Subject: Aright, since Ivy isn't looking...
Author:
Posted on: 2016-03-31 13:39:00 UTC

I'll say what's wrong and what's not.
-IIRC the mark on my left hand is from a hot pan. Definitely not tea-related (or liquid-related in general).
-I work in a cafe's kitchen, but that's a recent thing. I don't do anything more taxing than cutting tomatoes, though.
-My hands were cold at the time because temperature was at the low tens Celsius. We don't have air conditioning here, and in fact I had a radiator working when I took that photo.
-The desk is indeed my desk at home.
-The stuff about organisation and the desk is spot-on.
-The small, grey scissors are for nails. I also fix my own clothes (especially when it's something small like a button), so I do cut thread with them once in a blue moon. The large scissors with black handles are actually my brother's.
-The tissue paper is there because it's spring and I have allergies.
-The plate is indeed for sushi. However, I didn't eat sushi from it; I ate pizza. The red specks are pizza seasoning.
-Hand sanitiser is for when the water in the tap is absolutely freezing.
-My computer is about four years old and refurbished at that. While it's true that I don't spring for new technology, I can theoretically afford a new computer (service grant from the army); I'd rather spend the money on something else, though.
-The camera has no batteries. It used to be my brother's before he bought a serious professional camera. It's actually more comfortable to use than my phone's camera, especially since the phone uses a godsdamned touchscreen; Taking the photos of my right hand was a pain in the arse.

Bonus round (the other post):
-As mentioned, this is my desk at home.
-It's fixed to the wall because it's a custom-made desk (and takes less space).
-the TAU notebook is more than four years old; I got it when I was considering studying there via the Academic Reserve. I'm currently not studying anything (I dropped law a few months ago because raisins).
-Carpet is, as you said, a pain to maintain, and also catches dust and other allergens.
-On Grammatology isn't a textbook, at least not in the usual sense. I took it from my mum's library because both she and a good friend spew fire and brimestone at it; I want to see what all the hassle is about.
-Most of the books on my desk are indeed fiction. Exceptions are The Letters/Ars Poetica by Horatius (near ASoIaF), the aforementioned On Grammatology, and The Plague by Camus.

So, yeah. Some things are spot on, some are wildly off the mark.

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