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Home » Blog » Why does cooking gas always finish on Sundays?
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Why does cooking gas always finish on Sundays?

sokonnect
Last updated: October 28, 2024 11:42 am
sokonnect Published October 28, 2024
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1. You cook a lot on weekends2. It finishes around the same time you bought it.3. Murphy’s Law4. The frequency illusion

1. You cook a lot on weekends

After a hectic workweek, you have all the time to buy food stuff, cook, and stock up your fridge with all manner of soups and stews.

You may also have family and friends over and need to cook for a larger group. Cooking a lot on weekends will inevitably lead to your gas running out.

2. It finishes around the same time you bought it.

If you refill your gas on a Sunday and cook at a similar rate each week, you’ll likely run out of gas again around the same time the following month or months.

3. Murphy’s Law

Your cooking gas finishing on a Sunday is also a classic example of Murphy’s Law: the law states if anything can go wrong, it will. If it can’t go wrong, it will go wrong anyway.

We tend to notice these “inconvenient moments” more because they disrupt our routines, especially when preparing meals for family gatherings or the upcoming week.

4. The frequency illusion

Our perception plays a big role too. This is known as the frequency illusion or the Baader-Meinhof phenomenon.

It simply states that when something inconvenient happens once, we’re more likely to remember it and notice it again.

If gas ran out on a random day of the week, we’d probably replace it without much thought, but on Sundays, it feels more annoying, making it stand out in our memory.

So, there you have it; these are the four reasons why your gas finishes on a Sunday.

TAGGED:cookingfinishGasSundays
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