An uttermost amount of people today are very busy as well. There is evidence that the parents or siblings were in charge of bandaging cuts or treating other injuries. According to Penelope Allison of the University of Leicester, in the UK, “I think that a lot of more high-level first aid went on within households. We have found surgical instruments in domestic contexts, and I think someone in the house was responsible for sewing up the injured people” (“Secrets of Ancient Pompeii Households Revealed in Ruins”). Weaving looms have been found in houses, meaning the families more than likely sewed their own clothes, consequently saving money by not buying them. They also seemed to like food on the run, due to the fact there was a large absence of formal dishware, but a prosperity of objects like barbeques, meaning that the lion’s share of people were eating on the run in addition to running everywhere.
The people of Pompeii also had many non-gadgets. Non-gadgets are also known as multipurpose tools, which are simple objects used for many purposes. Some examples from Pompeii would be pots also used as wine ladles and spindle whorls also used as furniture ornamentation. Some examples from our era would be the tractor, the red rubber scraper, and the pocketknife. Multipurpose tools more than likely played a gargantuan role in the average Pompeii person’s