Agree completely with nonanan2. And couldn't disagree more with eazybee - we have moved on since our grandmothers (1900s) were looking after families, we have undergone what we call a technological revolution, and we have rampant globalisation - the idea that young people live lives that have any comparison with those of our grandparents (over a century ago) is just nonsense.
People who work unsocial hours cannot just switch their cooking responsibilities to another time of day, by working unsocial hours their body rhythms are changed and they're actually more tired. Young people in London don't own their own homes, let alone cabbage patches where they can 'grow their own' even if they had time. Life for millions of young Londoners is unrecognisable to people in their 60s+ who live in the provinces. And this is a huge problem because people who have never spent hours commuting, had to live in flats with shared cooking resources, and paid exorbitant rents to do so, have no idea of how bad life can be and it's all so easy to brand such people as lazy. Good proverb about walking a mile in my moccasins before you criticise - those who use food banks have no alternative and until there is a real appreciation in this country by people who have it all, of how those who have nothing survive, we'll never get to a situation where we can eradicate the need for food banks. Sure, Domestic Science and Home Economics on the school curriculum is important, but national politics are the root of this problem.
Does anyone have this jumpsuit?
Unexpected opportunity to have a few days break next week and would love some recommendations
More rude behaviour on public transport 😡


