Bigger myth: every time we turn a guy down for sex, we experence multiple orgasms, not technically true.The biggest urban myth: The female orgasm.we think about sex every single second.Men think about sex every seven seconds.![]()
Bigger myth: every time we turn a guy down for sex, we experence multiple orgasms, not technically true.The biggest urban myth: The female orgasm.we think about sex every single second.Men think about sex every seven seconds.![]()
That must have been a pretty old secret experimental model, since all production cars have had electronic fuel injection for the past 25 years or so.I'm surprised nobody has mentioned the experimental carburetor that will allow a 5000 pound car to achieve 40 miles per gallon of gasoline. It seems like everyone has a friend of a friend of a friend's uncle who bought a new car and was mistakenly given the secret experimental model with the magic carburetor!![]()
I've heard it'll make you go insane.The old “pleasuring yourself” will make you go blund.![]()
It may not make you go blind, but I hear it might make you make spelling mistakes.![]()
I've never encountered a railroad crossing that didn't have the tops of the rails flush with the road surface. And don't RR crossings have flashing lights, warning bells, and automatic gates where you live?Some crossings have the rails set into the road. Others do not. Those latter are the ones that get bumpy----they work pretty much like speed bumps.
And necessary or no, taking a look each way is minimal extra effort for greatly reduced risk. There's no logical reason to argue against doing it.
I've never encountered a railroad crossing that didn't have the tops of the rails flush with the road surface. And don't RR crossings have flashing lights, warning bells, and automatic gates where you live?Some crossings have the rails set into the road. Others do not. Those latter are the ones that get bumpy----they work pretty much like speed bumps.
And necessary or no, taking a look each way is minimal extra effort for greatly reduced risk. There's no logical reason to argue against doing it.
The old "pleasuring yourself" will make you go blund.![]()
It may not make you go blind, but I hear it might make you make spelling mistakes.![]()
I'll have to do research on this but I still doubt the whole "sitting too close to the TV damages your eyes" thing. How many countless people have sat infront of computer monitors for 8 hours a day, five days a week, and suffered no significant vision loss? If sitting too close to a TV or computer monitor damaged your vision or made you blind both would be an epidemic in developed nations.
A computer monitor is not a TV. By the time computer monitors came along, a lot of the problems of earlier CRTs (60s - early 70s and before) had been addressed to a degree. Even so, sitting that close to a CRT is not going to do your eyes any good and the research is there to show it.
As far as I know, there are no similar problems with LCD monitors. I can definitely say subjectively that I experienced some discomfort staring at a CRT monitor for many hours but experience no discomfort at all with LCDs.
- From HERE.Using you eyes for any length of time does not make them weaker. You may get tired and may even get a headache with long reading hours, but these symptoms have nothing to do with eyes getting weaker. Sitting closer than necessary to the television may give you a headache, but it will not damage your vision. Modern TVs do not emit harmful radiation, so eye damage due to radiation is also not an issue. As with sitting too close to the television, you may get a headache from reading in the dark, but it will not weaken your sight.
In Germany, there's one that says you can drink beer and then wine, but not the other way around, because that would make you sick.
...which is stupid and just not true. It's irrelevant in what order you drink beer and wine; if you drink too much, you'll get sick either way- if you don't, you'll be fine no matter what you drink first.
I heard that one for the first time when I first came to Germany a few years back (so I've got no idea whether it's an international urban myth).
No matter how many times the thing gets disproven on the telly, radio and whathaveyou, people are reluctant to let it go. It's annoying.
I've never encountered a railroad crossing that didn't have the tops of the rails flush with the road surface. And don't RR crossings have flashing lights, warning bells, and automatic gates where you live?
The lights and bells are standard.
When I was in Japan dog was on the menu, cat too but less.The cats thing may not be true, but the dog one sure is here, and in Korea and Mainland China.
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