🤬Bitch Catch all/random thread

I want a new couch. Don't need one, but it would be nice to have one I can lay down on. Mine leather couch up until 5 years ago was showing it's age and dog wear, though still insanely comfortable (low, cushy sidearms, perfect for a pillow). My parents gave me theirs when they moved, nice, great shape, but arms as hard as a rock and a weird size, not a love seat, but not a full long couch, just shy of 6' laying room.

I want one with a chaise on the end. Torn on getting another leather one. It's nice in the summer to be cool, but I also often stick to it. Cold in the winter, not that I really mind, but the kid hate sit. Kids can be messy and really, the couch is one of the first places I end up fucking a lot of the chicks, so not having cloth to clean is nice. They should make covers for sectional couches or ones with a chaise. I'm hemhawing over materials (and leather has very limited color options, even fewer when picking a specific couch). And damn those fuckers got expensive
 
I hate buying furniture so much. For my office/bonus room i just went nuts at ikea. Everything i need in one place for cheap? Yes please.
 
That'd be fine for an office. I just looked, their couches are absurdly expensive for what looks like they were chiseled from rocks and painted :lol:

Also, who would buy a couch without sitting on it? I never would have considered it, but I'm tempted to buy online, do the financing here, and just not deal with going to a store.
 
That'd be fine for an office. I just looked, their couches are absurdly expensive for what looks like they were chiseled from rocks and painted :lol:

Also, who would buy a couch without sitting on it? I never would have considered it, but I'm tempted to buy online, do the financing here, and just not deal with going to a store.
My couch sucks but I'm living with it. My biggest gripe is the back rest is way too low.
 
Yeah I don't want to live with it :lol: I too hate the low back rest. We're too old for that shit! Ashley has 0% financing for 2 years. Likely end up with a faux leather, I can get the style I want. Easier to clean the real leather. May be a shorter life span, but my kid is old enough to not abuse furniture, but young enough to still spill shit all the time :lol:

Prices are fucking stupid now though. You could get a thick, tough, but soft real leather for $1k-$1,500 back then. Now that's double. For many of us, the only affordable option for a $3-4k couch is to do Room To Go's 5 year financing. 5 years on a couch, fuck that.
 
  • Like
Reactions: RIP
I went overboard. Stupid Ashley and their 0% financing :lol:

Gonna love my new couch. This thing was insanely comfortable. But with only 4' between the sides, had to get a new coffee table for the kid to eat and color on. I eat on it too, so I've always wanted one of those where the top raises up a bit. Aaaand the kid suckered me in to getting her a bed and night stand. Eh, at 14 she's old enough for something nice and not a cheap platform bed and a folding table as a nightstand :lol:

I have so much shit to do before it's delivered. So much in the way/to get rid of...hopefully sell :suicide:

22405-02-17-4X3-CROP?fit=fit&wid=1920&hei=1440.webp
 
That looks so comfortable.

I shot sporting clays for the 1st time this morning. That was fun as fuck. I hit 57/100 which i guess isnt too bad for a beginner. I guess now I'm in the market for a new gun 😂
 
Looking at it, I was thinking it might be a little hard on the seats at first. Nope, you just melt right into it. Perfection.

Clays, I've never done it either. I grew up watching it. A bunch of guys gathered in the cow field down the road from me. I'd be out picking blackberries on Saturday morning and watch them blast those clays all morning. I've heard it can be harder than you'd think. Not the leading part, how you look when you aim (how your eyes focus/what you're focusing on, where you're actually looking, etc).
 
Looking at it, I was thinking it might be a little hard on the seats at first. Nope, you just melt right into it. Perfection.

Clays, I've never done it either. I grew up watching it. A bunch of guys gathered in the cow field down the road from me. I'd be out picking blackberries on Saturday morning and watch them blast those clays all morning. I've heard it can be harder than you'd think. Not the leading part, how you look when you aim (how your eyes focus/what you're focusing on, where you're actually looking, etc).
Yeah figuring out what to focus on was awkward compared to one eye open shooting. The course was fun. It was 15 stations, and you'd shoot at either 6 or 8 per station. Some would roll across the ground (like a rabbit), others went straight up, left to right away from you, towards you, etc. We did what are called report pairs all day. You'd call pull, then once you shoot they send the second bird. Im pretty much instantly hooked.
 
I watched a video on it recently, said the key was both eyes open. Of course it was a video trying to sell a method on train your eyes for shooting with both eyes open :lol: I haven't shot lately, but I suck at it. I'd love to be able to since my dominant eye switched, but I just can't do it. Luckily, cross eye dominance has little to no effect on rifle aim and it wasn't too bad to switch to my left eye and and just shift a pistol in right hand towards my left eye. I'd probably suck ass at skeet, but that does sound like a lot of fun.
 
Yeah. Both eyes open when shooting a shotgun. You don't really aim either... more like point in the general direction of the target.

Except for turkey hunting. The pellet pattern is super tight and requires more precision.
 
Back
Top