Overdue bills.
Born during the very last month of the previous millennium, but I don't know what generation that is.
Or, in Eastern countries, the five precepts.
My most common thought of all time or my most common that appears unprovoked?
My most common thought of all time is, just generally, about how mentally misguided humans are in general. In my experience, people predominantly have an "ask questions later" approach to things, and then when they do finally "ask the question", it's "how do I excuse myself". My whole life, and everything I've learned from history, is shaped by this, and they hate pushback. If humanity killed someone for agreeing, in time, would they be remembered as a philosopher or a crazy person since inclination rules?
My most common thought that appears unprovoked is similar, it deals with the situations I've been witness to in the name of what I described and trying to think out what the implications actually are and what would be in the best interest of each situation. I recently watched a show about a guy who built 100 houses for people in an impoverished country, and people reacted to this act of charity by complaining he was continuing colonialism. Sometimes "I can't even" is a perfect mood descriptor.
I forgot how the conversation went, but one day, a conversation I had with someone about comprehensibility (which was often an issue) compelled me to talk to an AI, a talk which I remember from the fact the AI did now have such issues as the complaining humans had.
The ancient Romans discovered evolution, though it worked a lot differently, with them theorizing we came from fish and that one day some guy with arms and legs burst out of a mother fish. According to the theory, things probably got incredibly awkward at family reunions.
This is the one I'd recommend.
Is that the one robot from Futurama who binges grapes?
The Wii U was an amazing concept that got abandoned too early. My Wii U which I love still collects dust for this reason.
Quince cider if they have it, but typically they don't, and I end up buying it for myself at expensive prices, which one might argue is a good buffer. It has a natural tingy taste (for me anyways) and an non-static level of alcohol content, which is true of cider in general.
I think my biggest change was between age seven and my teen years because it's when I went through the most. I otherwise don't change much, but in those first years I was like a different person.
That's the neat part, I don't.