Comments
-
@Delivery God Yato, I hate on them because of the claim that spinning a piece of plastic/metal will magically help someone with certain disabilities - its all obviously placebo. So you're either buying them for the placebo effect or because you think they look fun, which is something only an 8-year-old should be doing.
-
@misztrannymarie, Everyone fidgets... except maybe for those guards in front of Buckingham Palace. Whether it’s touching your hair, biting your nails, playing with your clothing or spinning pens in your hands, you probably fidget many, many times a day. It’s called a fidget spinner because it can spin and allows you to do what you normally try not to do: fidget. The toy looks like a cross between a ceiling fan and the head of a triple headed electric shaver. As you can see, the fidget spinner is not exactly the most complex of inventions, although it gives a whirring sound while it spins. Therefore, the fidget spinner’s price premium ($15 on Amazon) over other common fidget objects such as pens, pencils, balls and coins probably isn’t due to massive research and development costs. Nonetheless, some retailers have made claims that the fidget spinner has health benefits such as easing stress, PTSD, anxiety, and ADHD.
This is cancer in its truest form