I have lived for literally years at a time without having hot water, and besides strengthening my bond to the ideal of Marxism-Leninism-Maoist thought, I also found that I quickly became used to not having hot water. I had no problem washing dishes in cold water.
As a bonus, if you abide by a revolutionary workout regiment and are trying to become swole in the fashion of a true more revolutionary person, a quick cold shower after working out every day (or twice a day on leg/cardio days) will actually cool you down a lot.
You should get used to it also, because after the revolution hot water will surely be rationed for important non personal use, and probably won't be available to the home of most comrades. Unless you plan on pursuing a career in the Party, you will probably not be able to use hot water at your whimsy as you can today.
![](http://i.imgur.com/BWCxnrx.jpg)
aerdil posted:i literally can not function without a hot shower in the morning and since life is ephemeral and we're all gonna die some day and the universe will slowly gasp out its last bits of hawking radiation and ease into a state of eternal stillness, im gonna keep hot showerin'
Purge this parasite
![](http://i61.tinypic.com/2ch7403.jpg)
gyrofry posted:why don't people make a real life full sized meatship
c.f. my post in bf's food thread
roseweird posted:littlegreenpills posted:why don't ppl use the output coils of their fridges to generate hot water
bc most refrigertors arent adapted to do that and who is going to modify them??? but in the resource scarce future the luckiest among our successors will live in superefficient prefab 12 foot cubes and the refrigeration and air control and electrical generation will all be wired togther in one corner, all of it of course designed so that groups of cubes can be stacked together in a variety of configurations to more efficiently pool their resources, compelled as they are by the need to keep the heat rays running lest some of the tent dwellers get too close.
roseweird posted:the largest and most persistent of these arrays would, of course, begin to form the first post-collapse cities—pitiful semi-mobile rats' nests of haphazard manufacturing efforts and winding halls of doors to shut-ins' homes all thrown together like legos—as primitive reinterpretations of decayed engineering technologies gradually came to be find new purpose and form in the novel way of life that would define the vast majority human culture and history for the following 12,000 years
I found the theme song for this dysotopian future
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TbdcW-rPsi8
makes u think