Do You Buy the Lottery

Yes, when the jackpot is ridiculously high (say, over $150m). I’ll buy 1 or 2 tickets for each successive jackpot until someone wins. I figure if I win, great, because I’m set for life and most people I care about will be, too, or at least get something really nice/helpful. And if I don’t win, then I’ve just contributed to someone else’s life hopefully being better. It’s harmles for me to pay $1-2 for a day of daydreaming at work.

I didn’t even bother with that much playing until a couple years ago. The jackpot got huge (over $200m), and people at work were pooling money together to buy more tickets (30 people, $30, 1/30th of the jackpot). I didn’t like that as much, but I figured I’ll be damned if they win and I’m one of a few people still stuck working while the department gets decimated. After that, I started throwing a dollar at the lottery a bit more often. I haven’t bought scratch-offs in a long, long time.

I don’t recall ever buying a lottery ticket for myself, although my brother and I bought some to give away at an employee Christmas party in 1986.

I used to do that, but now I get it in gallons wholesale. It’s cheaper.

And, no, filters don’t quite work. Water softeners work, but those have a heavy initial cost that I could never justify.

P.S. Get distilled if you like Aquafina or Sam’s Choice. Get spring water if you like Dasani.

Your counterexamples aside, statistically, poor people play the lottery and rich people buy bottled water.

The problem is the big jugs don’t fit in our fridge. And we just get the bottled stuff from Aldis. (If you have an Aldis in your area, GO THERE, it’s great)

It’s not that our water needs softeners or anything, it’s just a slight, metallic taste.

That’s actually the part I like about my tap water. It’s got flavor!

Almost forgot - I don’t know if you’d call it a lottery as such, but I’ve got money invested in the UK Premium Bonds scheme. I regularly win between £25 and £100 at each monthly draw (I’m sure it’ll be the million next month :stuck_out_tongue: ) but can always sell them back and get the original money I invested back at any time. No interest as such, but the winnings for lucky-bond holders possibly make up for it!