I love this subreddit because it’s a coin toss between seeing the most absolutely terrifying thing on the face of the earth or something bizarrely wholesome.
Regarding Alzheimer’s, people with the disease know it’s happening. When my grandpa started to get it around ten years ago, he was very frustrated, frightened, and angry. He knew what was happening because his mom and several other family members had suffered from Alzheimer’s; when I was a kid, he once told me that getting it was his worst fear. Now, he’s fine, in a way. He’s aware he has Alzheimer’s, but he has no idea how bad it actually is. He doesn’t recognize anyone, but he knows he has a large family and just accepts if someone says they are his kid. It’s sad, but he’s not struggling against it like he was in the beginning.
It's in my family, too. We lost my grandmama to it. It feels like an axe waiting to fall and cut away all that helped be you and love others. I'm glad he's handling it so well. Make sure to listen to every one of his stories.
Same with my grandfather. He was very embarrassed after he had asked how my sister's husband was doing, when he himself remembered that my brother-in-law had died about 8-9 months ago, when he asked the question. Unfortunately, grandfather had some children who criticized him from the time he was diagnosed and died.
My grandfather (dad's side) had dementia my grandmother was hiding it from my dad's family, which caused her to get a heart attack from the stress she died in her sleep years ago,but he died two years ago
The deer with the crooked neck is (or at least was, as of a few years ago) in St. Maries, Idaho. At that point, it had been around for years and has had fawns since whatever caused its neck to be like that (whether a broken neck that healed wonky, birth defect, whatever), so it's apparently relatively healthy all considered.
That's interesting, I thought it was a headless chicken situation where the animal was dead but the body didn't realize and was just going as normal until it died of thirst or hunger and stuff
More info on the woman who killed the hitman in Portland; She was a registered nurse, with experience in (among other things) cracking open rib cages to administer heart massages The only words the hitman said to her was "You're strong." When she said she'd call him an ambulance, he only *growled* at her. They didn't find evidence of where he had come from until a friend of hers came back to the house to get her stuff, and found a backpack in her basement that the police had missed, which contained the hitman's ID, a bottle of chocolate syrup, a diary with the latest entry saying "Call Mike" (her husband), and a paystub from the adult movie rental place that Mike owned.
Well, at least, the hitman acknowledged her strength. While I'm sure it would be terrifying to have this happen to you, this just sounds more badass the more I hear of it.
Fun fact! radium poisoning actually happened to a group of women called the radium girls! they worked in wristwatch factories using radioactive paint to make them glow, and would even paint themselves to glow. this was during the 1920’s when radium was extremely popular, even being in water that claimed to heal you. one of the womens jaws was lifted right off her face, and the company did nothing against it, hiding behind syphillis and other medical issues and technicalities. the girls finally won in court but at that point they only had a few months left anyway. and this didnt just happen once! it happened at multiple companies in the US. Kate Moore wrote an amazing book on this topic that i highly reccomend if this sounds morbidly interesting to you
That's chronic radiation poisoning though Acute radiation poisoning is like what you get from the demon core sphere, which in an accident when the screwdriver holding the sphere open slipped and the core started to go critical. There was a blue flash of light. Almost everyone in that room died within days in utter agony
Also, part of the area is called "Rainbow Valley" because the climbing gear (as in: clothes) is usually bright and colorful and doesn't decay - and there's a lot of it on those corpses. What Click mentioned - the woman looking at you - was also true. She died a few hundred meters from the base camp on the return trip, leaning against her backpack, on a trip lead by her husband. She was looking down, towards the base camp when she died making camp, and thus was looking at people making their way up for a while. I think one or two people even died trying to retrieve her corpse... until the body was pushed over and off a ledge by weather and/or snow. Caitlin Doughty (Ask A Mortician) has made a video about the corpses of Mt. Everest. It's... pretty good, if you can stomach the pictures. (Although I think this was one of the videos where she started to warn people when she was about to show corpses.)
The Susan Kuhnhausen story is wild! Her offer to call him an ambulance was genuine, she really didn't want to kill him but he wouldn't give up, and of course she felt horrible about it later. I think she fought/tried to run away for like 20 minutes straight before realizing the man wasn't going to stop until he killed her. And his family told her they didn't hate her for killing him bc she had to do it to survive.
@@desperadox7565 Because taking another life, even if it's to save your own, is not something anyone should need to do. Honestly, if you feel 'great' after doing something like that you should probably get your head checked out.
It's so disturbing that authorities have produced a "missing" child that was not actually the missing kid of the family so many times that you can confuse several of the instances 🤦🏻♀️
And in one of them the police actually had the mother committed to a mental institution because she wouldn't shut up about them giving her someone else's kid. Total horror story.
As someone with really bad arachnophobia, I cannot stress enough how much I truly appreciate a warning instead of just suddenly slapping a spider on screen and scaring the crap out of me, especially in the context of "oddly terrifying" where the picture has a high chance of triggering an anxiety attack. So thank you 🙏
I'm not sure if I have arachnophobia cause I'm generally alright with tiny spiders but when I saw the warning I knew it would probably be some big frickin spider so I just closed my eyes for 10 seconds
Fun fact the bird you saw the woman taking care of in her home is a shoe billed stork and while they look like a fnaf reject they are actually rather sweet towards humans. There is one in a zoo that will allow you to walk right up and pet them so long as you bow before hand to show respect, and if you don't bow they just fly away to the other side of the enclosure.
That mirror thing is something you are specifically NOT supposed to do when lucid dreaming, because it will most lily result in something very disturbing or nightmarish.
Sorry to do a "Well akshually", but there's actually nothing wrong with mirrors in dreams, it's only if you believe that you *will* see something scary in the mirror.
I've looked in the mirror countless times in dreams and the results were almost always positive. The problem comes when you believe that you'll see something scary on the mirror, since in a lucid dream your thoughts become reality.
It’s been a hit or miss with me in dreams. One constant however is that it’s never me. I may recognize the person as ‘me’, but it’s not the real me. Sometimes I was a gal, other times a guy. Then there was the one time I was a dinosaur. The shadow demon one wasn’t as shocking as seeing myself as a dino, believe it or not.
Whenever I see a myself in a mirror in dreams there is always some medical abnormalities going on like cancerous boobs, teeth falling out, botflies up the nose, etc.
Fun fact: The mushrooms growing out of the stuffed animal are pink oyster mushrooms, which are edible and can be grown at home with a kit. I suspect they replaced the stuffing with sawdust or a similar substrate, and then inoculated the stuffed animal with pink oyster spawn. This would be the easiest way to create that "The Last of Us" effect. Oh yeah, and cordyceps are edible too.
@@aquapenguin9697 Well, here are some more fun facts. The Last of Us can't happen IRL because human body temperatures are too high for the fungus to grow. We're physiologically too different from insects, and our nervous systems and immune systems are more complex. The cordyceps for eating is grown on brown rice anyway, not insects. Though I'm going to undo all that by pointing out that there's a species of fungus that can infect immunocompromised humans, specifically Schizophyllum commune, better known as the split gill fungus. The irony is that this fungus is also edible. It's also one of the most studied fungi in the world, and is known to have over 20,000 biological sexes.
Point Nemo is actually even more terrifying than stated in the image, because not only is it the farthest from any human on earth, but also pretty far from any living creature in general, because ocean currents keep away the nutrients that would be necessary for anything to survive there. So there's at most creatures passing through, but like really nothing lives there permanently.
9:05 Fun fact, torii gates are said to be gateways between the realm of the living and the realm of the beyond. This gate in an abandoned subway system is 100% haunted and there is absolutely some form of yokai lurking in there, whoever took this photo had better pray to the kami that nothing followed them out
aren't they only meant for kami? hence why you should travel to the sides instead of directly in the middle of one, because the center is reserved for the kami?
thanks for the fun fact! this made me remember a cutscene from a game where a character passes through a torii gate and enters a festival of youkais or something but I didn't know it was because he passed through the gate
@@yeen.7209 gateways from mortal to spirit, kami may use them primarily, but anything with enough power can too unless warded properly. hard to see if that one had any at all. looking back, ya probably none. thats a stay away and pray whatever is around is at least ok with you leaving asap.
For the 'zombie' deer, if you've watched the zombie movie 'Train to Busan', the first zombie was a deer that got hit by a truck transporting waste from a biotech lab. Quite disturbing watching this thing get back up with its shattered bones.
I spent a good portion of my childhood with a sinkhole centered directly under my bedroom. They tried filling it in but, it turns out there was a bigger one underneath it. I was basically sleeping in a room suspended over a void.
Now I'm wondering if there was an even bigger sinkhole under the bigger sinkhole... But seriously, you're very lucky you didn't get buried alive in your sleep.
The tornado forming, while absolutely horrifying, was an amazing shot. Never seen one forming from such an angle. I hope the one who got the footage is ok.
Fun fact. Those guns will target everything in range (2 miles) because they don't have an iff reciever. Edit: thus they aren't kept loaded until its needed.
@@TacPhoenix remember hearing a story of a US ATGM carrier (an ADATs or Sgt. York I think) on display having it's systems turned on, and just immediately swinging the turret to face the crowd Edit: there is also a frightingly large number of passenger airliners shot down by Navy ships
The Katy Perry clip is nothing more than a 'party trick' she learned she could do when sitting in makeup chairs for long stretches and needing to keep one eye closed/still for the makeup artists but using the other to see. She will do it on stage during concerts as a part of her show, often to poke fun at the people who post memes that she's a robot/AI.
I’ve written in detail elsewhere, it’s a symptom of some disease states but is also normal for a portion of healthy people, too. It’s called Bell’s Palsy! Source: your friendly neighborhood nurse with autoimmune illness
Imagine if the pig farm was that big because each pig had their own individual nicely sized room with everything they need to be happy. Seems far more humane as long as you don't see the inside.
I was once locked in a closet by two boys. For context these two boys came over with my Aunt, it gets better. I asked them to come up to my room to play and they did. It was my idea to be locked in the closet so they helped me drag over my matress to the closet door and once i was inside they pushed it against the knob. I was bawling by the time my mom found me, keep in mind i was only in the closet for a couple of minutes. After i calmed down i asked my mother if she had seen where the two boys. My mom asked me "what two boys?" Which i thought was odd because she had seen me playing in my room with them or so i thought.. "They came in with my aunt" i whispered. "She doesn't have any little boys," my mom replied. I have never been the same since, I still get chills when I remember this.
Creepy thing I discovered a couple of months ago - I was staying overnight at my sister's horse barn waiting for our pony mare to have her baby, and one night around 1 am I was walking back to my tent next to the mare's field after using the restroom, and heard a really creepy screeching noise, looked over and saw what looked exactly like a person standing in the corner of the arena against the fence. freaked me the F. I knew it had to be something totally normal, since none of the horses were reacting at all, but my heart was pounding as I got closer until my brain could properly distinguish that it was, in fact, someone's long raincoat hanging on a fencepost. The screeching turned out to be one of my sister's young rooster's trying to figure out how to crow. I swear the combo of those things took a couple years off my life ._.
I've heard foxes calling at night. They make a noise almost like a person screaming in fear and/or pain. A lot of really innocent and non-threatening animals make some _damn_ creepy noises. Ironically, it's usually the dangerous animals that make the not particularly frightening sounds.
@@dmgroberts5471 I immediately thought it was going to be foxes before I finished reading their comment. They make the weirdest noises. They also sound like an evil clown giggling when they're happy 🙈
when pareidolia at night and an immature rooster's failed attempt at crowing makes the most innocent of of rain jackets look like a super spoopy wraith with flailing arms and an inhuman screech XD, that's sure to make sure no one gets sleep that night.
Hey atleast it was just that I can't go outside at night because of the skinwalker I'm not kidding my dogs and donkeys are the only thing keeping me safe every night nothing but dead silence not even insects my other animals stay quiet when night comes I always now sleep with a knife under my pillow just incase it gets in
Besides them being all science/chemical names, it's probably due to his dyslexia combined with English not being his first language & it being the first time he's really reading the words out loud, if I remember correctly how he makes his videos. I only mention it here because English isn't my first language either. My first language was Finnish but due to such immersive study of English and etymology to become an editor, my Finnish has suffered while I've been out of the country and I'm actually really embarrassed by it, which is one of the reasons I haven't been back in nearly 10 years (I'm approaching 30). This post became sort of a downer and I didn't mean it to be. I just saw it and it resonated with me; also, I'm on a lot of medication so knowing the generic names of medication helps a lot. *sigh* I will say though that I've heard enough New Zealanders tell me they really like maths but their accent makes me wonder why they're telling me they're into hard drugs hehe.... Anyway, didn't mean to be such a killjoy; I love The Click and his videos and was really happy he uploaded today. Plus I used to live in the Portland, Oregon, area, so I've been to Clackamas, for example, so it's neat when areas I lived in pop up like that. And I do get the original joke here; it was funny enough for me to stop reading for a moment lol and then was inspired to make this post, so kiitos ja hyvää päivää! (thanks and good day)
@@riinak7212 I get that change can be difficult. I also didn't mean to make fun of Click's dyslexia, I just saw an opportunity for a pun. I hope you get a chance to go back to Finland some time soon! Ik wens je een goede dag! (Dutch for I wish you a nice day!)
The face in the window triggered a memory for me. When I was young, like 7, we always passed by this old house on my way to school, and one day I noticed what looked like an old, rotting body propped up against the window. No one else saw it, even though I pointed it out every time I saw it until I was 12. Finally, my parents noticed and it scared them. The next week, it was no longer in the window, but in the middle of a cornfield near the house. Turns out it was a scarecrow made with old torn, muddy clothes and some sort of sack for a head, so from the street through the window, it looked like a human. Then the next week, the guy made another one and put it by his window. The first one is still out in the field, but it's old and falling apart. The new one IS STILL BY THE WINDOW. What's even weirder is that no one knows who lives there. The house even looks like it's slowly rotting, I can't imagine anyone living there.
Thank you. I really wasn't sure what that was. Just because you live in the middle of nowhere doesn't mean your neighbours aren't into scarecrows and cropcircles; golums and aliens.
The animal that the woman is taking care of is actually a shoebill stork I believe, they’re scary to look at but are actually quite gentle creatures, allowing camera crew to film their nests up close in the wild and such Although living in conditions like that is likely to make any animal act out of character
This is also one of the zoos in Berlin, if I'm remembering from my recent visit. I don't thiiiiiiiiiink the sign said it was the residence of the employees. I think it was one of the remaining buildings which was left standing. But I could be wrong.
In the Science Museum in London, there was a cross-stitch project that a lady with Alzheimer's had completed over ten years as her disease got worse and the stitch-work was so beautiful and intricate at the beginning and it was so sad looking at how she'd just forgotten how.
I took care of my grandmother who had Alzheimer's. She used to love to crochet & before she got the disease, she would make the most beautiful afghans. She taught me how to crochet when I was a child. Once her Alzheimer's progressed, she would get so frustrated that the piece she was crocheting didn't look like it was supposed to. I started waiting until she went to bed & then would unravel what she had done & rework it. She was so happy when she would get up the next day & see her progress. I never let her know what I was doing. It made me so happy to see her happy.
The bug infestation on that guy is most likely bedbugs. Speaking from experience, they hide in your clothes and items and jump off wherever you go. Anything public with fabric chairs like waiting rooms, theatre seats, or bus seats. Always be aware of any mysterious bites you find on yourself or loved ones. Once you get them, they're a bitch to get rid of.
I used to have huge issues with this myself, to the point I couldn't use the bathroom at night. It helped, at least for me, learning why this happens. It's a scientific phenomenon called the strange face illusion, or the strange face in the mirror illusion. It's caused by the brain filling in gaps in perception due to the low light levels, similar to how that pile of clothes on a chair turns into a figure. There is an added layer of fear and disturbance because the image being distorted is your own face, which you recognize but your brain is much more used to seeing other people's faces than your own so it tries to fill in the blanks as if it was someone else resulting in a weird not-quite-you in the mirror.
Me too! And...what if it's actions don't exactly mirror my own? Bloody Mary ruined me. Agreed. I look like...not me. Scary. I have minimal mirrors in my house because of that.
I know that staring at the mirror in dim light for too long causes hallucinations. So I don't even glance at myself on mirrors if the room is dark. Glad to know I'm not alone
Regarding the bison thing: Travellers on the railroads were encouraged to shoot bison as they travelled. They had special shooting expeditions where HUNDREDS of men were shooting out the windows and from the rooftops of moving trains, leaving the dead carcasses behind without even attempting to harvest anything.
As soon as I saw the caption I knew *exactly* which picture it would be, seeing as it's not rare to see that picture in the west us at museums and such. I couldn't believe that click hasn't seen it before, though it makes sense.
There are people who try to say that the US doesn't have a racist past, and we have this. "Let's drive an animal to extinction *specifically* to starve the natives into oblivion." Nothing wrong with that, no sir
@@c4tfsh8yeah, as a european they don't teach us indept history of the USA at school. We learn the history of our own country and global things like that most native americans were wiped out.
For the cat in the first one, I think we get the uncanny valley effect from the cat's eyes. They are rather small, cats have large eyes compared to their face while humans tend to have smaller eyes compared to their face. So to see a cat, an animal that's supposed to have large eyes, with small eyes, it reminds us of a human.
A very hearty thanks to the editor for the arachnophobia warning, especially having an audio cue as well as the note on screen in case I'm not completely paying attention.
I used to have a strong fear of spiders, but now that I’ve mostly gotten used to them, now I have a strong fear of cockroaches for some reason. If I see one scuttling along the floor, I’m liable to freak out for a bit before I get my act together and attempt to squish it before it gets away from me.
If I remember correctly, the boy they thought was Dunbar's kid was traveling with his uncle when police took him and they arrested the uncle as kidnapper. It was a tragedy for two families.
Yes and no. Novacaine, the injectable local anesthetic, and lidocaine, the topical anesthetic, are synthetic derivatives of cocaine, so it is two stimulants known for making hearts go pop.
This is why it’s important to tell medical professionals about _all_ medications and drugs you’ve taken. They’re not going to judge you or rat you out to the cops, they just need to know for your safety.
Funny thing about Edmund Kemper, is that when he went to jail, he was completely reformed. He refuses to be let out and often helps police with investigations. Bizarrely wholesome for a guy who murdered a bunch of people. I agree with him, he should never be free. But while he's in there, I'm glad he's at least trying to do good.
"Fun" fact about the missing kid that wasn't the actual missing kid returned to the mother. She demanded to know where her real child was, they stopped looking for her kid, they refused to acknowledge she was right, it eventually went to court where she won her case and was given a massive payout, which they never paid, she ended up in a mental instutiuon where I believe she died (not sure on last part). Her real child was never found.
Yeah you got it wrong. wrong kid and wrong Mom. it's happened multiple times. They didn't have internet back then so they could just lie and then never have to correct cuz nobody would ever find out. Just like your comment is 3 weeks old and you had multiple people tell you were wrong and you still don't correct your comment because
Maybe I'm wrong, but wasn't she institutionalized because they never paid her? Like they tried so hard to keep her quiet and it never worked because they just refused to actually help her.
17:55 The story of Hisashi Ouchi is probably the saddest and scariest example of this. He got hit with a fatal full body dose of radiation, and it completely destroyed his chromosomes. His body pretty much totally stopped producing new cells. Once his current ones died, there were none left to replace them. His entire body became an open wound.
I had to look this up and now I regret it. His heart stopped two months in and the doctors decided to revive him instead of just letting him die. I literally didn't think that story could get worse.
@@e.pluribusunum7916I would recommend watching the wendigoon video on it. He kinda goes more into detail on why the doctors and family made the choices they did. It’s a sad case where the tabloids ended up blaming people that were just trying to save the poor guy
@@dawnkyria8518 I remember reading that at the time doctors were legally obliged to do everything to keep him alive as they had not received permission from him to let him die during the time he still could speak lucidly. Do you know if this is correct?
I watched the wendigoon vid, truly horrifying, they tried so hard to keep him alive, and to think all of this was a mess-up of a radiator or something (it was a long video, the only part of the beginning I remember was the blue radiation)
I love to think of them as hippogriffs, as they're very big on respect and appreciate bowing. They're generally super chill with humans, but if you're an AH they will rightfully turn on you. And you can't just go right up to one you don't know, you have to wait for them to acknowledge you and essentially give you permission. They're so awesome 💖
Yep and from what I’ve heard usually if people they haven’t acknowledged attempt to go near them, they will simply just fly some distance away from them rather then attack despite being more then capable of doing some serious damage. Of course due to their lack of fear towards humans many end up being killed by poachers.
THE BOBBY DUMBAR SITUATION IS SO WILD so basically he went missing then was eventually reunited with his family (the mother apparently recognised him as her son) but the boy apparently had no idea who the family was, eventually just accepting he was Bobby. Then another woman saw his picture in the paper and recognised the boy as HER missing son, but when she came to visit and confirm, the town basically ran her out of there bc they were so protective of him. BuzzFeed Unsolved did an episode on it, which explains it a lot better than I can lmao
Fun fact. An ai vtuber named neuro-sama was canceled and temporarily banned on twitch for denying the holocaust. Even after her creator fixed that people were still mad as if she were a real person.
Bobby Dunbar was an interesting case where two kids were kidnapped, but one was given to the Dunbars and another to someone else. The Dunbar mom knew from the first instance something was wrong and even tried asking if police made a mistake (it was years later) and they swore nope. Only for the conlcusion years later that dna proved the other boy, whose mom refused to believe wasnt hers, was actually the Dunbar kid. It is crazy and shows why genetic studies and dna analysis are so important today.
"This container transports a disease which has no cure." This would be great on a horse trailer 😂 The bird in the photo is a shoebill. They look like nightmares, but they're actually very friendly towards their zookeepers. The cassowary is the Murder Bird™️
2:20 This needs to be an SCP which just acts like a normal dog, and to show affection it walks up to you, rubs against you and inserts its tendrils like long needles into you skin. This is completely painless and if you let the SCP keep its tendril needles in you for long enough it can cure ailments, the more serious the longer this takes, so a small cut or bruise may only take 5 minuets, but a broken bone or serious cuts may take a day, and cancer or a life threatening injury may take a week. I just really like the idea of SCPs that seem absolutely terrifying unless you know what they do.
Yeah, but in the current climate of the SCP site, they'll require it to be something Eldrich, monstrous, and not-at-all useful. I think that many of the older articles are actually being rewritten to ensure that every SCP cannot be used without causing horrific side effects or randomly failing at critical moments. I'm just waiting for them to turn SCP-0999 from cuddly and friendly into something that turns your skin into something that looks like a lotus pod. 😠
there’s so much more to the bobby dunbar story. the family knew that the kid wasn’t theirs, the dunbar mother continuously said he didn’t look like bobby had different birthmarks etc. and the boy didn’t know them either. but they wanted their son back so badly that they showered the child with gifts so he wouldn’t want to leave. his real mother (a single mother vs bobby’s well off family) who was fighting to get him back was trashed in news papers harassed by bobby’s family, journalists, and the police. she never saw her son again. the way the real dunbar boy disappeared was really strange too but grief isn’t an excuse to steal someone’s child
i love how that guy is talking down to the turret like its a misbehaving cat about to knock over his glass of water instead of being one shot away from an international incident. 😭😭
I got caught in a rip current as a kid, it was awful. The current pulls you down and flips you upside down, it basically shoves your face into the sand hard which knocks the wind out of you. I could only surface for a second at a time and couldn't swim back to shore. My sibling tried to help me and the lifeguard told them to back away and call for me to swim towards them instead. Apparently swimming sideways (parallel to the beach) is the only way to get out. I had mild friction burns (kind of like rug burn) on my face from being slammed into the sand so hard. 0/10 experience
@@noodlepoodlegirl I'm glad the lifeguard was paying attention that day and saw me go down, I don't think we would have been able to figure out what to do without him
The sandpaper room reminds me of when I used a salad drier as a torture device for my dolls when I was little. I would spin it as fast as I could then stop abruptly so my dolls were thrown to the other side of the drier. This was pretty much always a part of my play. Entirely wholesome.
The arachnophobia warning genuinely saved me from an anxiety attack THANK YOU!!! It means so SO much to me when youtubers give warnings before showing pics of bugs or spiders!!!
@@abcdefghijkImnopqrstuvwxyz. that's one of the reasons I love watching Click. He actually seems concerned for people, and it feels genuine, unlike a lot of youtubers.
As a person who has given birth to a child and a kidney stone, I can confidently say the kidney stone was more painful. It was like an end stage contraction that didn’t go away for over 10 minutes at a time.
My mom told me her pancreatitis caused by a gallstone going the wrong way, was more painful than birthing me or my sister 😅 I remember her puking out of pain for multiple hours before dad took her to the hospital. She described the picture they showed her of her gallbladder as "a bunch of grapes wrapped in clingfilm" 😬 Well, knowing this was a thing that happened to both my mom and grandma in their fourties, I sure as hell know what to ask the doctor to check if I start getting mysterious cramps every now and then in my middle age 😅
No kids, but I've had the stone when I went in to get it smashed, one of the nurses told me that his wife was prone to them and because she was used to that didn't bother getting an epidural when she had their kids.
I liived in South Korea for a year, and in Seoul ther where these skyscrapers that were shopping malls withh entire floors just empty or with one or two stores in them. They were designed with the future in mind, but stepping onto a floor that was entirely empty except for a single toy store was creepy AF.
*Narrator voice* You may think this is an entire shopping center. But what you don't realize is, is that you have stepped into the twilight zone" *cues Twilight Zone theme*
When that happens you have a 50/50 chance of discovering you're a clothing store manikin that's been pretending to be human too long and now it's time to go back...
The search for Bobby Dunbar had a lot of attention. When presented with the found boy, the family was overjoyed and ready to take the boy in. When the mother bathed the found boy and expressed concerns that it wasn't Bobby, the police gaslit her into just being hysterical and told her to be grateful she had her son back. It's so sad because of course the family would want this boy to be their lost son, but gaslighting then into accepting a "placeholder" is so cruel.
That story about a family raising the kid that wasn't theirs goes quite a bit deeper then you would think. Simon Whistler has a video about this kid and it's pretty crazy. It broke up a couple families and put the real mother in jail and the great great grand daughter is the one that finally took a DNA test against an ultimatum from the rest of the family. Lots of juicy drama... yall will love it. Check it out lol.
-That's what I'm guessing too. So very sad.- Edit: I looked into it and it seems to be a deer in Idaho that's been dubbed the "crooked neck deer" or "crooked head deer." Idaho Game & Fish said they suspect that the deer broke her neck without severing her spinal cord (which is extremely rare, but it happens) and they've been keeping an eye on her for a while, but she's still going strong and has fawns every year or so.
Oddly terrifying thing that happened to me was that I distinctly remember two books I read in my childhood that have never existed. They were both very different to each other but both sort of cautionary tales in which children were tempted into doing something wrong and suffered horrible deaths because of it (kinda like the struwwelpeter). Like I remember where I read the books, w hat the illustrations looked like, i even know of existing books illustrated by the same people. It’s like they just dropped out of existence after I read them.
Isn't this like the Mandela effect? Being sure of sth that appearantly isn't real? I think I experienced it too, but sadly my memory is too bad to remember enough
This sounds SO familiar to me. I don’t think I remember entire titles, but I do often find myself asking others if books had entire other scenes or stories in them, referring to them, or asking people why they forgot stories that “aren’t there.” To be fair- the human mind is a wild and very fallible thing, I just think it’s really interesting that this is a thing and I think it’s just as naive to decide what it cannot be as it is to decide what it is. We can eliminate things based on likelihood - like, you know, Occam’s Razor, but saying we know the answer or are sure what the answer isn’t have their own problems entirely.
@@saritavenkatapathynaidu9533 please write. (if you aren't already.) freaking fascinating. I wish your comment was a hundred times longer. you give me house of leaves vibes.
The operation movie kinda already happened, it was called Awake. It was about a rich guy getting heart surgery but the anesthesia paralyzed him but left him awake and felt everything. Also the donor heart was sabotaged so that his girlfriend and his doctor, who was his friend, could collect life insurance and i believe take his inheritance
There is also a really disturbing scene in the last part of the dystopian Uglies series: So main character Tally is a super soldier at this point, and scheduled to get her shitton of cybernetic enhancements removed because they are seen as a law violation. So she lies in the operation tank and turns out the anesthesia does not work because her super soldier metabolism is too fast, so she will be operated on fully conscious. And this is a quite extreme operation. They scrape all the skin off and replace it with fresh skin, replaced the muscles with artificial ones, and a dozen smaller things. We know at this point that the surgery that made her this took at least a WHOLE MONTH. She ultimately gets rescued, but not before being injured a lot and panicking, and man, that was an intense scene for a book for teenagers.
I remember seeing something similar called Erwin the Little Patient. It was designed to teach kids about various organs. But I agree that it's disturbing.
I knew a lady who’d had kids and also broken her leg. She said the broken leg was more painful. I don’t have kids but I get crippling period pain. I’ve also had a broken arm. Period pain is still the most painful thing I’ve experienced.
Interesting. I asked my mom once and she said giving birth was literally traumatizing levels of pain. She's suffering from chronic back pain now and swears that this pain that sometimes makes her cry by just sitting down is nothing compared to giving birth. The human body is both terrifying and fascinating.
For me the most painful things are migraine headaches, severe gas, and my gallbladder trying to become a suicide bomber. (Thank goodness that last one could only happen once.) I've broken bones before, severely sprained my ankle numerous times, gotten a couple of concussions, and had a miscarriage. I've also sewed up a kid fissure in my own hand, cut open and cleaned out my own cyst, and set a broken bone in my hand. Those first three were still the most painful though, although the really severe ankle sprain/probable cracked bone they missed on the X-ray and the broken toe both deserve honorable mention because trying to walk on them, or even hit my foot at all in the ankle one, truly hurt like heck. People who've had kidney stones often say it's the worst pain they've ever had and I believe them. For my Dad, breaking his ribs and spine and then being sat up by a truly heartless nurse before his X-rays came back is probably really high up there. (Not sat up in bed on an incline with support, sat up in a chair or something because she wanted him to feed himself and thought he was just being a baby. I don't know if he ever learned her name, she's gone down in his memory as Nurse Auschwitz.)
Childbirth pain gets quickly forgotten as soon as you hear that first little cry. I’ve broken both legs. That hurt but it was nothing in comparison to having a still birth. All the pain of delivering a baby but no baby.
If someone hasn't already, someone should make lists of Click's business, movie, plushie, DnD stories and such. It would be quite an undertaking, but would be neat.
Yeah, looks like the poor thing got hit by a car just hard enough to break its neck but narrowly avoid instant death 😅 I doubt it'll survive long in that condition though 😢
It may be something like torticollis, which is something that can happen to rabbits. I’ve seen pet rabbits running around living their lives with their heads twisted almost 90 degrees
I actually had to read case studies, some with pictures, of the damage that radiation exposure can cause. We also had to read about the symptoms of various levels during the..... decay..... and I can say with all honesty that I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy. It's horrifying
I've got two oddly terrifying stories that happened to my family and I: First one was when my family was looking for a new house after we moved out of our old apartment. One of the houses we visited looked perfect, and we were seriously considering buying it, until we got to the last bedroom in the house. It had a bolt lock on it that locked from the outside, and on the inside there were dirt marks all over the walls. It was also clear someone had been picking at the door. The second weird thing that happened was years later, after we had moved to a Christian school my mom went to high school at (we move a lot). We were living on campus because she became the English teacher there, but the school was much smaller and hadn't been doing well after a bad director ran the place into the ground. There was one building on campus that wasn't being used anymore due to a lack of students, but there were still supplies and furniture in there that hadn't been sold yet. One night we went in there to borrow some chairs for my mom's classroom, and the whole building was giving eerie vibes. We decided to quickly leave after seeing hand marks on one of the classroom walls. Probably just left there by messy kids, but still way too creepy for us to look around more lol
1) Are you sure that it was dirt? Because deadbolts on the outside are normally used to keep people locked up, especially unruly children if we're talking several decades ago 2) Never enter abandoned rooms in a school... ALWAYS a bad idea for various reasons.
It would be really interesting to find the address of the house you looked at with the bolt lock and do a little research. Might uncover an interesting story...
Kinda loving the dark interpretations of family games :- hungry hippos, operation, uno, snakes (chutes) & ladders etc…. My childhood has been enhanced!
I actually did the mirror trick once during a dream. I saw myself from a different angle. My reflection turned around and started to panic. The clothes were a bit off, but my reflection was saying everything I was thinking but before me. It felt like I was the fake one. My reflection was somehow more human than me.
Oh damn, I thought what would happen is that you won't "actually" see a face since the brain can't makes faces, like you will have the impression of seeing you face but deep down you know you staring at nothing.
Wow that’s terrifying!!! I’ve had a dream where I saw myself in the mirror, but it was fairly normal and I was putting on makeup but in a location I’d never been in irl, but I remember when I woke up I was thinking it was very strange I was able to dream about looking in the mirror.
19:35 as someone who knows a tiny bit about lucid dreaming I can say this is a terrible way to confirm whether you are in a dream or not because mirrors in dreams can come up with all kinds of terrifying or disturbing things. a better way would be to try to count the number of fingers on your hand
uhhh I think I'd rather not tho, the idea of looking down and trying to count on my fingers but my fingers never run out is more freaky than the mirror demons I haven't met yet. plus, I once dreamt that I ate my fingers, so on the balance I have worse associations with fingers in dreams than with mirrors...
Yup. I went to count my fingers and found a glove on my hand once. Every time I am around a mirror in a dream though I get trapped in the view from the mirror.
What does it mean if you dream about mirrors but it’s perfectly normal? I had a dream where I was putting on lipstick in the mirror but I looked like myself (or at least my ideal self)
@@loverrlee idk I have only seen a few videos about it but my guess is that it varies from person to person and also that it shows you what you somewhat expect.
The toy in the washing machine is from a TV show called dinosaurs that aired on Disney in 1991. They used both masks and puppets to make dinosaur like people. About half of the episodes are straight nightmare fuel.
My grandmother didn't recognize me at the end. When they told her I'm my mother's child she accepted it. im until today not sure if she believed it or did just not care enough anymore to tell people when she believed something was wrong. She also seemed like she couldntgive sense to the little baby girl that visited her (my cousins daughter). She liked watching her and smiled sometimes a bit when she ran around. But whenever she returned from her exploring of the room back to us my grandmother looked surprised as if she didn't know anymore that she belongs to us...
mmh. i visited at one of my relatives while she did recognized me and my mom, she never said my or my moms name, i feel so bad that she is on edge of forgetting us entirely. but i don't have money to travel to her, i went with my parents. and i live 577km away from her.
One of the last things my grandmother said to my mother was, in a moment of lucidity, that she didn't want to keep waking up like that, only occasionally knowing what was going on. She tried to stop eating and taking her medicine, but the nursing home would literally forcefeed her. My whole family now has a pact if that happens to any of us. No nursing home, no forced life. The most terrifying shit I've ever seen.
@@hmnhntr I understand that. My grandpa just died. He had cancer. He stayed at home until the end. He didn't eat enough. Of course we offered him often food as we wanted him to eat but we didn't push when he declined. There was nothing they could do about the cancer and as it was in his stomach to he just felt always full even after drinking some sips water or of his food-drinks. At the end you can just try to make the last moments easy to the person. Forcing him to eat more would maybe have given him some more days or weeks but for what price? He was anyway constantly having pain. Why stress him to do stuff he doesn't want to, make his last weeks harder just to have him some more days in agonizing pain?
20:30 The whole story is wild. Basically there was another boy who also went missing at the time, likely the son of a single mother who was not taken seriously (likely because it was the early 20th century and she was a poor single woman). A relative of hers took her son for a few days but never returned him, and the boy he was later seen with was taken into custody and returned as "Bobby Dunbar". The man was arrested for kidnapping, and nobody actually knows what exactly happened to the real Bobby.
One thing is for sure... The real bobby is dead... Macabre joke I know... I can only hope that the real Bobby lived a long healthy life... But I don't think it's likely
@@a_d3mon I think it's very likely he either died at that lake that day or Walters was involved in his death. It's tragic that a woman was left without a son while another family who unknowningly lost their own raised him.
Seeing the tornado forming was really impressive. Because yes, you do feel tiny. Same with thunderstorms. Had one the other day, actually. It's pitch black outside, rain is pounding against my window, and suddenly there's a bright flash, with thunder shaking the house. Mother Nature is bigger than us, and hers are the only rules that matter.
As someone in Tornado Alley that witnessed a tornado almost touch down right outside my front door as a kid, thunderstorms scare me more. I know a lot about tornadoes, it's a consequence of the ever present danger and my intense curiosity. I know what to do if there's a tornado, and that knowledge gives me safety Thunderstorms, however, are a lot more frequent and a lot more scary. At least with a tornado, the weather channels will give you a precise location and clear warnings. Thunderstorms cover a bigger area, they take longer to pass over, and they can form many tornadoes. You never know when a lightning strike will kill your power, even if it's only for a split second. You haven't felt true terror until you are yelling into the dark, barely able to hear yourself over the pounding rain, hoping your pet is close enough to hear you calling them home. The street light, not 40 feet from you, is hard to see in the storm. Lightning flashing close enough to see its detail, the roar of thunder following less than a second behind (It's close, you know it's close because you used to reassure yourself with how far it was as a kid using the same method). All you can think of is how soaked your cat's fur will be when they come home, because you can't stand the thought of them being too far to hear you over the storm. The cat you've had for over half your life, a pet you aren't sure how to live without. I've felt that terror twice this summer, and I'm glad how well I was able to put it into words lol. I'm 19, my cat is 12, and both times it was like my heart was out in the storm. But like the stubborn cat she is, she still goes outside a lot lol
The last one was the baby dinosaur from a TV series in the early 90's called Dinosaurs. I loved the show when I was a kid. The baby was always hitting the dad with something and saying "Not the Mama." To my child brain it was completely hilarious.
They all scared the crap out of me as a small child. A completely petrified kind of scared. Pretty sure my mom thought I liked the show cause I'd just stare at the TV, but I hated them.
Fun fact: If you have DID, and you are not the core personality but you are the host personality (i.e. the one that is in control most of the time that the world sees) your appearance on the outside won't necessarily match your internalised appearance of yourself. So looking in a mirror to check if you're dreaming? Not gonna help ya there XD Also gives us a terrible phobia of those house of mirrors places in fun faires.
Oof, so sorry you and your system deal with that. The more I learn about DID, the more I feel deeply lucky that the extent of my traumas afforded me mechanisms to remain in the spectrum of my particular diagnoses. It really astounds me to hear that systems can accomplish all the things that they do - the idea of uniting and communicating with a system sounds overwhelming, and I’m sure it often is. I just think how profound and important the lives of each and every system with DID and it’s members are to our understanding of the societal ails and our available solutions. If we lived in a better world, perhaps systems wouldn’t exist the way they do, but for now I know I can push for a better world where we learn from some of the most vulnerable people - members of systems - how those vulnerabilities show us that problems grow in darkness and help us to put a light on those problems with abuse as DID systems can go forward without having to be the ones to go forward and spearhead the effort of addressing the frequency and severity of terrible abuse situations and how ignorance and apathy feed them, let alone simply spearheading advocacy and awareness of DID itself. The things it takes to become a system are far too great for this to be an issue that lies with with members of systems alone. The way I see it, DID and those who live with it are the most extreme example of our lack of mental health literacy and total discomfort with addressing abusive origins of many mental health issues. Sending your system love and hopefully keeping those awful experiences with mirrors to a minimum! At very least I hope that those members that are externally facing or “driving” the body at any time see mirrors with a sense of the other members that can keep it from being *as* jarring. Maybe it’s just wishful thinking, I just want to ease that pain.
@@saritavenkatapathynaidu9533 We accept mirrors as a necessary evil. We don't always enjoy it but if we focus on the task we use the mirror for it's less horrific :) It's a balancing act like most things. We found what works for us and we work with that.
core alters are disproven by the theory of structural dissociation, there's no such thing as an original alter because the personality never integrated in the first place. there is an original *host* but not a core (as a side note we have complex/polyfragmented did, we know what we're talking about)
@@fallenautteanimates7764 I also have DID I use core to mean the oldest formed personality. like in my case, the one that spent most of the time living as 'me' growing up and doing day to day stuff and grew up seeing the face in the mirror therefore having time to associate themself with it
Thank you for featuring my bones again!! The fibula did not fly out nor was it used for soup. What we did just find out was that I just broke the leg rather severely and I guess they discovered when removing the old hardware that nearly 3cm of the fibula was dead/no longer healing, thus it needed to be removed to get back to the healing bone. The biggest issue was that the doctors overseeing my case received *no* indication or mention of the fibula removal, which would have been helpful considering I kept falling after the surgery was complete. 💀 Still though, I will never forget the looks on everyone's faces when this X-Ray was taken. It is still a spooky-ass way of finding out your bone has done gone away 🤔
You gotta love the miscommunication between doctors, but also was there supposed to be a replacement splint put in place to bridge the gap or did they just decide "nope looks perfectly fine to me"
@@obsidion_flame3095 looking at the OR notes, it doesn't look like they had an intention of splinting it, because it appears it may have interfered with the Masquelet technique on the tibia. I guess it was for the best because that is the more important bone, but why did we have to find out like THIS? 😭 I am still trying to make sense of it all myself, but fortunately I have legal representation to help :')
@@jasonking7570ja, I think it was the Twitter Got Rizz video! I honestly like this one more. In any case, I appreciate Click in being lighthearted in both instances! It really helps because it truly isn't easy lol.
20:55 The boy was traveling with his uncle/other male relative, a man people considered to be of ill repute, so he was accused of kidnapping Bobby and the boy was given to the Dunbars. The boy's mother had written to the authorities but wasn't believed. Bobby disappeared in the woods near alligator infested waters. It's obvious what happened to poor little Bobby but it's still called a mystery.
I have psychosis, and I’ve heard the “look in the mirror to see if your dreaming” tip all my life. It’s terrifying to constantly wonder if you’re dreaming or not because your face is always morphing in the mirror. I’ve learned to live with it, but man, it’s scary sometimes.
That last one is from a 90s tv show called Dinosaurs. It's basically a family sitcom with dinos. The baby is lowkey evil, and it's the creature in the washing machine. The show's run ends with an apocalypse. Very heartwarming.
The saddest thing about the Alzheimers is the speed at which it progressed. The dates on the right of the paper were from 1999 to 2014, but it started to get bad from only 2005, so it hit really hard after only 6 years.
About the 'are you dreaming' sign: I used to have this 'vivid dream' feeling all the time, and what grounded me back was to read signs, clocks and look at my own face. When I'm dreaming and I see my reflection/stare people's faces in my dreams, they look AI generated. And since then I noticed this, I'm slightly impressed and TERRIFIED of AI generated photorealistic images
In my dream, the face was so realistic i thought it was real life.i never once had ai face ib my dream, its always realistic. The sign i search is usually the disorienting location and sudden change in scenery but sometimes my dream follow consistent time and place like real world. And the only things that can make me diffetentiate it with real world is when i awake
@@cefrinaldi8060 I don't think I've ever had a problem with identifying my dreams as dreams tbh... I always realize I'm dreaming either at the start or in the middle. I just normally go with the flow though as my brain is supposed to be resting and just letting it do what it wants is better than pushing it with my imagination. I do on occasion break that though because I want a bit of fun...
When I'm dreaming, I get a weird "out of body experience" feeling, like I'm looking through my eyes, but also looking at myself from "outside" the world. I suspect I probably always had this, but only noticed when I started lucid dreaming.
Don't understand. If you can remember that that's what you must do, and then you do it, you are thinking, so you are conscious, so you are not dreaming.
@@rosiefay7283 this behaviour don't start when you dream, but when you are awake feeling you are sleeping Once your body don't give you palpable feeling enough to know you are awake, you start doing this a couple time a day to ground yourself into this perspective, so when you do this in your dreams it's more routine shit than anything else
26:36 - That walkie-talkie could be either more innocent than what Click supposes (part of Haunted House setup) or something more sinister, (tho stalker eaves-dropping is sinister in itself) There was a show (think it was NICS) where they were investigating someone trying to drive a woman crazy. To do so, they had a device hidden in the air vents and would use it to play voices at low volume at key moments (often when she's alone) to make the woman appear crazy.
The real messed up thing about the Bobby Dunbar situation is his actual mother tried to be like no that’s my kid but she lost the case because it was a small town and everyone knew the Dunbars
6:24 i love how it's traditional in all countries that have wild strawberries to pick them and thread them on straws. i used to make edible necklaces from them as a kid UwU
28:40 this one looks like it could work really well, actually the people in the boxes could be a mix of manneqins, strangers and maybe 1 or 2 people who you know closely
It is one of the many and varied “WTF, white Amerikkka?’ moments in history, it’s just that massive and horrific animal abuse, even when directed at starving and eradicating innocent indigenous people, is still relatively low on the list compared to the direct crimes against humanity. The older I get, the more I see the American flag as more terroristic than even nationalistic (which just isn’t good either), just striving to keep anyone “lesser” occupied with an effort to overcome to block innovation, financial gain, and power (I specifically mean people that are: black, brown, disabled , lgbTQIa+ identities, any indigenous group, women and any non men, etc)
On the mirror thing outside of the psych's office: for a period of about six - eight months I was consistently dissociating to the point that every time I looked in the mirror I couldn't recognise my reflection as my own. It truly felt like the person in the reflection had a difference face than me, but I couldn't tell you how I looked in comparison to it. Led to a lot of identity problems and even su*cidal ideation. It's possible that dissociation is what that sign is referencing.
if so, then that's... a really unhelpful sign. some people, when they figure out they're dreaming, start doing impossible things, either for the fun of it, or to try to end the dream, so uh that might not go so well if they're awake but dissociating
The last clip, the doll in the washing machine is from the 90’s tv show “Dinosaurs”. If you’ve ever seen the original run of the show “roseanne” it had the same vibe, just everyone was dinosaurs. the doll is of the sassy baby character.
For the sandpaper room: just walk to the far wall, sit/stand while the floor moves you to the other wall, walk back to the far wall and just keep doing that. Depending on the size of the room/speed of the sandpaper you might be able to take small naps.
Go to buyraycon.com/theclick to get 15% off your order! Brought to you by Raycon
👍👍
2 hours ago? Cliccy the time Traveller
Hey, you misspelled the title. It should have been "Kids' toys" instead of "kid's toys".
@TheClick is definitely a time traveler
@@Purple_Sweatertime travel he did
I love this subreddit because it’s a coin toss between seeing the most absolutely terrifying thing on the face of the earth or something bizarrely wholesome.
Like the biblically accurate furbies!
or both!!!
I like this sub because scary stuff is cool to me even though I hate watching horror movies
Sometimes it’s things that are just regular terrifying, and other times it’s actually something that fits the subreddit
Edit: whoops
Regarding Alzheimer’s, people with the disease know it’s happening. When my grandpa started to get it around ten years ago, he was very frustrated, frightened, and angry. He knew what was happening because his mom and several other family members had suffered from Alzheimer’s; when I was a kid, he once told me that getting it was his worst fear. Now, he’s fine, in a way. He’s aware he has Alzheimer’s, but he has no idea how bad it actually is. He doesn’t recognize anyone, but he knows he has a large family and just accepts if someone says they are his kid. It’s sad, but he’s not struggling against it like he was in the beginning.
That’s sad, I wish there was a way to help.
It's in my family, too. We lost my grandmama to it. It feels like an axe waiting to fall and cut away all that helped be you and love others. I'm glad he's handling it so well. Make sure to listen to every one of his stories.
My grandma had it, it was beyond heartbreaking.. 💔
Same with my grandfather.
He was very embarrassed after he had asked how my sister's husband was doing,
when he himself remembered that my brother-in-law had died about 8-9 months ago, when he asked the question.
Unfortunately, grandfather had some children who criticized him from the time he was diagnosed and died.
My grandfather (dad's side) had dementia my grandmother was hiding it from my dad's family, which caused her to get a heart attack from the stress she died in her sleep years ago,but he died two years ago
"Mother Nature is a dommy mommy" is NOT a take I expected to hear today, but honestly, you're right
Dommy Mommy Nature. UwU.
Frightingly right.
Kinda need art of this now tbh 😂
@@RubixCuber66 careful what you wish for 😆
@@sarahloveless1726 You have no idea how good his idea is. Dommy mommy nature art sounds absolutely great.
The deer with the crooked neck is (or at least was, as of a few years ago) in St. Maries, Idaho. At that point, it had been around for years and has had fawns since whatever caused its neck to be like that (whether a broken neck that healed wonky, birth defect, whatever), so it's apparently relatively healthy all considered.
Thank you for this comment!! I was looking to see if anybody had any info
That's interesting, I thought it was a headless chicken situation where the animal was dead but the body didn't realize and was just going as normal until it died of thirst or hunger and stuff
That deer just said no to death
@@LemonadePrince ME TOO
More info on the woman who killed the hitman in Portland;
She was a registered nurse, with experience in (among other things) cracking open rib cages to administer heart massages
The only words the hitman said to her was "You're strong." When she said she'd call him an ambulance, he only *growled* at her.
They didn't find evidence of where he had come from until a friend of hers came back to the house to get her stuff, and found a backpack in her basement that the police had missed, which contained the hitman's ID, a bottle of chocolate syrup, a diary with the latest entry saying "Call Mike" (her husband), and a paystub from the adult movie rental place that Mike owned.
This NEEDS to be a movie.
What I want to know is why tf did he have chocolate syrup
@@Amayawolf_01it was his last meal
@@Amayawolf_01chocolate~
Well, at least, the hitman acknowledged her strength.
While I'm sure it would be terrifying to have this happen to you, this just sounds more badass the more I hear of it.
Fun fact! radium poisoning actually happened to a group of women called the radium girls! they worked in wristwatch factories using radioactive paint to make them glow, and would even paint themselves to glow. this was during the 1920’s when radium was extremely popular, even being in water that claimed to heal you. one of the womens jaws was lifted right off her face, and the company did nothing against it, hiding behind syphillis and other medical issues and technicalities. the girls finally won in court but at that point they only had a few months left anyway. and this didnt just happen once! it happened at multiple companies in the US. Kate Moore wrote an amazing book on this topic that i highly reccomend if this sounds morbidly interesting to you
I remember my high school theater troupe did a performance of them once
They would hold the brush between their lips to sharpen the point, if I remember right.
We also did a Radium Girls performance! By far my favorite I've ever done!
My mom has that book! I have to read it sometime.
That's chronic radiation poisoning though
Acute radiation poisoning is like what you get from the demon core sphere, which in an accident when the screwdriver holding the sphere open slipped and the core started to go critical. There was a blue flash of light. Almost everyone in that room died within days in utter agony
Fun fact: Some of the frozen corpses on Mt. Everest are actually used as way-markers now.
And they give them nicknames like green boots or sleeping beauty (who died with her husband leaving their 11 year old an orphan).
Also, part of the area is called "Rainbow Valley" because the climbing gear (as in: clothes) is usually bright and colorful and doesn't decay - and there's a lot of it on those corpses.
What Click mentioned - the woman looking at you - was also true. She died a few hundred meters from the base camp on the return trip, leaning against her backpack, on a trip lead by her husband. She was looking down, towards the base camp when she died making camp, and thus was looking at people making their way up for a while.
I think one or two people even died trying to retrieve her corpse... until the body was pushed over and off a ledge by weather and/or snow.
Caitlin Doughty (Ask A Mortician) has made a video about the corpses of Mt. Everest. It's... pretty good, if you can stomach the pictures. (Although I think this was one of the videos where she started to warn people when she was about to show corpses.)
What?!
"OK it's another 200ft straight, then take a left at Bob"
They took Dave like a year back (or he just disappeared)
The Susan Kuhnhausen story is wild! Her offer to call him an ambulance was genuine, she really didn't want to kill him but he wouldn't give up, and of course she felt horrible about it later. I think she fought/tried to run away for like 20 minutes straight before realizing the man wasn't going to stop until he killed her. And his family told her they didn't hate her for killing him bc she had to do it to survive.
"Of cause" she felt horrible? Why? She should have felt great. And didn't she kill him to get the information about his client?
@@desperadox7565 Because taking another life, even if it's to save your own, is not something anyone should need to do. Honestly, if you feel 'great' after doing something like that you should probably get your head checked out.
It's so disturbing that authorities have produced a "missing" child that was not actually the missing kid of the family so many times that you can confuse several of the instances 🤦🏻♀️
And in one of them the police actually had the mother committed to a mental institution because she wouldn't shut up about them giving her someone else's kid. Total horror story.
The f***?
I heard a really old one where they thought the ear looked similar so they gave the family the kid. Then the actual kid came back. So weird
@@amberkat8147that was the LAPD in 1921? If I remeber correctly
@@amberkat8147ACAB
As someone with really bad arachnophobia, I cannot stress enough how much I truly appreciate a warning instead of just suddenly slapping a spider on screen and scaring the crap out of me, especially in the context of "oddly terrifying" where the picture has a high chance of triggering an anxiety attack. So thank you 🙏
as someone with pretty bad arachnophobia as well, thanks for this comment for also giving me an extra heads up
The klaxon was a nice touch, too. I wish more places on the web were so accommodating.
as someone with arachnophilia, I too share your appreciation for the spider notice.
I'm not sure if I have arachnophobia cause I'm generally alright with tiny spiders
but when I saw the warning I knew it would probably be some big frickin spider
so I just closed my eyes for 10 seconds
@@lazerpie101arachnoPHILIA? what does that mean? /genq
Fun fact the bird you saw the woman taking care of in her home is a shoe billed stork and while they look like a fnaf reject they are actually rather sweet towards humans. There is one in a zoo that will allow you to walk right up and pet them so long as you bow before hand to show respect, and if you don't bow they just fly away to the other side of the enclosure.
Aaand when they say anything a war veteran gets PTSD
@@lazyvincy13666 yes but actually yes
You have to bow before petting like a hippogriff 😭
@@lazyvincy13666Fellow Casual Geographic viewer?
Casual geographiiiiic!
That mirror thing is something you are specifically NOT supposed to do when lucid dreaming, because it will most lily result in something very disturbing or nightmarish.
Sorry to do a "Well akshually", but there's actually nothing wrong with mirrors in dreams, it's only if you believe that you *will* see something scary in the mirror.
I've looked in the mirror countless times in dreams and the results were almost always positive. The problem comes when you believe that you'll see something scary on the mirror, since in a lucid dream your thoughts become reality.
It’s been a hit or miss with me in dreams. One constant however is that it’s never me. I may recognize the person as ‘me’, but it’s not the real me. Sometimes I was a gal, other times a guy. Then there was the one time I was a dinosaur. The shadow demon one wasn’t as shocking as seeing myself as a dino, believe it or not.
Uh, is it bad that I've never even SEEN a mirror in ANY dream EVER? 😰
Whenever I see a myself in a mirror in dreams there is always some medical abnormalities going on like cancerous boobs, teeth falling out, botflies up the nose, etc.
Fun fact: The mushrooms growing out of the stuffed animal are pink oyster mushrooms, which are edible and can be grown at home with a kit. I suspect they replaced the stuffing with sawdust or a similar substrate, and then inoculated the stuffed animal with pink oyster spawn. This would be the easiest way to create that "The Last of Us" effect.
Oh yeah, and cordyceps are edible too.
...even if cordyceps are edible...I aint eating the parasite mushrooms that CAN TURN ANTS INTO BASICALLY ZOMBIES
@@aquapenguin9697 Well, here are some more fun facts. The Last of Us can't happen IRL because human body temperatures are too high for the fungus to grow. We're physiologically too different from insects, and our nervous systems and immune systems are more complex. The cordyceps for eating is grown on brown rice anyway, not insects.
Though I'm going to undo all that by pointing out that there's a species of fungus that can infect immunocompromised humans, specifically Schizophyllum commune, better known as the split gill fungus. The irony is that this fungus is also edible. It's also one of the most studied fungi in the world, and is known to have over 20,000 biological sexes.
@@FrozEnbyWolf150 So what you're saying is, to make Clickers, all we need to do is to crossbreed Chizophyllum and Cordyceps? *COOL.*
yeah, sure, cordyceps are edible and safe. totally not a ploy by someone who's been infected to turn others
@@ethanrose9682 PLEASE DONT DO THAT
Point Nemo is actually even more terrifying than stated in the image, because not only is it the farthest from any human on earth, but also pretty far from any living creature in general, because ocean currents keep away the nutrients that would be necessary for anything to survive there. So there's at most creatures passing through, but like really nothing lives there permanently.
9:05
Fun fact, torii gates are said to be gateways between the realm of the living and the realm of the beyond. This gate in an abandoned subway system is 100% haunted and there is absolutely some form of yokai lurking in there, whoever took this photo had better pray to the kami that nothing followed them out
Depends...is she hot?
aren't they only meant for kami? hence why you should travel to the sides instead of directly in the middle of one, because the center is reserved for the kami?
thanks for the fun fact! this made me remember a cutscene from a game where a character passes through a torii gate and enters a festival of youkais or something but I didn't know it was because he passed through the gate
@@yeen.7209 gateways from mortal to spirit, kami may use them primarily, but anything with enough power can too unless warded properly. hard to see if that one had any at all. looking back, ya probably none. thats a stay away and pray whatever is around is at least ok with you leaving asap.
@@Parthgamer123 u mean the cutscene from yae mikos story quest in genshin?
For the 'zombie' deer, if you've watched the zombie movie 'Train to Busan', the first zombie was a deer that got hit by a truck transporting waste from a biotech lab. Quite disturbing watching this thing get back up with its shattered bones.
I watched that with my brother and his roommate
I watched it and to be honest was quite terrifying
Oh thank goodness for this comment. I was terrified (I love deer).
2:27 nope nope nope nope, already so much nope.
@@ms.annthropic6341
You do realize this is a reply section for a comment and not the actual comment section, right?
I spent a good portion of my childhood with a sinkhole centered directly under my bedroom. They tried filling it in but, it turns out there was a bigger one underneath it. I was basically sleeping in a room suspended over a void.
And your parents didn't move you to another room? I have concerns.
that's horrifying
welp... new nightmare material... thank you very much wind O_O
Now I'm wondering if there was an even bigger sinkhole under the bigger sinkhole...
But seriously, you're very lucky you didn't get buried alive in your sleep.
@@dmgroberts5471 sinkhole ception
Fun fact, shoebills (the big bird) are actually really friendly, they just look murderous
Yeah, I think he might have been thinking of a cassowary :D Shoebills do sound like a machinegun, though 😅
they treat their offspring horribly
@@chocomilk5096 Then just make sure you aren't related to it before you go near it
@@EverTheFractal XD
They're like the real life version of the hippogriffs from Harry Potter. Bow to them, and they will politely bow back.
The tornado forming, while absolutely horrifying, was an amazing shot. Never seen one forming from such an angle. I hope the one who got the footage is ok.
I absolutely love the fact that the guy was telling a Flipping TURRET “No” like it was a cat trying to knock over a glass
27:20
Fun fact. Those guns will target everything in range (2 miles) because they don't have an iff reciever.
Edit: thus they aren't kept loaded until its needed.
@@TacPhoenix remember hearing a story of a US ATGM carrier (an ADATs or Sgt. York I think) on display having it's systems turned on, and just immediately swinging the turret to face the crowd
Edit: there is also a frightingly large number of passenger airliners shot down by Navy ships
The Katy Perry clip is nothing more than a 'party trick' she learned she could do when sitting in makeup chairs for long stretches and needing to keep one eye closed/still for the makeup artists but using the other to see. She will do it on stage during concerts as a part of her show, often to poke fun at the people who post memes that she's a robot/AI.
I’ve written in detail elsewhere, it’s a symptom of some disease states but is also normal for a portion of healthy people, too. It’s called Bell’s Palsy!
Source: your friendly neighborhood nurse with autoimmune illness
It’s easy to trigger and makes what is otherwise very difficult quite easy!
@saritavenkatapathynaidu9533 Wow! TIL
I had heard of Bell's Palsy but never actually knew what it was.
Imagine if the pig farm was that big because each pig had their own individual nicely sized room with everything they need to be happy. Seems far more humane as long as you don't see the inside.
That is a wonderful thought... 😔
I was once locked in a closet by two boys. For context these two boys came over with my Aunt, it gets better. I asked them to come up to my room to play and they did. It was my idea to be locked in the closet so they helped me drag over my matress to the closet door and once i was inside they pushed it against the knob.
I was bawling by the time my mom found me, keep in mind i was only in the closet for a couple of minutes. After i calmed down i asked my mother if she had seen where the two boys. My mom asked me "what two boys?" Which i thought was odd because she had seen me playing in my room with them or so i thought..
"They came in with my aunt" i whispered.
"She doesn't have any little boys," my mom replied. I have never been the same since, I still get chills when I remember this.
Creepy
Oh 😯
Don't make fun of the nervous system walker, he’s SENSITIVE! DAD JOKE, NAILED IT
I love dad jokes! Thanks for not terrifiying me!
He's just a nervous good boy, leave him be 😊
(Gives a round of applause for the pun)
lol t
Creepy thing I discovered a couple of months ago - I was staying overnight at my sister's horse barn waiting for our pony mare to have her baby, and one night around 1 am I was walking back to my tent next to the mare's field after using the restroom, and heard a really creepy screeching noise, looked over and saw what looked exactly like a person standing in the corner of the arena against the fence. freaked me the F. I knew it had to be something totally normal, since none of the horses were reacting at all, but my heart was pounding as I got closer until my brain could properly distinguish that it was, in fact, someone's long raincoat hanging on a fencepost. The screeching turned out to be one of my sister's young rooster's trying to figure out how to crow.
I swear the combo of those things took a couple years off my life ._.
I've heard foxes calling at night. They make a noise almost like a person screaming in fear and/or pain. A lot of really innocent and non-threatening animals make some _damn_ creepy noises. Ironically, it's usually the dangerous animals that make the not particularly frightening sounds.
@@dmgroberts5471 I immediately thought it was going to be foxes before I finished reading their comment. They make the weirdest noises. They also sound like an evil clown giggling when they're happy 🙈
when pareidolia at night and an immature rooster's failed attempt at crowing makes the most innocent of of rain jackets look like a super spoopy wraith with flailing arms and an inhuman screech XD, that's sure to make sure no one gets sleep that night.
Hey atleast it was just that I can't go outside at night because of the skinwalker I'm not kidding my dogs and donkeys are the only thing keeping me safe every night nothing but dead silence not even insects my other animals stay quiet when night comes I always now sleep with a knife under my pillow just incase it gets in
@@singledinner6945 Are you sure it's not the Fungi from Yuggoth? 😆
For a math teacher Cliccy does have a lot of trouble pronouncing kinds of meth...
Take away his degree!
Tipo ,meth teacher not math
@@leroyjenkinsreturns not a typo, a joke. Also, *typo
Besides them being all science/chemical names, it's probably due to his dyslexia combined with English not being his first language & it being the first time he's really reading the words out loud, if I remember correctly how he makes his videos. I only mention it here because English isn't my first language either. My first language was Finnish but due to such immersive study of English and etymology to become an editor, my Finnish has suffered while I've been out of the country and I'm actually really embarrassed by it, which is one of the reasons I haven't been back in nearly 10 years (I'm approaching 30). This post became sort of a downer and I didn't mean it to be. I just saw it and it resonated with me; also, I'm on a lot of medication so knowing the generic names of medication helps a lot. *sigh* I will say though that I've heard enough New Zealanders tell me they really like maths but their accent makes me wonder why they're telling me they're into hard drugs hehe.... Anyway, didn't mean to be such a killjoy; I love The Click and his videos and was really happy he uploaded today. Plus I used to live in the Portland, Oregon, area, so I've been to Clackamas, for example, so it's neat when areas I lived in pop up like that. And I do get the original joke here; it was funny enough for me to stop reading for a moment lol and then was inspired to make this post, so kiitos ja hyvää päivää! (thanks and good day)
@@riinak7212 I get that change can be difficult. I also didn't mean to make fun of Click's dyslexia, I just saw an opportunity for a pun. I hope you get a chance to go back to Finland some time soon!
Ik wens je een goede dag! (Dutch for I wish you a nice day!)
The face in the window triggered a memory for me. When I was young, like 7, we always passed by this old house on my way to school, and one day I noticed what looked like an old, rotting body propped up against the window. No one else saw it, even though I pointed it out every time I saw it until I was 12. Finally, my parents noticed and it scared them. The next week, it was no longer in the window, but in the middle of a cornfield near the house. Turns out it was a scarecrow made with old torn, muddy clothes and some sort of sack for a head, so from the street through the window, it looked like a human. Then the next week, the guy made another one and put it by his window. The first one is still out in the field, but it's old and falling apart. The new one IS STILL BY THE WINDOW.
What's even weirder is that no one knows who lives there. The house even looks like it's slowly rotting, I can't imagine anyone living there.
Thank you. I really wasn't sure what that was. Just because you live in the middle of nowhere doesn't mean your neighbours aren't into scarecrows and cropcircles; golums and aliens.
We should all take a moment to appreciate Click's cat.
no we shouldn't
Simba needs all the appreciation.
@@WohaoG Shut up
I'm waiting for the day Click's cat learns to walk on his hind legs.
@@WohaoGlooks like you can't appreciate true beauty
The animal that the woman is taking care of is actually a shoebill stork I believe, they’re scary to look at but are actually quite gentle creatures, allowing camera crew to film their nests up close in the wild and such
Although living in conditions like that is likely to make any animal act out of character
Stork🎉
This is also one of the zoos in Berlin, if I'm remembering from my recent visit. I don't thiiiiiiiiiink the sign said it was the residence of the employees. I think it was one of the remaining buildings which was left standing. But I could be wrong.
yea I had a feeling it was a shoebill stork
In the Science Museum in London, there was a cross-stitch project that a lady with Alzheimer's had completed over ten years as her disease got worse and the stitch-work was so beautiful and intricate at the beginning and it was so sad looking at how she'd just forgotten how.
That is absolutely heartbreaking... Losing myself like that has always been my biggest fear.
I took care of my grandmother who had Alzheimer's. She used to love to crochet & before she got the disease, she would make the most beautiful afghans. She taught me how to crochet when I was a child. Once her Alzheimer's progressed, she would get so frustrated that the piece she was crocheting didn't look like it was supposed to. I started waiting until she went to bed & then would unravel what she had done & rework it. She was so happy when she would get up the next day & see her progress. I never let her know what I was doing. It made me so happy to see her happy.
@@joiedevivre2005 That is so heartbreaking, but really sweet. It's nice that her legacy lives on in you.
The bug infestation on that guy is most likely bedbugs. Speaking from experience, they hide in your clothes and items and jump off wherever you go. Anything public with fabric chairs like waiting rooms, theatre seats, or bus seats. Always be aware of any mysterious bites you find on yourself or loved ones. Once you get them, they're a bitch to get rid of.
I actually have a mild fear of seeing myself in mirrors at night largely because I don't immediately recognize my face. It's very uncomfortable.
I used to have huge issues with this myself, to the point I couldn't use the bathroom at night. It helped, at least for me, learning why this happens.
It's a scientific phenomenon called the strange face illusion, or the strange face in the mirror illusion. It's caused by the brain filling in gaps in perception due to the low light levels, similar to how that pile of clothes on a chair turns into a figure. There is an added layer of fear and disturbance because the image being distorted is your own face, which you recognize but your brain is much more used to seeing other people's faces than your own so it tries to fill in the blanks as if it was someone else resulting in a weird not-quite-you in the mirror.
reminds me of when i looked at the window and then my reflection turned its head, the mouth opening wide like in those shitty ghost clips
I have a similar fear of my reflection reaching through the mirror and attacking me
Me too! And...what if it's actions don't exactly mirror my own? Bloody Mary ruined me. Agreed. I look like...not me. Scary. I have minimal mirrors in my house because of that.
I know that staring at the mirror in dim light for too long causes hallucinations. So I don't even glance at myself on mirrors if the room is dark.
Glad to know I'm not alone
Regarding the bison thing: Travellers on the railroads were encouraged to shoot bison as they travelled. They had special shooting expeditions where HUNDREDS of men were shooting out the windows and from the rooftops of moving trains, leaving the dead carcasses behind without even attempting to harvest anything.
As soon as I saw the caption I knew *exactly* which picture it would be, seeing as it's not rare to see that picture in the west us at museums and such. I couldn't believe that click hasn't seen it before, though it makes sense.
Don't forget: the preferred way to kill bison was to herd them over cliffs. And that's how we ended up with "Head-smashed-in-buffalo-jump".
There are people who try to say that the US doesn't have a racist past, and we have this. "Let's drive an animal to extinction *specifically* to starve the natives into oblivion." Nothing wrong with that, no sir
@@c4tfsh8yeah, as a european they don't teach us indept history of the USA at school. We learn the history of our own country and global things like that most native americans were wiped out.
8:43 it gets far more terrifying when you realize it wasn’t just a movie. Those were last moments of millions of people in the gas chambers.
True. It’s what makes the movie important despite its own failings that any human work inevitably has.
I remember watching that movie in sixth grade after we read the book
For the cat in the first one, I think we get the uncanny valley effect from the cat's eyes. They are rather small, cats have large eyes compared to their face while humans tend to have smaller eyes compared to their face. So to see a cat, an animal that's supposed to have large eyes, with small eyes, it reminds us of a human.
A very hearty thanks to the editor for the arachnophobia warning, especially having an audio cue as well as the note on screen in case I'm not completely paying attention.
Same.
I’m always so thankful to the RUclipsrs who give such warnings!
Yeah since I have extreme arachnophobia
I used to have a strong fear of spiders, but now that I’ve mostly gotten used to them, now I have a strong fear of cockroaches for some reason. If I see one scuttling along the floor, I’m liable to freak out for a bit before I get my act together and attempt to squish it before it gets away from me.
Same, yes. I hate it when spiders just pop up on screen without warning. Really loved the TW.
If I remember correctly, the boy they thought was Dunbar's kid was traveling with his uncle when police took him and they arrested the uncle as kidnapper. It was a tragedy for two families.
Didn't they also execute the uncle?
Oh geez that's horrible
With the meth plus anaesthetic thing, it’s basically a potent stimulant + a potent sedative so your heart just goes Bang
Did anyone remind the people on similar prescription stimulants? You can't just tell them once, they tend to forget.
Yes and no. Novacaine, the injectable local anesthetic, and lidocaine, the topical anesthetic, are synthetic derivatives of cocaine, so it is two stimulants known for making hearts go pop.
Where as marajuana/thc can make knock you out surgical sedatives wear off sooner, like midsurgery sooner
This is why it’s important to tell medical professionals about _all_ medications and drugs you’ve taken.
They’re not going to judge you or rat you out to the cops, they just need to know for your safety.
@@kirstenwyatt9675 Seriously? That's scary.
Funny thing about Edmund Kemper, is that when he went to jail, he was completely reformed. He refuses to be let out and often helps police with investigations. Bizarrely wholesome for a guy who murdered a bunch of people.
I agree with him, he should never be free.
But while he's in there, I'm glad he's at least trying to do good.
"Fun" fact about the missing kid that wasn't the actual missing kid returned to the mother. She demanded to know where her real child was, they stopped looking for her kid, they refused to acknowledge she was right, it eventually went to court where she won her case and was given a massive payout, which they never paid, she ended up in a mental instutiuon where I believe she died (not sure on last part). Her real child was never found.
I think you mean the case of Walter Collins. His mother, Christine, was fortunatly released but was sadly never reunited with her real son
They made a movie based on it with angelina jole as the mother
Yeah you got it wrong. wrong kid and wrong Mom. it's happened multiple times. They didn't have internet back then so they could just lie and then never have to correct cuz nobody would ever find out. Just like your comment is 3 weeks old and you had multiple people tell you were wrong and you still don't correct your comment because
Maybe I'm wrong, but wasn't she institutionalized because they never paid her? Like they tried so hard to keep her quiet and it never worked because they just refused to actually help her.
That's terrifying...
17:55 The story of Hisashi Ouchi is probably the saddest and scariest example of this. He got hit with a fatal full body dose of radiation, and it completely destroyed his chromosomes. His body pretty much totally stopped producing new cells. Once his current ones died, there were none left to replace them. His entire body became an open wound.
The effects radiation poisoning has on the body are terrifying.
I had to look this up and now I regret it. His heart stopped two months in and the doctors decided to revive him instead of just letting him die. I literally didn't think that story could get worse.
@@e.pluribusunum7916I would recommend watching the wendigoon video on it. He kinda goes more into detail on why the doctors and family made the choices they did. It’s a sad case where the tabloids ended up blaming people that were just trying to save the poor guy
@@dawnkyria8518 I remember reading that at the time doctors were legally obliged to do everything to keep him alive as they had not received permission from him to let him die during the time he still could speak lucidly. Do you know if this is correct?
I watched the wendigoon vid, truly horrifying, they tried so hard to keep him alive, and to think all of this was a mess-up of a radiator or something (it was a long video, the only part of the beginning I remember was the blue radiation)
35:47 The bird seen in this image is called a Shoebill, these birds are incredibly friendly and will even let humans near their nests.
I love to think of them as hippogriffs, as they're very big on respect and appreciate bowing. They're generally super chill with humans, but if you're an AH they will rightfully turn on you. And you can't just go right up to one you don't know, you have to wait for them to acknowledge you and essentially give you permission. They're so awesome 💖
Yep and from what I’ve heard usually if people they haven’t acknowledged attempt to go near them, they will simply just fly some distance away from them rather then attack despite being more then capable of doing some serious damage. Of course due to their lack of fear towards humans many end up being killed by poachers.
THE BOBBY DUMBAR SITUATION IS SO WILD so basically he went missing then was eventually reunited with his family (the mother apparently recognised him as her son) but the boy apparently had no idea who the family was, eventually just accepting he was Bobby. Then another woman saw his picture in the paper and recognised the boy as HER missing son, but when she came to visit and confirm, the town basically ran her out of there bc they were so protective of him.
BuzzFeed Unsolved did an episode on it, which explains it a lot better than I can lmao
she's actually discussed that eye thing before, she's got a weird twitch that happens when she's stressed out
Very convinient maybe too convinient... She could really be an AI.
Wasn’t it all part of the show? I was sure she said so. And she was singing about androids too.
it's a party trick she has, not a twitch
Oh thank goodness. I thought she was having a stroke-
I heard she was doing it to represent a doll with a broken eye
Fun fact. An ai vtuber named neuro-sama was canceled and temporarily banned on twitch for denying the holocaust. Even after her creator fixed that people were still mad as if she were a real person.
Was it on twitter
@@khaoswithKendall yup
"Someone tell Vedal there is a problem with my AI."
Bobby Dunbar was an interesting case where two kids were kidnapped, but one was given to the Dunbars and another to someone else. The Dunbar mom knew from the first instance something was wrong and even tried asking if police made a mistake (it was years later) and they swore nope. Only for the conlcusion years later that dna proved the other boy, whose mom refused to believe wasnt hers, was actually the Dunbar kid. It is crazy and shows why genetic studies and dna analysis are so important today.
And after listening for a few more seconds...yes...that is the same case lol.
"This container transports a disease which has no cure."
This would be great on a horse trailer 😂
The bird in the photo is a shoebill. They look like nightmares, but they're actually very friendly towards their zookeepers. The cassowary is the Murder Bird™️
2:20
This needs to be an SCP which just acts like a normal dog, and to show affection it walks up to you, rubs against you and inserts its tendrils like long needles into you skin. This is completely painless and if you let the SCP keep its tendril needles in you for long enough it can cure ailments, the more serious the longer this takes, so a small cut or bruise may only take 5 minuets, but a broken bone or serious cuts may take a day, and cancer or a life threatening injury may take a week. I just really like the idea of SCPs that seem absolutely terrifying unless you know what they do.
I like this friendly, helpful SCP. I shall call it The Feathertouch Surgeon. Aka Bob the Fixer.
Oddly wholesome unimaginable horror
Yeah, but in the current climate of the SCP site, they'll require it to be something Eldrich, monstrous, and not-at-all useful.
I think that many of the older articles are actually being rewritten to ensure that every SCP cannot be used without causing horrific side effects or randomly failing at critical moments.
I'm just waiting for them to turn SCP-0999 from cuddly and friendly into something that turns your skin into something that looks like a lotus pod. 😠
I love this so much omggg
This just became a dnd monster for me.
there’s so much more to the bobby dunbar story. the family knew that the kid wasn’t theirs, the dunbar mother continuously said he didn’t look like bobby had different birthmarks etc. and the boy didn’t know them either. but they wanted their son back so badly that they showered the child with gifts so he wouldn’t want to leave.
his real mother (a single mother vs bobby’s well off family) who was fighting to get him back was trashed in news papers harassed by bobby’s family, journalists, and the police. she never saw her son again.
the way the real dunbar boy disappeared was really strange too but grief isn’t an excuse to steal someone’s child
i feel so bad for the mother of the stolen kid
I would kill to see Click and OT do a Buzzfeed Unsolved Paranomal style ghost-hunting series
i love how that guy is talking down to the turret like its a misbehaving cat about to knock over his glass of water instead of being one shot away from an international incident. 😭😭
I got caught in a rip current as a kid, it was awful. The current pulls you down and flips you upside down, it basically shoves your face into the sand hard which knocks the wind out of you. I could only surface for a second at a time and couldn't swim back to shore. My sibling tried to help me and the lifeguard told them to back away and call for me to swim towards them instead. Apparently swimming sideways (parallel to the beach) is the only way to get out. I had mild friction burns (kind of like rug burn) on my face from being slammed into the sand so hard. 0/10 experience
I'm so glad you're here to tell the story. most in that situation aren't as lucky. damn. karma was on your side that day.
@@noodlepoodlegirl I'm glad the lifeguard was paying attention that day and saw me go down, I don't think we would have been able to figure out what to do without him
The sandpaper room reminds me of when I used a salad drier as a torture device for my dolls when I was little. I would spin it as fast as I could then stop abruptly so my dolls were thrown to the other side of the drier. This was pretty much always a part of my play. Entirely wholesome.
YOU ARE MENTALLY ILL LIKE ME
The arachnophobia warning genuinely saved me from an anxiety attack THANK YOU!!! It means so SO much to me when youtubers give warnings before showing pics of bugs or spiders!!!
SAME!!! I HAVE A PHOBIA OF BOTH I LOVE CLICK FOR THIS-
@@abcdefghijkImnopqrstuvwxyz. that's one of the reasons I love watching Click. He actually seems concerned for people, and it feels genuine, unlike a lot of youtubers.
It was a somewhat big spooder dug into a hole, but it's face was flat, so it looked like a coin on the ground.
@@philippeamon7271 Oh, okay :D Spoopy coin 🥲🥲
Meanwhile, the sound almost gave me an anxiety attack 😅
27:26 that gun is a automatic and runs on a program so there wasn’t even a person in there aiming it which makes it 10x as scary
As a person who has given birth to a child and a kidney stone, I can confidently say the kidney stone was more painful. It was like an end stage contraction that didn’t go away for over 10 minutes at a time.
THANK YOU FOR CLARIFICATIONS ON THAT :D
My mom told me her pancreatitis caused by a gallstone going the wrong way, was more painful than birthing me or my sister 😅 I remember her puking out of pain for multiple hours before dad took her to the hospital. She described the picture they showed her of her gallbladder as "a bunch of grapes wrapped in clingfilm" 😬 Well, knowing this was a thing that happened to both my mom and grandma in their fourties, I sure as hell know what to ask the doctor to check if I start getting mysterious cramps every now and then in my middle age 😅
@@elieli2893 I can believe it. I passed out from baby stones.
No kids, but I've had the stone when I went in to get it smashed, one of the nurses told me that his wife was prone to them and because she was used to that didn't bother getting an epidural when she had their kids.
Same. I didn't have meds for birth and would rather do that again than pass a stone again
I liived in South Korea for a year, and in Seoul ther where these skyscrapers that were shopping malls withh entire floors just empty or with one or two stores in them. They were designed with the future in mind, but stepping onto a floor that was entirely empty except for a single toy store was creepy AF.
*Narrator voice* You may think this is an entire shopping center. But what you don't realize is, is that you have stepped into the twilight zone" *cues Twilight Zone theme*
When that happens you have a 50/50 chance of discovering you're a clothing store manikin that's been pretending to be human too long and now it's time to go back...
The search for Bobby Dunbar had a lot of attention. When presented with the found boy, the family was overjoyed and ready to take the boy in. When the mother bathed the found boy and expressed concerns that it wasn't Bobby, the police gaslit her into just being hysterical and told her to be grateful she had her son back. It's so sad because of course the family would want this boy to be their lost son, but gaslighting then into accepting a "placeholder" is so cruel.
Misogyny is a hell of a thing. The willingness of some people to discount half the species is alternately depressing and fucking infuriating.
20 points to all the 80s kids who knew with one look exactly what that toy in the washer was. “Not the mama!!!”
Ooh is it a toy based on that dinosaur show by Jim Henson?
@@medusathedecepticon Yup. It was one of those toys that talked when you pulled its string. I had one as a kid.
"I'm the baby! Gotta love me!"
I came here to say that too lmao
And the washer dance is totally in character
That story about a family raising the kid that wasn't theirs goes quite a bit deeper then you would think. Simon Whistler has a video about this kid and it's pretty crazy. It broke up a couple families and put the real mother in jail and the great great grand daughter is the one that finally took a DNA test against an ultimatum from the rest of the family. Lots of juicy drama... yall will love it. Check it out lol.
The mother was put in an asylum cos she wouldn't shut up that it wasn't her kid
The police knew it wasn't her kid but didn't want the bad publicity
Which channel? Casual Criminalist?
@@jenna6149 Decoding the Unknown.
I watched that episode. It was heartbreaking, and the cover up by officials was disgustingly disgraceful.😡
@@Emerald.She-Ra ACAB
4:26 for those wondering that deer probably has CWD or chronic wasting disease and is pretty terrifying to witness irl
-That's what I'm guessing too. So very sad.-
Edit: I looked into it and it seems to be a deer in Idaho that's been dubbed the "crooked neck deer" or "crooked head deer." Idaho Game & Fish said they suspect that the deer broke her neck without severing her spinal cord (which is extremely rare, but it happens) and they've been keeping an eye on her for a while, but she's still going strong and has fawns every year or so.
I remember seeing that before and i think the deer had a broken neck and somehow survived with it for a little while
@@migitri i wonder if thats extremely lucky or unfortunate? I hope it doesnt hurt too much ☹️ poor girl
@@migitri That’s even better news I’m glad she’s alive still!
Oddly terrifying thing that happened to me was that I distinctly remember two books I read in my childhood that have never existed. They were both very different to each other but both sort of cautionary tales in which children were tempted into doing something wrong and suffered horrible deaths because of it (kinda like the struwwelpeter). Like I remember where I read the books, w hat the illustrations looked like, i even know of existing books illustrated by the same people. It’s like they just dropped out of existence after I read them.
Isn't this like the Mandela effect? Being sure of sth that appearantly isn't real? I think I experienced it too, but sadly my memory is too bad to remember enough
This sounds SO familiar to me. I don’t think I remember entire titles, but I do often find myself asking others if books had entire other scenes or stories in them, referring to them, or asking people why they forgot stories that “aren’t there.”
To be fair- the human mind is a wild and very fallible thing, I just think it’s really interesting that this is a thing and I think it’s just as naive to decide what it cannot be as it is to decide what it is.
We can eliminate things based on likelihood - like, you know, Occam’s Razor, but saying we know the answer or are sure what the answer isn’t have their own problems entirely.
@@saritavenkatapathynaidu9533 please write. (if you aren't already.) freaking fascinating. I wish your comment was a hundred times longer. you give me house of leaves vibes.
Sounds like some of those mad German stories like Little Suckerthumb.
@@mgthestrange9098 yeah that’s in the same book as the struwwelpeter i mentioned
The operation movie kinda already happened, it was called Awake. It was about a rich guy getting heart surgery but the anesthesia paralyzed him but left him awake and felt everything. Also the donor heart was sabotaged so that his girlfriend and his doctor, who was his friend, could collect life insurance and i believe take his inheritance
I also thought of Seven Pounds with Will Smith. My favorite film with him.
There is also a really disturbing scene in the last part of the dystopian Uglies series: So main character Tally is a super soldier at this point, and scheduled to get her shitton of cybernetic enhancements removed because they are seen as a law violation. So she lies in the operation tank and turns out the anesthesia does not work because her super soldier metabolism is too fast, so she will be operated on fully conscious. And this is a quite extreme operation. They scrape all the skin off and replace it with fresh skin, replaced the muscles with artificial ones, and a dozen smaller things. We know at this point that the surgery that made her this took at least a WHOLE MONTH. She ultimately gets rescued, but not before being injured a lot and panicking, and man, that was an intense scene for a book for teenagers.
I love how Click sees something, anything at all really and almost instantly goes "Omg I could make this into a plushy!"
Maybe those anti-aicraft (AA) guns would work well...just chibi-fy them a bit....have the guns be like Diglet or Dugtrio from "Pokémon" hehe.
I remember seeing something similar called Erwin the Little Patient. It was designed to teach kids about various organs. But I agree that it's disturbing.
I knew a lady who’d had kids and also broken her leg. She said the broken leg was more painful.
I don’t have kids but I get crippling period pain. I’ve also had a broken arm. Period pain is still the most painful thing I’ve experienced.
It's amazing how different people's bodies experience things differently.
Interesting. I asked my mom once and she said giving birth was literally traumatizing levels of pain. She's suffering from chronic back pain now and swears that this pain that sometimes makes her cry by just sitting down is nothing compared to giving birth. The human body is both terrifying and fascinating.
For me the most painful things are migraine headaches, severe gas, and my gallbladder trying to become a suicide bomber. (Thank goodness that last one could only happen once.) I've broken bones before, severely sprained my ankle numerous times, gotten a couple of concussions, and had a miscarriage. I've also sewed up a kid fissure in my own hand, cut open and cleaned out my own cyst, and set a broken bone in my hand. Those first three were still the most painful though, although the really severe ankle sprain/probable cracked bone they missed on the X-ray and the broken toe both deserve honorable mention because trying to walk on them, or even hit my foot at all in the ankle one, truly hurt like heck. People who've had kidney stones often say it's the worst pain they've ever had and I believe them. For my Dad, breaking his ribs and spine and then being sat up by a truly heartless nurse before his X-rays came back is probably really high up there. (Not sat up in bed on an incline with support, sat up in a chair or something because she wanted him to feed himself and thought he was just being a baby. I don't know if he ever learned her name, she's gone down in his memory as Nurse Auschwitz.)
Childbirth pain gets quickly forgotten as soon as you hear that first little cry. I’ve broken both legs. That hurt but it was nothing in comparison to having a still birth. All the pain of delivering a baby but no baby.
Natattatification: Do you maybe have endometriosis?
If someone hasn't already, someone should make lists of Click's business, movie, plushie, DnD stories and such. It would be quite an undertaking, but would be neat.
I've got a feeling that the deer was probably hit by a car and survived.
I don't care what hit that deer, it didn't hit them hard enough
Yeah, looks like the poor thing got hit by a car just hard enough to break its neck but narrowly avoid instant death 😅 I doubt it'll survive long in that condition though 😢
@@bendingdemon6483Poor baby’s suffering now.. damn these reckless drivers!! >:[
It may be something like torticollis, which is something that can happen to rabbits. I’ve seen pet rabbits running around living their lives with their heads twisted almost 90 degrees
the deer might have had chronic wasting desease.
I actually had to read case studies, some with pictures, of the damage that radiation exposure can cause. We also had to read about the symptoms of various levels during the..... decay..... and I can say with all honesty that I wouldn't wish that on my worst enemy. It's horrifying
I've got two oddly terrifying stories that happened to my family and I:
First one was when my family was looking for a new house after we moved out of our old apartment. One of the houses we visited looked perfect, and we were seriously considering buying it, until we got to the last bedroom in the house. It had a bolt lock on it that locked from the outside, and on the inside there were dirt marks all over the walls. It was also clear someone had been picking at the door.
The second weird thing that happened was years later, after we had moved to a Christian school my mom went to high school at (we move a lot). We were living on campus because she became the English teacher there, but the school was much smaller and hadn't been doing well after a bad director ran the place into the ground. There was one building on campus that wasn't being used anymore due to a lack of students, but there were still supplies and furniture in there that hadn't been sold yet. One night we went in there to borrow some chairs for my mom's classroom, and the whole building was giving eerie vibes. We decided to quickly leave after seeing hand marks on one of the classroom walls. Probably just left there by messy kids, but still way too creepy for us to look around more lol
1) Are you sure that it was dirt? Because deadbolts on the outside are normally used to keep people locked up, especially unruly children if we're talking several decades ago
2) Never enter abandoned rooms in a school... ALWAYS a bad idea for various reasons.
It would be really interesting to find the address of the house you looked at with the bolt lock and do a little research. Might uncover an interesting story...
Kinda loving the dark interpretations of family games :- hungry hippos, operation, uno, snakes (chutes) & ladders etc…. My childhood has been enhanced!
I actually did the mirror trick once during a dream. I saw myself from a different angle. My reflection turned around and started to panic. The clothes were a bit off, but my reflection was saying everything I was thinking but before me. It felt like I was the fake one. My reflection was somehow more human than me.
That's incredibly unsettling and makes me never want to look in a mirror again
I was already scared of seeing myself in the mirror in the dark and this certainly didn't help lmao
Oh damn, I thought what would happen is that you won't "actually" see a face since the brain can't makes faces, like you will have the impression of seeing you face but deep down you know you staring at nothing.
Wow that’s terrifying!!! I’ve had a dream where I saw myself in the mirror, but it was fairly normal and I was putting on makeup but in a location I’d never been in irl, but I remember when I woke up I was thinking it was very strange I was able to dream about looking in the mirror.
You're the reflection and the wrong one woke up in your body.
19:35 as someone who knows a tiny bit about lucid dreaming I can say this is a terrible way to confirm whether you are in a dream or not because mirrors in dreams can come up with all kinds of terrifying or disturbing things. a better way would be to try to count the number of fingers on your hand
So you're telling me that determining if you're dreaming is exactly like determining if art is AI made or not?
uhhh I think I'd rather not tho, the idea of looking down and trying to count on my fingers but my fingers never run out is more freaky than the mirror demons I haven't met yet. plus, I once dreamt that I ate my fingers, so on the balance I have worse associations with fingers in dreams than with mirrors...
Yup. I went to count my fingers and found a glove on my hand once. Every time I am around a mirror in a dream though I get trapped in the view from the mirror.
What does it mean if you dream about mirrors but it’s perfectly normal? I had a dream where I was putting on lipstick in the mirror but I looked like myself (or at least my ideal self)
@@loverrlee idk I have only seen a few videos about it but my guess is that it varies from person to person and also that it shows you what you somewhat expect.
The toy in the washing machine is from a TV show called dinosaurs that aired on Disney in 1991. They used both masks and puppets to make dinosaur like people. About half of the episodes are straight nightmare fuel.
especially the cockroaches
I'm the baby, gotta love me
Funny part is that i recognised it immediately. Not the mama!
I loved that show as a kid and still do
@@Llortnerof Ditto
My grandmother didn't recognize me at the end. When they told her I'm my mother's child she accepted it. im until today not sure if she believed it or did just not care enough anymore to tell people when she believed something was wrong. She also seemed like she couldntgive sense to the little baby girl that visited her (my cousins daughter). She liked watching her and smiled sometimes a bit when she ran around. But whenever she returned from her exploring of the room back to us my grandmother looked surprised as if she didn't know anymore that she belongs to us...
I’m sorry. My grandpa didn’t recognize me either. 😢
mmh. i visited at one of my relatives while she did recognized me and my mom, she never said my or my moms name, i feel so bad that she is on edge of forgetting us entirely. but i don't have money to travel to her, i went with my parents. and i live 577km away from her.
One of the last things my grandmother said to my mother was, in a moment of lucidity, that she didn't want to keep waking up like that, only occasionally knowing what was going on. She tried to stop eating and taking her medicine, but the nursing home would literally forcefeed her. My whole family now has a pact if that happens to any of us. No nursing home, no forced life.
The most terrifying shit I've ever seen.
@@hmnhntr I understand that. My grandpa just died. He had cancer. He stayed at home until the end. He didn't eat enough. Of course we offered him often food as we wanted him to eat but we didn't push when he declined. There was nothing they could do about the cancer and as it was in his stomach to he just felt always full even after drinking some sips water or of his food-drinks. At the end you can just try to make the last moments easy to the person. Forcing him to eat more would maybe have given him some more days or weeks but for what price? He was anyway constantly having pain. Why stress him to do stuff he doesn't want to, make his last weeks harder just to have him some more days in agonizing pain?
20:30 The whole story is wild. Basically there was another boy who also went missing at the time, likely the son of a single mother who was not taken seriously (likely because it was the early 20th century and she was a poor single woman). A relative of hers took her son for a few days but never returned him, and the boy he was later seen with was taken into custody and returned as "Bobby Dunbar". The man was arrested for kidnapping, and nobody actually knows what exactly happened to the real Bobby.
One thing is for sure... The real bobby is dead... Macabre joke I know... I can only hope that the real Bobby lived a long healthy life... But I don't think it's likely
@@a_d3mon I think it's very likely he either died at that lake that day or Walters was involved in his death. It's tragic that a woman was left without a son while another family who unknowningly lost their own raised him.
@@hanpines3808What I don’t understand is how did they ever even mistake someone else’s son for their own tho?
@@loverrlee He was only 4 at the time
+ grief made them just want to accept this kid as theirs I suppose
@@hanpines3808 aw yeah that's super sad :c
Seeing the tornado forming was really impressive.
Because yes, you do feel tiny. Same with thunderstorms. Had one the other day, actually. It's pitch black outside, rain is pounding against my window, and suddenly there's a bright flash, with thunder shaking the house.
Mother Nature is bigger than us, and hers are the only rules that matter.
damn. I got chills. I hope you're a writer.
@@noodlepoodlegirl I am, actually.
Haven't really published anything other than fanfiction yet, but I'm working on it.
As someone in Tornado Alley that witnessed a tornado almost touch down right outside my front door as a kid, thunderstorms scare me more. I know a lot about tornadoes, it's a consequence of the ever present danger and my intense curiosity. I know what to do if there's a tornado, and that knowledge gives me safety
Thunderstorms, however, are a lot more frequent and a lot more scary. At least with a tornado, the weather channels will give you a precise location and clear warnings. Thunderstorms cover a bigger area, they take longer to pass over, and they can form many tornadoes. You never know when a lightning strike will kill your power, even if it's only for a split second.
You haven't felt true terror until you are yelling into the dark, barely able to hear yourself over the pounding rain, hoping your pet is close enough to hear you calling them home. The street light, not 40 feet from you, is hard to see in the storm. Lightning flashing close enough to see its detail, the roar of thunder following less than a second behind (It's close, you know it's close because you used to reassure yourself with how far it was as a kid using the same method). All you can think of is how soaked your cat's fur will be when they come home, because you can't stand the thought of them being too far to hear you over the storm. The cat you've had for over half your life, a pet you aren't sure how to live without.
I've felt that terror twice this summer, and I'm glad how well I was able to put it into words lol. I'm 19, my cat is 12, and both times it was like my heart was out in the storm. But like the stubborn cat she is, she still goes outside a lot lol
The last one was the baby dinosaur from a TV series in the early 90's called Dinosaurs. I loved the show when I was a kid. The baby was always hitting the dad with something and saying "Not the Mama." To my child brain it was completely hilarious.
Thank You. I thought I was the only one who recognized Baby Sinclair. "I'm the Baby, gotta love me!"
@@Fuchsschwesterig purple eyes, I'm very cuddly~
Edit: and now my smart butt has that song stuck in my head.
They all scared the crap out of me as a small child. A completely petrified kind of scared. Pretty sure my mom thought I liked the show cause I'd just stare at the TV, but I hated them.
18:05 the dude forgot that after a day or so the skin starts to peel off on the non-rotten flesh and so you have your flesh directly exposed
Fun fact: If you have DID, and you are not the core personality but you are the host personality (i.e. the one that is in control most of the time that the world sees) your appearance on the outside won't necessarily match your internalised appearance of yourself. So looking in a mirror to check if you're dreaming? Not gonna help ya there XD Also gives us a terrible phobia of those house of mirrors places in fun faires.
Oof, so sorry you and your system deal with that. The more I learn about DID, the more I feel deeply lucky that the extent of my traumas afforded me mechanisms to remain in the spectrum of my particular diagnoses. It really astounds me to hear that systems can accomplish all the things that they do - the idea of uniting and communicating with a system sounds overwhelming, and I’m sure it often is. I just think how profound and important the lives of each and every system with DID and it’s members are to our understanding of the societal ails and our available solutions.
If we lived in a better world, perhaps systems wouldn’t exist the way they do, but for now I know I can push for a better world where we learn from some of the most vulnerable people - members of systems - how those vulnerabilities show us that problems grow in darkness and help us to put a light on those problems with abuse as DID systems can go forward without having to be the ones to go forward and spearhead the effort of addressing the frequency and severity of terrible abuse situations and how ignorance and apathy feed them, let alone simply spearheading advocacy and awareness of DID itself.
The things it takes to become a system are far too great for this to be an issue that lies with with members of systems alone. The way I see it, DID and those who live with it are the most extreme example of our lack of mental health literacy and total discomfort with addressing abusive origins of many mental health issues.
Sending your system love and hopefully keeping those awful experiences with mirrors to a minimum! At very least I hope that those members that are externally facing or “driving” the body at any time see mirrors with a sense of the other members that can keep it from being *as* jarring. Maybe it’s just wishful thinking, I just want to ease that pain.
@@saritavenkatapathynaidu9533 We accept mirrors as a necessary evil. We don't always enjoy it but if we focus on the task we use the mirror for it's less horrific :) It's a balancing act like most things. We found what works for us and we work with that.
core alters are disproven by the theory of structural dissociation, there's no such thing as an original alter because the personality never integrated in the first place. there is an original *host* but not a core
(as a side note we have complex/polyfragmented did, we know what we're talking about)
@@fallenautteanimates7764 I also have DID I use core to mean the oldest formed personality. like in my case, the one that spent most of the time living as 'me' growing up and doing day to day stuff and grew up seeing the face in the mirror therefore having time to associate themself with it
@@clarebrady1532 then that would just be an original host
Thank you for featuring my bones again!!
The fibula did not fly out nor was it used for soup. What we did just find out was that I just broke the leg rather severely and I guess they discovered when removing the old hardware that nearly 3cm of the fibula was dead/no longer healing, thus it needed to be removed to get back to the healing bone.
The biggest issue was that the doctors overseeing my case received *no* indication or mention of the fibula removal, which would have been helpful considering I kept falling after the surgery was complete. 💀
Still though, I will never forget the looks on everyone's faces when this X-Ray was taken. It is still a spooky-ass way of finding out your bone has done gone away 🤔
You gotta love the miscommunication between doctors, but also was there supposed to be a replacement splint put in place to bridge the gap or did they just decide "nope looks perfectly fine to me"
@@obsidion_flame3095 looking at the OR notes, it doesn't look like they had an intention of splinting it, because it appears it may have interfered with the Masquelet technique on the tibia. I guess it was for the best because that is the more important bone, but why did we have to find out like THIS? 😭
I am still trying to make sense of it all myself, but fortunately I have legal representation to help :')
Wait, featuring your bones *again??*
@@jasonking7570ja, I think it was the Twitter Got Rizz video!
I honestly like this one more. In any case, I appreciate Click in being lighthearted in both instances! It really helps because it truly isn't easy lol.
@@strumpet1113 If you don't mind satisfying my curiousity, how's your healing process going/gone?
20:55 The boy was traveling with his uncle/other male relative, a man people considered to be of ill repute, so he was accused of kidnapping Bobby and the boy was given to the Dunbars.
The boy's mother had written to the authorities but wasn't believed.
Bobby disappeared in the woods near alligator infested waters. It's obvious what happened to poor little Bobby but it's still called a mystery.
I have psychosis, and I’ve heard the “look in the mirror to see if your dreaming” tip all my life. It’s terrifying to constantly wonder if you’re dreaming or not because your face is always morphing in the mirror.
I’ve learned to live with it, but man, it’s scary sometimes.
Sorry to hear about the psychosis. How often do you have episodes of not being in touch?
That last one is from a 90s tv show called Dinosaurs. It's basically a family sitcom with dinos. The baby is lowkey evil, and it's the creature in the washing machine. The show's run ends with an apocalypse. Very heartwarming.
The saddest thing about the Alzheimers is the speed at which it progressed. The dates on the right of the paper were from 1999 to 2014, but it started to get bad from only 2005, so it hit really hard after only 6 years.
About the 'are you dreaming' sign: I used to have this 'vivid dream' feeling all the time, and what grounded me back was to read signs, clocks and look at my own face. When I'm dreaming and I see my reflection/stare people's faces in my dreams, they look AI generated. And since then I noticed this, I'm slightly impressed and TERRIFIED of AI generated photorealistic images
In my dream, the face was so realistic i thought it was real life.i never once had ai face ib my dream, its always realistic. The sign i search is usually the disorienting location and sudden change in scenery but sometimes my dream follow consistent time and place like real world. And the only things that can make me diffetentiate it with real world is when i awake
@@cefrinaldi8060 I don't think I've ever had a problem with identifying my dreams as dreams tbh... I always realize I'm dreaming either at the start or in the middle. I just normally go with the flow though as my brain is supposed to be resting and just letting it do what it wants is better than pushing it with my imagination.
I do on occasion break that though because I want a bit of fun...
When I'm dreaming, I get a weird "out of body experience" feeling, like I'm looking through my eyes, but also looking at myself from "outside" the world. I suspect I probably always had this, but only noticed when I started lucid dreaming.
Don't understand. If you can remember that that's what you must do, and then you do it, you are thinking, so you are conscious, so you are not dreaming.
@@rosiefay7283 this behaviour don't start when you dream, but when you are awake feeling you are sleeping
Once your body don't give you palpable feeling enough to know you are awake, you start doing this a couple time a day to ground yourself into this perspective, so when you do this in your dreams it's more routine shit than anything else
Thank you click. I'm in the hospital right now, and even that isn't as terrifying as that horse cryptid skin walker nightmare you described.
Not what I had to hear in the dark
Wishing you a quick and complete recovery from whatever has you in hospital!
35:44 That's a shoebill! they look scary and they're very tall birds but they actually very gentle around humans!
and they make cool noises as a bonus
I'm gonna be entirely honest, jogging out in the middle of a biblical flood sounds metal as FUCK.
You just reminded me of that one vid of a Florida dude standing in the middle of a street during a hurricane, while he's holding the American flag 😂
26:36 - That walkie-talkie could be either more innocent than what Click supposes (part of Haunted House setup) or something more sinister, (tho stalker eaves-dropping is sinister in itself)
There was a show (think it was NICS) where they were investigating someone trying to drive a woman crazy. To do so, they had a device hidden in the air vents and would use it to play voices at low volume at key moments (often when she's alone) to make the woman appear crazy.
A third possibility is someone with mental illness or in a bad place trying to catch proof of something happening
The real messed up thing about the Bobby Dunbar situation is his actual mother tried to be like no that’s my kid but she lost the case because it was a small town and everyone knew the Dunbars
6:24 i love how it's traditional in all countries that have wild strawberries to pick them and thread them on straws. i used to make edible necklaces from them as a kid UwU
I can’t tell what’s more oddly terrifying.
This subreddit or all the unsettling ideas that Click has for plushies.
28:40 this one looks like it could work really well, actually
the people in the boxes could be a mix of manneqins, strangers and maybe 1 or 2 people who you know closely
21:55 Cannot get over the way he says "Why are you proud of this?!"
It is one of the many and varied “WTF, white Amerikkka?’ moments in history, it’s just that massive and horrific animal abuse, even when directed at starving and eradicating innocent indigenous people, is still relatively low on the list compared to the direct crimes against humanity.
The older I get, the more I see the American flag as more terroristic than even nationalistic (which just isn’t good either), just striving to keep anyone “lesser” occupied with an effort to overcome to block innovation, financial gain, and power (I specifically mean people that are: black, brown, disabled , lgbTQIa+ identities, any indigenous group, women and any non men, etc)
Fun fact! The picture of the buffalo skulls at 21:53 was just one of many piles just like it lined up next to each other.
On the mirror thing outside of the psych's office: for a period of about six - eight months I was consistently dissociating to the point that every time I looked in the mirror I couldn't recognise my reflection as my own. It truly felt like the person in the reflection had a difference face than me, but I couldn't tell you how I looked in comparison to it. Led to a lot of identity problems and even su*cidal ideation. It's possible that dissociation is what that sign is referencing.
if so, then that's... a really unhelpful sign. some people, when they figure out they're dreaming, start doing impossible things, either for the fun of it, or to try to end the dream, so uh that might not go so well if they're awake but dissociating
The last clip, the doll in the washing machine is from the 90’s tv show “Dinosaurs”. If you’ve ever seen the original run of the show “roseanne” it had the same vibe, just everyone was dinosaurs. the doll is of the sassy baby character.
Oh my god I used to love that show, but I never considered that yeah, its basically Rosanne with dinosaurs
For the sandpaper room: just walk to the far wall, sit/stand while the floor moves you to the other wall, walk back to the far wall and just keep doing that. Depending on the size of the room/speed of the sandpaper you might be able to take small naps.