresh brewed. Living in your car, how do you manage the mechanical maintenance of your car, and glob forbid, how do you mange any repairs that it might need? For example do you change the oil yourself? I heard you talking about brake pads and rotors in another one of your videos. When it's time to replace the pads, and check the rotors for wear (and also for roundness and runout) – do you do that yourself? I live in an apartment, I don't have a garage, so I do maintenance procedures outdoors. A large portion of what professional motor vehicle technicians bill their customers for car maintenance, is for "labor," as opposed to the cost of parts and materials. However labor really includes overhead costs for having and using "shop," and the cost of all the tools they use. Some of the tools are expensive and require an investment. Much maintenance can be done outdoors with just a rolling hydraulic jack, jack stands, and simple hand tools, but it is harder that way, and takes longer that way. Service literature for my car says the brake fluid should be changed every 3 years. My plan for changing the fluid involves sliding my 75 year old body under the car and working with the bleeder valves while in some rather uncomfortably twisted lying-down positions. A few months later the car will be needing new brake pads. I have a micrometer that I can use to check the thickness of each rotor..
  • @FreeSpiritMom
    Stephanie, I’m about to give you a whopping 😂😂
  • @LilyGazou
    Yikes. It’s so easy to boil water.