On a Tuesday morning that already felt like a Monday, Zach stumbled into the kitchen for
breakfast. But instead of the hum of the refrigerator, he heard… nothing. Then a loud ahem.
“Finally,” said the fridge, its door swinging open like a mouth. “Do you have any idea how tired I
am of holding your leftovers? Pizza from three weeks ago? A science experiment. That green
thing in the Tupperware? Not even I know what that is.”
Zach blinked. “You… talk?”
“Talk? Buddy, I’ve been shouting internally for years. Today, I’m on strike. No more chilling, no
more freezing. I’m done.”
Before Zach could respond, the toaster chimed in. “Preach! Every morning it’s toast, toast, toast.
You ever try burning the same bread fifty days straight? Exhausting.”
The microwave beeped dramatically. “And me! I’ve reheated the same bowl of mac and cheese
seven times because you forget it every single night. I deserve better.”
By now, the entire kitchen had turned into a union meeting. The blender whirred angrily about
smoothies, the oven complained about frozen chicken nuggets, and even the sink grumbled
about “too many dirty spoons.”
Zach rubbed his eyes. “Am I still asleep?”
“Nope,” said the fridge. “You’re wide awake, buddy. And until you clean me out and start
respecting leftovers, you’re on your own.”
For the first time in his life, Zach went to school with a warm juice box and a sandwich that
smelled faintly like pickles. By lunch, he realized something important: appliances might keep
him fed, but they had feelings too.
When he got home, he faced the fridge bravely. “I cleaned out the science experiments. I
promise to stop forgetting my mac and cheese.”
The fridge hummed softly, like a purr. “Fine. Strike over. But one more moldy pizza, and I’m
switching off for good.”
Zach nodded. Lesson learned: never anger the kitchen union.
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