Archive for the ‘Health’ Category

12/31/2024 “HAPPY NEW YEAR”   Leave a comment

Well, it’s New Years Eve once again. This was a fun holiday when I was in my teens and twenties but these days not so much. I never really understood what the big deal was and still don’t. It’s just a day and night made for drinking, carousing, and avoiding sobriety check points. I hope none of you become victims of that stupidity and cause an accident that may harm yourself and others by drinking and driving. In my years as a police officer, I made a point of not working on this holiday. I took the day off and then occasionally drank too much, caroused too much, and got really stupid. I managed to survive but only just.

This year I’m housebound and safe from the fits of holiday stupidity. Please be safe . . . and not too stupid. I wouldn’t want to be reading about any of you on “the day after”. Let me bring a few smiles to your lips before you decide to begin your celebration by taking a little trip to the 1980’s for some occasionally rude and hilarious humor.

  • If the shrimps come in on a shrimp boat, how do the crabs come in? On the captain’s dinghy.
  • Why did Miss Piggy miss her last concert? She had a frog in her throat.
  • What happens when you moon in bumper-to-bumper traffic? You wind up with your ass in a jam.
  • What’s the difference between a counterfeit dollar bill and a skinny girl? The counterfeit bill is a phony buck.
  • What’s the definition of a real lady? Someone who doesn’t smoke, doesn’t drink, and only curses if it slips out.

  • Why did they name the new feminine hygiene spray SSY? Because it takes the PU out of pussy.
  • What happens when a guaranteed condom breaks? The guarantee runs out.
  • What’s 138? Dinner for four.
  • When do you know you’ve had the world’s best head? You have to pull the sheet out of your ass.
  • What’s the difference between frustration and panic? Frustration is the first time you find out you can’t do it the second time, and panic is the second time you found out you couldn’t do it the first time.

BE CAREFUL OUT THERE

12/28/2024 “X-MAS FOOD COMA”   Leave a comment

Christmas is gone . . . thankfully. I love all the presents, and I love all the decorations (if I’m not forced into putting them up), but my downfall is all the damn food. I’m what you might call a “taster”. I love tasting everything and this year was the worst since last year. I swear we had enough food for twenty people but unfortunately, there were only seven of us. That means that I’ll be eating reheated holiday leftovers for at least the next two weeks. Also, let’s not forget the large influx of food anticipated on New Years Eve and again on New Years Day. I have absolutely no willpower and I’ll probably be found dead with a large slab of lukewarm ham hanging out of my mouth. With that cheery thought in mind, I’ll be posting a few tidbits of trivia about food as I sit here eating blueberry donuts and cherry lifesavers.

  • Animal Crackers were introduced in 1902 as a Christmas novelty item and packaged with a string for a handle. It made it easier to hang them on the Christmas tree as an ornament.
  • Coffee was officially recognized as a Christian drink by Pope Clement VIII in 1592.
  • Most of the egg rolls sold in grocery stores in the United States are actually produced in Houston, Texas.
  • The American city that consumes the most ketchup is New Orleans.
  • Eighty-seven percent of whole milk is water.

  • Miss Piggy of Muppets fame was once quoted, “Never eat more than you can lift.”
  • The term “Surf & Turf” was coined by gastronome Diamond Jim Brady and was first served to him at a waterfront restaurant in Brooklyn, NY, in the late 1880’s.
  • The name Lorna Doone was the name given to a shortbread cookie in 1869 based on a novel by the same name.
  • Baskin-Robbins introduced an ice cream, Lunar Cheesecake, in 1969 to commemorate the moon landing.
  • Salsa overtook the ever-popular ketchup as the top selling condiment in 1991.

BRING ON NEW YEARS, I’M NOT TOO AFRAID

11/28/2024 “HAPPY THANKSGIVING”   Leave a comment

πŸ¦ƒTURKEY DAYπŸ—

The human body is an amazing organism. It can create miracles by healing itself to survive unbelievably nasty injuries. That doesn’t change the fact that it can also be truly disgusting as we all know. Today’s Thanksgiving post will review some gross facts about the human body and the things that it has the ability to produce after eating a turkey and all the side dishes. A little gross but what isn’t. This should be on your mind as you chow down on your big meal today. LOL

URINE

The average person produces approximately 3 pints of urine a day. In the normal adult the bladder rarely holds more than about 3/4 of a pint of urine, with the urge to urinate coming at the 1/2-pint mark. More than one pint causes pain and an intense urge to urinate immediately.

FUN FACT: In Roman times gladiators would brush their teeth with urine and then gargle with it too. They believed it was good for their gums.

SPIT

Most people produce approximately 8 cups of spit a day. It’s produced by three sets of salivary glands around the mouth area. That works out to about 50,700 pints produced in the average human lifetime. Thats enough to fill a couple of large swimming pools.

VOMIT

In humans very often after one person begins vomiting, it triggers vomiting in others (emetophobia). Compared to other animals, humans are relatively light on vomiting. Big vegetarian whales vomit every 7-10 days to help get rid of anything inedible they may have swallowed by accident. Dogs not only vomit frequently, but they’ll also eat their own vomit. Probably the most vomitus animals, however, are cows, who digest otherwise in edible grass by regurgitating it into their mouths, chewing it for a bit, and then swallowing it over and over again.

FUN FACT: Emetophobia is the fear of vomiting and of being around others who are vomiting. It is the fifth most common phobia according to the International Emetophobia Society.

SNOT

Snot is a defensive function, stopping for example germs, dirt and pollen from getting into your lungs. The average person produces approximately 1/2 pint of snot per day. When you sneeze, up to six pints of air is blasted out of your lungs at approximately 100 miles per hour, along with any germs you may be carrying at the time. Sneezing is also the main way that illnesses like colds and flu are spread among humans.

FECES

If you add up all the time spent eating and drinking by an average human over the course of their entire life, it comes to approximately 5 years. This adds up to 33 tons of food, which is equivalent to eating six entire elephants. Unfortunately, what goes in must come out. Most of that mass is water that you lose through sweating, breathing, and peeing, or carbon that you breathe out in the form of carbon dioxide, while a lot of the rest goes into making new bits for your body that need replacing. The result is that during your lifetime you will produce a pile of feces about the size of a car.

FUN FACT: According to the World Toilet Organization, the average person visits the toilet approximately 6-8 times a day, or 2500 times a year, and spends three years of their life sitting on the toilet.

EAT UP, ENJOY YOUR MEAL, AND GO NAP ON THE SOFA!

11/02/2024 “ANSWERS”   Leave a comment

A Rural Library

I find it amazing that the longer I live the less I seem to know. I’ve spent many years compiling and posting odd facts and there’s no end in sight. Here are two questions that most people have wondered about at one time or another but never really obtained a reasonable answer for. Here’s your reasonable answers.

HOW DID THE WORD “COCKTAIL” ORIGINATE?

A cocktail is an alcoholic drink that comprises a number of ingredients that are mixed or shaken together. There are hundreds of different concoctions and their often sweet, colorful and interestingly named, such as the Grasshopper, the Rusty Nail, Sex on the Beach and the Slippery Nipple. There seem to be hundreds of explanations for the origination of that word but many of them are utter nonsense. This is one explanation that caught my attention, and I immediately chose to believe it. In the 18th century an innkeeper named Betsy Flanigan stole chickens from her neighbors and cooked them for her patrons. After the meal, she would serve mixed drinks and place a chicken feather in each of them. At this display, one French customer yelled, “Vive le cocktail. I know that sounds silly but it’s no sillier than many of the others I’ve read about. This is my favorite explanation, and I hope it’s true.

WHEN AND HOW WAS TOILET PAPER INVENTED?

The Chinese invented toilet paper in the 14th century, and the Bureau of Imperial Supplies produced paper for use by the Chinese emperors. In 1857 the first factory producing toilet paper was made by American Joseph Cayetty who named his product Therapeutic Paper, and it was sold in packs of 500 sheets. Before the invention of toilet paper, different areas of the world use different things. Public toilets in ancient Rome provided a moist sponge on the end of the stick, while the Vikings who occupied England used discarded wool, and later in the Middle Ages that was replaced by a balls of hay. In Hawaii, meanwhile, coconut husks were used, while the early Eskimos used snow and tundra moss. French royalty used strips of lace and British lords used pages from books. In the United States, newspapers and telephone directories were commonly used, as were other books. The Old Farmer’s Almanac was actually printed with a hole punched through the corner of each page so that it could be hung in outhouses, and the Sears catalog was widely used until it began being printed on glossy paper. It’s use as a hygiene product became instantly unpopular as did corncobs in farm country.

(Ouch!)

10/22/2024 “ODDS ON DYING”   Leave a comment

Have you ever gone to the track and bet on a horse? Have you ever tracked the odds on your horse? It always amazed me that someone actually sat in an office somewhere and computed those odds. No one actually knows what criteria is used or even if they’re accurate but what the hell do I know, I’m not a gambler. Today’s post is going to be more of the same. I found this information quite by accident and I knew immediately that I had to post it. If you think horseracing odds were hard to compute, these are even more ridiculous. You might find them interesting, and I hope you do.

Odds of Dying

While playing a video game: 100,000,000 to 1

By venomous snake bite: 95,000,000 to 1

By an asteroid falling to earth: 75,000,000 to 1

By venomous spider bites: 25,000,00 to 1

By a champagne cork: 22 million to 1

By lightning: 10,000,000 to 1

By a bee or wasp sting: 5,000,000 to 1

By falling down stairs: 157,000 to 1

By choking: 100,000 to 1

By heart disease: 467 to 1

😡😡😡

ROLL THEM DICE

10/01/2024 πŸ’₯πŸ’₯Limerick AlertπŸ’₯πŸ’₯   Leave a comment

I thought I’d start the month of October with a bang. Over the years I’ve posted thousands of limericks, and I hope I live long enough to post 10,000 more. I tried to pick a topic today to make these limericks a little more interesting. So, the topic for our October limericks is MOTHERHOOD. I’m sure all of you mothers out there, both male and female, will appreciate them.

πŸ’₯

There was a young girl of Claridge’s

Who said, “What a strange thing marriage is,

When you stop to think

That I’ve poured down the sink

Five abortions and 50 miscarriages!”

πŸ’₯πŸ’₯

There was a young lady named Flo

Whose lover had pulled out too slow.

So, they tried it all night

Till he got it just right . . .

Well, practice makes pregnant, you know.

πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯

There was a young lady of Maine

Who declared she’d a man on the brain.

Much you knew from the view

Of the way her waist grew,

It was not on her brain that he’d lain.

πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯

There was a young lady of Louth

Who suddenly grew very stout.

Her mother said, “Nelly,

There’s more in your belly

Than ever went in through your mouth.”

πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯

DEDICATED TO ALL OF YOU MOTHERS OUT THERE

09/24/2024 “FREAKY & BIZARRE II”   Leave a comment

Are you ready for another day of freaky and bizarre? Let me dig into my bag of nonsense and come up with four or five more oddities which you might find interesting. I don’t need to say anything else, here we go.

  • When English writer Thomas Hardy (1840-1928) died, his heart was kept apart from his body that was cremated. The idea was to bury it in Stinsford, England, the home of his beloved childhood church and his family’s burial plot. All went according to plan until his sister’s cat leaped up on her kitchen table, snatched the heart, and ran off into the woods with it.
  • Centuries ago, animals were often put on trial for crimes ranging from witchcraft to theft and murder. Throughout history, the animal that’s been prosecuted mostly is the pig. In 1547 France, for example, a mother pig and her six babies were sentenced to death for killing and eating a child. The sow was executed, but the piglets were pardoned because it was felt that they were led astray by the bad example of their mother.
  • A fortune teller told businessman Kichiro Toyoda that it would be good luck to change his company’s name to Toyota and to give the company cars names beginning with the letter “C “such as Celica and Camry.
  • Francesco Lentini was born in 1889 with what appeared to be a tail, but which was in fact a nearly developed foot growing from the base of his spine. Although he was treated as a disabled outcast most of his life, he found work in Italian sideshows and was quoted as having said, “I have never complained. I think life is beautiful, and I enjoy living it.” He lived to the ripe old age of 78 years.
  • Investigators in Tacoma, Washington, were able to identify two generations of maggots on a body that had died from a gunshot wound. In doing so, they determined the approximate date of the corpses demise, as a maggots lifecycle lasts only about three weeks. Armed with the estimated time of death, the investigators were able to trace the disease whereabouts and eventually found the killer.

OOH MY!!!

09/12/2024 “FOLLOW THE LEADERS”   Leave a comment

I purposely avoid posting about current political events after running a political blog in the early 2000’s called Anti-Stupidity. It was an interesting experiment that ultimately convinced me never to do it again. No matter what you post politically, half the country agrees, and the other half sends you hate mail and death threats. Such is the political condition of the country, and it hasn’t changed much in the intervening years.

I dislike all politics and political parties and will never understand why anyone would run for office these days. That includes those power-hungry individuals running for President. It would hardly be worth it if not for the corruption that eventually makes almost every former senator, representative, and President a multi-millionaire.

Today’s post is political trivia in its lamest form. These are odd and rarely known facts on many of our past Presidents chosen at random . . .

  • Jimmy Carter is the first President to have been born in a hospital. All thirty-eight previous presidents were born “at home.”
  • The chief drafter of the United States Constitution and twice President was a lightweight on the scales. James Madison weighed in at only 100 pounds and he was the shortest President, at 5’4″.
  • James Buchanan has been the only bachelor to serve as president of the United States.
  • Not until Herbert Hoover was President., in 1929, did the U.S. Chief Executive have a private telephone in his office. (The telephone had been invented 53 years earlier.) The booth in a White House hallway had served as the president’s private telephone before one was finally installed in the Oval Office.
  • A campaign issue in John Quincy Adams unsuccessful reelection campaign of 1828 was the White House expense account: $50 for a billiard table, six dollars for billiard balls and $23.50 for chessmen.

  • The first U.S. President to be born in the 20th century didn’t take office until 1961 – John F. Kennedy (1917-1963).
  • The longest Presidential inauguration Address lasted nearly two hours, 8,445 words, almost twice as many as any other Presidents. It was delivered during a snowfall by a hatless, coatless William Henry Harrison in 1841. He became ill and died of pneumonia exactly a month later making his presidency the shortest in history.
  • Theodore Roosevelt was the first US President to ride in an automobile and the first to fly in an airplane, among many other firsts.
  • Until 1826, white people in the United States were sold as indentured servants who would be freed after a certain period of time. Andrew Johnson, who became President in 1865, was a runaway white slave; advertisements appeared in newspapers in an attempt to get him back.
  • President William Howard Taft weighed 350 pounds. He got stuck in a bathtub in the White House and someone had to be called to pull him out. He then had a special bathtub made. It was so big that, when it was delivered, four White House workmen climbed into it and had their picture taken.

HAIL TO THE CHIEF – LOL

08/31/2024 PπŸ’©OπŸ’©OπŸ’©P   1 comment

As I sit here this morning looking for inspiration for this post I received a text message from my grandson. He just received from his parents his first real phone and he immediately reached out to me with a typical text from someone his age (11). It consisted of about 60 rows of poop emojis with a short sentence, “My gift to you LOL.” I’m not sure why it is that kids love talking about farting and pooping exclusively but it seems to be something trending online as well these days. Tick-Tock is full of farting individuals blasting away in crowded street scenes. I have to admit it’s incredibly funny and apparently poop humor starts at a very young age. Hoping that the “little shit” (no pun intended) will someday read this post and learn a few more disgusting facts about poop he needs to know.

  • People often fart shortly after they die.
  • The most germ laden place on your toilet isn’t the seat or even the bowl. It’s the handle.
  • The average healthy adult expels between 100 and 200 grams, almost half a pound, of feces every day.
  • More than 6.5 million Americans have fecal incontinence – the inability to control the passage of stool – and most of them are women.
  • Americans used 36.5 billion rolls of toilet paper every year, which represents at least 15 million trees.

🧻🧻🧻

  • Most people produce 1 to 4 pints of gas and pass it approximately 14 times per day.
  • The foul odor of flatulence comes from intestinal bacteria as it releases gases that contain sulfur and, in some cases, methane, one of the greenhouse gases responsible for global warming.
  • Adolf Hitler suffered from chronic flatulence, for which he took anti-gas pills.
  • 40% of the world’s people have no toilet, and must use the bathroom in any public place they can find: bushes, roadsides, alleys, etc.
  • In a humid environment like the bathroom, a single bacterial cell can multiply into 1 billion cells overnight.

🚽🚽🚽

Well, there you have it folks, everything you never wanted to know about poop and its related activities. And a special thanks to my grandson (the poop specialist) for his inspiration.

πŸ’©GO, GO, GOπŸ’©

08/29/2024 πŸ’₯πŸ’₯SPORTS LIMERICK ALERTπŸ’₯πŸ’₯   Leave a comment

I’m not what anyone would consider a rabid sports fan. I love the NFL and the Pittsburgh Steelers, but I still can’t sit for three hours to watch a game filled with constant annoying commercials. I now rely on Facebook to supply me with recaps on Monday morning. I was for many years a huge fan of the Pittsburgh Pirates but that eventually faded away due to an organization afraid to spend money on exceptional players. They seem to have improved in this area this year, but I’ve been fooled before . . . so color me skeptical. One thing I’ve always loved even more than sports was any good limerick. I searched out a few samples about sports and I found them to be just as enjoyable as any sports event on television.

A showoff whilst skating on ice,

Turned a difficult somersault (twice).

He bounced on his head,

Spat out six teeth and said:

“I must try that again- it was nice!”

πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯

I hit every home run we score,

I catch every catch and what’s more,

I aint missed a game,

You may not know my name,

But I’m up here in row eighty-four.

πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯

I played a few times for the Yankees

(Though, as memories, I’ve tried to blank these).

I did what I could,

But I wasn’t much good,

And my antics had fans grabbing hankies.

πŸ’₯πŸ’₯πŸ’₯

A team playing baseball in Dallas

Called the umpire “blind” out of malice.

While the ump had fits,

The team scored eight hits,

And a girl in the bleachers called Alice!

🏈🏐⚾🧒

GO STEELERS