anything goes with emma chamberlain - jump scares and putting on sunscreen, pet peeves
Episode Date: August 4, 2024i think we can all agree that being as positive as possible in life is a good thing. however, i'd argue that being too positive is a bad thing. without a little bit of negativity, there's no balance, ...because some stuff is annoying. so today, i'm going to be tapping into my negative energy and sharing some of my current pet peeves. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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For the most part, I'd say I'm a pretty positive person.
You know, I might even say that I'm a glass half full kind of girl.
I think we can all agree that being as positive as possible in life is a good thing.
However, I'd argue that being too positive is a bad thing.
Without a little bit of negativity, there's no balance.
If we're 100% positive about everything all the time,
we're lying, we're living in a lie.
Because some stuff is negative, some stuff is annoying,
some stuff does suck.
So today, I'm gonna be tapping in to my negative energy
and sharing with you some of my current pet peeves.
Apparently, I've been really positive
over the last few years because I haven't made an episode
about my pet peeves in almost two years.
I'm long overdue to discuss some of my pet peeves.
So that's what we're gonna be doing today.
This will be my fourth pet peeves episode,
so if you wanna check out my other three,
go check those out.
And let's dig right in.
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Okay, number one, when people start acting up to get others' attention. Listen, before I go any
further, I must say that I used to do this. When I was in middle school or even
probably in high school, unfortunately, it's a little too recent for me to accept about
myself. But if there was like a group of cute boys around and I was with my friends, I would
start acting up, getting loud, you know, laughing really loud, talking really loud, dancing, just like making a scene
to try to get attention from the boys.
Now, in my opinion, when you're a tweenager,
ages 11, 12, 13, or even a teenager,
it's somewhat forgivable to behave in such a way
because it is an immature thing to do.
Being a young person means doing immature things.
I'd say it's forgivable.
But when you start becoming a young adult, you enter your 20s,
maybe even you enter your 30s, it's not cute anymore.
You can't get away with it anymore.
It's goofy.
Recently I was at the beach and I was people watching
because that's one of my favorite things to do when I was at the beach and I was people watching because that's one of my favorite things to do
when I'm at the beach.
And I was watching this group of college-aged kids,
probably around my age,
and I was watching all of these different groups of kids
acting up to get each other's attention.
And I wanna say it's charming, I wanna say it's cute,
but I unfortunately can't.
It is annoying to me.
Not only is it annoying because there's something
sort of cringe about it, like you know what's going on
in the inner workings of their brain,
and there's something about that that's cringe.
Because anytime people are trying too hard in any capacity,
it's sort of cringe.
But it's also a pet peeve because it's inconsiderate of other people.
Like I was trying to relax and read on the beach and now all of a sudden various groups
of kids are screaming and squealing. These are not even kids, these are adults, these
are people my age, are screaming and squealing and chuckling and shrieking
with their friends, trying to get the attention
of other groups of kids of the same age.
And there's just something about it.
It's inconsiderate of people who are
in the general vicinity, you know?
So it goes beyond being cringe,
because I feel like once you become an adult,
you're expected to be considerate
of people around you.
I am empathetic to an extent because I did do this when I was a middle schooler and a
high schooler, but it's not something that I do anymore.
I've grown out of it and I think I'm expecting other people to grow out of it as well.
So unfortunately, it is a pet peeve.
Number two, when you're at the park or beach or any communal place
and someone whips out a speaker and starts playing some bullshit music, okay?
It's one thing if they pull out a speaker and start playing some really subtle jazz
or some really peaceful classical music.
But it's another thing when they whip out 2010 pop songs.
When I'm relaxing at the park, I do not want to hear Disturbia by Rihanna.
I just don't.
I'm sorry, I don't.
That's not the vibe I'm cultivating.
Is that a phenomenal song?
Yes, that is a phenomenal song.
I agree, it is a good song.
I'd argue 95% of humans on this planet enjoy that song.
I don't wanna hear it when I'm at the park.
I don't wanna hear it when I'm relaxing on the beach.
I don't wanna hear it when I'm sitting outside at a cafe. I just don't want to hear it when I'm relaxing on the beach. I don't want to hear it when I'm sitting outside at a cafe.
I just don't.
And that kind of goes hand in hand with my last pet peeve.
It's like, we must be considerate of others
and what type of vibe others are trying to cultivate.
We can enjoy music.
We can enjoy laughing and talking and giggling,
but at a reasonable volume.
Simple as that.
If the volume of what you're doing in a public place
is projecting out and entering other people's spaces,
you maybe need to think twice about it.
Number three, when people think it's funny to jump scare.
For example, if I have a friend over
and I'm maybe doing something in the kitchen, like I'm putting dirty dishes in the dishwasher,
and my friend is floating around my house doing whatever, and then when I'm done loading the dishwasher,
I start looking around for them. Hey, where'd you go? Hey, where'd you go?
And then abruptly while I'm searching, they jump and scare me fuck that I fucking hate that that
Really pisses me off. It's not funny again. It's kind of immature like
When you're a kid and you're playing around with your friends and you get jump-scared. It's common practice, right?
It's what you do when you're a kid. It it sense. Being a kid is just playing games constantly.
I have grown out of enjoying that game. That is not funny to me anymore. That is not fun to me
anymore. I don't like that feeling. I don't like the feeling of adrenaline and fear. And I always
scream. Maybe that's why people like to jump scare me is that I always scream and get really startled
because I have really bad anxiety.
So like I just get five times more startled
by being jump scared.
Maybe that's why people do it to me.
That's what makes it even worse, okay?
I would love to believe that I'm an adult now
and I don't have to deal with that anymore.
Unfortunately, I can't believe that
because adults jump scare
too. But I think it is so stupid and so not funny and so annoying. Like it really fucking
bothers me. It makes me so mad. Like I'm already paranoid enough. I'm already expecting like
a home intruder at any given moment. I'm already, my heart rate is already higher than it needs to be just because I'm an anxious person
I don't need somebody jump-scaring me. It's so stupid. Like if you're gonna pull a prank on me do something smarter. It's lazy
It's a lazy prank. It's stupid
number four
When people are telling you a story and start casually dropping names, but they know that you don't know who they're talking about.
Okay, for example, let's say I were to be talking to somebody that I'm not really close to, like
someone who I see around every once in a while. They're sort of a friend, but they don't know
the names of my family members or the names of my closest friends or the names of my co-workers.
Let's say I proceed to tell them a story and say,
well, yeah, so I showed up to work.
And then Susan was like, okay, where's the coffee
and donuts?
I thought you were bringing in the coffee and donuts today.
And then Anthony was like, no, she never said she was,
do you see what I'm saying?
Horrible example.
But in no world could I know who those people are.
Within the context of the conversation
and the person that I'm talking to,
there's no way I could know that niche character
in that person's life.
And yet they're dropping the names left and right
as though I know them.
That will even happen sometimes with people
that I just met.
Sometimes I think people do this on accident
because they're telling a story that they wanna hear.
And they get so wrapped up that they forget
that there's also somebody else perceiving the story.
And so that's a pet peeve.
Number five, when you get invited to a dinner
and then you show up and realize nobody's really eating. I feel like
this will happen sometimes, like a big group of friends will be like, yeah, let's all go
out for dinner. And then somehow it's been decided without you personally knowing that
everyone's just going to be snacking and maybe having a drink. Or maybe you get invited to
a big dinner party or an event of some sort, and it's framed
as a dinner.
But when you show up, everyone's really just kind of having drinks and food is available,
but nobody's really eating.
Or maybe you go out to dinner with a friend and you show up and they're like, I already
ate dinner like two hours ago, I'm actually not hungry.
This is a huge bummer to me.
Because if I'm going to some sort of dinner party
or I'm going out to dinner at a restaurant,
I like to make the most of the experience
because I really, really enjoy dining outside of the home.
So I will plan accordingly and I will not eat before
so that I can really enjoy as much food as possible.
And if I show up to an event expecting dinner
and then dinner's not really happening,
I'm now either forced to eat awkwardly in a setting where no one else is really eating,
like order a full meal, or I'm forced to be hungry and eat later. This is just a real bummer to me.
If something's not dinner, don't fucking frame it as dinner, because there's planning that goes into this shit. Okay? Number six, stud
earrings. Okay. I like how stud earrings look. Don't get me wrong. They can be very cute.
This is not about the aesthetic of a stud earring. This is about the discomfort of a
stud earring. Majority of stud earrings have a sharp post that goes through your piercing hole,
and then a sort of clasp that you push through the post on the back.
Now my issue is that this pokey post is so fucking uncomfortable when you try to sleep.
Unless you're somebody who only ever sleeps on your back,
you know what I'm talking about.
Trying to sleep in a pokey stud earring
is one of the most horrific experiences
a human can experience.
That is a huge exaggeration, but it is so frustrating.
I like to keep my jewelry in for a week, two weeks at a time.
And I don't like taking jewelry off for a week, two weeks at a time. And I don't like taking jewelry off for sleeping
or for showering and then putting it back on.
So the frustrating thing about a stud earring
is that I can't wear a stud earring
for multiple weeks, multiple months straight
because they're so uncomfortable to sleep in
that I inevitably have to take them out.
And that just ruins my jewelry flow.
And I end up just not even wanting to wear the jewelry
because it's so uncomfortable to sleep in.
I just can't do it.
Now luckily, there are a few jewelry brands
who make earrings that are flat on the back.
And the invention of flat back earrings
is honestly life changing.
And now I only wear flat back earrings.
However, they're really challenging
to get in and out of the ear, I will say.
Like, they're so much more comfortable,
but they're so much harder to change.
I wish that there was a middle ground.
Number seven, brand new sneakers.
I really just hate how sneakers look when they're new.
I want my sneakers to look five years worn in.
And the problem is, whenever I get a new pair of sneakers,
I hate how they look new so much that I'm like,
I don't really wanna wear them yet.
I don't really wanna wear them yet.
And then I end up wearing them less
because they look so new and fresh
and I don't like that look.
And it just ends up taking months and months, sometimes even years to wear in a pair of
shoes because I hate how they look so much when they're new.
Which is why I have been known to buy sneakers that are pre-worn in.
I'm not kidding.
And the irony is shoes that are pre-worn in tend to be more expensive. Like I have these sort of converse-esque looking sneakers
that I bought pre-worn in
for probably double the price of converse.
It's stupid.
It's totally stupid.
But I wore those immediately
because they already looked worn in.
They already had scuffs on them.
They had scuffs on, like the brand fake scuffed them up. It's ridiculous,
but I get it because I don't like how a new sneaker looks. I don't like how it feels either.
A new sneaker is so stiff. I like when they start to mold to your foot and stuff. I just
don't like brand new sneakers.
Next pet peeve, belts. Okay, there are many times when you slap on a belt and you don't
even think twice about it.
But every once in a while, belts can be a source of pet peeves.
For example, it's really hard to find the right belt size, especially when you're someone
who thrifts, okay?
I thrift and buy vintage majority of the time.
I would say 90% of my belts are vintage.
And it's really challenging to find the right belt size
when it doesn't have a size attached to it.
And like, you can kind of size it out,
but then a lot of times you'll find a really cute belt
and it's too big or it's too small.
And some belts fit for low-waisted jeans,
some belts fit for high-waisted jeans,
some belts almost fit perfect,
but you're in between a belt loop. Like, one belt loop is too tight, but then the belt loop next to it is a little
bit too loose. Belts can be tough when it comes to sizing. I actually bought a belt
hole puncher so that I could take my vintage belts that are too big and punch new holes
in them so that they'd fit better. If a belt's too small, there's nothing you can do.
But if a belt's too big, a lot of times you can punch new holes in it.
And I do that all the time.
But it's still a pet peeve, like getting the belt size perfect.
It's hit or miss.
Another belt-related pet peeve is when you have a pair of pants that you really want
to wear a belt with, but then there's no belt loops.
I have some cute little dress pants that would absolutely thrive with the addition of a belt,
but will never get to experience the belt because there's just no belt loops.
I kind of think everything should have a belt loop, but I don't know because belts are such
a great accessory, they're such a helpful accessory. It's such a shame when something has no belt loops.
And I understand from a design perspective that sometimes it looks better to not have
belt loops on something. But there have been so many times when I've been looking at my outfit
in the mirror, like, huh, what could this use? And then I've thought to myself, a belt, then the
pants have no belt loops, or the skirt has no belt loops.
And it's sort of become a trend to put belts over clothes with no belt loops.
That's also sort of a pet peeve for me because a lot of times the belts moving around, the belt can look wrong.
Sometimes when it's placed on the wrong part of the body, like if you're wearing
like a plain little mini skirt
and you wanna put a big statement belt over it,
depending on the shape of the belt,
sometimes the belt cannot lay flat
because you're trying to wear a belt lower on your waist
where it's less flat, cause there's your butt there.
And it can kind of make the belt ripple
or have gaps in like awkward places
and it just looks incorrect.
Next, number nine, clothes that are see-through
when they aren't supposed to be.
I can't tell you how many times I've bought
like a white pair of dress pants or a white skirt
or a sweater, like a cute sweater,
and have struggled to style it or to wear it because it's been see-through. or a white skirt, or a sweater, like a cute sweater,
and have struggled to style it or to wear it
because it's been see-through.
If something is not supposed to be see-through,
it should not be see-through.
Like white dress pants, for example,
those are not supposed to be see-through.
They should be lined or something to make them wearable.
Like there are times when clothes are actually unwearable
in any capacity because they're so see-through.
If you can see any type of underwear under the dress pants,
even nude, which sometimes happens,
that is not a functional garment.
That should not be sold.
That's a scam.
Clothes are supposed to cover the body.
So if it's see-through and you can see your underwear
and you can see like your butt crack,
like what the fuck is happening?
There are times when this is intentional, you know, like we wear sheer clothing. We wear mesh clothing
I mean, I understand there's an art to that as well
But there are times when it is clear that clothing is not supposed to be see-through and it is and that is when it's a pet peeve
And it happens more than it should
next
number ten leaving the house in a mediocre,
half-baked outfit because you're late.
You know when you catch yourself midway through
picking out an outfit, like you know you're not there yet.
It's not clicking yet.
But you know that if you gave it another 15 minutes
and you played around for another 15 minutes,
you'd really have a strong look going.
But then you look at your watch and you got to go.
Like you're already a little bit late.
And so then you have to leave wearing what you're wearing and you're not
confident in it and you don't feel good in it.
And it's just not the right outfit.
You know that you could have done better.
You know that if you would have just given yourself 15 more minutes, that you
really could have had a strong look, but now you're forced to leave the house
in something that you don't really like.
What a bummer that is.
And that happens to me all the time
because it takes me a long time
to pick out an outfit, to be honest.
There's a lot of trial and error
that goes into every outfit I wear,
whether it's going to the grocery store
or going to a wedding, like it doesn't matter.
I like to play around and I like to take my time.
Sometimes that's 10 minutes.
Sometimes that's an hour.
It's just so heartbreaking to leave the house
in something that you don't quite feel good in
because then when you're out and about,
you don't feel as confident
and you don't feel as focused and present in the moment.
You're thinking about how your outfit just feels off.
I fucking hate that.
That happened to me yesterday
to literally go to the grocery store.
And I was like, oh, but I kind of want to wear
something sort of cute.
I was like playing around with what bag I was going to wear.
And he was like, I'm going to the grocery store.
I don't know why I'm like that.
I actually made an episode a while ago
about sort of the pros and cons of dressing in a uniform.
And this pet peeve is one of the reasons
why I want to dress in a uniform.
I think one day I will, but I don't think it's the right time yet.
I'm still too excited by fashion to not wear something different every day.
You know, I don't know.
If I had a uniform, I'd always feel solid because the uniform is perfectly created for
satisfaction.
Next, number 11.
When I order a matcha latte and it isn't bright green, okay?
Let me explain something to you about matcha if you're not into matcha.
There's two types of matcha, ceremonial grade and culinary grade.
Ceremonial grade is the highest quality of matcha, ideal for drinking, having in a matcha latte or whatever.
And then there's culinary grade, which is better for using in large quantities for cooking
and stuff.
Now, ceremonial grade matcha is really, really bright green.
Culinary grade matcha is more of a light grayish-brownish green.
I would say for the most part, it's standard for cafes to serve
ceremonial grade matcha, this high quality drinking matcha. It tastes better, it looks
better, and it's just sort of the standard for the most part. I would say majority of
cafes use high quality ceremonial grade matcha and charge as such, right? Like you're getting a high quality beverage.
My pet peeve is when I order a matcha from somewhere and it's clearly low quality matcha.
It's kind of gray.
It's not bright green.
Now I know you might be thinking, Emma, you're a snob.
No, I'm not.
Because if I order a matcha and spend like $4 on it, sometimes even $5 on it,
I expect it to be high quality matcha, you know?
Like you get what you pay for, but sometimes certain cafes will not use the highest quality matcha,
and you can see it, and it ruins the whole experience because number one, the flavor is not as good.
Number two, the color is not as satisfying.
Probably a quarter of the reason why I like drinking matcha is because of the beautiful
green color.
And so if that green color is not there, what the hell are we doing?
Anyway, pet peeve.
That's really pretentious.
So I hope you enjoyed that one.
Number 12.
Oh my God, is there a fucking leaf blower?
That is insane. Oh my God. is there a fucking leaf blower? That is insane.
Oh my God, there's literally a leaf blower.
I don't know if you can hear it.
One of my pet peeves
was literally a leaf blower always managing to start at the worst times,
like when I'm reading peacefully outside
and then my neighbor's like gardener comes and starts leaf blowing,
or when I'm about to record a podcast.
A leaf blower always manages to start at the worst fucking times.
And I swear to God, my neighbor's gardener is leaf blowing again.
I don't know how it's possible that my neighbors leaf blow probably four times a week.
Why? You can leaf blow just once a week.
So this is my next pet peeve.
I did not think that this was going to be the next one.
But in honor of the leaf blower starting
that I'm ultimately going to ignore
because I'm already in the middle of recording this.
I'm not stopping.
I'm really frightened.
I'm frightened that you can hear it.
I'm frightened that it's a terrible sound.
But you know what?
We're just gonna have to deal with it, okay?
If I decide to go read outside or something,
especially because it's summer,
and I like to just sit outside for a bit
and read or work on my computer or something,
it's always five minutes into that
that the leaf blower starts.
Whenever I'm feeling all jazzed up to record a podcast,
I'm really excited, I have a great idea,
I'm super stoked, leaf blower starts.
Okay, next, number 13.
The terribly short window that fresh produce is ripe. Okay, this, I mean, it depends on
the produce. Like something like Brussels sprouts or carrots or apples tend to last
longer, like multiple weeks in the fridge, even like potatoes, things like that. Things that are harder, but things like berries, plums, nectarines,
I don't know, cucumbers, more fragile produce,
has an insanely short window of being ripe before it goes rotten.
My favorite seasonal fruits of summer are plums and nectarines and peaches.
And literally I buy them and they're a little bit firm.
And then one day later they're mushy and they're rotten.
The timing of it all is a fucking nightmare.
And the worst is when I can see that some fruit in my fruit bowl is perfectly ripe, but I'm not in the mood for fruit or I'm full.
Like I, I already ate lunch and then I realized, oh wait, there's a perfectly ripe nectarine
or plum in my fruit bowl.
I should probably eat it, but I don't even want it.
Or like maybe I have a recipe that includes cucumbers.
So I use half of a little bag of cucumbers.
And then I have a few more
and I know that they're about to go soon,
but I'm like, I don't know what the fuck to eat with a,
what else do I do with these cucumbers?
And I can see that they're going bad and time's running out.
And I end up throwing stuff away sometimes and it's so sad.
Okay, next I have some pet peeves when it comes to salads.
So number 14 is just salads in general.
I actually love salads.
However, I have a lot of pet peeves relating to salads.
Two that come to mind are number one,
when a salad doesn't come with enough dressing.
I want every single thing in my salad,
every single ingredient in my salad
to be fully coated in a rational level of dressing.
I don't want my salad drowning in dressing by any means.
That's gross and that's soggy.
But I don't wanna see any dry parts of my salad
after it's properly mixed.
And I can't tell you how often I'll order a salad or something, particularly one to
go, and I'll open it up, pour the dressing on, mix it up and realize that was not enough
dressing and this is a dry salad.
It happens more often than not.
And it's just such a shame because it doesn't taste as good.
You don't benefit from the flavor of the dressing if it's barely covering all the ingredients in the salad. So I tend to order extra dressing
just to avoid this debacle. It's usually better to have too much than not enough. However,
a lot of times when you order extra dressing, it's forgotten. That happens to me all the
time as well. At least when you're at a restaurant, you can be like, hey, can you bring an extra little
side of dressing or it's premixed by the restaurant so they've perfected the amount of dressing
and it's not your problem.
But wow, I really, really don't like a dry salad and I need dressing.
My other salad pet peeve is when you order a salad from like maybe a nicer restaurant.
I feel like this tends to happen at nicer restaurants, ironically.
The salad comes out and it's not cut.
This is a popular thing at nice restaurants, which makes no sense to me
because I'm like, at a nice restaurant, in theory, you should be paying
for the easiest eating experience possible, right?
You're paying a premium, so you want to experience a premium.
So when you order like a Caesar salad and it's a wedge of romaine lettuce
with the dressing drizzled on top and a big knife on the side, it's like, why?
Now I have to cut up the salad myself and mix the dressing in?
What?
I absolutely fucking hate that.
It feels like a ripoff to me.
I'm like, this is lazy.
Like this feels lazy to me.
If I'm ordering a salad that costs more than $8,
you know, I want that thing to be easy to eat.
I want everything to be mixed.
If I wanted to make a salad myself,
I would have fucking made one at home.
So cut up the fucking salad for me.
I'm serious.
I honestly, I hope that restaurants hear this.
If you own a restaurant
and you don't have a pre-cut up salad
and you're sending it out full wedge and all,
I beg of you for fuck's sake,
bring that thing back to the kitchen and chop it up
for the love of God, please.
Number 15, when you're in the middle of cooking
and realize that you don't have an ingredient.
Now I know that this is like a cringe,
like that awkward moment when you're cooking
and then you realize you forgot an ingredient.
It's like, okay, whatever.
But this is actually a real pet peeve for me
because it can be a really challenging thing to solve.
Like for example, the other night,
I decided that
I was going to make like a broccoli. I make this broccoli pasta sometimes at home. It's
really not anything great. Like it's not super delicious. But basically what I do is I boil
some pasta and then I steam some broccoli and then I put all that together in one pan
and then I pour some pre-made tomato sauce on it and
season it a bit with some salt and some chili flakes and whatever and then let that heat up on the stove and then I serve that
with Parmesan or nutritional yeast or whatever sort of cheesy substance
I'm in the mood for and that is a pretty good dinner, you know
what makes it taste good is the sauce the mood for and that is a pretty good dinner. You know, what makes it taste good is the sauce,
the tomato sauce.
And I just assumed that I had tomato sauce.
I always have tomato sauce.
Like I cannot remember a time in my life
where I've not had tomato sauce somewhere in my house.
It was late in the evening, I was really exhausted
and I just started boiling my pasta
and started steaming my broccoli.
And well, I looked in the pantry and I looked in the fridge,
no tomato sauce, no sauce at all.
And I was faced with the question, what do I do now?
Do I figure out a way to make a sauce
with stuff that I already have in my house?
What do I do?
I don't even have, I was like, do I have butter?
I don't even have butter.
Like, what do I do?
Do I go out and get tomato sauce from the store?
Like I have all this stuff already cooking on the stove. It's too late to pivot and do something else, you know, I
Ended up just finishing my cooking and then going and running and getting some tomato sauce
Whatever. Okay, but it can be a real catastrophe to start cooking and realize that you don't have an ingredient
16 when you get food out and it needs just a little bit more
salt to reach its full flavor potential,
but there's no salt available.
Now, for the most part, if you're eating at a nice
restaurant or something like that,
salt's gonna be available.
However, if you're eating at maybe more of a fast casual
sort of restaurant, or maybe you get some food to go.
Salt isn't always available.
There are certain foods that really need salt.
For example, let's say something that you're eating
has a hard-boiled egg on it.
Let's say you got a salad
and there's a hard-boiled egg on it.
I really only like hard-boiled eggs with salt on it.
So that salad, because it has a hard-boiled egg in it,
might need a little bit more salt.
Or let's say you get avocado toast and they didn't really salt it well enough.
Avocado tastes so good with the perfect amount of salt.
But before you reach that perfect amount of salt, it's flavorless and not as great.
This sounds like a niche problem, but I can't tell you how many times I've gone and picked up food and maybe ate it in my car because I'm in a rush and been like, oh my God, this needs salt.
And so I've started keeping salt everywhere.
I carry around salt in my purse.
And I'm not just talking about this is my new thing.
And everybody thinks that I'm wild for this, but it's wild how much it comes in handy.
and everybody thinks that I'm wild for this, but it's wild how much it comes in handy.
I now carry a salt grinder in my purse,
probably 80% of the time.
And I also always keep a salt grinder in my car
because I eat a lot in the car.
I eat a lot on the go.
I get a lot of stuff to go.
It's the same thing also with hot sauce and soy sauce
when you pick up, say, sushi to go,
or you order an avocado toast to go,
or you order, like, a breakfast scramble.
Those things are so good with hot sauce.
So I have a bunch of mini hot sauces
and a bunch of packets of soy sauce in my pantry,
and I put them in my bags,
and I take them with me when I travel,
because when you're eating on the go, you never know when you might need these critical condiments. and I put them in my bags and I take them with me when I travel.
Because when you're eating on the go, you never know when you might need these critical condiments.
But I would say salt is the thing that I bring around the most.
Number 17. I always have to pee at the most frustrating times.
Like right as I'm falling asleep and I have to get up.
Like I'll pee before I lay down to go to sleep. And then right as I'm falling asleep,
I'll have to pee again, almost always.
Whenever I sit down to record a podcast,
oops, I have to pee.
When I'm having a shopping day,
the second I arrive at the store that I wanna shop at,
oops, I have to pee.
Go to a bookstore with no bathroom, great, I have to pee.
Trying on clothes at a Q store, oops, have to pee.
I always have to pee at a horrible time. Oh my God, arriving at a, oops, have to pee. I always have to pee at a horrible time.
Oh my God, arriving at a concert, always have to pee. I don't know. That's just a pet peeve
when I have to pee at a time that I really, it's inefficient to pee.
Number 18, when I forget about a plan that I made because I didn't put it on my calendar.
This is a catastrophe because I've missed out on things that I've genuinely
been really excited about because I didn't put it on my calendar. And I'm somebody who
exists so rigidly to my calendar. Like if it's not on my calendar, it doesn't exist.
That's how I organize everything in my life to a point that if something doesn't go on
to my calendar, it ceases to exist for me. So I've missed out on some genuinely fun things,
like birthday parties, hangouts with friends, stuff like that,
because I didn't put it on my calendar and I forgot.
And either we didn't text to follow up, so I completely forgot,
or I made other plans,
and then I can no longer do what I thought I was going to do.
It's just a bummer.
I'm also somebody who really tries to keep my word.
Like if I make plans with somebody,
I will do everything in my power not to cancel
because I don't like being canceled on.
It's sort of a pet peeve when I get canceled on.
I don't mind if I get canceled on like a week before,
but like getting canceled on the day of
or if somebody's like, oh yeah,
I'll come to your birthday party and then doesn't show up, that kind of sucks.
I've done it myself because of bad planning,
but it's something that I really avoid.
And so when I do it on accident,
I'm really ashamed of myself because it's not a trait
that I admire in others.
Number 19, when I start a book or movie and I don't like it,
but I have to decide whether to go on
the journey or not.
This is the reason why I've struggled to watch movies and read books in the past because
I hate the dilemma of starting something and not liking it and not knowing what to do next
so much that I'd rather just not read at all or not watch movies at all, which sounds kind
of wild, but here's the thing.
If you keep watching a movie that you think is bad
and it never gets better, at the end of it,
you feel like you just wasted two hours of your life.
And some would argue, yeah, but like you experienced it
and like now you have a full-formed opinion.
Okay, sure, but I could have watched something
that would actually leave me feeling good. Same thing with a book though. Like if you start a book and you, sure, but I could have watched something that would actually leave me feeling good.
Same thing with a book though,
like if you start a book and you're like,
oh, this is really not good.
But you're like, you know what, I'm gonna keep pushing.
You get to the end of the book and you're like,
I just put so much brain power into reading this book
for it to really honestly be bad, right?
And you just feel like you wasted your time
when you could have been experiencing something
more fulfilling in a way.
But then on the other hand, sometimes things can start out slow or start out sort of unenjoyable
and pick up and become great.
I've had that with many books and many movies where in the beginning I was like, I don't
know if I'm going to like this.
And then I've sat through it and been like, hold on a minute, this is amazing.
You don't know.
You don't know what direction to go.
And you can go online and read reviews and stuff,
but like, I don't know, I don't always trust reviews.
Like there are things that I really like
that have bad reviews and things that I hate
that have great reviews.
So I don't know, I just, I fucking hate that.
It's a pet peeve.
20, keeping track of passwords.
The amount of passwords that we need to remember
is honestly ridiculous.
There are so many passwords,
there are passwords for fucking everything.
And now there is technology that can help you keep track
of your passwords, you know, so you can save them
and then they can automatically fill in.
But there are some passwords that I don't feel comfortable
having saved to my iCloud or having saved to my Google
because I don't want them to get hacked.
I don't want to save the password anywhere.
But then if I don't save the password anywhere,
how am I supposed to remember it?
You know, every password should ideally be different.
That's something that we've learned
through various data breaches and stuff like that.
It just feels clunky. Like managing passwords feels clunky. It's such
a mess. And I have somewhat of a system that I'm not even going to share because I'm so
protective of my passwords that I won't even tell my family members how I keep track of
my passwords. But it's just clunky. There's no way to do it that's really, really secure,
but also really, really organized
and also impossible to lose.
And then, you know, every once in a while,
you go in and you change your passwords
and then you forget to update it
in the place where you store your passwords
and then it's a mess and you're always resetting passwords.
Oh, so annoying, I hate passwords.
Just anything having to do with passwords
really bothers me and is a pet peeve.
Next, 21. When you take a pill and you don't drink enough water with it and so the pill
gets stuck in your throat. This is a relevant pet peeve for me because I take a lot of vitamins
and pills these days. I take one very large pill twice a day for my polycystic ovarian syndrome,
PCOS, which is a hormonal thing.
And then I also take B12 because I'm a vegetarian and B12 is supposed to be good for that.
I also take L-thionine, which is supposed to be good for anxiety.
I also take allergy medication, a supplement for my IBS that helps me go poop
regularly and make my stomach hurt less. I take three pills for that. Oh, I also take vitamin D.
I take a lot of pills, okay? And I take them twice a day. And if I don't drink enough water
with my pills when I take them, they will get stuck in my throat
for like the next hour.
And I'm burping and I can like taste it.
And I'm like trying to get it all down.
I hate taking a mass of pills
and I hate not taking them with enough water.
It's just that feeling of the pills being stuck
in your throat, it's absolutely horrible.
So, and certain pills have a bad flavor.
Like my B12 supplement tastes
really bad so if I don't drink enough water with it I can taste it in my mouth
a little bit. Ugh, it's disgusting. Number 22, when I really want more coffee I'm
really craving a coffee but I know that if I drink more I will have a panic
attack. So the older I get the more anxious I get unfortunately that is
something that I'm realizing and I'm becoming more sensitive to stimulants.
Like, I used to be able to drink as much coffee as I wanted,
and I used to be able to consume as much nicotine as I wanted,
and it didn't matter.
The older I get, the worse my anxiety gets,
and the higher my sensitivity is to stimulants.
So I know now that I can only really have
one to two caffeinated beverages per day.
Honestly, one is ideal.
Like one really delicious, perfectly crafted
caffeinated beverage per day is usually the best bet
for me at this point in my life.
After that, great, I can have decaf
if I'm at home and it's available.
The worst is when I want the kick of caffeine, okay?
I don't want decaf, but I know that if I drink more, I will have a panic attack.
It's the fucking worst.
Like yesterday, I was really sort of sluggish.
I was anxious yesterday, but I was also sluggish.
And so I had my first coffee, and then about an hour later, I was like,
you know what, I'm going to make another one today.
Prior to that, I've been solid on savoring one coffee per day.
I'll make myself like a pretty big sized coffee.
I make an iced drink in an insulated cup so I can enjoy it for as many hours as possible.
Anyway, yesterday, I was like, let me just make another coffee.
I'm feeling really sluggish.
And lo and behold, I drank the second coffee. I don't think I had eaten enough either. So I think I was even more
susceptible to like the caffeine impacting me too much. All that to say I had two coffees and I had the worst
panic attack. It was pretty bad. Well, what happened was I started to feel really
dizzy and lightheaded and I couldn't really figure out why. And whenever I have a sort
of minor symptom like that, like I might just feel dizzy because I stood up too fast or
because I'm tired or because, you know, my sinuses, like sometimes if I have really bad
allergies like my sinuses, one sinus will fill up with fluid and then it'll make my inner ear, like it'll make me dizzy, that can make you dizzy, or
maybe I'm a little bit hungry. There's so many reasons why you can get dizzy.
I got a little bit dizzy yesterday for an unknown reason and
I was already feeling kind of anxious and then I convinced myself I was gonna pass out and
then I freaked out and I was like, oh my and I called my mom and I was like,
I'm really scared. Like, I don't know, I feel like I'm gonna pass out. I wasn't gonna pass out.
If I had not drank that second cup of coffee, I would have been like, oh, I'm just a little bit
dizzy. Let me try to figure out what that is from. Let me blow my nose and see if it's my inner ear.
Let me have a snack and see if it's my blood sugar. Like, let me figure out what the fuck's going on
and solve it.
But because I had two coffees, I just gave myself a panic attack,
which then made me more dizzy.
Anyway, it's a pet peeve of mine when I want more coffee,
but I know that if I drink more, I will have a panic attack.
23. When I'm in the shower and I realize that I've run out of shampoo,
I've run out of conditioner, face wash, toothpaste, because I brush my teeth in the shower, I've run out of shampoo, I've run out of conditioner, face wash, toothpaste,
because I brush my teeth in the shower.
I've run out of something, and I'm already in there.
And then I have to do that little fucking wet walk of shame
to my little cabinet that has my back stock of stuff.
And then it's really bad when I'm fully out.
Like, oh shit, I ran out of body wash,
and I don't even have any left.
Now what?
Then, wet and soaked, I have to go look in my travel bag
to see if I have a backup in there.
And on the worst of days,
I don't even have a backup in there.
It's the fucking worst.
24, trying to get a bath to the perfect temperature.
I don't take a lot of baths.
I think for this reason, the challenge of getting the bath water to the perfect temperature
is so frustrating to me that I just don't even take baths.
You know, you don't want it too hot.
You don't want it too cold.
Usually it's better to just make it too hot and then wait for it to cool down and get
in it.
But then also, the bath rarely stays the right temperature for very long.
So then you end up cold, and then you have to drain it a little bit and add some more hot water.
It's... This is the reason why I don't like taking baths.
I would say taking baths in general is a pet peeve of mine.
I wish I could enjoy a bath with a little glass of wine,
but it's just not realistic for me most of the time.
Number 25, putting on sunscreen.
I know sunscreen is important for numerous reasons,
especially for me, because skin cancer does run in my family.
So out of anyone I know, I should be the best
at reapplying sunscreen and being really vigilant about it.
But there's nothing I like about sunscreen.
I've tried lotion sunscreens, I've tried spray sunscreens,
I've tried oil sunscreens, I hate sunscreen.
The only sunscreen that doesn't really bother me to apply
is like face sunscreen because I have a really good
face sunscreen that is comfortable
and it works as a moisturizer.
It's really not an inconvenience, but body sunscreen,
oh my God, I hate it.
I hate applying it.
I hate reapplying it.
I hate when it gets on my clothes.
The only redeeming quality is that I like the smell
of sunscreen, but everything else about it is horrible,
especially when you're at the beach
and maybe you just got in the ocean for a little bit
and you got out and you're like,
shit, I should probably reapply
because I bet a lot of my sunscreen came off in the water.
And then, you know, you're trying to get sunscreen back on and rub it in,
but then you've sand everywhere, so you're like rubbing sand in.
Oh my God. I fucking hate sunscreen.
A few weekends ago, I went to the beach and I was like, you know what?
I'm going to get a good tan today. I'm not going to wear any sunscreen.
Why? Why? why, why?
I got so fucking sunburned,
I literally could not sleep that night
because I was so sunburned, I could barely move.
I do that like once a year,
and then I learned my lesson for the year,
but I just, I hate sunscreen.
I hate that we need it, but we do, and it's good.
So wear sunscreen and don't get a sunburn like me.
26, cleaning my makeup brushes.
I have a lazy method of temporarily
sort of cleaning my makeup brushes.
I have this spray that you can just spray
onto your brushes and then, you know,
wipe them off on a tissue or something.
But the spray, it doesn't really work.
Like it works okay for powder products,
like eyeshadow brushes and stuff.
It's great for that.
It's not great for a foundation brush,
or a concealer brush, or a makeup sponge.
It's horrible for that.
To clean those brushes, what's best is to fully wash them
in the sink with brush cleaner.
And I know that, but I literally do it once a year.
And I hate cleaning my makeup brushes, and I know it's giving me acne.
I know it's giving me clogged pores.
You know what?
Maybe I'll do it today.
Maybe I'll wash my makeup brushes today, but it's a pet peeve to clean them.
I fucking hate cleaning them.
27.
Removing waterproof mascara.
Listen, I love waterproof mascara
because I love being able to sort of rub my eye
a little bit and not have mascara be everywhere.
I like my makeup not getting destroyed if I sneeze
or my eyes water from allergies
and it doesn't make my mascara go everywhere.
I appreciate waterproof mascara,
but I literally refuse to wear it now
because removing it is so challenging
that I just don't even want to wear it anymore.
I also hate removing black eyeliner.
Like when I do like a really intense eyeliner look
and there's a bunch of eyeliner in my waterline,
I hate removing that.
It's so hard to remove.
I feel like I'm just ripping out all my eyelashes
and damaging the delicate skin on my eyes
when I'm removing waterproof mascara
or like thick eyeliner.
And the thing is, when it comes to wearing,
waterproof stuff is better, right?
It doesn't smudge, it is better.
So it's a bummer.
28, when something needs to constantly be charged to work,
like a speaker or wireless headphones, et cetera,
anything that needs to be constantly charged to work,
there are certain things that need to be charged
every once in a while to work.
Like I have some portable chargers that need to be charged
maybe once every two weeks,
or like a little portable lamp that only has to be charged like once every six months.
But there are certain things that are just badly designed,
like the battery inside is just horrible,
and it needs to be charged all the time.
Like if every time I want to use my portable speaker,
I turn it on and it's like low battery,
that is annoying to me.
And that is a pet peeve.
29, messy cords.
Like behind my desk, I just have so many messy cords
and there's no really good way to organize them.
Like maybe there is,
but if you organize your cords really well,
then you can't change them out whenever you need to.
And sometimes, you know, I need to unplug things
or move things around.
So I'm always faced with messy cords
and also cords that are not the correct length.
Like I feel like cords are either way too long
or way too short and there's no in between
and that really bothers me.
So that's another pet peeve.
30, when my cats try to sit on my hands or computer
or notebook or book or whatever I'm looking at
or working on.
When I'm recording a podcast,
my cats love to walk in front of my computer,
walk on my keyboard, step on my recording equipment,
et cetera.
When I'm reading a book,
my cats love to sit on my lap where my hands are.
I don't know how they know,
but it seems like they always know how to get in the way.
Listen, I love cats and I think cats are great pets.
But my God, is it so annoying sometimes.
And last but not least, red receipts.
I've told a story before about how I accidentally had my red receipts on for a few months
and I was accidentally leaving people on red for hours on end,
not knowing that they knew that I had read the message.
Red receipts are so stressful for me for many reasons. That was when I discovered that I hated
Redd receipts was when for multiple months in my teenage years, I had Redd receipts on and I found
out later after a mortifying discovery, one of my friends told me and then I realized that I had
been texting my crush for weeks with my Redd receipts on and I would read told me and then I realized that I had been texting my crush for weeks
with my red receipts on and I would read their text and then not respond for like two hours
and then respond later trying to play hard to get.
Meanwhile, they saw that I read it.
Oh my God, that was really embarrassing.
But then since then, I've grown a stronger and stronger hatred for red receipts just
in general.
I don't like when people have their red receipts on because there's something about it that like feels aggressive.
Like I don't want to know when they've read it.
I like when it just says delivered.
There's just something about it that's unsettling to me.
But there are certain chatting platforms like Instagram DM,
for example, where I feel like you can't turn red receipts off.
I might be wrong about that.
They might have updated it since, but for a long time you couldn't turn red receipts off. I might be wrong about that.
They might have updated it since, but for a long time you couldn't turn red receipts
off.
So you couldn't read a message without somebody knowing that you'd read it.
And that really bothers me because sometimes I want to read something and then decide later
after I've read it if I want to respond and I don't want the person to know if I've seen
it or not.
31 pet peeves. that is a lot.
Let me know your pet peeves.
Send them through to me on Instagram at Anything Goes.
Follow Anything Goes on social media at Anything Goes.
If you enjoyed this episode, tune in for the next one.
New episodes on Thursdays and Sundays.
You can stream anywhere you get podcasts,
although video episodes are exclusively on Spotify.
You can check me out on social media at Emma Chamberlain,
and you can check out my coffee company.
Go to chamberlaincoffee.com,
see if we're in a store near you using the store locator,
or just order online.
And check Chamberlain Coffee out on social media
at Chamberlain Coffee.
Yeah, okay. That's all for today. Thank you all for letting me rant.
Thank you for hanging out. I love and appreciate all of you.
And I will talk to you in a few days.
Okay, love you. Talk to you later. And bye.