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What everyday human activities do you expect to be exactly the same in 1,000 years as they are now?
- Waving to someone who is actually waving to someone behind you
— OverlordAinz
- Shitposting and graffiti. We’ve got examples of it from almost all ancient cultures forward. No reason for it to stop now.
— agirlnamedsenra
- The awkward moment when you pass someone you kinda know in the street/hallway/spaceship and you're not sure whether to say hello or even acknowledge them.
— HacksawJimDGN
- The massive reluctance to get out of bed in the morning. I imagine as time goes on, humans will slowly become more willing to leave bed in the morning, but the advancements in bed-comfort technology will offset any positive change in human evolution that affects wake-vertical time.
It should be noted that I'm writing this as I'm laying in bed, procrastinating on getting up.
— BNinde
- Getting nagged by your mother for not doing something, and then getting nagged about having to be told to do something before you do something, after you have done the something.
— sharrikul
- Complaining.
I think even if we end up in some sort of technological utpoia, people will still be bitching about something.
EDIT: A lot of people have brought up the point that complaining is what helps us to advance as a people. This is a very optimistic outlook, and I thank you for your perspectives. Let us never stay stagnate friends.
— Zappion
- Waking up and lying on your sleeping thing for a while trying to muster up the courage/drive to face the day
— slthomp2
- Breakups. Broken hearts have been around thousands of years and I expect that won't change
— -eDgAR-
- Teenage boys will still be cranking one out like there's no tomorrow.
— xilog