It’s certainly cold outside so to wrap up for winter, you might benefit from this one handy trick. The super simple hack was posted on X, formerly Twitter, account Today Years Old

The weather is super chilly right now.

It’s undoubtable most of us will be wrapping up for the winter season with gloves and hats. Another item of clothing which is an absolute must is a scarf, but did you know you’ve been wearing it wrong your whole life?

Now over on X, formerly Twitter, popular account Today Years Old, which boasts 1.1million followers, recently unveiled a hack which might just blow your mind. In the post, a woman can be seen demonstrating a unique way to wear your scarf.

In the clip, she said: “Has anyone ever showed you how to put a scarf on like this? You start off like this, put it to the back, criss-cross them and bring those two forward.

“Okay then you want to pull the neck piece for some, put these two inside, pull them down in the back there will be one that you can put over your head.

“When you put it over your head, it’ll keep the ears warm, you can tighten it down to your head so your ears are nice and warm then you put your hat over. When we put your hat over, it’s going to cover your ear perfect. So it’s like double protection in the winter.”

So instead of just wearing a scarf, you’re basically covering your head too – for extra warmth. And the savvy hack struck a chord among social media users as the post racked up 2,400 likes and just over 400 retweets.

One said: “Today I learned how to wear a scarf.” While another added: “Omg I’ve been lied to my whole life.” And a third posted: “Genius,” while a fourth chimed in: “You’re doing it right! Thank you.”

Looking for more things that could potentially blow your mind? Just recently, people were only just discovering what WD-40 actually stands for – and many couldn’t quite believe it.

Posting to his 117,000 followers, user @enterviewteev revealed he only just learned what it means. He said in his caption: “I bet over 90% of my followers had no idea,” as he claimed he was “today years old” after discovering what the “WD” stands for.

He revealed: “The WD and WD-40 stands for water dispersal. Who knew that the WD and WD-40 stood for water dispersal? Nobody even thinks about those academics when they using WD-40.”

Share.
Exit mobile version