🤯 INCRÍVEL: “Good Information To Have, Hopefully Never Useful”: 45 Random Facts That Won’t Pay Your Bills But May Keep You Entertained 😲
Living in the digital age has granted us access to all kinds of information. Many of them will add value to our lives, perhaps even answer our biggest questions.
However, some are frivolous yet fascinating enough to be excellent conversation starters at a dinner party, much like the random facts on this list. Feel free to verify them if you have doubts, but should you go down each rabbit hole, know that you are enriching your knowledge in some form or another.
If starting small talk at a social gathering is one of your anxiety triggers, start with these.
Babies are born with around 300 bones. By adulthood, that number drops to just over 200 as bones fuse together over time. You spend your whole childhood losing bones, and nobody warns you!
In the 1960s, the CIA spent millions implanting microphones in cats’ ears and radio transmitters in their skulls, hoping to train them to sit near foreign officials and eavesdrop on private conversations. The program was scrapped when they arrived at the same conclusion any cat owner could have told them for free—cats do whatever they want.
Switzerland has made it illegal to own just one guinea pig or parrot, on the grounds that keeping a social animal without companionship counts as animal cruelty. You need at least two. Genuinely one of the more reasonable laws on the books anywhere.
Weird, fascinating facts make us curious. Reading through many of these items likely made you want to Google them to verify whether they are indeed true.
Curiosity has been linked to emotional, social, and psychological benefits, which clinical psychologist Emily Campbell broke down in this article for UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Magazine.
Campbell first noted that curiosity is essential to our survival. As she explained, the urge to explore and seek novelty keeps us vigilant about our constantly changing environment.
“(It) may be why our brains evolved to release dopamine and other feel-good chemicals when we encounter new things,” she wrote.
Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia is the clinical term for a fear of long words. Whoever named it was not being kind.
The filling inside a KitKat is made from rejected KitKats that didn’t pass quality control. They grind up the imperfect ones and put them inside the perfect ones. So you can probably feel like an eco-warrior when eating one now!
Being curious means having a deeper understanding of the world and the people around us. In effect, it also helps us develop more empathy, which only leads to growth.
This is why Campbell urges engaging with others on a personal level, especially with people we don’t know.
Australia is wider than the Moon. East to west, the country stretches almost 4,000 kilometers compared to the Moon’s 3,400-kilometer diameter. The Moon wins on total surface area since it’s a sphere, but still.
Owls swallow small animals whole, let their stomach dissolve everything that it can, and then compact the bones and feathers into a neat little pellet and spit it back out. Efficient, if not exactly refined dining.
Curiosity can be a double-edged sword, depending on how you express it. General-interest curiosity, which is more about celebrating a lack of knowledge and wanting the opportunity to gain more, is closely related to intellectual humility.
However, there is also deprivation curiosity. As University of California, Santa Barbara professor Jonathan Schooler explains, this is when the goal is to “squelch the discomfort of uncertainty.”
Fredric Baur invented the Pringles can and was so proud of it that he asked to be buried in one. His family honored the request by putting some of his ashes inside one. Once you pop, you really can’t stop.
As if chess wasn’t hard enough to understand already! There are more possible ways to play a game of chess than there are atoms in the observable universe.
“When you lack intellectual humility—when you feel like you need to know everything and you realize there’s something you don’t know—that leads to an uncomfortable gap,” Schooler said.
As an example, he mentioned people who accept fake news because they don’t like uncertainty.
Humans are only born with two fears: falling and loud noises. Every other thing you’re afraid of, you picked up along the way.
McDonald’s once engineered bubblegum-flavored broccoli to try to get kids to eat more vegetables. It did not work. Shockingly.
Barbie has a full government name, Barbara Millicent Roberts, and she’s been keeping it quiet since 1959.
Indeed, being curious has its benefits. However, being receptive to new ideas is just as important. As Dartmouth College professor Thalia Wheatley states:
“[Curiosity] really creates common ground across brains, just by virtue of having the intellectual humility to say, ‘OK, I thought it was like this, but what do you think?’ And being willing to change your mind.”
A blue whale’s heart weighs 400 pounds, pumps 60 gallons of blood per beat, and its heartbeat can be heard from two miles away. The human heart pumps 2.4 ounces per beat. Why are humans running the world again?
Polar bears are secretly wearing a black wetsuit under fur that isn’t even white! It’s translucent, just reflecting light back at you. The whole fluffy white bear thing is essentially an optical illusion.
During medieval times in Europe, animals were regularly put on trial for crimes including crop destruction and unaliving people! Courts took these cases completely seriously because people genuinely believed animals were capable of sin and guilt, and therefore deserved the same legal accountability as humans.
Those fluffy white things drifting peacefully overhead aren’t as light as they seem. A cloud can weigh upwards of 550 tons! That’s not even talking about one shaped like an elephant…
Every year in Lopburi, Thailand, residents lay out 4.5 tons of fruit and vegetables for the 3,000 monkeys that live near the local temple. The monkeys have their own annual buffet, and honestly, that sounds more fun than most human festivals.
Nobody knows who invented the fire hydrant because the patent was destroyed in a fire at the U.S. Patent Office in 1836. The irony is immaculate.
Sloths can hold their breath for up to 40 minutes underwater, longer than dolphins. The laziest animal on the planet is secretly an elite diver. That’s maybe why they always look so smug.
Sharks have been around for at least 419 million years, which means they predate grass, dinosaurs, mammals, and Saturn’s rings. This is their planet, and we’re all just visiting.
If you sneeze when you step into bright sunlight, you might have something called Achoo Syndrome, which is a real medical condition and also the best-named condition in the history of medicine.
The fastest muscle in your body is the one that closes your eyelid, snapping shut in under 100 milliseconds when something gets too close to your eye. Blink, and you’ll miss it, literally.
A goldfish named Tish lived to 43 years old in the UK, which is several decades longer than anyone tells you when you win one at a fair.
Dogs are responsible for the 3rd most fatalities in the UK! They are only behind bees and cows.
A grizzly bear can bite through a bowling ball (not sure who figured this out… or why…). Their bite force hits around 1,000 pounds per square inch, enough to crush bone like it’s nothing. Good information to have, hopefully never useful.
Redheads require about 20% more anesthesia than everyone else due to their genetics. So it might be worth mentioning before going under that you aren’t a “natural redhead.”
A lightning bolt heats the air around it to 50,000 degrees Fahrenheit, which is five times hotter than the surface of the sun. Something to think about next time you’re waiting out a storm.
Woodpecker tongues are long enough to wrap around their own brain, acting as a built-in shock absorber against the impact of pecking wood all day. Nature’s helmet.
Every time you shuffle a deck of cards, the specific order those 52 cards land in has almost certainly never existed before and will never exist again. There are more possible arrangements than atoms on Earth.
The fastest hands on land might belong to Mike Tyson, but in the water, it belongs to the mantis shrimp. At only four inches long, it’s capable of throwing a 50mph punch hard enough to shatter glass tanks. The mantis shrimp is the most terrifying thing in the ocean that you’ve never thought to be afraid of.
Honey never expires! Archaeologists have found 3,000-year-old honey in Egyptian tombs that was still perfectly edible. A combination of low water content, high acidity, and antibacterial properties means sealed honey will essentially last forever, which is more than can be said for most things the Egyptians left behind.
You can technically make a diamond out of peanut butter. The carbon in the spread can be crystallized into a diamond under the right heat and pressure. The catch is that it takes three weeks to produce a stone roughly the size of a match head, so Skippy is not going to put De Beers out of business anytime soon.
You’re about a centimeter taller when you wake up than when you go to bed. Your spine decompresses overnight and then gets squashed back down throughout the day. So, technically, everyone is lying on their driver’s license.
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