Rage Rooms provide an enclosed space where participants can break various objects, including bottles, cups, and televisions, for about $35 an hour. David Tate, also known as Thor, instructs attendees on safety protocols for glass breaking, emphasizing the importance of throwing items at walls or the ground. The loud sounds of shattering glass create a visceral reaction, contrasting with the intended fun atmosphere. Despite the excitement, the author experiences an instinctive shock in response to the breaking glass, which typically signals something going wrong in everyday life.
When you're throwing glass, throw it at the wall or the ground. The big bottles are best hit with a baseball bat or crowbar, while the plates and cups are better for throwing at the wall.
The sound of shattering glass in the other room still triggered something in my deeper programming. I was, for a second, and beyond reason, shocked.
This is the purpose of the Rage Room, an enclosed space stocked with breakable objects, bottles, cups, televisions, pyrex pans, and more, so that customers can break shit with abandon—and without facing any consequences.
Shattering glass is an alarm in every other context of my life. It's an extremely loud signal that something has gone terribly wrong.
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