There’s a shot of “casa cucaracha,” a birdhouse placed on the kitchen floor to house cockroaches. Then a sticky-looking dining room table laden with open beverages. Then a pair of jeans crumpled up next to a case of Corona Light.
“When did living like this become a flex?” one of the video’s nine million viewers asked in the comments.
But theyve been pushing this idea for a while, heres a article from 2013.
In a study in the September issue of Psychological Science, Kathleen Vohs, PhD, of the University of Minnesota Carlson School of Management, found that working in a tidy room encourages people to do socially responsible, normatively "good" things like eat healthfully and give to charity. But working in a messy room seems to help them try new things and come up with creative ideas.
Im not one to judge, but the clutter gets to me. I can tolerate it to an extent but once it starts affecting my mood I just clean everything up.
I wouldnt say that asmongolds case though, his room doesnt look that cluttered, just looks kinda dingy, like someone who hotboxes a bunch of cigs or a ton of weed in their room. Im from appalachia though, you couldnt imagine some of the shit I have seen lmao.
Old people living in literal shacks with dirt floors, to trailers full of dog poop and newspaper inches deep.
Ive seen some pretty bad shit in nova scotia too. Just piles of chip/fast food wrappers piled in front of the tv. Alot of hoarders.
People dont see this kinda shit when they have mental illness though, and dear god the kids. I seen some kids living in cape breton in a house that was basically falling down and the looks on their faces in the window as we drove away, still kinda haunts me to this day. But unless I see actual signs of abuse im not one to call in government workers who are so overloaded with shit they just dont care about anyone or anything anymore.
Technically its illegal to leave your kid at home if they are under the age of 12 in nova scotia, which honestly blew my mind because in appalachia and other cultures they dont treat children like invalids. There is no law in appalachia telling people when they can leave their kids home, it just says when you feel it is appropriate. Dear god man when I was teen it was still a normal thing to watch a 10 year old drive a tractor/work truck down the road to the next field.
Pewdiepie being normal, thats a good one. He obviously has his own demons. Dude is full of hate, and most of his content is just bashing others.
I would agree with you about the rooms but I had to point out that this seems to be a generational thing. Take from that what you will.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/08/style/clutter-messy-room-tiktok-instagram.html
But theyve been pushing this idea for a while, heres a article from 2013.
https://www.apa.org/monitor/2013/10/messy-desk
Im not one to judge, but the clutter gets to me. I can tolerate it to an extent but once it starts affecting my mood I just clean everything up.
I wouldnt say that asmongolds case though, his room doesnt look that cluttered, just looks kinda dingy, like someone who hotboxes a bunch of cigs or a ton of weed in their room. Im from appalachia though, you couldnt imagine some of the shit I have seen lmao.
Old people living in literal shacks with dirt floors, to trailers full of dog poop and newspaper inches deep.
Ive seen some pretty bad shit in nova scotia too. Just piles of chip/fast food wrappers piled in front of the tv. Alot of hoarders.
People dont see this kinda shit when they have mental illness though, and dear god the kids. I seen some kids living in cape breton in a house that was basically falling down and the looks on their faces in the window as we drove away, still kinda haunts me to this day. But unless I see actual signs of abuse im not one to call in government workers who are so overloaded with shit they just dont care about anyone or anything anymore.
Technically its illegal to leave your kid at home if they are under the age of 12 in nova scotia, which honestly blew my mind because in appalachia and other cultures they dont treat children like invalids. There is no law in appalachia telling people when they can leave their kids home, it just says when you feel it is appropriate. Dear god man when I was teen it was still a normal thing to watch a 10 year old drive a tractor/work truck down the road to the next field.