I never cook anything, unless you count putting pre-made lasagna into the oven. I feel like I should change this, but maybe it's okay?
>>8270423
If you're happy and/or healthy, there is no reason to change.
I think it's fine, if you're okay with it. A lot of people enjoy cooking, but there's nothing wrong with skipping it if it never interested you.
I'm a support worker. I work with adults with often severe learning disabilities........I teach them all to cook rudimentary meals from scratch.
If you can't cook you're beyond retarded.
>>8270423
Maybe that's bait, but I'll reply.
Actually, cooking by yourself has many advantages :
>cheaper
These pre-made meal cost a lot long term, also you'll tend to do less take away to cook home once you break the habit
>healthier
I mean that's probably a concern for you if you're considering to stop that. Just look at the ingredients of any of these manufactured meals : it looks terrible, and it is.
>tastier
Something you make according to your taste, with ingredients you chose are just plain better.
>relaxing
This one is not for everyone, but cooking is a nice 20min of work that relaxes many people.
Then, as the other anons said, there is no wrong in eating take away/ready made from time to time. Doing it regularly though is not recommended (bad for your body, expensive and not that good).
>>8270456
He didn't say he couldn't cook.
>>8270457
>cheaper
The lasagna pictured above costs 0.99 GBP (1.25 USD), but low prices like this seem to be the exception rather than the norm.
>healthier
As you guessed, that's the main reason I'm considering to cook. Was also thinking about just eating raw vegetables or taking supplements.
>tastier
Yeah.
>relaxing
idk, eating is annoying, especially when I get hungry while programming
>>8270467
>he
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