Dish Soaking

(Time-Assisted Compliance)

WHAT IT IS:

A long-haul excuse disguised as preparation. The dish is dirty, but you’re not ignoring it — no, you’re letting it marinate in its own consequence. The sink becomes a spa retreat for forks you refuse to acknowledge.

This isn’t avoidance. It’s hydrotherapy.

WHAT YOU'LL NEED:

  • One or more dirty dishes
  • running water and whispered lies
  • a sponge you haven’t made eye contact with in 11 days

PROS:

  • Something is happening, technically
  • Makes you feel less gross than just leaving the dish out dry
  • Delays action while maintaining the illusion of care   

CONS:

  • You still won’t clean it
  • Dish now spiritually heavier than before
  • Water becomes a symbolic broth of shame

BONUS ACTIVITY: When asked about it, say: “I’m letting the enzymes do their thing.” You sound scientific. They stop asking.

Difficulty Level: Extremely Low
Requires only gravity, water, and a willingness to walk away.

Time Commitment:Indeterminate
Officially “just a few minutes.” Unofficially overnight, then until tomorrow night.

Skill Transferability: Moderate
Builds confidence in postponement, delegation to future-you, and the art of calling something “in progress.”

Cost Over Time: Low but cumulative
Slightly higher water usage, plus the eventual purchase of a new sponge that smells like regret.

Dish Soaking Diagram

Historical Note

Archaeologists excavating Pompeii discovered amphorae filled with greasy clay plates left “to soak” in rainwater at the time of the eruption. Inscriptions on the wall translate loosely as “I’ll get to it after the games.” Scholars debate whether this was a primitive cleaning method or simply procrastination immortalized in ash.

Get New Hobbies, Occasionally

A quiet publication documenting low-effort pursuits as they emerge. Delivered periodically. No urgency implied.
For internal distribution only

Get New Hobbies, Occasionally

A quiet stream of low-effort hobbies, delivered periodically.

Each issue features one simple pursuit, along with light guidance for those considering participation.
For internal distribution only