1000 Yard Stare

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  • Опубликовано: 10 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @Simplehistory
    @Simplehistory  Год назад +492

    Visit brilliant.org/SimpleHistory/ to start learning with Brilliant!
    The first 200 people who sign up using my discount URL will also get 20% off an annual plan!

    • @Michael-vl8gx
      @Michael-vl8gx Год назад +7

      Omagad🤑

    • @morphingninja
      @morphingninja Год назад +6

      I'm going to say this nicely, but even if the ad is a normal part of your videos, it came across as very tone deaf in this one particularly. Might have been best to have just saved it for the end or something.

    • @Canada-Ball-Mapper
      @Canada-Ball-Mapper Год назад +1

      It's not Ipruh, it's Ipuh

    • @Escorter
      @Escorter Год назад +2

      Can you do USS Sangamon cve26 converted to oiler to aircraft carrier pls

    • @platypusoo7958
      @platypusoo7958 Год назад +1

      Memes of 1k yard stares

  • @jxgh-l6o
    @jxgh-l6o Год назад +4449

    these soldiers are already brave enough to face these horrors head on, but the fact that people have the audacity to call them cowards because they are naturally traumatized makes my blood boil

    • @dumboi5369
      @dumboi5369 Год назад +285

      Empathy seems to be lacking in so many, I feel the same way.

    • @definitelynotakgbagent6612
      @definitelynotakgbagent6612 Год назад +212

      As someone who suffers from PTSD.. I hate how people back then and even now don’t understand it

    • @dennisyoung4631
      @dennisyoung4631 Год назад +59

      True. It’s very easy to impute *moral deficiency* for a *lot* of things - including disabilities one might be born with, on top of treatment-induced PTSD (which I live with every day nearly six decades on.)

    • @ADcommenter
      @ADcommenter Год назад

      They didn't fully understand mental illness until 1990, many decades AFTER the most major wars had occurred.

    • @dosidicusgigas1376
      @dosidicusgigas1376 Год назад +62

      ​ @definitelynotakgbagent6612 Back then they barely understood it, they thought the concussive force from the shells damaged the brain during ww1. The military brass didnt really listen to it, although officers got it too. Some generals got 20,000+ of their men killed in the span 24 hours. I suspect Douglas Haig had PTSD. He planned the Somme offensive, the first day had over 57,000 Allied casualties and around 19,000 of them died. A lot of the generals were broken men by the end of the war.
      Nowadays at least its recognized in the medical field, vets dont get the benefits they deserve in my opinion regarding ptsd & all va related things.
      Here in Canada there was a guy that reccomended a bunch of war vets get euthanized, one went through with it and he had a wife and kid(s?)

  • @MicTheOni
    @MicTheOni Год назад +5885

    The ancient Romans called it "Divine Madness" and in the Civil War they called it "Soldier's Heart"

    • @Account_abandoned-q7m
      @Account_abandoned-q7m Год назад +427

      "Quid huic accidit?"
      "Ipsum? Divinam insaniam experitur!"
      Soldiers in Rome talking about a young recruit, 2 months after the start of the Second Punic War.

    • @therealking6202
      @therealking6202 Год назад +261

      In California they call it Indica.

    • @runningoutofnames3CS
      @runningoutofnames3CS Год назад +272

      @@therealking6202nah they call it “Californian”

    • @therealking6202
      @therealking6202 Год назад +79

      @@runningoutofnames3CS Only to uncultured outsiders. There's a distinct difference between your Sativas, your Indicas, your drunks, and your meth heads...lol...

    • @McGovern1981
      @McGovern1981 Год назад +32

      Ya was about to say this has existed since war itself....not something that's good for your mental health.

  • @Dovah22
    @Dovah22 Год назад +1411

    I’ve seen this in my own father growing up. He served in the Gulf War and there were times he was back over there mentally speaking.

    • @ww-ut1fv
      @ww-ut1fv Год назад +60

      Step-father served Gulf as well, luckily he was fairly unnaffected. I thank your father for his service, war is a rough thing.

    • @Akrmdz444
      @Akrmdz444 Год назад

      ​@@ww-ut1fvI dont know if i should thank your grandpa, because he probably killed innocent for corrupt politician sake

    • @kennash7583
      @kennash7583 Год назад +13

      My wife still to this day deals with me with this

    • @ThatGuy-lv7hf
      @ThatGuy-lv7hf Год назад +12

      @@ww-ut1fv Your dad was fighting for oil , not country

    • @AlfimAlves
      @AlfimAlves Год назад

      @@ThatGuy-lv7hfoil is a resource and a country needs a resource. US mugged the entire world after the fall of the British empire. No coincidence that the same nation that runs the world has the most weaponry aside from Russia’s warheads (that will never be used lol)

  • @andyroberts805
    @andyroberts805 Год назад +282

    My best friend came home from Iraq with it. A once very outgoing/goofy fellow he’d now just sit and stare. When you spoke to him he’d just start rambling about his time in combat. He was KIA in Afghanistan in 2005.

    • @MB-fo2sk
      @MB-fo2sk 11 месяцев назад +32

      That's awful. How did they let him back in the service? Didn't he have to pass some kind of psychiatric evaluation before that?

    • @thrandompug2254
      @thrandompug2254 11 месяцев назад +8

      May he rest in peace

    • @visassess8607
      @visassess8607 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@MB-fo2skMaybe it was just leave and not out of the Army

    • @juneyellowsnek
      @juneyellowsnek 7 месяцев назад

      That's not shell shock.

    • @faysmith7248
      @faysmith7248 29 дней назад

      Shush it ​@@juneyellowsnek

  • @unilife4603
    @unilife4603 Год назад +3143

    Props to the animators, the facial expressions looked legitimately unsettling
    Edit: Yeah ik it was an actual painting, though it was from WWII, not I. The realism in the animated expressions is still unsettling.

    • @jeff_theepic1011
      @jeff_theepic1011 Год назад +54

      Thats trauma for ya

    • @jannepennanen8521
      @jannepennanen8521 Год назад +13

      Was about to comment the same!

    • @pariahzero
      @pariahzero Год назад

      Good source material: One was a very close facsimile of a famous war artist's painting: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Thomas_C._Lea_III_-_That_Two-Thousand_Yard_Stare_-_Original.jpg

    • @stupid2867
      @stupid2867 Год назад +28

      Props to the animators for making a new video and not just making a compilation and calling it something other than blehbluhblabla compilation

    • @PerturbatorFan
      @PerturbatorFan Год назад +22

      I guess it's due to how uncanny they look, they just don't fit with the style of the characters

  • @ives3572
    @ives3572 11 месяцев назад +141

    "War's tragedy is that it uses man's best to do man's worst." - Harry Emerson Fosdick

  • @insertreference9154
    @insertreference9154 Год назад +913

    To see the horrors of advanced warfare unlike anything seen before, I would be terrified for the rest of my life just like these unsung heros

    • @the_femboy_gravemind
      @the_femboy_gravemind Год назад +30

      “what your seeing here is advanced warfare.” that one guy thats a pedo or something idk

    • @nyb2.027
      @nyb2.027 Год назад +5

      @@the_femboy_gravemind😂😂

    • @redditfunnyhurhur6023
      @redditfunnyhurhur6023 Год назад +4

      ​@@the_femboy_gravemindI've just escaped from kevin spacey's basement

    • @MrBillyBob0
      @MrBillyBob0 Год назад +1

      ⁠@@the_femboy_gravemind
      Uhm his name is Kevin Spacey
      🤓☝️

    • @mrhonkhonk6116
      @mrhonkhonk6116 Год назад +6

      @@MrBillyBob0the pedo star in advanced warfare ?

  • @JamesFromTexas
    @JamesFromTexas Год назад +335

    I can't imagine the amount of PTSD that's going to surface from future warfare with the advent of drone-dropped munitions. Just the thought of being in a combat zone with that tech gives me nightmares.

    • @ColinTherac117
      @ColinTherac117 Год назад +59

      I wouldn't be surprised if common desk fans become major triggers for Ukraine war veterans given that drone propellers make the same sound.

    • @JamesFromTexas
      @JamesFromTexas Год назад +32

      @@ColinTherac117 yeah, that's going to be rough.

    • @runningoutofnames3CS
      @runningoutofnames3CS Год назад +12

      @@ColinTherac117crazy how you are ignoring the Russian vets who will also suffer the same fate as their Ukrainian counterparts

    • @poopgobbler5415
      @poopgobbler5415 Год назад

      ​@@runningoutofnames3CSthat's the name of the war you dunce ape

    • @Spottycloth
      @Spottycloth Год назад +44

      @@runningoutofnames3CS he said Ukraine war because the war/frontline is in, well, Ukraine. both sides soldiers will still suffer the same after the conflict ends. he was talking about the vets/soldiers of the war from both sides.

  • @djodyssey99
    @djodyssey99 11 месяцев назад +254

    The fact that it took until 2006 for those soldiers to be pardoned for “cowardice” is actually baffling. Rest in peace to those souls.

    • @AGripOBabys
      @AGripOBabys 11 месяцев назад +8

      it puts alot of it into perspective. life used to be even harder than that.

    • @SalSanchez-dy6cn
      @SalSanchez-dy6cn 8 месяцев назад +1

      Not saying it's not true just saying u heard someone say once you come back the same way you went in

  • @Jakob_Herzog
    @Jakob_Herzog Год назад +1172

    Any people mocking a soldier for Shellshock/PTSD should have been forcefully put on the frontline. If they survived, I highly doubt they would mock that soldier again.

    • @blueberry1vom1t
      @blueberry1vom1t Год назад +85

      Generally I am against sentiments like this. But in the case of the dishonorable cowards who doubt PTSD, yes, they should be forced to go through what the people they mocked go through. If they can come out the other end of horrible abuse, torture, wrongful imprisonment or even warefare, then they can be as snarky as they want. But they'll either lose their apatite for snark, or they'll come back in a casket.

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 Год назад +8

      The constant terror is unimaginable.

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 Год назад +9

      ​@@content_enjoyer4458and ppl who experienced it would not mock those who suffers

    • @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378
      @jamesedwardladislazerrudo1378 Год назад +4

      ​@@kidd32888 You know you can't trust your officers right?.

    • @wtz_under
      @wtz_under Год назад +4

      tho i dont think you mean this literally, this is how i might feel if extreme enough

  • @jesusisalive3227
    @jesusisalive3227 11 месяцев назад +40

    My great uncle was blown out of his foxhole in korea. He went through a period of mental trouble afterwards. He made a full recovery thank God. He is the strongest man I know, he is now 94 years old and lives by himself in the country side. He still chops his own wood and everything else that needs to be done. This after he had his pelvis shattered 10 years ago after a tractor ran him over. There will never be another generation like my uncles.

  • @codybailey855
    @codybailey855 Год назад +464

    And most of these SOBs never saw a fraction of the horrors these men survived. An absolutely unforgivable chapter in military history.

    • @christophercuston
      @christophercuston Год назад +8

      (Not you specifically) Of course. When you're not in life and death situations, you can b&&*@ about everything.

    • @therasco400
      @therasco400 Год назад

      Hes talking about how the people controlling the war conducted the war when they never saw combat.
      Honestly the most horrific thing is that the tactic of the allies WAS to keep sending men to there deaths just to drain Germanies resources. @@christophercuston

    • @SOUTHEASTALLDAY
      @SOUTHEASTALLDAY 11 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@christophercuston💯💯 I hate how people jump on the moral high ground and act as if they were in the war in 1915🤣it's like bro wasn't even born yet and he's already jumping on the bandwagon.

    • @SOUTHEASTALLDAY
      @SOUTHEASTALLDAY 11 месяцев назад +2

      You're so hard and tough bro, War hero.🤣

    • @Elitesyno
      @Elitesyno 11 месяцев назад

      @@SOUTHEASTALLDAYit’s true though, WW1 was the most horrific war of all of them. You are just stupid, and have never opened a history book 🤦‍♂️😂 stupid people will always say stupid things because they have nothing else to argue.

  • @Khornecussion
    @Khornecussion Год назад +347

    I love that many British people I know talking about WW2 called Americans " barbaric "- and then I bring up the whole " Summary execution " thing that the British and French were infamous for and go " You can call Americans mean for slapping around soldiers that're freezing up, but at least we didn't put a Webley to the back of their head and permanently turn their inner thoughts into outer thoughts all over the nearest trench wall. "

    • @Cringe_Lord
      @Cringe_Lord Год назад +20

      Ye, we were bastards
      And then there's the Russian commissars

    • @dominusdone5023
      @dominusdone5023 Год назад

      There’s more Britain caused more deaths than the nazis just from imperialism in China, India, and africa

    • @AsMightyAsBread
      @AsMightyAsBread Год назад +43

      Everyone is guilty of sin

    • @RustyUNITB
      @RustyUNITB Год назад +8

      Didn’t Patton nearly get fired for those slaps?

    • @serch3ster
      @serch3ster 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@Cringe_Lord Mans hitting you with the whataboutism.

  • @GeraltofRivia22
    @GeraltofRivia22 Год назад +618

    Shell shock isn't only PTSD. Its also a physical trauma to the brain from constant concussive blasts from explosions.

    • @The_scrongler1978
      @The_scrongler1978 Год назад +8

      Man so what’s inside the shell gets shocked and then the outside. You ain’t catching me in the military

    • @imchris5000
      @imchris5000 Год назад +45

      shell shock is worse than just ptsd even though people try to compare to it. its from the brain damage you get from the concussive of massive artillery shells landing near by. just the over pressure created by the explosion can kill. its a whole different level than just seeing the horrors of war. I have a friend I went to school with who went to iraq and was in an ied explosion. he was not burned or hit by any shrapnel but the pressure hitting his body blew out his bladder making him incontinent and he got mild brain damage leaving him with seizures and can no longer drive at only 28 years old

    • @The_scrongler1978
      @The_scrongler1978 Год назад +1

      @@imchris5000that’s a lot of fancy words, I don’t understand them but they seem smart

    • @boneroaster88j7
      @boneroaster88j7 Год назад

      @@The_scrongler1978 Other way around the shock is caused by the shells.

    • @The_scrongler1978
      @The_scrongler1978 Год назад +1

      @@boneroaster88j7 I see, shells shock the shell and that’s called shell shock. I think I get it

  • @mobucks555
    @mobucks555 Год назад +155

    My mom was in college after 'nam and the young men would hide under desks if there was a loud noise. It was all a knee jerk reaction after going through war.

    • @Slava_Ukraini1991
      @Slava_Ukraini1991 Год назад +72

      heard an afghanistan vet describe waking up to flashbacks the day he got back home. he said he was awoken by mortar fire and machinegun bursts and rolled off of his bed scrambling for his gear and getting more and more panicked as he attempted to locate his plate carrier, rifle, night vision, etc before looking out the window and seeing green trees and snapping back realizing he was no longer in afghanistan. crazy what war does to these people.

    • @chizorama
      @chizorama Год назад +15

      @@Slava_Ukraini1991 You can leave the war, but the war never leaves you.

    • @johnhildenbrand2642
      @johnhildenbrand2642 Год назад +14

      ​@chizorama A big part of it is the angle from which you look at your experiences, I have been blown up 4 times, and took 2 bullets on top of that, but I consider it a small price to pay for the opportunity to have been able to bear that cost for others, it is awful, thankless and nasty watching your friends blown apart, shot, self deleted and mangled, to say nothing of what you will do to the enemy, but that cross MUST be carried, and our generation fought the longest war in the nation's history, and at no time was troop strength so low that a conscription was necessary, there's a lot to be said about that, so if you were one of those who manned the ramparts during that time, be proud, you saved a whole lot of people from being forced into going

  • @Darwingreen5
    @Darwingreen5 Год назад +123

    PTSD has to be frustrating for the war medics. Things like bullet wounds, broken limbs and shrapnel they can patch up, but there's no way they can patch up mental wounds like that.

    • @Slava_Ukraini1991
      @Slava_Ukraini1991 Год назад +3

      they usually don't have to deal with it. PTSD becomes a problem after returning home at least in modern wars.

    • @sdivine13
      @sdivine13 Год назад +1

      Motrin, hydrate, change socks. Fixes 100 percent of all ailments cancer included.

    • @davemiller638
      @davemiller638 Год назад

      @@sdivine13 Thanks, will try

    • @toshineon
      @toshineon 11 месяцев назад +1

      Can any mental wounds ever be healed? Statements on the internet seems to suggest that they can't.

    • @bishop51807
      @bishop51807 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@toshineon we don't even fully understand how or why we sleep so I don't think we know how to fully give treatment for emotional traumas like PTSD.

  • @condelocatelli7172
    @condelocatelli7172 Год назад +31

    My grandfather, who fought in the Italian army during World War II, also suffered from this, but only in the last years of his life did the family manage to see the true extent of the damage that the war caused to his psychology. Before he got sick he didn't let on, he was a great man.

  • @bbwilkinson6326
    @bbwilkinson6326 Год назад +42

    Ive never served, but I've seen this in the civil world, along with the accompanying wander. His best friend died in a plane crash at an air show that he was watching, I found him afterward just wandering the field, staring off into the distance and just emotionally oblivious. I still feel for that guy, that was the most haunting encounter of PTSD I've seen yet.

  • @maira_dog4666
    @maira_dog4666 Год назад +108

    As an undergraduate student of psychology I find this video so sweet, just, humane and necessary! Thank you Simple History! ❤

    • @JohnInen
      @JohnInen 10 месяцев назад

      ❤💯

  • @oliversherman2414
    @oliversherman2414 Год назад +110

    I'm glad our modern militaries don't laugh at or even shoot those unfortunate soldiers who experience PTSD. We've come a long way since WW1

    • @filipinordabest
      @filipinordabest Год назад +17

      I wish you're right.

    • @Dead_Again1313
      @Dead_Again1313 Год назад

      Yeah now we just get called murderers and war criminals.

    • @RobinLundqvist
      @RobinLundqvist Год назад +1

      You should ask who is giving you the information you have, then question “could this source be lying to me”? When it comes to the military, they usually investigate themselves and find no wrongdoing.

    • @bishop51807
      @bishop51807 9 месяцев назад +4

      We still have a ways to go but the improvements are noticeable

    • @oliversherman2414
      @oliversherman2414 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@bishop51807 indeed

  • @neofulcrum5013
    @neofulcrum5013 Год назад +48

    War can either make you tough or mess you up beyond repair. Sometimes both.

  • @leealdrich2707
    @leealdrich2707 Год назад +33

    for further reading on those interested, The book On Killing by Lt. Col Grossman dives into other mental casualties in later wars and one of the many parts that interested me was that soldiers on crewed weapons and vehicles like bombers, tanks and even warships, ironically while on paper causing more destruction than the typical infantry man. suffered less PTSD cases and or developing said trauma than infantry in the field. due to them being too far or not even seeing the destruction caused on their fellow man on a personal level. part of their minds rationalizing that "they didn't kill anyone", just a building, vehicle or a non descript plot of land. where as infantry see the wrath on man unleashed before their very eyes,
    "Looking another human being in the eye, making an independent decision to kill him, and watching while he dies due to your action combine to form one of the most basic, important, primal and potentially traumatic occurrences of war." - Chapter 3 Why can't Johnny kill? page 69.

    • @Dead_Again1313
      @Dead_Again1313 Год назад +2

      I've been thinking about reading that. I think you just convinced me.

    • @imchris5000
      @imchris5000 Год назад +1

      they were not experiencing the over pressure of the explosions just the over pressure will give you brain damage if not outright kill you

    • @Mark-in8ju
      @Mark-in8ju 11 месяцев назад +1

      What if those crews were physically brought to the location they previously targeted once the battle was complete?

    • @leealdrich2707
      @leealdrich2707 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Mark-in8ju
      I could not visualize the horrible deaths my bombs…had caused here. I had no feeling of guilt. I had no feeling of accomplishment. -J. Douglas Harvey, World War II bomber pilot, visiting rebuilt Berlin in the 1960s quoted in Paul Fussell, Wartime.
      Found in the book I mentioned, sorry for the late reply.

  • @whowhatwherehowwhy
    @whowhatwherehowwhy Год назад +39

    Those who are lucky enough to never see the sword, are never cursed with knowing it’s sharpness.

  • @wakcedout
    @wakcedout Год назад +37

    This stare still exists and I have seen it. Knew a guy who left for a long deployment linking up with army, he left cheery and happy go lucky. When he came back you can tell he wasn’t all there at times.

  • @Swagmaster07
    @Swagmaster07 11 месяцев назад +9

    5:32 THE MAN, THE LEGEND!

    • @KellyCy
      @KellyCy 9 месяцев назад

      Lol I know him😂

  • @jamesmcgrath1952
    @jamesmcgrath1952 Год назад +111

    That stare is also associated with hyper vigilantism. Some one used to being hyper aware of their surroundings and what is happening around them. It's not uncommon with soldiers who are in highly dangerous and fluid combat enviorments. It can take years, if ever to unlearn the habit.

    • @whitekony1006
      @whitekony1006 Год назад +16

      Yeah,every guy I've ever known that's done hard time or has really lived the streets ends up with that look too.

    • @juneyellowsnek
      @juneyellowsnek 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@PostalDude_1997pardon us, we were unaware we had a licensed psychiatrist in the thread.

    • @jranddasquad7455
      @jranddasquad7455 3 месяца назад

      Lil durk got it ​@@whitekony1006

    • @searchforthetruth1
      @searchforthetruth1 11 дней назад

      @@whitekony1006 it’s from living in constant fight or flight and nothing in between for YEARS at a time.

  • @okupantrosyjski103
    @okupantrosyjski103 Год назад +52

    You explain the story very well, I adore you!

  • @vihuynhquang5204
    @vihuynhquang5204 Год назад +383

    I played a horror game called “Trenches”, which a British soldier trapped behind the German’s trenches line during WW1, and stuck for days. He escaped, rescued, but severely damaged in mentality. One would’ve thought he could finally have a happy ending when the war is over with his family, he slaughtered his entire family - including his unborn son, before he blown his own head to pieces with his shotgun in the end, a year after the war was over. Turns out he was never given a proper PTSD treatment after all
    And yet a majority of people called him monster

    • @Piece-Of-Time
      @Piece-Of-Time Год назад +38

      Never heard of this game, thank you, it's gonna be interesting. Horror game + WWI setting must be awesome

    • @ferretyluv
      @ferretyluv Год назад +81

      He’s still a monster. But war turned him into one.

    • @maybeafriend9028
      @maybeafriend9028 Год назад +6

      @@ferretyluvyea apparently. Every villain is.

    • @andrewcollins2060
      @andrewcollins2060 Год назад +22

      ​@@ferretyluv I am not very certain you understand what a flashback actually is. In that moment he was most likely back in those trenches and every living thing around him wanted him dead. When he came around again and realized what he had done he killed himself for it.
      Alternativly it could have been other reasons nobody will ever know for sure. But all in all try to not make such comments without truely understanding the perspectives that could have taken place.....🤐

    • @Bullboy_Adventures
      @Bullboy_Adventures Год назад +11

      There's another one quite similar, but it had dinosaurs in it. No joke

  • @edi9892
    @edi9892 Год назад +9

    It reminds me of a Joker quote in the Dark Knight trilogy. Basically, it hits harder when you can't anticipate it. The relation to this is that in earlier wars, you had a rough idea where the enemy was, you spotted him, approached him, and engaged him and then you left back home to relative safety...
    In modern wars, you can get killed by a stray bullet, or a shell, long before you even know that the enemy is near... Plus, there's no safe time or place. You can get shelled 24/7.

  • @tonyz7216
    @tonyz7216 Год назад +2

    My family have photographs of one of my great-grand-uncles which were taken during the Great War. This stare, this terrible empty stare that you can't forget.
    Mobilized as a private soldier in August 1914, participated to most great battles of WWI, received the Croix de Guerre, he finally got killed in action as a lieutenant in August 1918 after fighting for four years in the trenches. They never found his body he did not have a grave. He is my hero, when I feel low I think about what he went through and this gives me strength. May he rest in peace.

  • @NinajuiPR
    @NinajuiPR Год назад +58

    I hate how words like "1000 yard stare" or "war crimes" have been so watered down I only think of the joke versions when I hear them

    • @Dustin_Bins
      @Dustin_Bins Год назад +7

      Yeah, despite our medical/psychological advancements; some people STILL think the way the British officers thought in WW1. To this day the amount of people who have hatred for those with PTSD or those who were captured is still there.

    • @capitcha
      @capitcha Год назад +3

      @Tigran-Abazyanlol, Ukraine is losing. Sweet dreams though…

    • @DanSepulveda
      @DanSepulveda 7 месяцев назад

      What happens to chronically online mfrs

  • @BobsoneK81
    @BobsoneK81 Год назад +33

    It's very sad that soldiers for many years experience that and see them ruined mentally by war.

    • @Voucher765
      @Voucher765 Год назад +8

      Especially during WWII, May history not repeat itself

  • @garrett621
    @garrett621 11 месяцев назад +21

    My father is a Vietnam veteran. I don't know if he ever had shell shock but he certainly had what I called the "death stare." It was terrifying but I really don't think he was aware of it. Respect to him.

    • @Thatonepatriot77
      @Thatonepatriot77 11 месяцев назад +1

      Respect

    • @garrett621
      @garrett621 11 месяцев назад

      @Tigran-Abazyan yes, you're probably right. Take care.

    • @juneyellowsnek
      @juneyellowsnek 7 месяцев назад

      ​@Tigran-Abazyandoubtful that it was shell shock in Vietnam. Likely PTSD.

  • @junedhussain6252
    @junedhussain6252 Год назад +8

    Thank you so much for your hard work. Simple History. i couldn't imagine what these soldiers went through during the horrors of war. May they rest in peace.

  • @corymorimacori1059
    @corymorimacori1059 Год назад +124

    “You think I haven’t heard of those things before? You’re just a bully who’s too scared to go to war.” Freddie Mercury

    • @robertsears8323
      @robertsears8323 Год назад

      That POS was a gay so anything it said is a lie.

    • @barnabykardashianiii3637
      @barnabykardashianiii3637 Год назад +6

      Bro really quoted Epic Rap Battles lmfao ☠️

    • @robincordero3
      @robincordero3 11 месяцев назад

      @@barnabykardashianiii3637 i dont even know what that is but lol

  • @ives3572
    @ives3572 11 месяцев назад +19

    Nothing but respect for all those brave souls who fought valiantly and gave up their lives for something greater than themselves.

  • @Sir_Squirrel_TheIV
    @Sir_Squirrel_TheIV Год назад +35

    I worked part time in a psychologist office as a janitor and I met some people with PTSD it was just heartbreaking. I met a kid from Israel, he was 16, his entire family of 7 got killed , I also met Palestinian girl who’s mom got blown up in front of her and I even met a Ex-Soviet soldier who fought in Afghanistan. Wherever they are know I hope they are alive and well.

    • @wtz_under
      @wtz_under Год назад +3

      sometimes humanity comes quite far, but there will be more modern problems coming along the way. so much so that it could overwhelm our minds. i always think about this, what if we werent so advanced

    • @Moonshine449
      @Moonshine449 Год назад

      @@wtz_underWe have gone too far

  • @ColKorn1965
    @ColKorn1965 Год назад +14

    My dad's uncle parachuted into Normandy and was captured. He wouldn't talk about it unless he was drunk. He sometimes had a stare

  • @jj12studios
    @jj12studios 8 месяцев назад +9

    5:24 gotta love the tf2 sniper sound

  • @kingofthepod5169
    @kingofthepod5169 Год назад +21

    I feel like this needs a part 2. Usually you have a today section and talk about the evolution of the video topic. Support is out there people. Considering the topic and how horrifyingly common veteran mental health issues get neglected I feel this part 2 needs some support numbers and resources. We literally got the 988 this year in the USA.

  • @CalebAnimations3000
    @CalebAnimations3000 3 месяца назад +3

    1:00 That guy shaking took “shiver me timbers” to the next level 💀

  • @dominicsondrini3099
    @dominicsondrini3099 Год назад +7

    I learned that you are a real guy with a sweet voice, not a computer generator voice tailored to what an algorithm thinks a human will connect with. This information has made my day. I am so glad you are real. Great content!

    • @ChrisKane-
      @ChrisKane- Год назад +1

      I am indeed very real! Thank you for the compliment. 😁

    • @WeAintJokinHere
      @WeAintJokinHere Год назад

      @@ChrisKane- he wasn't talking to you 💀

    • @ChrisKane-
      @ChrisKane- Год назад +1

      @@WeAintJokinHere To whom was he talking?

    • @WeAintJokinHere
      @WeAintJokinHere Год назад

      @@ChrisKane- he was talking to simple history

    • @ChrisKane-
      @ChrisKane- Год назад +1

      @@WeAintJokinHere I'm the narrator from this episode. 😀

  • @ItsLifeJim_VB
    @ItsLifeJim_VB Год назад +49

    One of the big things I've seen recently is that younger generations (through either attempts to be edgy or simple ignorance) are returning to humiliating those with PTSD, both veterans and regular victims of trauma.
    Its disgusting to think that a section of the worlds future population is so jaded and sickening that they will do these kinds of things.
    I hope only that people learn, because I refuse to live in a world where these people are running it.

    • @dirrt5011
      @dirrt5011 Год назад +8

      and they turn around and make all those stupid phonk edits of war footage. they’re idolizing a very superficial image of war. i once saw an old clip of a ww1 french soldier with ptsd having a mental breakdown after seeing his uniform, but whoever uploaded it but a billion filters and “badass” music. they were basically just using an incredibly traumatized man for internet clout.

    • @Perc_angle30
      @Perc_angle30 Год назад +3

      Coming from a person from the “younger generation” that’s just not facts a lot of us watch our friends die sometimes right infront of us go to any inner city and ask around about their experiences

  • @Zopiexx
    @Zopiexx Год назад +2

    My Great grandfather had this for a while, he was a Soviet soldier he fought with my Great grand uncle and Grand uncle in Moscow later Ny Great grand uncle and Grand uncle went towards Leningrad and sadly passed away there, while my Great grandfather fought in Stalingrad and later on in Kursk, Ukraine and other major citys like Kiev, Warsaw, Berlin. Eternal memory to the heroes!

  • @oldlincolnpipewelder
    @oldlincolnpipewelder Год назад +16

    The thousand yard stare:
    …. something you don’t really want…

  • @neoasura
    @neoasura Год назад +108

    It's not just war, I was abused as a child quite severely. And I used to call it "staring off into the distance and zoning out" as I grew up, but that was before I read up on trauma and specifically childhood trauma. I still get it from time to time. Some people call it PTSD, Idk what it is really.

    • @HardcoreOreider
      @HardcoreOreider Год назад +17

      I wish you the best, hope you are doing better nowadays

    • @lemax6865
      @lemax6865 Год назад +23

      Post-traumatic stress disorder can result from anything sufficiently traumatic. War is a commonly documented cause because of a) how severely traumatic it is, such that even very resilient folk can be traumatized by it and b) how many people from the same demographic experience it at the same time when it happens. That said, it's not at all the only cause. It's impossible to obtain a diagnosis from a RUclips comment, but it's entirely possible that you've suffered PTSD following whatever trauma you experienced. The only way to be certain would be to have yourself evaluated by qualified professionals, and it's up to you to decide whether that'd be worthwhile. Depending how much you're still suffering and how well you've adapted, you may benefit from treatment, or not so much.

    • @wtz_under
      @wtz_under Год назад +1

      @@lemax6865you are correct.

    • @Ebola419
      @Ebola419 Год назад +2

      Lets not compare whatever you went through with people that experienced the horrors of war

    • @otani8806
      @otani8806 Год назад

      That's his point of reference that anchors his opinion.

  • @drhorrorfootball
    @drhorrorfootball Год назад +257

    I feel most people from d-day had a thousand yard stare.
    It was one of the most deadliest battles ever, so many bodies split in half and deaths.

    • @combinecommando001
      @combinecommando001 Год назад +27

      Depends which beachfront they were sent to. If it was Omaha, yes, you would most likely be right. But most of the other landings, like Juno for example, went extremely well.

    • @pariahzero
      @pariahzero Год назад +57

      It depends on how one measures it. D-Day didn't grind on for weeks, months years. For example at Verdun, over a ton of artillery was expended per square inch, and even today, you can't stray from very well marked paths because of unexploded (and very much *live*) artillery - both high explosive and chemical weapons. Artillery barrages were so intense whole units were just turned into a chunky red mist, which rained and rotted everywhere. Or the battle of Stalingrad, where 1.2 million men died over about 5 months. D-Day was a flash in the pan - horrible yes, but imagine that same kind of fight for months, knowing your only way out is in pieces. May we never see the like again.

    • @houjisaifeddine5524
      @houjisaifeddine5524 Год назад +16

      d-day itself didn't have that many casualties though, not even in the top 100 deadliest battles in history.
      to understand things better, the allies suffered less than 5000 deaths on d-day. that's from 3 nations combined
      in comparaison, the first day of the battle of the somme, the british alone suffered about 20.000 deaths.
      actually, operation overlord in its entirety (both the landings and securing strategic locations within normandy, lasting a bit less than 3 months) isn't even in the top 20 casualty-wise. humans have caused far more destruction, unfortunately

    • @matheussuzuki1046
      @matheussuzuki1046 Год назад +22

      I think stalingrad would be more like it

    • @SirAntoniousBlock
      @SirAntoniousBlock Год назад +17

      D-Day was a skirmish compared to the charnal house of most WW1 battles and WW2 eastern front ones.

  • @themightyironoak
    @themightyironoak Год назад +16

    "It is good that war is so terrible, or else we should grow too fond of it."
    -- Robert E. Lee
    Blessing to all the heroic veterans who are victims of this horrible condition and violence of war, respect to all. I salute you.

  • @maybeargy
    @maybeargy Год назад +23

    the thousand yard stare kinda freaks me out

    • @Luis-be9mi
      @Luis-be9mi Год назад +7

      Tell me about it, when I first started reading about WW1, one picture that stuck with me was a grinning soldier that made him look demonic. I can only imagine the horrors that poor soul witnessed and been through.

    • @myprobate1661
      @myprobate1661 7 месяцев назад +1

      If you see that look in a child's eye, keep an eye out for them. Children who are subjected to repeat sexual or satanic ritual abuse can kind of have that look.

  • @JimRoberts86
    @JimRoberts86 Год назад +4

    They were your fathers, your brothers, your sons, and you turned your backs on them.
    Thank you for speaking for those that cannot team.

  • @classifiedveteran9879
    @classifiedveteran9879 Год назад +18

    First 20 seconds is about the 1000-yard stare. _(Something that I got in Afghanistan.)_
    The next 10 minutes are not about the 1000-yard stare but about PTSD and early treatments for it. _(Something that I didn't get in Afghanistan.)_
    _(Edit due to one typo.)_

    • @FragGoesBoom
      @FragGoesBoom Год назад +8

      Thank you for you're service and welcome home. I hope you're doing better and is getting help to recover from the trauma ❤🙂

  • @TheSisyphusExperience
    @TheSisyphusExperience Год назад +7

    9:41 though is truly terrifying

  • @jamesofficial6829
    @jamesofficial6829 9 месяцев назад +2

    I'm so mad and completely mortified on how people can be so cruel. The people that fought in WW1 on both sides were all heroes in my eyes and understandably war is a horrible experience. How about love instead of torture for these men? Love is the greatest healing power on the planet and I wish I had it because I really need it right now. Talking about being cuddled by a wonderful woman.

  • @firesturmgaming
    @firesturmgaming Год назад +37

    The 1000 Yard Stare also happens when a person experiences a strong enough trauma from anywhere, anything and anyone.

    • @DELTAF11B
      @DELTAF11B 11 месяцев назад +1

      I did that once

    • @bachiak1
      @bachiak1 6 месяцев назад

      kaya when she saw her mom getting ate by connie dad

  • @Eastlmao69
    @Eastlmao69 Год назад +9

    0:07 bro the only one who doesn't have dots for eyes

  • @thenoteworthy1298
    @thenoteworthy1298 Год назад +32

    There are accounts of knights in the Middle Ages having PTSD/ Shell Shock, mentioning them breaking down when hearing struck metal (smithing).

    • @juneyellowsnek
      @juneyellowsnek 7 месяцев назад

      Knights in the middle ages never experienced shell shock.

    • @thenoteworthy1298
      @thenoteworthy1298 7 месяцев назад

      @@juneyellowsnek Well of course they didn’t call it that back then, but there are accounts of them experiencing problems to modern people with PTSD

    • @juneyellowsnek
      @juneyellowsnek 7 месяцев назад

      @@thenoteworthy1298 correct. Shell shock is not the same as PTSD. shell shock is a physical injury resulting from pressure waves causing brain damage. PTSD is strictly mental health.

    • @thenoteworthy1298
      @thenoteworthy1298 7 месяцев назад

      @@juneyellowsnek Ohhh I see.
      I stand corrected.

  • @maevethefox5912
    @maevethefox5912 Год назад +61

    Shell Shock is commonly considered the same as PTSD, but there is a distinct Shell Shock disorder caused by neurological trauma from overpressure compression from being too near artillery strikes.

    • @bhiei
      @bhiei Год назад +10

      Good mention

    • @sniperelite360
      @sniperelite360 Год назад

      Well people suffered from it without being exposed to artillery

    • @juneyellowsnek
      @juneyellowsnek 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@sniperelite360no, they suffered similar mental symptoms. They did not suffer the same condition.

  • @stevenabogunde
    @stevenabogunde 11 месяцев назад +2

    With how many wars that happened throughout history it surprises me that people still called you a coward back then you’d think everyone would have an understanding of what war is

  • @javyassassin13
    @javyassassin13 11 месяцев назад +2

    Damn im so proud of this channel and how much its grown from having less than a few hundred thousand subs now millions and seeing the face behinf the voice wow how far youve come man

  • @Goc4ever
    @Goc4ever Год назад +122

    Very informative video as always, well done Simple History. May those young men rest in peace🫡. What the British had done to those poor lads was downright despicable😡.

    • @Chris_Thorndyke
      @Chris_Thorndyke Год назад +12

      @dinoconcThat’s a poor excuse

    • @geradkavanagh8240
      @geradkavanagh8240 Год назад

      This 'doco' focuses on British Shell shock victims. It leaves out what common soldiers and civilians from all Nations were coping with.

    • @Goc4ever
      @Goc4ever Год назад +2

      Regardless it doesn't say the British had to treat its own traumatized soldiers worse than animals and they never apologized until 2006😡.

    • @geradkavanagh8240
      @geradkavanagh8240 Год назад

      Basically combatants suffering the same shell shock effects from any nation were treated in the same way. Was a time when people were less knowledgeable about the effects of war.@@Goc4ever

    • @dominusdone5023
      @dominusdone5023 Год назад

      Britain does this to every country lol worse than nazis

  • @Ididitlikethis2079
    @Ididitlikethis2079 Год назад +6

    “And when you gaze long into an abyss the abyss also gazes into you.”
    - Friedrich Nietzche

  • @Silent.Heaven
    @Silent.Heaven Год назад +9

    Alooooone at the edge of the universeeeeee, humming a tuneeee.

  • @5552-d8b
    @5552-d8b 11 месяцев назад +2

    I never experienced war or had the 1000 yard stare. But seeing there faces led me to conclude that people are so scared of dying there stuck in full adrenaline and the eyes are forced open because the mind is on full alert and not wanting to die, especially after seeing the carnage of war of there friends dying. So it makes them super paranoid and forced them to be on full alert cause they don’t want to die.

  • @JusttKeridd
    @JusttKeridd Год назад +5

    0:55 the way he just falls bruhh

  • @BBYBLU_
    @BBYBLU_ 4 месяца назад +1

    Literally breaks the brain. So tragic.

  • @shanejones4058
    @shanejones4058 Год назад +46

    Seeing friends and people you have just spoken to get killed in brutal ways I.E (IEDS, Grenades/RPG) people mangled in horrible ways, still screaming or making noises …. headshots are also gruesome to see happen. It’s all horrible. Seeing the death caused at your own hands is also very traumatic later in life especially. War is not natural….

    • @wolfrainexxx
      @wolfrainexxx Год назад +5

      I agree. Allies should never have gone to war with Japan or Germany, regardless of who started it, or why. War is evil.

    • @thekinginyellowmessiahofha6308
      @thekinginyellowmessiahofha6308 Год назад +7

      @wolgrainexxx
      Millions more would have died. It was horrific, but without that war all of Europe would have been enslaved.

    • @basedsmoke591
      @basedsmoke591 Год назад

      war is unfortunately natural for humans. there is not a single moment in human history when war wasn't happening...

    • @deepdungeon8465
      @deepdungeon8465 Год назад

      ​@@wolfrainexxxoh yeah, asks the Japanese. 😂

    • @My_Old_YT_Account
      @My_Old_YT_Account Год назад +1

      ​@@wolfrainexxxalmost everyone in the allies had either been partially invaded or had attempts at invasion against them. The only major one who could've stayed out is the UK.

  • @alexandrefillot9600
    @alexandrefillot9600 Год назад +8

    *Everlong by the Foo Fighters starts playing*

  • @bandit6272
    @bandit6272 Год назад +4

    We actually still use electroshock therapy, we call it "electroconvulsive therapy" or ECT. Much more humane these days, with the pt sedated during the entire procedure. The pts I spoke with, didn't remember a thing. The went to sleep, and woke up after it was over. Iirc we use it for catatonic and refractory severe depression.

  • @skeleleleton
    @skeleleleton Год назад

    Bro the way your voice seamlessly switches from normal to that bassy undertone is actually insane. Like in the ad at 2:38 "That's what brilliant offers" but its so casually even until the "O" sound in "offers" but then you hit the "F" sound and suddenly where in super dramatic bass land. I could listen to you talk about anything cuz that's just a unique and captivating feature of your voice.

  • @Tmilitaria
    @Tmilitaria Год назад +4

    Good video, those who suffered PTSD deserve our respect and deserved proper medical attention rather than the horrible torture.

  • @waylingtons
    @waylingtons 11 месяцев назад +2

    Shell shocks shaking symptoms were also from flinching from the constant bombardments. Your natural reflexes were tested so much to the point of stress it became basically uncontrollable for the sufferer to stop shaking.

  • @MrBillsomm2000
    @MrBillsomm2000 3 месяца назад +1

    There are no cowards on the edge of human experience.

  • @Vasher-The-Destroyer
    @Vasher-The-Destroyer Год назад +8

    That one British officer was just pour evil, just comes to show how far we've come and understanding mental helath and how war effects peoples minds.

  • @v.emiltheii-nd.8094
    @v.emiltheii-nd.8094 Год назад +8

    War........war never changes.

  • @wattsinaname6975
    @wattsinaname6975 11 месяцев назад +8

    My understanding was that shell shock is more than just ptsd, but literally brain damage from concussive blasts.

  • @brianriggs2335
    @brianriggs2335 Год назад +9

    This was a great video. My heart is soft for those who truly experienced those horrors. Im sure I would easily get shell shock if I was a combat soldier.

  • @ryanmurphy2089
    @ryanmurphy2089 11 месяцев назад +4

    Thousand island stare

  • @MrCombatmedic00
    @MrCombatmedic00 7 месяцев назад +1

    Best way I can describe it personally from experiences from OIF, it was like I would remember something and just mentally focus on it and pick it apart piece by piece. Example: “hey, that chicken leg looks kind of like how that one soldiers…leg….looked…with all the blood…and the exposed muscle…all that blood….the look on his face…so much noise….” And I’m thinking this all in my head as I’m replaying it and I become lost in it

  • @ablackghostmyguy3741
    @ablackghostmyguy3741 Год назад +3

    Makes me sick how the public calls them cowards, meanwhile they hadn't spent a day in the trenches or in the mud and pushed them to join up and fight in the first place

  • @Kavinplaysroblox
    @Kavinplaysroblox 2 месяца назад +1

    The thousand-yard stare (also referred to as two-thousand-yard stare) is a phrase often used to describe the blank, unfocused gaze of people experiencing dissociation due to acute stress or traumatic events. It was originally used about war combatants and the post-traumatic stress they exhibited but is now also used to refer to an unfocused gaze observed in people under a stressful situation, or in people with certain mental health conditions.
    An exhausted U.S. Marine exhibits the thousand-yard stare after two days of constant fighting at the Battle of Eniwetok, February 1944.
    The thousand-yard stare is sometimes described as an effect of shell shock or combat stress reaction, along with other mental health conditions. However, it is not a formal medical term.

  • @brucekaraus7330
    @brucekaraus7330 Год назад +13

    Maybe whoever drew the figure for "severe psychosis", (1:18) should spend some time with veterans suffering from that disorder and see if their portrayal seems as cute afterwards.

  • @hugoefekandirmaz9180
    @hugoefekandirmaz9180 7 месяцев назад +5

    0:15 the origin of the picture that this comes from was a blue eyed soldier that was actually smiling because he survived a gunshot to the neck and was smiling for the photo while being healed by a frontlines doctor

    • @Joseph-x7w4l
      @Joseph-x7w4l Месяц назад

      You mean private Lindsay Rogers

  • @Bryceewing17
    @Bryceewing17 11 месяцев назад +4

    I witnessed one of my best friends commit “sewer slide” in front of my face and I can really relate to a lot of this. Ptsd comes in all shapes and sizes

  • @ChannelMath
    @ChannelMath 11 месяцев назад +2

    It seems to me that the stare is a classic sign of dissociation, a protection mechanism where part of the mind sort of checks out while you are still conscious. Some people spend day after day dissociated, feeling nothing except a vague background anxiety, until something happens that breaks the spell, often resulting in uncontrollable crying, anger, or some other strong emotions breaking through.
    For a long time I chose to stay dissociated. I'm trying to start experiencing life again but the anxiety is intense

  • @jorimdrever3965
    @jorimdrever3965 Год назад +6

    The animation is very smooth in this video! Good job simple history animaters!

  • @dwaynemontgomery1851
    @dwaynemontgomery1851 Год назад +2

    ptsd then: caused by unthinkable devastation and unthinkable horrors
    ptsd now: caused by mild inconvenience
    its amazing how far we have come as a society...

  • @Michael-yz9wf
    @Michael-yz9wf Год назад +5

    I'm so glad that he hopped on this

  • @taladiv3415
    @taladiv3415 11 месяцев назад +4

    8:23 As if they didn't suffer enough! 😢

  • @wadeklein8962
    @wadeklein8962 Год назад +3

    She’ll shock begins from a sense of hopelessness, and terror. With a lack of sleep, fear constantly on your mind, and loud scary explosions and death all around, it’s not hard to see how ptsd happens, when someone sees something, or feels that something is just outright, not right. And nothing they are in control of will change it, their mental health starts to degrade, until at last their humanity is exposed, and they can no longer play the ruse of life, no longer ignore the horror of life, which most people learn to shut out of their head, ignore, or not linger on the thought. The more I think about people with ptsd, schizophrenia, psychosis, the more I think they are the most sane of us. Genuinely reacting to something terrible, reacting the way they should, utter horror. Horror to the point their brain begins shutting out everything but fear. Eventually, even that. Shutting out everything.

  • @USAirsoft
    @USAirsoft Год назад +1

    I’ve never been so angry and sad watching a Simple History video.

  • @particularbored6072
    @particularbored6072 Год назад +11

    I once was asked at the rehab I had been working at if I was a veteran. I said no, and asked why. The client said "You just have that look of someone who's been to war." I wasn't sure what to say other than "Yeah...just not overseas."

  • @vinny.g5778
    @vinny.g5778 Год назад +2

    First time I see realistic eyes in Simple History. So unsettling

  • @Steve_Raglan_aka_William_Afton
    @Steve_Raglan_aka_William_Afton Год назад +8

    0:32 They killed Napoleon!

  • @potgnom
    @potgnom Год назад +2

    my great grandpa came home from the eastfront with PTSD, my Grandma said his mind never left Stalingrad and he commited suicide 10 years after the war was over, he couldnt live with the things he did and saw in the war.

  • @kingjaythegreatest9749
    @kingjaythegreatest9749 Год назад +15

    I’m curious, in the military would they have training to overcome the fear of artillery bombardment? Example, having soldiers in the trenches while the artillery cannons fired at them? (Would that help alleviate the fear, or has any practices been used to help soldiers prepare for this?)

    • @ColinTherac117
      @ColinTherac117 Год назад +11

      The practice of having recruits crawl under barbed wire while instructors shoot live machine guns overhead has been a staple event of initial entry training in most militaries for decades. Similar concept.

  • @Noteven0
    @Noteven0 Год назад +2

    Yealland was just a sadistic quack!
    Tartarus has a special place for monsters like him. It’s right next door to the place RUclips moderators end up…

  • @Predz-xh5oj
    @Predz-xh5oj Год назад +297

    They did it, they did the joke

    • @theagency5332
      @theagency5332 Год назад +9

      Yes they did my friend yes they did.

    • @helmetmesa
      @helmetmesa Год назад +7

      In fact they did

    • @gamevidz8763
      @gamevidz8763 Год назад +15

      What’s the joke? And where is it?

    • @shanejones4058
      @shanejones4058 Год назад +2

      @@gamevidz8763inside joke

    • @maltheartistme
      @maltheartistme Год назад +5

      @@gamevidz8763to be honest, i guess the dude in the original picture looked kinda funny? look the picture up for yourself if you’d like.

  • @Super-Shafs
    @Super-Shafs Год назад +4

    A realistic face on the simple history thumbnail doesn't exist, it can't hurt you
    Realistic face on simple history thumbnail:

  • @robproductions2599
    @robproductions2599 Год назад +2

    Alone at the edge of a universe humming a tune