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Why do people save takeout menus they never use?

Some menus stay not because they are useful, but because choices are comforting.

People save takeout menus they never use because menus preserve future choices. The paper itself has little value, but throwing it away can feel like removing a convenient possibility that may become useful one day.

Kitchen drawers often contain menus from restaurants people have not visited in years. Some restaurants may have closed. Others may have moved online. Still, the menus remain.

Part of the reason is practical. A menu provides prices, options, and contact information. Yet practicality rarely explains why people keep dozens of them long after smartphones made them unnecessary.

The deeper reason is possibility. A menu represents an easy solution to a future problem: dinner after a long day, guests arriving unexpectedly, or a moment when cooking feels impossible. This is where Future Visibility quietly shapes behavior.

Once an object becomes associated with preparedness, its practical value matters less. Throwing it away feels like reducing options, even if those options are rarely used.

People think they save menus for food. More often, they save them because having choices available can feel almost as satisfying as making one.

Why do people save takeout menus they never use?

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