I believe that the consensus on this is that the originator of this post has taken up smoking. Ash is sticky.
111 0 ReplyOr aerosolized cooking oil if the house is open enough or possibly vape residue if they vape at all
80 0 ReplyTaking up smoking also reduces your pulmonary capacity, which makes blowing things harder
26 0 ReplySmoking makes blowing money easier. Touché :)
12 0 Reply
I've never seen sticky ash. I've seen completely beige and brown nicotine on walls, but never sticky.
This is more likely due to cooking. If the cooking hood/extractor doesn't work right or they just haven't cleaned in a while, the fumes from cooking will cover everything in a thick layer of sticky fat, which is difficult to get rid of with normal cleaning products.
16 0 ReplyYou don't think tar is airborne or sticky? Confidently incorrect.
5 0 Reply
Because of woke
99 0 ReplyThanks Obama
41 0 Reply
has dust changed
Dust. Dust never changes.
48 0 ReplyQuality dustpost.
27 0 ReplyBut you can still blow Dustin
(Dustin thanks you for your service)
21 0 ReplyDustin: 🫡
6 0 Reply
You can blow dust off? All of it? Asking from near the 405.
13 0 ReplyDust II
10 0 ReplyEver left your window open by mistake on a smog day?
9 0 ReplyWe're all just dust in the wind. Stuck in place, going nowhere.
8 0 ReplyDust is lucky, getting blown so much
8 0 ReplyWhat was that old saying? The internet makes you stupid.
7 0 ReplyShit! If I had more than 2 braincells I'd be in trouble.
2 0 Reply
maybe that's just how dust worked in the movies
6 0 Reply