What do strangers, your loved ones and businesses do that really annoys you?

It has been more than 20 years since Seinfeld writer Dan O'Keefe wrote the classic 1997 episode The Strike, featuring character Frank Costanza (played brilliantly by Jerry Stiller) and his made-up, anti-consumerism holiday Festivus.

A quick search of Facebook events shows that people across this nation are still celebrating Festivus in real life, including Brew Bus Brewing in Tampa on Dec. 22, and Tampa Beer Works on Dec. 15.

If you're not familiar, this video is a good primer and festivusweb.com has a wealth of info, but these are the basics: the main decoration is an unadorned metal pole (Frank Costanza "finds tinsel distracting"), there are feats of strength ("Festivus isn't over until you pin me"), and — most importantly — there is airing of grievances, when people publicly share their complaints from the preceding year.

For the past two years, we've asked people to share their grievances and complaints, no matter how petty or minutiae-related, and we've published them.

You complained about the overuse of the word "amazing," the Florida winter heat, shopping carts, and how your father-in-law insists on teeing off from the "senior" tees when playing golf despite being freakishly strong for his age. Last year you complained about The Last Jedi, and then you complained about people who complain about The Last Jedi.

You sounded off on fidget spinners, the way your upstairs neighbors sound like "wild animals who aren't even having fun," co-workers bathroom habits and Publix getting rid of the sandwich press ("Toasting is not the same!")

Now we want to hear about 2018.

Submit your grievances via the form below and we'll publish a selection of them before Dec. 23, the traditional date of Festivus. Extra points for funny grievances that aren't about presidential politics. (You must enter a name that isn't obviously fake to be considered).

As Frank Costanza put it, "I've got a lot of problems with you people, and now you're going to hear about it."

Contact Christopher Spata at cspata@tampabay.com or follow @spatatimes on Twitter.