For years, I cursed that useless gap between my car’s cup holders. It looked like a mistake.
A design failure. Proof that nobody at the factory actually drove the thing. I shoved receipts in there.
Crumbs fell in. Keys got stuck. I hated it. Then one day, someone casually revealed its real purpose—and my whole idea of “bad design” shatt… Continues…
I had spent years assuming that strange, narrow slot was just wasted space,
a reminder that designers and drivers live in different worlds.
Learning that it was actually meant to cradle grocery bag handles and purse straps felt like a quiet revelation.
Suddenly, all those spilled takeout containers, rolling oranges, and cracked eggs became preventable chaos I had simply accepted as normal.
What struck me most wasn’t just the cleverness of the feature, but its humility. No one bragged about it. No salesperson pointed it out. It was built to help, not to be admired. Once you recognize it, you begin to see other silent solutions around you—small, thoughtful choices hidden in everyday objects. That little slot becomes a reminder that sometimes the world is kinder and more carefully designed than we give it credit for; we just haven’t learned how to look yet.