Why Women Fainted So Much in the 19th Century

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  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024

Комментарии • 4,2 тыс.

  • @TodayIFoundOut
    @TodayIFoundOut  6 лет назад +150

    Looking to learn more risque facts about our past? Then watch this video on How to Cure Sexual Urges the 19th Century Way- The Birth of the Graham Cracker:
    ruclips.net/video/JlnhoYc-TsI/видео.html

    • @robkunkel8833
      @robkunkel8833 6 лет назад +4

      Today I Found Out ... that this is an interesting site. ✔️

    • @mattievauhn9010
      @mattievauhn9010 5 лет назад +1

      Today I Found Out !

    • @Sound_Tech
      @Sound_Tech 5 лет назад +1

      Out of genuine curiosity I'm interested in your thoughts of this video:
      ruclips.net/video/rExJskBZcW0/видео.html
      I've watched your video 3 times now, back to back, trying to understand your views on the corset's relation to fainting and on a particularly random day I happened upon this aforementioned video and are curious if and how it effects your opinions and research.

    • @haroldlamble5163
      @haroldlamble5163 4 года назад +1

      Corset to tight couldn't breath.

    • @elizabethcrow4518
      @elizabethcrow4518 4 года назад +2

      Btw they did not tight lace their corsets then. The corset just made the curves more defined and the had bum rolls to exaggerate the shape. Also in the photos you see of women in the late 19th century is the very early stages of photoshop.

  • @rodrigorebollos
    @rodrigorebollos 7 лет назад +4563

    "How's about we get to my place so I can....relieve your hysteria"
    -Some guy in the Victorian Era

    • @mobspeak
      @mobspeak 6 лет назад +291

      Their version of Netflix and chill.

    • @Ooh_Thats_Daqqq
      @Ooh_Thats_Daqqq 6 лет назад +48

      Sorry that was me, I’m the guy. I’m sorry for what I did please forgive me.

    • @geckoo9190
      @geckoo9190 6 лет назад +8

      I think that the profession of gigolo could have been mixed with profession of doctor, what could have been pretty convenient if you don't consider the fact that they showered once per year.

    • @paladinboyd1228
      @paladinboyd1228 6 лет назад +5

      Vulcan Peace, M'lady?

    • @BothHands1
      @BothHands1 6 лет назад +38

      pffft, did you hear him speak about what a chore it was to actually "relieve" her hysteria? In reality, you were probably just interested in your own hysteria, which could be relieved in a minute or two. Why do you think these women needed doctors to do it for them - the guys in their lives clearly weren't.

  • @lonewanderer5515
    @lonewanderer5515 6 лет назад +3318

    You know you have money when you have a room just for fainting in

    • @cseblivestreaming
      @cseblivestreaming 6 лет назад +47

      lone wanderer
      Your profile-picture is so fitting
      Thank God Fallout exists!

    • @kingchop2329
      @kingchop2329 6 лет назад +4

      Hurenson Internet I was gonna say that before i read your reply. XD

    • @WasabiKitCat
      @WasabiKitCat 6 лет назад +22

      It’s called a bedroom...

    • @lonewanderer5515
      @lonewanderer5515 6 лет назад +2

      KHALIIL01 lol yea sex drugs and rock and roll lol

    • @useodyseeorbitchute9450
      @useodyseeorbitchute9450 6 лет назад +24

      It seems that US universities rediscovered idea of having such room for people claiming being in emotional distress, and called it "safe spaces".

  • @Heisenbrick
    @Heisenbrick 4 года назад +505

    A lady faints and someone shouts is there a doctor in the house?
    -Every man in the room stands up!

    • @honey_bee65
      @honey_bee65 4 года назад +29

      Depending on the woman 😉

    • @wms1650
      @wms1650 4 года назад +9

      @@honey_bee65 You got that right.
      Just imagine how embarrassed a "lady" would be fainting and no man showed up to help.☹️💔

    • @user-mc6zk8tc8c
      @user-mc6zk8tc8c 3 года назад

      @@wms1650 There actually was such embarrassments for not being asked to dance by any man in social gatherings.

    • @ltlbuddha
      @ltlbuddha 3 года назад +1

      If the implied reasoning here were true and men were so eager to think of women's needs, women would be more satisfied with heterosexual sex than they are

    • @paulaneary7877
      @paulaneary7877 2 года назад +2

      I feel faint.

  • @sunicarus8607
    @sunicarus8607 6 лет назад +2373

    Literally the day after I watched this, I fainted for the first time in my life. Coincidence? I think not.

    • @lyralexxia5870
      @lyralexxia5870 6 лет назад +69

      I paused the video for several hours and fainted for the first time ever, it's definitely not a coincidence.

    • @sunicarus8607
      @sunicarus8607 6 лет назад +19

      라이언천사의 I hope you're okay! 💚

    • @lyralexxia5870
      @lyralexxia5870 6 лет назад +18

      sunicarus Thanks for asking I'm fine 😃

    • @sunicarus8607
      @sunicarus8607 6 лет назад +14

      라이언천사의 Happy to hear it 😊

    • @carpenter3461
      @carpenter3461 6 лет назад +28

      R/thathappened

  • @galacticcat8464
    @galacticcat8464 7 лет назад +2595

    I've always wondered why the victorian women in the movies fainted at the drop of a hat.

    • @galacticcat8464
      @galacticcat8464 7 лет назад +2

      Hunter deja 😂😂

    • @Agaettis
      @Agaettis 6 лет назад +56

      They were actually doctors that did this practice. They thought that the time that the womb traveled around the body, and it being out of place was one of the 'reasons' for hysteria. It was also one of the 'medical benefits' of corsets, trying to keep that uterus tame lol

    • @Jane-yg3vz
      @Jane-yg3vz 6 лет назад +26

      It was actually because of gas lighting sucking up all the oxygen in the parlor where women sat all day. Women have been wearing corsets for over a thousand years and this fainting epidemic was only prevalent in Victorian times. This is also why fainting was more of a thing with middle and upper class women.

    • @raver4lyfe16
      @raver4lyfe16 6 лет назад +9

      Because they just wanted a good fingering lol

    • @geckoo9190
      @geckoo9190 6 лет назад +6

      I always though that it came from a comedy or such.

  • @10000_angry_bees
    @10000_angry_bees 6 лет назад +2757

    If someone faints from tight lacing
    Do they get waisted?

  • @lindabroad7391
    @lindabroad7391 4 года назад +53

    For a time, during the 1960’s, I lived with my grandmother, and her mother. My great grandmother was born in 1875, during the Victorian era. By the time I knew her, she was mostly blind, partially deaf, and was unable to get around without assistance and in her upper 80’s. To help her with her needs, my grandmother gave her a beautiful bell, the sort that would call a someone for assistance, banish the thought! My great grandmother would ding-a-ling ring for my grandmother about every 5 minutes it seemed to me. It seemed that way to grandma too, so whenever I could after school I would answer the bell. I loved to do it because my great grandmother would tell me stories of her life. My grandmother also told me about the Victorian era, because her mother fancied herself a true Victorian lady, prim and proper, complete with dramatic fainting spells if her bell was left unattended when rung. Thank you for this piece. Very true to the cause.

  • @callinaartymko6417
    @callinaartymko6417 6 лет назад +406

    As someone who does living history, I can say that a corset originally wasn't meant to slim the waist so much as support garments. Like he mentioned in the video, women wore a lot of clothing, so having a corset basically took the stress off of your hips when wearing heavy skirts. However, a corset doesn't so much shrink your waist, rather it changes it from an oval to a circular shape giving the illusion of a smaller waist (think of sticking out your belly). Additionally, fashion called for bustles and full sleeves, enhancing even more the look of a small waist. Obviously there were women who wore corsets to shrink their waist, and there still are extremists, but wearing a properly fitted corset I can comfortably move, breathe, and even dance. I don't believe a corset would have been a main reason for swooning during the Victorian era, rather other reasons that were suggested in the video. Check this out if you don't believe me that corsets are actually really comfortable: ruclips.net/video/6_Ogeug8XPc/видео.html

    • @LadyDragonbane
      @LadyDragonbane 5 лет назад +21

      THIS

    • @gypsyvail
      @gypsyvail 5 лет назад +27

      I've also found that the stays are helpful to be sure the dress always fits - especially for close- fit bodices, it's helpful to have a garment that redistributes that last bowl of ice cream (why yes, I *do* speak from experience) 😁

    • @atropa9945
      @atropa9945 5 лет назад +8

      Thank you. That's exactly what I was looking for

    • @bluesira
      @bluesira 5 лет назад +23

      Keep in mind that he points out that there were lacing traditions and waist-training fashions that were SPECIFIC to the Victorian Era. Corsets have been worn in many forms, for many years, at many different times, by many different types of people, for many different reasons. It doesn't seem fair to compare your experience doing 'living history' with accounts of the time. Even if you reenact Victorian fashions (which I don't think you mentioned specifically, just that you wear a corset) I don't think they would be able to use garments that were so accurate that they contained the toxic or illegal substances that they contained at the time (whalebone/ivory, staining and dying chemicals, etc). Also, moving about in a corset for a limited period of time doesn't really compare to the sort of lifelong waist-training discussed in this video.
      Not saying that some corsets can't be comfortable, or that the other reasons mentioned in the video may not have been the real primary causes for Victorian ladies fainting, but half the comments are people making jokes about masturbating doctors and the other half are all testimonials from ladies saying "but corsets are comfy!" He goes into very specific detail about why that simply was not true for the time, or why "comfort" may have been irrelevant in the face of health factors, and also makes sure to include a dissenting opinion of the time as well that talks about how only people who don't know how to wear corsets would say not to wear corsets. Just... no one is attacking your ability to wear corsets. It's okay.

    • @iluvhcr1
      @iluvhcr1 5 лет назад +28

      bluesira Hi I’ve done Victorian Historical Re-enactment. A few things tight lacing was only done by the upper class and they could afford custom made corsets which means it would be comfortable for them. Also it’s possible to make a corset that significantly reduces the waist size without causing any stress on one’s hips or ribs. I know this from making and knowing various people who make corsets. I’ve also worn a Victorian styled corset for days in a row where I was constantly walking, dancing, singing, etc.
      Now if that isn’t enough there’s a RUclipsr that essentially grew up wearing a corset and has done extensive research into corsets. Here is Her take, since it would be the most similar to those who have done lifelong waist-training: m.ruclips.net/video/rExJskBZcW0/видео.html

  • @tomokokuroki2506
    @tomokokuroki2506 6 лет назад +2712

    "I wear this for comfort."
    It was a lie then and it's a lie now.

    • @oooohapenny4707
      @oooohapenny4707 6 лет назад +151

      This is why I stopped wearing clothes

    • @ingrid_inthesky
      @ingrid_inthesky 6 лет назад +76

      I find them comfy, especially when having menstrual cramps and back pain. It also just feels like a nice hug haha

    • @InTheFleshInc
      @InTheFleshInc 6 лет назад +10

      Imagine the smell of the Vagina with all that clothing under wear. Because showers were not a norm & baths were few and far between. Did you ask yourself underwear? Hahahahaha
      They just wanted to be under cover whores, getting orgasminzed.

    • @TheStanleyParables
      @TheStanleyParables 6 лет назад

      Tomoko Kuroki explains your pic

    • @TheStanleyParables
      @TheStanleyParables 6 лет назад

      Renske050 lucky

  • @anonymouscandle1223
    @anonymouscandle1223 6 лет назад +502

    So what I learnt from this was, if you were a lesbian in the Victorian era, be a midwife

  • @BlackCroft666
    @BlackCroft666 6 лет назад +353

    Corsets are like shoes. Cheap ones aren't comfortable. Expensive ones made by experts on your body size are heaven on earth.

    • @embroideredragdoll
      @embroideredragdoll 4 года назад +5

      BlackCroft666LP true

    • @pr0xZen
      @pr0xZen 4 года назад +6

      A modern, properly tailored and fitted corset isn't really the wearable, wrap-around bench vice it used to be back then though. It's not so much for squishing your innards into a Brazilian lift ^^,

    • @inlonging
      @inlonging 4 года назад +1

      3:05 this was already addressed

    • @DuchessOfDoofus
      @DuchessOfDoofus 4 года назад +21

      @@pr0xZen actually modern corsets (waist trainers really) are very rarely actually fitted properly _especially_ when compared to the careful craftsmanship of historical corset makers. Also there is actually _no_ evidence that would suggest that ribs were removed, organs permanently displaced, digestive system ruined and the like. If you can find one skeleton that suggests this kind of impact was made hmu. Corsets were designed to be comfortable and practical as a priority. Despite what this bloke says, tight lacing was actually _very_ rare and greatly frowned upon by most respectable women. It was actually opposers to the suffragette movement that invented most of the myths about corsetry and targeted tight-lacers claiming they were the rule rather than the anomaly to give women less validity in this movement.

    • @rileyboomer8627
      @rileyboomer8627 4 года назад +12

      @@DuchessOfDoofus it took 2 minutes on Google scholar to find illustrations and studies showing permanent deformation and damage...

  • @SFVYachtClub
    @SFVYachtClub 3 года назад +41

    Personal vibrators eliminated the position of "Hysteria Treatment Professional"
    *_automation claims another job_*

  • @connormcgill2419
    @connormcgill2419 7 лет назад +1979

    Oh no I'm gonna binge watch hundreds of these

    • @TodayIFoundOut
      @TodayIFoundOut  7 лет назад +129

      At least you'll learn interesting things, unlike binge watching most channels on RUclips. :-)

    • @derinedala5032
      @derinedala5032 7 лет назад +101

      Are you suggesting that I won't learn interesting things from watching videos of kittens trying citrus fruits for the first time for four hours?

    • @Robert-rt9ho
      @Robert-rt9ho 7 лет назад +17

      Today I Found Out I can't stop watching I must finish them all

    • @alisona.4166
      @alisona.4166 6 лет назад +8

      He said most, you can learn a lot from that, everyone knows that it's the most intelligent thing to watch besides Rick and Morty.

    • @zariahscott8212
      @zariahscott8212 6 лет назад

      Connor McGill haha and I love being your 700th like

  • @Lightwaverable
    @Lightwaverable 7 лет назад +1399

    I always laugh when I'm alone.

    • @DogFoxHybrid
      @DogFoxHybrid 6 лет назад +5

      When Mr Poopybutthole started talking about how much he accomplished between seasons and faulted the viewers for probably having achieved nothing at all in the same time, .... I LOLed

    • @skybladebloodheart4247
      @skybladebloodheart4247 6 лет назад +9

      its just saying most cases of lauphter are small quick social ques rather than full blown lauphter

    • @TheChickenRiceBowl
      @TheChickenRiceBowl 6 лет назад

      skyblade bloodheart Laughter* c:

    • @skybladebloodheart4247
      @skybladebloodheart4247 6 лет назад +1

      its a hard word sue me XD lol

    • @kylebrown4377
      @kylebrown4377 6 лет назад +5

      skyblade bloodheart To be fair to you, in English a -gh- doesn't (normally) make a "F" sound.... except in laughter

  • @blossomsaturnalia108
    @blossomsaturnalia108 5 лет назад +377

    Lesbian in the Victorian era.
    "Call the midwife, I shall be in my fainting room."

    • @nauniwhitewave-runningmout4526
      @nauniwhitewave-runningmout4526 4 года назад +9

      Lmao

    • @crabbearyscottage9899
      @crabbearyscottage9899 4 года назад +5

      But in the Victorian era, people hated LGBTQ so that means nobody was gay or lesbian

    • @ReddCrystal
      @ReddCrystal 4 года назад +44

      @@crabbearyscottage9899 Well, people were, they just weren't allowed to show it for fear of being cast out, imprisoned, or worse. But that didn't mean they didn't KNOW of their attraction to their own gender, they simply didn't have a word for it.

    • @crabbearyscottage9899
      @crabbearyscottage9899 4 года назад +4

      Jester
      Ok 👌🏻

    • @MarcillaSmith
      @MarcillaSmith 3 года назад

      I feel there's a subreddit someone should be referencing here

  • @robmcmuffin8453
    @robmcmuffin8453 6 лет назад +1398

    Victorian era time travel tips: Do NOT lick the wall paper, Do post a resume on being a "pelvic masseuse".

    • @Mac_an_Mheiriceanaigh
      @Mac_an_Mheiriceanaigh 6 лет назад +47

      they don't want pelvic masseuses, they only want pelvic masseurs!!

    • @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT
      @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT 6 лет назад +97

      Given the habits of personal hygiene in those days, I seriously doubt that anyone from today would want to stand very close to the pelvic area of those ladies...

    • @NajSinghs
      @NajSinghs 6 лет назад +6

      Jose Silveira LMAO

    • @Kasatome
      @Kasatome 6 лет назад +39

      But the snozberries taste like snozberries. I have to lick the paper!

    • @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT
      @JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT 6 лет назад +11

      Well, it probably isn't worse than licking the said ladies (I leave the exact spot for you to chose).

  • @thestabbybrit4798
    @thestabbybrit4798 6 лет назад +570

    So now we know why Victorian women always faint when an attractive man is around.
    Is this also where the term "playing doctor" comes from?

    • @Luca-zk3jb
      @Luca-zk3jb 6 лет назад +8

      TheStabbyBrit 😂😂

    • @kittysouth4254
      @kittysouth4254 6 лет назад +52

      That is a really good question!

    • @ndnaf3705
      @ndnaf3705 6 лет назад +12

      TheStabbyBrit could be!

    • @mcgibs
      @mcgibs 6 лет назад +41

      That actually makes of lot of sense.

    • @tyhnbgtyhnbgt
      @tyhnbgtyhnbgt 6 лет назад +3

      Good point,, is there a doctor in the house!!??

  • @IncredulousIndividual
    @IncredulousIndividual 6 лет назад +41

    What I learned: masturbation is not a sin if you are reliving Hysteria

  • @princefleaswallow5182
    @princefleaswallow5182 6 лет назад +105

    i believe that much of the fainting can be attributed to arsenical wallpapers. back then green was an extremely sought after colour, and when Scheele’s Green, the original green arsenical paint, was made, many others came after it and everyone wanted a vivid arsenical green in their homes, resulting in a lot of sickness and a lot of death by arsenic poisoning. i myself lived in a home with arsenic wallpaper- the wm. buttrick house in peperell, circa late 1700s-early 1800s. someone at some point had put arsenical wallpapering in my room, my sister’s room, and the kitchen. the owners before us didn’t live in the house, it was supposedly a family home they wanted to keep. they sold it to us and within a week of staying i was constantly fainting, had migraines every day, and could hardly get out of bed.

    • @hypnotoad28
      @hypnotoad28 6 лет назад +10

      How did you end up realizing what the problem was, and resolving it?

    • @hotpotato2102
      @hotpotato2102 5 лет назад +8

      Hypnotoad very late, but maybe it's because they that the house was Victorian and the walls were a specific color of green

    • @RatTaxi
      @RatTaxi 4 года назад +7

      Oh, my god. I'm so glad you realized! Many ppl have never even heard of it. I only knew bc I'm a huge history buff and love William Morris designs.

  • @Silkendrum
    @Silkendrum 7 лет назад +121

    I'm surprised that you didn't mention the connection between the Greek word for uterus, and hysteria. Hysteria was thought to be centered in and caused by the uterus, and thus a unique and inevitable failing of women.

    • @Leo9ine
      @Leo9ine 7 лет назад +21

      Yep! That's why a hysterectomy is called such. The root of the word is hysteria as it pertains to the uterus.

    • @priscillawilson2634
      @priscillawilson2634 6 лет назад +1

      Duh. (Failing?????)

    • @Ajehy
      @Ajehy 6 лет назад +2

      Priscilla Wilson
      Yep, a failing. A reason why women weren’t allowed to own property, hold most jobs, or sue for divorce. They had a uterus, which messed with their brains. In the Middle Ages, it was believed that the uterus would float up towards the brain, interfering with its functions. The cure? Sit on perfume and sniff dung to encourage it to go back down.
      Quote Queen Elizabeth I’s speech at Tilbury: “I know I have the body of a weak, feeble woman; but I have the heart and stomach of a king”.
      Women were considered inferior, and part of it was their internal organs.
      (Which is obviously complete BS)

    • @homealone5087
      @homealone5087 Год назад

      Accurate

  • @lughfiregod16
    @lughfiregod16 7 лет назад +1309

    Corsets may have been terrible, but at least something good "came" of it.

  • @wickandde
    @wickandde 6 лет назад +788

    To the wonderful person who invented the vibrator, my histeria thanks you a million times over.

    • @melanieortiz712
      @melanieortiz712 5 лет назад +11

      There's actually a movie out about the doctor responsable for it.

    • @blackjacksonevipreveluvarm1369
      @blackjacksonevipreveluvarm1369 5 лет назад +2

      Ew

    • @CooganBear
      @CooganBear 5 лет назад +1

      You're welcome David. This is David right? 😱

    • @jimmym3352
      @jimmym3352 5 лет назад +17

      I still say women are lucky in this regard. Not only can you have multiple ones without a big deal, but toys are so much better. Toys for men don't really seem to work or do anything. They just seem like a way to rip you off.

    • @Cooe.
      @Cooe. 5 лет назад +34

      @Van Tazz Fuck off, ya prude. The 1950's are over buddy.

  • @freudianslippers6567
    @freudianslippers6567 6 лет назад +113

    "The only people who speak out about x issue, are people who have never tried" wow, people don't change their arguments do they?

    • @joyharmon1110
      @joyharmon1110 6 лет назад +7

      No, they don't. I always answer that by asking them, "In that case, it is pointless to have literature or theater."

    • @DuchessOfDoofus
      @DuchessOfDoofus 4 года назад +3

      That is completely beyond the point of that letter. At that time, many were spreading misinformation about corsetry (and still are), claiming they had all the answers because they wore it for a day but the fact of the matter is that to _actually_ understand what life was like in a corset they had to have worn it regularly and _properly._ She was simply defending the garment that had given millions of women imperative support for hundreds of years from knobheads who had no understanding of ecological validity

    • @NoName-ms8jb
      @NoName-ms8jb 4 года назад +3

      It is a very convenient argument because it allows the person to dismiss anyone who challenges their point of view. Anytime someone speaks out they are dismissed as someone who lacks the adequate experience to complain regardless of how experienced they actually are.

    • @DuchessOfDoofus
      @DuchessOfDoofus 4 года назад +2

      @@NoName-ms8jb sure, if it was being used as a placeholder argument. The point is not to dismiss all points of view given by the inexperienced but to dismiss claims of truth. These people were not just spreading ideas but rather claiming they had indisputable truth which inherently can't be gotten without a primary or credible (often expert) source. It's like if I claimed that Botox caused rashes and pain even though I have never had it nor do I know anyone who has or anyone in that area of expertise. I could hypothesise or express concern about such a thing but it would not be appropriate to proclaim it as truth without substantial or credible evidence from someone who has knowledge or experience.
      I'm sorry if this came off as hostile, I tend to get a bit heated about these topics, just know that I just want to stop the spread of stigma and misinformation about historical clothing, particularly corsetry. 😊

    • @NootalieWalf
      @NootalieWalf 3 года назад

      Freudian Slippers My sentiments exactly.

  • @TranslatorCarminum
    @TranslatorCarminum 7 лет назад +1160

    For a moment there, I thought he was going to say that it became common for women to feign hysteria just so they had a socially acceptable excuse to get fingered. Given how prudish the Victorian era was, God only knows how much sexual tension the typical person had to keep bottled up, so it would make sense if at least a few sly women figured out how to have a good time without being judged for it!

    • @taqu
      @taqu 7 лет назад +204

      Honestly, that likely IS the case, but it's not very well documented because it wasn't exactly proper for women to admit to wanting and finding sexual pleasure from what was supposed to be just a medical procedure.

    • @DennisComella
      @DennisComella 6 лет назад +62

      Pretty sure that was the subtext.

    • @Poofiemus
      @Poofiemus 6 лет назад +81

      I was totally thinking along those lines too. I wonder how many well-to-do women were basically having affairs with the family doctor this way. . .

    • @cheshirekat3050
      @cheshirekat3050 6 лет назад +42

      (nods)
      "My husband is getting some on the side, so why shouldn't I ?"

    • @valken666
      @valken666 6 лет назад +5

      They had their own fingers, no need for a doctor.

  • @Ajehy
    @Ajehy 6 лет назад +493

    As someone who worked for three years at a living history museum set in 1845, I totally agree on the “too many layers of hot clothes“ thing. We didn’t have to wear corsets (unlike women of the day), and we only had to wear one petticoat instead of the usual 4 to 6, but in the summer those floor-length gowns are brutal. Plus the “day cap” on your head to control the hair, keep it clean & for “modesty”. Lots of heat gets lost through the head, or trapped there in this case.
    I had to carry a hand fan at all times, because for historical accuracy we couldn’t have electric fans or air conditioning, and I still often felt like I was going to pass out. And I was lucky, working in buildings where I didn’t have to have a fire lit at all times. Just imagine cooking for your family over a hearth fire, for hours, while wearing five layers of skirts at minimum! And those skirts are made of cotton, so if you get too close to the fire, you can catch fire and die.
    (That’s not hyperbole. I was helping to move a heavy pot full of dyeing wool off a fire one day and my gown caught flame. I knew to stop, drop and roll and one of my co-workers dumped water on me, but they didn’t know that back then. And the cotton burns FAST. Only reason I wasn’t injured was the wool leggings I was wearing that October under my gown, since wool is naturally fire-resistant.)
    And the kicker? These were not wealthy women. These outfits were the standards for the middle class in rural upstate New York! If you wore fewer than four petticoats, It was possible that the shape of your legs would be visible, and you would be seen as a “loose woman”, and socially ostracized. These ladies couldn’t afford the more breathable hoop skirts. Also, the middle class didn’t get fainting couches or fancy vibrators. They had smelling salts.
    Instead of “here, let the nice doctor massage your lady bits”, it was “here, smell this ammonia (which smells a bit like Windex or urine) so it stimulates an inhalation reflex and you can breathe again.”

    • @DawnSuttonfabfour
      @DawnSuttonfabfour 6 лет назад +34

      Ajehy That's exactly what happened to Oscar Wilde's younger and only, sister. Her dress caught fire in the drawing room, lounge, and spread so quickly she died from her injuries.

    • @fionaglenanne8082
      @fionaglenanne8082 6 лет назад +19

      Ajehy that's a really awesome anecdote! thank you!

    • @theducklinghomesteadandgar6639
      @theducklinghomesteadandgar6639 6 лет назад +8

      Ajehy
      WOw, bless any and all souls who had to endure such atrocity in many cases as was shown having the reorganization of ones organs and all causing their own problems plus all of the pain, the inability to breath and eat regularly, not only was there pain from being bound so tightly there were many times where the boning would stab the woman in most cases causing mild to severe pain while in others instances to varying degrees the woman would or could be stabbed by the boning, either due to sizing issues, too large but usually too small causing if she were to bend or swoop down to do or retrieve something the bone could literally stab her but in other cases especially where sticks were used then next bone rarely with ivory the boning could be old and dried out and or brittle if not care for properly and therefore causing many to splinter in two usually causing a pointed and sharp edge perfect for stabbing the lady for simply sitting down or heaven forbid should she faint, and the really really crappy thing is it was all done for fashion and women let themselves be dictated to via usually a man in the fashion field anyway to tell them something so ridiculous, unnecessary, and painful should be all the rage and therefore must be worn!
      Sorry but this woman would have never fit into those eras, heck I still don't fit in but anyway, no man or woman is going to tell me anything is or is not fashionable, nor will I allow anyone to dictate and tell me I am happy or sad if I don't have this or that status type symbol and I absolutely refuse even if given one to live in a mansion and or have expensive vehicles like lamboghini, land rover, etc... Give them to me free and clear and then Watch me change the world with the funds I would get from selling it all! I would for one do away with all of the elite, with All Banksters, the pope and vatican, and any priests practicing pedophillia, the queen and whole royal family plus all other royal families Practicing these evil dark Arts of pedophillia, the drug kings the human trafficking kings the clintons obamas the plus the cia the pentagon and all black ops the people at cern and shut it down and reverse what has be done so far!
      Find out exactly who is pulling all of everybodys strings and sit them down and have a chat as well as anyone still left in isis and boko haram as well as these george soros antifa and kkk and other groups, blm that he and hillary have created and shut them all down! I would aprehend hillary and bill clinton as well as michale and barry soetoro aka obama as well as all cia, fbi, pentagon, fema, irs, dhs and dhs, nsa

    • @dickonmanwoody7599
      @dickonmanwoody7599 6 лет назад +1

      Ajehy You can thank Queen Victoria for all of that.

    • @kittysouth4254
      @kittysouth4254 6 лет назад +26

      Oh god. Please learn to use punctuation! That is the longest run on sentence ive ever seen...

  • @HabibRKO
    @HabibRKO 4 года назад +23

    Girl: Henry come over
    Boy: I can’t I’m building a railroad
    Girl: I’m thinking about fainting later
    Boy: 🏃

  • @annelisezeender7455
    @annelisezeender7455 5 лет назад +151

    I laugh by myself literally all the time, does that make me special?

  • @spectrum3808
    @spectrum3808 7 лет назад +766

    so the cure for fainting is masturbation?

    • @benjivilleneuve9906
      @benjivilleneuve9906 7 лет назад +51

      Colin Wolcott not necessarily but ever since ancient Greece, the only treatment available in the west aside from being jacketed and committed was forced orgasm. Whether done by masturbation, vibrator or one of those ancient versions of the modern cry...cybil...I forget the name but the machine that replicates a thrusting penis a woman aligned her passage up to. its only been like 75 yrs that this was totally phased out as quackery. in fact the turn of the century to the 1950s or so saw horrible torture in the form of treatment too (well the "too" only if you agree that today such treatments mentioned would be assault) cuz that's when electroshock treatment was big as were lobotomies which had huge famous cases like JFKs sister and were so popular they had do it at home kits that people use to this day if they are really into the whole drilling holes in the scalp trend I forget the name but man is it extreme and stupid

    • @jessicamoore8903
      @jessicamoore8903 7 лет назад +23

      Benji Villeneuve Drilling holes in the skull is called trepanning.

    • @ethpling165
      @ethpling165 7 лет назад +19

      Benji Villeneuve ...
      Guess that's why I never faint

    • @MrShadowpanther3
      @MrShadowpanther3 6 лет назад +19

      Maybe that explains why I never faint... 8^)

    • @Patricio4Christ
      @Patricio4Christ 6 лет назад +7

      No, cure for fainting is NOT masturbation!

  • @SeraphimKnight
    @SeraphimKnight 7 лет назад +1609

    Spending your days giving the finger to women sounds like an... interesting sort of job lol

    • @2330shawn
      @2330shawn 6 лет назад +78

      Seraph that is until you find out that them wearing all those clothes made the ol front butt, the equivalent version of today's swamp balls.

    • @waderznutz8605
      @waderznutz8605 6 лет назад +53

      Seraph it depends how clean they weren't or were

    • @tinyturquoise94
      @tinyturquoise94 6 лет назад +147

      waderz nutz nobody was clean back then my dude

    • @geckoo9190
      @geckoo9190 6 лет назад +43

      Sure, if you don't mind that they took only one shower per year.

    • @valken666
      @valken666 6 лет назад +47

      How good it would have been to relieve some hysteria from 4 or 5 80 year old ladies in the morning.

  • @AnthonyMonaghan
    @AnthonyMonaghan 5 лет назад +315

    Where do I apply for the job of hysteria reliever?

    • @bigbill2444
      @bigbill2444 5 лет назад +19

      Someday, when you grow hair on places than just your head, you will learn the answer.

    • @christianheichel
      @christianheichel 5 лет назад +23

      Job interview........
      Job interviewer. Are you a professional?
      Me. Uhm...yes a professional....an expert you might say....you might even say I enjoy my job. If I can help even one lady get rid of her hysteria I think my job will have been well worth it.
      Job interviewer. Well you seem to be the perfect choice then. Your job starts now..
      Me. shouts "YES"

    • @vazdagazda3940
      @vazdagazda3940 5 лет назад +8

      @@bigbill2444 uhh, dude looks like he's 40...

    • @melissaivy5309
      @melissaivy5309 4 года назад +2

      😆

    • @GoodVideos4
      @GoodVideos4 4 года назад +5

      You'd first need a time machine. Wrong century now, unfortunately. :-)

  • @TheMayorofTown
    @TheMayorofTown 6 лет назад +302

    3:36
    "It is difficult to imagine a slavery more cruel or far-reaching in it's injurious consequences than that imposed by fashion..."
    Wait, this was said in 1891?
    ...When literal slavery was still a thing?

    • @vilwarin5635
      @vilwarin5635 6 лет назад +14

      I think it means that authentic slavery is impossed by others and a slave has no choice, whereas the fashion was choosen by the women, and theoretically nobody made them to wear them

    • @romeldminter5866
      @romeldminter5866 5 лет назад +4

      19century whalebone corsets for a small waist or Japanese wooden metal screw feet binding for cute tiny holves.Fashion is fun to socialy masquerade but by the end of the night Vanity kills in some way or another..and tight shoes are a mf.

    • @jlp2061
      @jlp2061 5 лет назад +3

      Ever actually worn one? I’ve worn multiples from multiple time periods for theater. Thus still not as much as many layers. I blacked out and had to learn to breath differently. What is positive

    • @jlp2061
      @jlp2061 5 лет назад +2

      What is positive. Good posture.

    • @GeneralNickles
      @GeneralNickles 5 лет назад +36

      Slavery was abolished in 1865 you fucking moron.
      And don't give me any of that "but people were still treated like slaves and blah blah blah." Bullshit, because that shit still happens to this day.

  • @alexnicolaou3579
    @alexnicolaou3579 7 лет назад +511

    the same is happening to this day with high heels, it has been proven that it causes harm to a woman's feet and body, but for fashion, and out of tradition and status quo, the proper formal lady attire still includes high heels..

    • @hajarmdn4883
      @hajarmdn4883 7 лет назад +37

      So true but we still wear them. While I don't do it regularly and not for like 2 years after I sprained one of my ankles badly. I can't deny that they make your legs look so pretty that a lot of women are willing to take the risk

    • @765respect
      @765respect 6 лет назад +16

      I wore high heels as soon as I got in high school. I wore them everywhere up until arthritis took up residence in my left foot 15 yrs after tearing my left acl skiing at age 38. I even wore them in my home while cooking and washing up. Before the arthritis, heels provided no discomfort. Average height was 3 inches. Loved them and miss them.

    • @angelamazakas2624
      @angelamazakas2624 6 лет назад +93

      Some jobs even *require* women to wear high heels!

    • @neverlandonearth77
      @neverlandonearth77 6 лет назад +69

      I hate high heels and will not wear them.

    • @marshmallowmountains4636
      @marshmallowmountains4636 6 лет назад +88

      I had a teacher that always wore high heels. She told us how we should never do it because she can't walk without them anymore. She said the tendon in her ankles were ruined and hurt when her feet were flat on the floor.

  • @isbsey
    @isbsey 6 лет назад +804

    I am in shock! I am 65 and when I was a teenager my grandmother died. My mother and I helped clear out the house after her death and I found a machine just like the one above. I asked what it was and my mother and Aunts scurried about gathering the box out of my hand, saying that it was an early hairdryer. I always wondered what the fuss was about!!! My grandmother was a great one for "having the vapours" and she retired to her room often. Now I know what she got up to. Pity she hadn't shared her secret with my poor old grandfather who accepted that once the heir and spare had been born, there was a No Entry sign put up. Poor old thing!

    • @cherryberry9468
      @cherryberry9468 6 лет назад +32

      isbsey 😂😂😂

    • @Bethsabee_Sheba_Newrose
      @Bethsabee_Sheba_Newrose 6 лет назад +100

      😂 Maybe Grandpa’s key had lost its, um, firmness.

    • @kalleklp7291
      @kalleklp7291 6 лет назад +69

      Damn..I feel sorry for your old grandfather...

    • @isbsey
      @isbsey 6 лет назад +106

      We'll never know now, poor old dear. Some men seemed to just accept this. Once my husband was born his mother put on the barbed wire knickers and his father went along with that. He was never unfaithful and nursed her until her death in their 80s, never complaining, telling everyone he had a wonderful wife and mother to his chldren - which she was. Sex doesn't seem to have been the most important thing in a lot of long lasting marriages, but I think that was in generations before good contraception.

    • @theatomickid137
      @theatomickid137 6 лет назад +40

      So he just stopped being horny? Yes, right. He found other avenues... believe me.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 6 лет назад +235

    I've also heard a rather grimmer explanation - that the socially-enforced stunted emotional development of many of the women of the time from higher social classes meant that they reacted in a childlike manner to stress, and that included fainting. Witness the many adult women in Jane Austen's books having temper tantrums and freaking out over the slightest provocation.

    • @dominicmanester8125
      @dominicmanester8125 5 лет назад +54

      I mean... a lot of young women are still being taught to act in a childlike manner to things they don't like, usually in university.

    • @MBison-im2qy
      @MBison-im2qy 5 лет назад +14

      at least they weren't holding witch trials, so then, progress.

    • @christianheichel
      @christianheichel 5 лет назад +8

      While not a psychology text book on the subject Jane Austin does get the idea of how society was at that time with a descent measure of accuracy...that and she is a great author.

    • @Toskrr
      @Toskrr 5 лет назад +9

      Jane Austen wrote parodies. I doubt her books were 100% realistic.

    • @Spills51
      @Spills51 5 лет назад +9

      So you mean, exactly like it is today?
      If you don't see how women across the board over react in this day an age I am truly baffled by you.

  • @Frredster
    @Frredster 6 лет назад +342

    "It is difficult to imagine a slavery more senseless, cruel or far-reaching in its injurious consequences than that imposed by fashion on civilized womanhood during the last generation." I'm sure there's a number of true slaves that would've eagerly traded places with those women.

    • @shintotchi
      @shintotchi 6 лет назад +24

      I scrolled specifically to see if anyone else caught that LOL

    • @sertaki
      @sertaki 6 лет назад +40

      This might be the quintessential instance of white privilege.

    • @nikkistahr7105
      @nikkistahr7105 6 лет назад +13

      Fredster !! I completely agree, damn near gasped..like reallllllly reallllllly now...we couldn't think of anything worse..hmm interesting 🤔

    • @lesleybrown1583
      @lesleybrown1583 5 лет назад +6

      WHITE LIVES MATTER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @sheawhite9451
      @sheawhite9451 5 лет назад +6

      @@jackuzi8252 yes it did they were doing it for the gratificationation of men

  • @evileangel1
    @evileangel1 7 лет назад +126

    omfg..... people used to make complaints about "You just don't understand if you are not a part of us" rants for so long, not even the format has changed nowadays!

  • @jivejunior8753
    @jivejunior8753 6 лет назад +896

    I don't know why people romanticize the Victorian era. It was so screwed up!

    • @spartan70055
      @spartan70055 6 лет назад +55

      Jive Junior And modern times aren't?

    • @Bethsabee_Sheba_Newrose
      @Bethsabee_Sheba_Newrose 6 лет назад +165

      spartan70055 OP’s statement did not, in any conceivable manner, imply the current world isn’t screwed up.

    • @spinylordship7671
      @spinylordship7671 6 лет назад +45

      Honestly, I like Victorian-era styled CLOTHING that's made modern-day and that's about it. Even so, I wouldn't wear it often and I do use those styles for certain costumes, but... Yeah, you're right. This time was really weird and super screwed up.

    • @spartan70055
      @spartan70055 6 лет назад +7

      uuamenator I'd say it's a big toss up between the two.

    • @nomadpi1
      @nomadpi1 6 лет назад +4

      Haven't read a bit of history have you! You romanticize contemporary media slop---everything is a copy of a copy of a copy...movies, televisions programs, self-help books, and let's not forget the I.Q. level exhibited by Yahoo /RUclips comments. The Victorian era was where it was socially approved to improve yourself...they really had no modern conveniences - very uncomfortable so they spent time vocalizing idealism...Freud you know.

  • @jayblack5231
    @jayblack5231 5 лет назад +13

    "It is hard to imagine a slavery more senseless and cruel than that of fashion."
    -19th century, American newspaper

  • @RandomNexus
    @RandomNexus 4 года назад

    This was fun and informative (as usual) thank you! :D

  • @lillyg6763
    @lillyg6763 6 лет назад +787

    You also forgot to mention that hysteria was never real, and is no longer considered a medical condition/diagnosis. You may assume people would know, or figure this out, but there you would be mistaken...

    • @Impetuss
      @Impetuss 6 лет назад +80

      Today we call it being horny

    • @nicktrains2234
      @nicktrains2234 6 лет назад +27

      Bunni Bunns you have not met my friend Melissa. Hysteria is the only way I can think of describing her character

    • @RajSingh-qc6lq
      @RajSingh-qc6lq 6 лет назад +23

      There's a difference between crazy and hysteric. Everyone's got a little bit of crazy in them.

    • @Mac_an_Mheiriceanaigh
      @Mac_an_Mheiriceanaigh 6 лет назад +20

      I am pretty sure the video was attempting to describe... "hysteria" ... without using any inappropriate language or be overtly risqué

    • @chelsear9483
      @chelsear9483 6 лет назад +62

      Hysteria was cause to put women in the psych ward for life, where they would die from the shitty treatment there. It seems silly and like a joke now, but it was very serious and sometimes dangerous to be diagnosed with hysteria. It was also a way for men to keep women down since if your husband, brother or father or even non family members sometime said you had hysteria and wanted you to go to the psych ward you were going and there was no way you could get out of it because they thought women didn't know what the hell they were talking about.

  • @yaelrar.4460
    @yaelrar.4460 6 лет назад +58

    Actually I heard a historian teach that women's corsets actually did provide support for holding babies on their hips, carrying buckets of water, baskets of laundry, and carrying heavy iron kettles.

    • @ashsummers5877
      @ashsummers5877 5 лет назад +12

      Arguably, their muscles were so atrophied from relying on the corset that they needed the corsets for support to do those things.

    • @n.ayisha
      @n.ayisha 4 года назад +3

      doubtful they were talking about the super-tightly-laced upper-class ladies. they had servants to do all that stuff. for the lower-classes, the support provided by a less-torturous corset would accomplish what that historian suggested.

    • @embroideredragdoll
      @embroideredragdoll 4 года назад +4

      the N.Ayisha the upperclass corsets weren’t so tortuous. They were quite comfortable due to the fact that it was tailored to their body type. They also wore soft linens beneath as to stop chafing (you know how you wear socks before wearing wellies to stop blisters?). Tight lacing was as common and frequent back as wearing a full latex garment is nowadays. As in, rare and only used as fetish wear.
      Ash is also right about the atrophy. The only problem a corset caused was upper body muscular atrophy. And that was due to corsets being worn by women since childhood (which by the way don’t worry child corsets were intended to support rather than give a mature shape)

  • @florencepierce1864
    @florencepierce1864 4 года назад +15

    Just saw this one from 3 years back. I love how Simon Whistler manfully strove to (almost) keep a straight face right until (almost) the end. Ah, euphemisms!

  • @sammiller2637
    @sammiller2637 5 лет назад +1

    You make great content brother, thanks for all the great vids.

  • @stanleycoleman
    @stanleycoleman 7 лет назад +336

    Who wouldn't want a fainting chair?

    • @millerrepin4452
      @millerrepin4452 6 лет назад +13

      Who wouldn't want a feinting doctor ;)

    • @bento5681
      @bento5681 6 лет назад +1

      stanleycoleman a man

    • @shiningarmor2838
      @shiningarmor2838 6 лет назад +2

      Not Rarity, evidently

    • @mcgibs
      @mcgibs 6 лет назад +3

      Today they're more like a hangover chair.

    • @Tonatsi
      @Tonatsi 6 лет назад

      I would rather my chair not fall over from fainting...

  • @billny33
    @billny33 7 лет назад +719

    didn't husbands find it suspicious at all that doctors who treated 'hysteria' were often doing something that quite resembled what the husband did to the wife when they were making babies? Were there no instincts of "hey there, get off my wife, that's my job damnit!"

    • @hajarmdn4883
      @hajarmdn4883 7 лет назад +390

      They didn't care about the women getting off and didn't even think it was a thing. They knew nothing of the clitoris and thought that only men felt pleasure from sex so I'm pretty sure they didn't do it to their wives

    • @sierraalice8072
      @sierraalice8072 6 лет назад +171

      Hajar Mdn even though I already knew this, reading it just made me sad

    • @TheRedRaccoonDog
      @TheRedRaccoonDog 6 лет назад +68

      +Hajar Mdn How quaint that they never thought to ask their wife.

    • @melody3741
      @melody3741 6 лет назад +70

      TheRedRaccoonDog quaint is not the word i would use.

    • @kevstacey8639
      @kevstacey8639 6 лет назад +166

      There might've been ones who put two and two together and never called the doctor again, instead treating their wives' "hysteria" themselves. We can only assume as people tended to not discuss what went on in the bedroom in those days.

  • @ari3lz3pp3lin
    @ari3lz3pp3lin 5 лет назад +11

    I laugh more often when alone. I have always been self-conscious of my laughter and so rarely really let it out around others.

  • @theretrodragonyope
    @theretrodragonyope 6 лет назад

    This is great! you even linked where original information came from; you are great. I can find new websites for various information.

  • @cptkilgore
    @cptkilgore 6 лет назад +378

    With their organs being misplaced and reshaped over time is it no wonder death at child birth was so common.

    • @MysteriousAsteria
      @MysteriousAsteria 6 лет назад +74

      No idea if tight lacing had really any effect on that, but regardless if women wore corsets or not, death by birth was common in general in all eras and cultures around the globe before modern medicine and hygiene standards.
      Doctors and midwifes then didn't know they had to disinfect and wash their hands and instruments after every operation or birth. Not only mother and child but even the medical staff was in constant danger, as it wasn't rare to catch a deadly infection through contact with body fluids of sick patients or corpses.

    • @penguinlove9240
      @penguinlove9240 6 лет назад +4

      cptkilgore it's still common 😒

    • @robloxguy192
      @robloxguy192 6 лет назад +2

      nigga child birth is not common

    • @wholeshebang1
      @wholeshebang1 6 лет назад +8

      Hoovy - Is it necessary to use racist terminology?

    • @lukeothedukeo
      @lukeothedukeo 6 лет назад +1

      Hoovy Not in the developed world, but a large chunk of the world, most of it in fact, doesn't follow the same health standards you'll find in Europe, the US, Japan, Canada, etc.

  • @autumnmiller9225
    @autumnmiller9225 6 лет назад +422

    I would also like to add one more reason...it could've also been the opium, heroin, or laudanum that they took for everything back then.

    • @aquablue7942
      @aquablue7942 6 лет назад +36

      dont forget cocaine !!!!....

    • @wherethecricketsings
      @wherethecricketsings 6 лет назад

      Autumn Mille

    • @anisfairburn2496
      @anisfairburn2496 6 лет назад +2

      The things they do for vanity..

    • @catherinecaldwell7757
      @catherinecaldwell7757 6 лет назад +7

      Cocaine was in Coca Cola until early 1900

    • @vickiesutherland6240
      @vickiesutherland6240 6 лет назад

      I don't think too many women were drug sniffin', opiod syrup carrying sluts back then. Not like the Little pigs of today. But they'd like you to believe that now wouldn't they, chums?

  • @hankzbiczak6838
    @hankzbiczak6838 3 года назад

    Very informative

  • @domiparavasilinus603
    @domiparavasilinus603 6 лет назад +20

    Subbed. Well presented, interesting and apparently well researched...and you did it in a mature manner which is incredibly refreshing on YT.

  • @adembroski
    @adembroski 6 лет назад +682

    It'a ok, ma'am, I'm a hysterologist.

    • @TrixAreForKicks
      @TrixAreForKicks 6 лет назад +12

      Aj Dembroski ohohohooooo hubba hubba

    • @PB-eg2je
      @PB-eg2je 6 лет назад +12

      Hysterology is actually a real thing. It is the study of uterus.

    • @dlwatib
      @dlwatib 6 лет назад +17

      I'm not a hysterologist, but I'll take a look.

    • @ladybugjess272
      @ladybugjess272 6 лет назад +2

      Aj Dembroski That's hilarious! U should get a badge made up for it.

    • @tyhnbgtyhnbgt
      @tyhnbgtyhnbgt 6 лет назад +2

      I'm not a hysteriaologist, but i did stay at a HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS last night.

  • @TealCheetah
    @TealCheetah 7 лет назад +132

    Just putting this out there. A properly fitted, lightly tightened corset is surprisingly comfortable.

    • @653j521
      @653j521 6 лет назад +32

      And how does it affect your organs and circulatory system? There is a video online of a woman taking a stress test in a corset and the difference was dramatic. Just because you don't feel sick doesn't mean you aren't doing yourself harm. Even Spanx has been shown to increase the number of cases of acid reflux.

    • @michyoung77
      @michyoung77 6 лет назад +14

      That’s good to hear, but I bet people shouldn’t wear them often. I find corsets absolutely beautiful.

    • @JustNatax3
      @JustNatax3 6 лет назад +4

      Lilly Dragon It's comfortable for walking and standing with a straight back but I struggle sitting longer comfortably in a corset.

    • @Goodiesfanful
      @Goodiesfanful 6 лет назад +4

      Lilly Dragon but they used "tight lacing" back then, which does not sound "lightly tightened" to me.

    • @pillerhika3078
      @pillerhika3078 6 лет назад +6

      The problem stems from repeated use. Just like everything else, too much of something will be detrimental to ones health. I put on a corset on occasion and as long as it's not tightly laced it's comfortable and relieves a lot of my back pain.

  • @mariongranbruheim4090
    @mariongranbruheim4090 6 лет назад +31

    7:15 “People rarely laugh when by themselves”… ?! Whoever said this can not have asked any Norwegians.

    • @prntrfxr
      @prntrfxr 5 лет назад +4

      Whoever did the study must be deadly boring. I laugh all the time by myself. I have thought of funny things and have laughed myself to tears. So, no I don't believe that study...

    • @GeneralNickles
      @GeneralNickles 5 лет назад +1

      That's really just a poorly worded sentence.
      The point isn't that people don't laugh when there alone. The point is that people rarely make themselves laugh.
      It's kind of like how it's physically impossible to tickle yourself.
      This also why it's generally considered lame to laugh at your own jokes.

    • @prntrfxr
      @prntrfxr 5 лет назад

      @@GeneralNickles, I agree that this is not how a lot of people behave, but there are those of us that live a little bit outside the box. We are not insane, but we do have a very active imagination. I absolutely hate to be bored. Kind of like how some people can't stand a picture on the wall that is crooked. They have to realign it or it makes them crazy. While I love being around people, I am equally happy by myself and entertain myself frequently by creating stories, telling jokes, and even acting out scenes from movies. Fortunately, I do these things in my own home, so it is not on display for the rest of the world. As for how often I do this...every day, so it is not something that rarely happens. Do my friends know I do this? Most of my friends already know I am a bit "out there", and so this fact would probably not surprise them. While, I don't hide it, I don't do this in public. People have similar needs, but their personalities are very different. That is what makes the world an interesting place. If we were all exactly the same, think of how boring it would be. While I do not believe this is 100% accurate, this website below is something you may want to examine. www.16personalities.com. I am an ENFP. Don't let this scare you, we only account for like 7% of the world's population.

  • @paulaneary7877
    @paulaneary7877 2 года назад

    I am HYSTERICAL with laughter after the second half of this video. THANK YOU FOR THAT! I had better call the doctor so he can "relieve" my symptoms.....

  • @musicman757tvify
    @musicman757tvify 6 лет назад +230

    You didn't mention laudinum, the alcoholic medicine of the time containing 10% opium, that was used for basically any illness from coughing to headaches.

    • @kalleklp7291
      @kalleklp7291 6 лет назад +17

      Yup...not to forget Coca Cola....with extract from the coca plant. It also contained alcohol back then. So people got high and drunk from that stuff that was sold as an all-round medicine.

    • @musicman757tvify
      @musicman757tvify 6 лет назад +4

      Mr Remakes & Kalle Klæp :
      The thing is, drug addiction and abuse did not exist in the socio-sphere of that time. Scientific ideas & medical opinions on the topics were laughed off. Just so incredibly interesting.

    • @kalleklp7291
      @kalleklp7291 6 лет назад +9

      I'd say people and science were more careless back then. Even Heroin was sold without a prescription and seen as rather harmless. I've read about it was used in cough medicine for children...that's just hilarious.No one questioned that kind of high-risk drugs..a few tests were done..and that's it. Nowadays they seem almost too paranoid on some stuff, but ok ..it's better than beeing careless.

    • @jameslandon4126
      @jameslandon4126 6 лет назад +8

      Yes, and opiates are known to cause shortness of breath which could contribute to the problem.

    • @madelineharper1714
      @madelineharper1714 6 лет назад

      Weird how coke and heroin were given out back in the day but you would only hear about alcoholics.
      Now that coke and heroin is illegal so many people are addicts.
      Were there not a lot of people addicted to it back in the day?

  • @mattwertin
    @mattwertin 6 лет назад +475

    found one of these in grandmas basement... lol she was always calm

  • @bessmcgaughey5715
    @bessmcgaughey5715 6 лет назад

    very interesting, thanks

  • @mrs.kaetlynwest4878
    @mrs.kaetlynwest4878 5 лет назад +3

    I laugh by myself all the fkng time!!! And especially in response to humor. I love watching Stand Up videos, among many, many other topics.

  • @EmpressLilith222
    @EmpressLilith222 6 лет назад +1768

    I wonder if there were women who were receiving “preventative care” 😎

    • @omggiiirl2077
      @omggiiirl2077 6 лет назад +12

      ღ ღ teeheehee!

    • @TheBingleichwiederda
      @TheBingleichwiederda 6 лет назад +35

      Its known, that some doctors are even trying this today...its nothing more than rape.

    • @___LC___
      @___LC___ 6 лет назад +14

      TheHoustonSkeptic That could be said about men today, as well.

    • @justmechanicthings
      @justmechanicthings 6 лет назад +15

      giggety

    • @geneticemo
      @geneticemo 6 лет назад +9

      Justin Martyr you say this but you are white

  • @TempestAmethyst
    @TempestAmethyst 6 лет назад +520

    I just assumed it was a socially acceptable way to fuck off from a conversation or situation 😂

    • @cerulean22b69
      @cerulean22b69 6 лет назад +27

      Mari Wright I mean, they probably did it for that reason too. The socially acceptable way of saying "you're annoying I don't wanna deal with you right now" lol

    • @theducklinghomesteadandgar6639
      @theducklinghomesteadandgar6639 6 лет назад +5

      Mari Wright
      Well you pretty much said it in exactly the correct format and explanation, but to reword the same words you used, they wanted to get out of a conversation and told the doctor to get her off to remove her bordom and clear her airways, so she could be socially acceptable, you know because one had to be polite when excusing themselves from company because they liked the company of a doctor more than the company of their husband....lmbo!!!
      They were effing off while removing themselves in a polite manner from a conversation to call their secret crush to come over and take care of the fact they were "in heat" you know being the middle of summer and all!!! But all the while forgetting to tell the good doctor they were in love with him and not their husband!!! Lmbo!!!!

    • @davidmg1925
      @davidmg1925 6 лет назад

      Mari
      I think there might have been raised eye brows had you couched in those terms but other than that........ I might just try now...
      Would it work for a male as well?
      I just makes sooooooo much sense.

    • @purpleemerald5299
      @purpleemerald5299 6 лет назад +3

      Mari Wright "fuck off" double entendre. XD

    • @isbsey
      @isbsey 6 лет назад +4

      +Mari - On a lot of occasions it was. Not all ladies "retired in a faint" to relieve themselves sexually. Most would come to, loosen themselves slightly, and breathe a sigh of relief to have gotten out of a boring or awkward situation. It wasn't socially acceptable, however, to do it too often, or at a time that would be embarrassing to her husband's social or financial standing - like in front of important people, and certainly never in front of any of the Royal Family however lowly. That was their prerogative lol

  • @cheetyliciousmeowmeow1085
    @cheetyliciousmeowmeow1085 6 лет назад +43

    I'd be fainting and hysterical all day....massage away doctor.

  • @paulthomasmcdonald2737
    @paulthomasmcdonald2737 5 лет назад +8

    Oh no! Now my partner is telling me that batteries for her Rampant Rabbit,should be available on prescription.🤣🤣

  • @cayannap6752
    @cayannap6752 7 лет назад +77

    more likely everybody laughs while they're alone but nobody would know about it.

    • @Icanfigureitoutintime
      @Icanfigureitoutintime 6 лет назад +2

      Cayanna P it's like that old saying. If a tree falls in the woods on a person laughing and no one's around do you hear the person screaming from the tree falling on them while they were laughing.? I mean that's the way that my grandmother told that one to me right before bed.

    • @ellabrady9233
      @ellabrady9233 6 лет назад

      I laugh when I'm alone

  • @sensibleb
    @sensibleb 6 лет назад +16

    "hey, u up? my place 4 netflix and hysteria relief?"

  • @wooderdsaunders6801
    @wooderdsaunders6801 4 года назад

    Very intresting.

  • @vodkavecz
    @vodkavecz 3 года назад +12

    Interesting, that feinting room is :D
    Tightly laced corsets causing problems is almost like a myth. They were probably wore by women equivalent to those modern ones who do so many plastic surgeries they barely look human.
    If anyone wants to know real historical facts about corsets, from experts, watch some videos from Karolina Żebrowska
    or Bernadette Banner.

  • @kalvenjamieson
    @kalvenjamieson 7 лет назад +712

    i can honestly say ive never had a cramped hand after "releiving a woman of her hysteria" lololol

    • @TodayIFoundOut
      @TodayIFoundOut  7 лет назад +167

      But what if you had 10 "clients" lined up back to back on a single day! ;-)

    • @kalvenjamieson
      @kalvenjamieson 7 лет назад +104

      i sir accept that challenge :) and keep up the great work

    • @robinannaniaz9670
      @robinannaniaz9670 7 лет назад +21

      they've lined up and they all look like dolly parton xD

    • @edbadyt
      @edbadyt 7 лет назад +74

      I've been known to get a sore jaw but it's worth it to see such grateful patients.

    • @stewydoo
      @stewydoo 7 лет назад +63

      You evidently haven't done it for long enough.

  • @copuffgaming
    @copuffgaming 6 лет назад +310

    I keep getting anxiety when he talks and the words scroll up the screen, like talk faster don’t let the words go off the screen before you say them! Ah! Then he barley says it in time as the last word goes off.

    • @Shirokroete
      @Shirokroete 6 лет назад +17

      Co Richards Sounds like you're... Hysteric about it...
      I have this great doctor who could help you with that!

    • @S3PT1M1
      @S3PT1M1 6 лет назад +6

      XD omg same, every fkin time.

    • @adamnord2763
      @adamnord2763 6 лет назад +3

      Is this doctor good at fingering?

    • @phenethylamine91
      @phenethylamine91 6 лет назад +4

      Someone please meat me in my fainting room!
      fixed

    • @EmmAPestilenciA
      @EmmAPestilenciA 6 лет назад +2

      Co Richards me too! I thought it was just me. the closer words got to the top of the screen, the more anxious i would get! I couldn't even concentrate on what he was saying even tho i was reading along.

  • @mcShmups
    @mcShmups 5 лет назад

    Phew! I thought those words would disappear to the top before he read them but he did it 👍great job!

  • @SiminaDar
    @SiminaDar 4 года назад +2

    Fashion historians actually say tight lacing was not very common. Corsets were basic foundation garments tailored to the shape of the wearer's body and provided support for the heavy layers of skirts and dresses. The tiny waists were an illusion created by padding in the bust and things like bustles and petticoats.

  • @joebykaeby
    @joebykaeby 6 лет назад +141

    The entire idea of corseting makes me legitimately sick to my stomach. Honestly the damage that can be done to feet by high heels does too.

    • @TheZephyrsWind
      @TheZephyrsWind 6 лет назад +6

      Indeed. My grandmother forced my mother to use high heels and now her feet have been bad (they got a bit better recently) for decades.

    • @ReallyReal_1
      @ReallyReal_1 6 лет назад +1

      Chris agh tf is with women

    • @joebykaeby
      @joebykaeby 6 лет назад +12

      More like tf is wrong with society really

    • @nectartyrant1390
      @nectartyrant1390 6 лет назад +4

      ever read about chinese foot binding?

    • @underwaternic1148
      @underwaternic1148 6 лет назад

      my mom loves high heels and wears them a lot so now when she wears flats for too long her feet and back start to hurt

  • @oinkards1143
    @oinkards1143 6 лет назад +464

    I thought they fainted because they were over dramatic.

    • @saddvamp22
      @saddvamp22 6 лет назад +56

      Oink ards they couldn't breathe. people back then were pretty dumb. Corsets' aren't supposed to be laced up so tight, to where you can't breathe.

    • @zedtass4923
      @zedtass4923 6 лет назад +58

      Oink ards In the video it states that in some cases they pretended to faint to show that they're delicate so I guess that classifies as being overdramatic

    • @oinkards1143
      @oinkards1143 6 лет назад +7

      Now today, people are dumb, when I mean that, I mean that hospitals are too cautious to allow younger people to be screened for certain cancers.
      - They're afraid to be sued if: A colonoscopy scratches or ruptures the colon
      - Doctors are scientist, they forget that they need to be curious and interest in such findings or possibility that this young adult has, "an old fart cancer"
      Using short cuts(auto functions) to do critical thinking for you, example:
      - Cashiers rely too heavily on computer calculations when dealing with change, when they enter the cash in, then a customer then brings up 5 cents to add to the payment, the cashier is dumb founded.
      - We need to remember how functions work, rather than have it do things for us, it may look like we know what we're doing, but when something happens, we look like an idiot underneath a smart ass mask.

    • @oinkards1143
      @oinkards1143 6 лет назад

      Now today, people are dumb, when I mean that, I mean that hospitals are too cautious to allow younger people to be screened for certain cancers.
      - They're afraid to be sued if: A colonoscopy scratches or ruptures the colon
      - Doctors are scientist, they forget that they need to be curious and interest in such findings or possibility that this young adult has, "an old fart cancer"
      Using short cuts(auto functions) to do critical thinking for you, example:
      - Cashiers rely too heavily on computer calculations when dealing with change, when they enter the cash in, then a customer then brings up 5 cents to add to the payment, the cashier is dumb founded.
      - We need to remember how functions work, rather than have it do things for us, it may look like we know what we're doing, but when something happens, we look like an idiot underneath a smart ass mask.

    • @alexandramcginnis8872
      @alexandramcginnis8872 6 лет назад +10

      Woman are just as dramatic as today. It’s kind of sexist to think that. It was probably a combination of all of his points in this video that woman fainted so much. The knowledge back then was much so limited than today

  • @shailajanayak2091
    @shailajanayak2091 6 лет назад

    Nice video.

  • @rubywingo6030
    @rubywingo6030 6 лет назад +287

    Nah...we are much smarter now! We just STARVE ourselves these days!!

    • @blake-devorak.
      @blake-devorak. 6 лет назад +3

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @dominicmanester8125
      @dominicmanester8125 5 лет назад +36

      We do? I've only noticed people getting bigger and bigger.

    • @JL-cn1qi
      @JL-cn1qi 5 лет назад +6

      Just watch WHAT you eat and get of your ass from time to time..

    • @MBison-im2qy
      @MBison-im2qy 5 лет назад +4

      the ketogenic diet is just starving yourself because you cannot get enough calories when you make yourself sick eating high fat foods.

    • @robertthomas5906
      @robertthomas5906 5 лет назад +8

      Or pay to have a doctor go in and subtract like 3/4 to 7/8 of the stomach. Then you can have a glass of water. Then after about 30 minutes you can have a little lunch. Any more than that and it comes up. The sleeve, lap band, etc.

  • @SpiritBear12
    @SpiritBear12 6 лет назад +1012

    It's amazing how clueless the Victorian era was. It shouldn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that if you restrict the rib cage you can't breathe well, and if you can't breathe wall, you can faint! Thank god that fashion fad fell by the way side. some women still wear them today, but personally, I like breathing as much as I need to.

    • @edwardianbananas6083
      @edwardianbananas6083 6 лет назад +87

      The Victorian was a dark sexist and ageist era for humanity and we may learn from there mistakes and use our fucking brains.

    • @LuckyK7777
      @LuckyK7777 6 лет назад +53

      OK, hold on because today's version is women nicking and cutting their "down below region" to shave it because that's the style today even though there are reports of infections and other health problems associated with bacteria from human waste that wouldn't be present when shaving underarms or legs. Women and body morphing, it never changes.

    • @Krakus916
      @Krakus916 6 лет назад +107

      Some people currently believe that being fat is healthy.Every age has clueless people, the only difference is that we get to see each kind more easily thanks to internet.

    • @davecasey4341
      @davecasey4341 6 лет назад +145

      "It's amazing how clueless the Victorian era was"
      And two hundred years from now people will say the exact same thing about our time.

    • @anonnomas4755
      @anonnomas4755 6 лет назад +7

      Dave Casey Not really we live an an age were we actually use our brains.

  • @paladinboyd1228
    @paladinboyd1228 6 лет назад +367

    I faint often and no one got me off.

    • @paladinboyd1228
      @paladinboyd1228 6 лет назад +24

      Penguin Love, It's like PC gaming sooner or later what you have doesn't cut it anymore and you want to upgrade.

    • @667halomaster
      @667halomaster 6 лет назад +4

      Maybe one day

    • @arandomperson3952
      @arandomperson3952 6 лет назад +15

      Comment threads like this make me happy I clicked the click bait.

    • @paladinboyd1228
      @paladinboyd1228 6 лет назад +4

      Malign Eldritch Abomination, Glad I made you laugh.

    • @staffordnation9754
      @staffordnation9754 6 лет назад +3

      Paladin Boyd i HAD TO CHECK THESE REPLIES!!!

  • @lashawnablanton4649
    @lashawnablanton4649 6 лет назад

    Very interesting

  • @cassidywarren7165
    @cassidywarren7165 4 года назад +2

    Tight lacing actually wasn’t as common as believed, it happened but very rarely, often times they used additional undergarments to build upon their bust and hips causing their waists to look smaller

  • @awesomeferret
    @awesomeferret 7 лет назад +410

    "People rarely laugh by themselves". I'd like to see a citation for that, because I doubt the validity of that. If it is true, then that's very sad. If most people are living sad and depressing lives, that can't be good for the world. I often laugh aloud while by myself, usually while watching or listening to something funny, but I will occasionally laugh just from thinking about something funny. And I'm sure this goes from a lot of people, but if I am wrong, then let me know.

    • @snood4743
      @snood4743 6 лет назад +25

      I don't laugh when alone nearly as much as I do with other people. I'll laugh even if I don't find a joke funny if other people are laughing.

    • @neverlandonearth77
      @neverlandonearth77 6 лет назад +23

      awesomeferret I laugh too while by myself. I also talk to myself too.

    • @timothybeebe6382
      @timothybeebe6382 6 лет назад +4

      awesomeferret seriously I laugh a lot all be my self alone.

    • @marshmallowmountains4636
      @marshmallowmountains4636 6 лет назад +23

      I can just be daydreaming while trying to sleep and then start laughing from something I remembered. There's no one around of course...and last night I found a freaking hilarious video and laughed loudly all by myself. My brother also laughs loudly all by himself quite frequently, every single night. So yeah I do question the validity of that study.

    • @AndrewSlacks
      @AndrewSlacks 6 лет назад +5

      Well let's start off with the fact that some are more blissfully happy than others by nature. Regardless, there is overwhelming data suggesting that laughter is mostly associated with social communication (in many species) so wouldn't necessarily be natural in solitude.

  • @Agaettis
    @Agaettis 6 лет назад +74

    They were not filled with actual whale bone but with whale baleen, which is far more flexable. Cheaper versions usually used reeds, and a piece of wood in the center

  • @TheCat72850
    @TheCat72850 4 года назад

    Good video

  • @tylerkrug7719
    @tylerkrug7719 5 лет назад

    Very very interesting

  • @Duncan_Idaho_Potato
    @Duncan_Idaho_Potato 7 лет назад +36

    So, "fainting rooms" and "fainting couches" (basically chaise lounges) were totally a thing. You know you have a problem when you have to have a whole room dedicated to caring for the side effects of your fashion choices.

  • @ironicdutchmoonshade1394
    @ironicdutchmoonshade1394 6 лет назад +167

    4:25 Oh, it was about fainting, not corsets. I forgot

    • @ginnyjollykidd
      @ginnyjollykidd 6 лет назад

      Wearing a corset, especially done up restrictively, keeps bodily fluids like blood in the upper part of the body. If you lose oxygen from the brain, you can easily faint, because it is how the body keeps the brain supplied with oxygen when blood pressure to the brain drops. Keeping your head lower to the ground allows blood to flow to the brain and prevent hypoxia.
      This might easily be the reason corsets were done up so tightly, to keep the brain supplied well with oxygen. The tighter the corset, the more blood flow to the brain.
      And you can bet that sexual stimulation can cause blood pressure to rise.
      And as far as menstrual blood, there were already methods to take care of that. Otherwise you would be out of the public eye for a week a month. The common woman could not afford to be out of commission for a quarter of her life. She had to work like the men did.

  • @rosesmith6925
    @rosesmith6925 6 лет назад

    Done with a straight face... Bravo Simon lol

  • @NikkiJayArtistry
    @NikkiJayArtistry 6 лет назад

    Usually don't like this type of accent but you have a really nice speaking voice.. Thanks for info

  • @charlied5465
    @charlied5465 6 лет назад +358

    that scrolling text made me uncomfortable

    • @domiparavasilinus603
      @domiparavasilinus603 6 лет назад +38

      Agreed. I kept thinking it would scroll off before he finished. Maybe static text block flips would be better.

    • @notkaitlyn5368
      @notkaitlyn5368 6 лет назад +2

      I hated it so much

    • @JudyNepune
      @JudyNepune 6 лет назад +2

      Charlie D omg me too😂😂

    • @Abby-km6vr
      @Abby-km6vr 6 лет назад +5

      same! And then I read it faster than his talking so I have to wait for him to finish saying what I had already read 10 seconds ago.

    • @kkfoto
      @kkfoto 5 лет назад +4

      I nearly fainted

  • @trentladson5668
    @trentladson5668 6 лет назад +375

    FAINT FROM WEIGHT , HEAT, AND TIGHTNESS THEIR POOR BODIES GLAD I WAS BORN IN 20TH CENTURY

    • @mountainbear6841
      @mountainbear6841 6 лет назад +8

      Trent Ladson agreed

    • @impossibledreams6115
      @impossibledreams6115 6 лет назад +7

      Trent Ladson guys what if 300 years from now people are like thank GOD i wasnt born in the 20th century... That was an insane time no one now could live through

    • @KpopManiac4Life
      @KpopManiac4Life 6 лет назад +2

      Trent Ladson 21st dumbass

    • @trentladson5668
      @trentladson5668 6 лет назад +1

      RIGHT, BUT I WON'T CALL YOU OUT OF YOUR NAME. GOD BLESS

    • @costybellaprincipess
      @costybellaprincipess 6 лет назад +14

      KpopManiac4Life You might be the dumbass. Unless a person was born after the year 2000 it's 20th century not 21st. 20th century= 1901-2000. Not everyone is a millennial, kiddo.

  • @bigtopbabe
    @bigtopbabe 6 лет назад +78

    Oh, the inaccuracies! To start with, I have never heard of a 19th century corset being made of leather. They were conscious of the need for fabric to breathe, after all. Also, the whole advent of tightlacing was made possible by the ability to use steel as boning in corsets. Wood and whalebone were common in earlier years, but the Victorians we think of generally had steel corsets.
    As an aside, the idea that vibrators were made to save doctors' tired hands is a common and easily disproven myth. There was a pervasive idea that vibration was good for one's health. The vibrators we see sold everywhere were not officially intended for use There, although certainly women did in secret. The "hysterical paroxysm" after a massage was not what everyone thinks. If you read the actual doctors' guidelines, it was actually a probably uncomfortable massage that concluded in a "paroxysm" that could look more like a hysterical breakdown or even a seizure.
    Also, corsets were primarily the 19th century bra. They weren't commonly used for tightlacing, as is obvious if you look at pictures from the era. If so many women were lacing down to a handspan waist, why is almost every item of clothing still sized for a normal, if slim figure? And where are all the pictures of women with 18-inch waists? They were generally laced enough to provide support, especially the much-maligned maternity corset. Anyone who's ever been pregnant, would you like to go through the whole thing with no supportive belly bands or bras? Didn't think so. Neither did Victorian women. This video uses as evidence some alarmist illustrations and evidence from 19th century doctors who were coming to these conclusions with little to no evidence. Standard corset wearing did not result in major organ displacement, although the rare long-term tightlacing could. Even then, take a second to think. How is the heart going to be affected? It's pretty far away from the bits a corset constricted. Generally the effects were confined to rib displacement and some reshaping of the liver, and even then you had to tightlace A LOT for many years to do it.
    Also, I and many friends can personally attest that you can absolutely still eat a full meal in a corset. In fact, I often get hungry the minute I'm fully in. Women who said they couldn't eat another bite were trying to emphasize how little they could eat and how dainty they were. You can also breathe just fine as long as you're not doing anything particularly strenuous, you just have to breathe into your chest rather than your diaphragm. As long as you don't try to run a mile, you'll be fine.

    • @Dwayne_Bearup
      @Dwayne_Bearup 4 года назад +7

      Thank you for the breath of sanity in amongst all the other comments :)

    • @sweetviolet79
      @sweetviolet79 4 года назад +8

      you have way too much free time.

    • @meloncholymelan
      @meloncholymelan 4 года назад +5

      Oh god thank you, I was looking for this comment

    • @jacksonwainwright5712
      @jacksonwainwright5712 4 года назад +1

      The funny thing is, as smart as you just tried to sound you still started so many thoughts with also that I couldn’t take any of what you said seriously. You stupid fuck

    • @benjaminlammertz64
      @benjaminlammertz64 4 года назад +1

      Thank you.

  • @XJeepWerks
    @XJeepWerks 4 года назад

    Boy did this video take an unexpected turn 😂😂😂

  • @RudeFoxALTON
    @RudeFoxALTON 6 лет назад +756

    Not my proudest relief of hysteria.

  • @mightyvoovoo
    @mightyvoovoo 7 лет назад +33

    "Costs less than Imitators" pardon me, but isn't THAT the imitator? ;)

  • @jakubbercik6965
    @jakubbercik6965 4 года назад

    Oh lord of the recommended page, what strange places have you taken me to at 2am?

  • @k.stewart007
    @k.stewart007 2 года назад +1

    I watched a documentary about this once. A young lady going to her doctors office to attended too this way. Seemed to be set in modern times though. It was very informative showing the practice in great detail.

  • @Katherine_The_Okay
    @Katherine_The_Okay 6 лет назад +35

    Hmm, does this mean that I should be able to get my medical insurance to cover certain... personal care items? :D

  • @AstronAnimations
    @AstronAnimations 6 лет назад +121

    wait..
    this is not Vsause..

  • @DeliriumzzZ
    @DeliriumzzZ 4 года назад

    I like the upbeat music that's playing in the background while listening to arsenic fatalities.

  • @alabernathy8348
    @alabernathy8348 4 года назад

    I loved the i hop add