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So the house that had the most impact on me growing up (the one that the house in the comic is based on), was built in the 1970's, and has a bunch of weird architectural quirks in it. This is one of them. No ceiling lights in the bedrooms were also one, so we all had to rely on lamps plugged into outlets connected to the light switches.
I still love that house, though.
We're also nearing the end of Chapter 1! There's maybe like 4 pages left of the chapter, and once I complete it, I'll post a compilation of the chapter on Twitter using Clip Studio's nifty new Twitter comic feature.
Featuring:

Harpo © mandobanjo
Pandora, art, and Youthful Bliss © Me
Category Artwork (Digital) / Baby fur
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 1082 x 1400px
File Size 507.6 kB
Listed in Folders
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so wait does it like turn the outlet off when you turn of the light/s, or is it just the placement of the outlet that bothers you. to be serious though my apartment is suffering the same faith since here in czech republic its normal to have outlets next to light switches and its so anoying when a small leak wakes you up and you waddle to the lights and stick your finger in the socket accidently (not that you get electrocuted and die but the check outlets have this metal rod sticking out of them and it just feels weird to touch it since its connected to ground and if you touch it when charged with static electricity, you are pretty much asking for a shockk)
I remember that several of my friends' houses growing up had those outlets connected to the light switches. It always confused me as to why anyone would intentionally do that. Perplexingly, my current apartment has both overhead lights and outlets connected to light switches, and it looks pretty modern, actually. Still not sure why they did it this way, but the result is that there is about twice as many light switches as necessary.
When I was a kid (late 80s-mid 90s), nearly every house we ever lived in had those stupid light switch outlets. I suppose they were meant to plug lamps into so we could turn them on with the switch. But we always had to make sure that the right things were plugged into the right outlets. It was always lots of "fun" when we would try to turn on a lamp, only to have a blaring stereo switch on instead!
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