Archive for the ‘Love’ Category

11/20/2025 “THE STRANGE HUMAN MIND”   Leave a comment

I’ve been on a roll of late with a collection of weird and unusual trivia facts but I think today I’m taking it one step further. I like weird and strange! I’ve never denied it and I’ll prove once again by offering up more information that isn’t common knowledge. Humans are imaginative and creative and extremely strange at times. Here’s proof of that and I hope you enjoy it. Inventions of the WEIRD.

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The Motorized Ice Cream Cone: ( Patent issued in 1999)

Just push the handy on/off switch on the side of the cone and your ice cream will spin around and around, and all you have to do is stick out your tongue.

Pet Petter: (Patent issued in 1989)

If you don’t have the time to constantly coddle your pet, the Pet Petter does. An electric eye sees your pet and signals the electronic motors to start swinging a petting arm tipped with a humanlike hand.

Toilet Snorkel: (Patent issued in 1982)

In most fires, it’s the smoke that will get you, and a source of fresh air can be a lifesaver. So here it is – a way to snake a snorkel through the zigs and zags of your toilet, so you can brief underwater.

Motorcycle Airbag: (Patent issued in 1989)

An all-over body suit airbag designed to cushion the motorcyclist’s fall in an accident. Air is forcibly ejected from the bike, the suit swells from compressed gas. It covers the arms, legs, and torso, along with a soft landing.

Life Expectancy Watch: (Patent issued in 2002)

This invention counts backwards toward the date of your eventual demise. You program the watch by answering a series of questions about your lifestyle such as exercise, eating habits, and alcohol and tobacco use. Your remaining time is conveniently displayed in years.

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A FAVORITE FUN FACT

Thomas Edison filed 1,093 patents, including those for the light bulb, electric railways, and the movie camera. When he died in 1931, he held 34 patents for the telephone, 141 for batteries, 150 for the telegraph, and 389 patents for electric lights and power.

HUMANS CAN BE VERY STRANGE

11/19/2025 “UNUSUAL TRIVIA”   Leave a comment

Todays post will be a little different from my normal trivia posts. Instead of a quiz I decided to just supply you with a few not-commonly-known trivia facts. I found them them to be fascinating and hope you will too.

  • In 1939, Rudolph the Red-Nosed reindeer was created by an Montgomery Ward advertising employee as part of his job.
  • Barbie’s (the doll) official real name is Barbara Millicent Roberts.
  • In 1884, P.T. Barnum once marched a herd of twenty-one elephants over the Brooklyn Bridge on it’s opening day to prove it was structurally sound.
  • In 1929, Armenian born Sarkis Colombosian created and produced yogurt in Methuen, Massachusetts.
  • In 1857, Joseph C. Gayetty invented modern day toilet paper.

  • The original McDonalds drive-in opened by brothers Maurice and Richard McDonald in 1948 made 10 hamburger patties per pound.
  • On July 28, 1933, the first singing telegram was delivered to Rudy Vallee on the occasion of his birthday.
  • Henry Ford kept the final breath of Thomas Edison in a bottle. It remains in the Ford Museum in Greenfield Village, Michigan.
  • The term “twofers” was created in 1892 to sell two-for-a-nickel cigars.
  • In 1908 in Germany, Melitta Bentz, first invented the coffee filter.

My Favorite

In June 1946, French engineer-designer Louis Reard

invented and introduced the bikini for the first time.

OMG! OMG! YIKES! OMG! OMG!

11/15/2025 💥💥Limerick Alert💥💥   Leave a comment

I thought a little sampling of limericks was in order for today. I’m normally cautious when posting limericks but today I’ll throw caution to the wind and just give you a taste of limericks from the 1920’s. It’s always fun to reminisce about the good old days and some of their limericks were outrageous and unpostable. I rate these PG-13 but you decide. I hope you enjoy them.

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There was a young man of Cape Horn
Who wished he had never been born.
And he wouldn’t have been
If his father had seen
At the end of the condom was torn.

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There was a young lady named Flo
Whose lover had pulled out to slow.
So they tried it all night
Tilley got it just right
Well, practice makes pregnant, you know.

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There was a young lady of Lout
Who suddenly grew very stout.
Her mother said, “Nellie,
There’s more in your belly
Then ever went in through your mouth.”

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My wife Myrtle’s womb has a habit
Of expanding whenever I stab it.
What’s more, my wife Myrtle
Is so wondrously fertile,
That she’s giving me kids like a rabbit.

❤️❤️❤️❤️

OLDIES BUT GOODIES

11/13/2025 “SCIENCE TRIVIA”   Leave a comment

I thought today I would add a few little known Science facts. With all of the space related science discussions of late I thought this would be a good time to join in. Enjoy!

  • In five years, a woman who wears lipstick will use enough to draw a line equal to her height.
  • Beards are the fastest growing hairs on the human body. If the average man never trimmed his beard, it would grow nearly 30 feet long in his lifetime.
  • A general rule of thumb for distinguishing fruits from vegetables: For fruits, seeds are on the inside; for vegetables, seeds are on the outside.
  • Tomatoes are native to the Americas and were initially cultivated by Aztec Indians as early as A.D. 700. They are also a common source of allergies.
  • The roller coaster was invented and patented in Ohio by a toboggan designer, John Miller in 1926. It featured small cars sliding down incline ramps.

  • The barcode was patented in 1952 by Joseph Woodland and Bernard Silver. In June of 1974, the first barcode scanner was installed at a Marshes supermarket in Troy, Ohio. The first product to carry a barcode was Wrigley’s gum.
  • IBM called its first laptop computer “The Convertible”. It was the size of a suitcase.
  • On April 12, 1934, the highest surface wind speed ever recorded occurred over Mount Washington, New Hampshire. It was clocked at 231 miles per hour.
  • The 400 mg of nicotine that an average pack-a-day smokers inhale in a week would instantly kill them if ingested in a single hour.
  • Six-year-olds laugh on average of 300 times a day.

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Here’s a favorite tongue twister that is considered the most difficult in the English language due to the complex brain and motor coordination it requires,

“Sixth sick sheik’s sixth sheep’s sick.”

👨‍🔬👩‍🔬

11/04/2025 💗POETRY OF THE YOUNG💗   Leave a comment

In recent months the political world seems to have taken over virtually all discussions. While those discussions are of supreme importance, a constant drumbeat of gloom, doom, and lying takes its toll on a person. Todays post is my attempt to lighten the mood a little. Here are the thoughts and hopes of a much younger generation ( that hasn’t been scarred by an overload of political thinking.

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By Jane Brown, United States

I like to feel my father’s whiskers,

They feel so very funny when I try to kiss him,

But when he shaves it does not tickle,

But still I wonder what my mother does.

❤️❤️

By Beverley Dinsdale, New Zealand

Dark fills the sky with his big black cloak,

You never hear him him come.

One by one the stars peep through,

Out comes the moon like a big yellow egg.

❤️❤️❤️

By Susan Heitler, United States

The candle screamed with fury,

Hot tears trickled down her face.

With figure slumped,

She lowly dwindled into shadows

❤️❤️❤️❤️

By Annabel Laurance, Uganda

I have a little brain

Tucked safely in my head

And another little brain

Which is in the air instead

That follow me, and plays with me

And talks to me in bed

The other one confuses me,

The one that’s in my head.

💕💕💕💕💕

SPECIAL THANKS TO RICHARD LEWIS

11/01/2025 🏈RETRO NFL TRIVIA🏈   Leave a comment

Don’t let the title of this post fool you. This trivia is for those of you who think you know everything there is to know about pro football. I’m certainly no expert and when I tested myself on these question I failed miserably. Lets see how you do with some old-school NFL trivia. The answers as always are listed below.

  1. Which NFL team first drafted Johnny Unitas?

2. What NFL team began life as the Frankford Yellow Jackets?

3. The first playoff game between division leaders came in 1933. Who beat who?

4. What NFL team was once sponsored by the Staley starch company?

5. Which team has lost more NFL playoff games than any other?

6. When was the last time that a team failed to throw a forward pass in a regular-season game?

7. What NFL championship was decided indoors?

8. The first million-dollar gate for an NFL championship game came in 1961. Who beat whom, and where?

9. Who were the two players suspended in 1964 for bidding on their own teams?

10. Who made the winning score in the NFL’s first sudden-death overtime game in 1958?

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Here’s a little bonus brain teaser for you. Complete this famous quote.
Playing a tie game is like . . .

Answers
Pittsburgh Steelers, Philadelphia Eagles, Chicago Bears 23 – New York Giants 21, Chicago Bears when the team was located in Decatur, Illinois, New York Giants, Chicago Bears beat the Portsmouth Spartans, 9-0, December 18, 1932, December 3, 1950, Cleveland versus Philadelphia, Green Bay 37, New York Giants zero, at Green Bay, Paul Hornung, Green Bay; Alex Karras, Detroit, Alan Ameche, Baltimore, scored a touchdown against the New York Giants, . . . kissing your sister.

10/30/2025 “BS or no BS?”   Leave a comment

These facts may appear to be BS but they are not. They were researched and compiled by Shane Carley who is also obsessed with weird but true facts.

  • The first leader of an independent Chile was Irish.
  • The Hundred Years War actually lasted 116 years.
  • The Austrian army once mistakenly attacked itself. The Battle of Karansebes resulted in losses of up to 10,000 soldiers when one Austrian regiment mistook another for the enemy.
  • Surprisingly, the U.S. state closest to Africa is not Florida – it’s Maine.
  • President Richard Nixon had a speech prepared just in case Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin died on the moon.

  • The people of Loss Angeles were so accustomed to light pollution that when an earthquake caused a blackout in 1994, many citizens called observatories to ask about the weird lights in the sky. They were the stars.
  • Early astronaut toilets were so bad that feces sometimes floated through the space capsule.
  • Believe it or not as far as official records are concerned, no one has ever had sex in space.
  • Marijuana and the hops in your beer come from the same plant family.
  • You can generally tell the color of a chickens eggs by the color of its ears.

  • As recently as 2004, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration permitted the production and marketing of maggots for limited use as a “medical device”.
  • The Declaration of Independence was written on animal skin.
  • Taking into consideration the upcoming holiday season. Christmas was originally banned in the American colonies.
  • Jackie Mitchell, the first (and only) female player in Major League Baseball, once struck out Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in consecutive at bats.
  • Hall of Fame MLB pitcher Hoyt Wilhelm hit a home run in his first MLB at-bat. He never hit another home run over the remainder of his 21 year career.

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TRUTH IS STRANGER THAN FICTION

10/28/2025 “INSPIRATION”   Leave a comment

Everyone at one time or another has a bad day or a bad week or a bad year. When your in one of these ruts it’s sometimes difficult to pull yourself out of it. Todays post is meant to inspire the readers and to lift their spirits a little. I hope it works for you!

  • “Never bend your head. Always hold it high. Look the world straight in the eye.” Helen Keller
  • “Keep your eyes on the stars, keep your feet on the ground.” Theodore Roosevelt
  • “I never remember feeling tired by work, though idleness exhausts me completely. Arthur Conan Doyle
  • “The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you got a put up with the rain.” Dolly Parton
  • There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle.” Albert Einstein

  • “Don’t give in! Make your own trail.” Katharine Hepburn
  • “You may have to fight a battle more than once to win it.” Margaret Thatcher
  • “One of the things I learned the hard way was it does not pay to get discouraged. Keeping busy and making optimism a way of life can restore your faith in yourself.” Lucille Ball
  • Even if you’re on the right track you’ll get run over if you just sit there. Will Rogers
  • “When written in Chinese, the word “crisis” is composed of two characters. One represents danger and the other represents opportunity.” John F Kennedy “

And finally one of my favorites:

Rules for Living

“Do not worry, eat three square meals a day, say your prayers, be courteous to your creditors, keep your digestion’s good, and steer clear of biliousness, exercise, go slow and go easy. Maybe there are other things that your special case requires to make you happy, but, my friend, these, I reckon, will give you a good life.” Abraham Lincoln

THESE SHOULD RAISE YOUR SPIRITS A LITTLE

10/25/2025 PLEASE MEET “BIG AL”   Leave a comment

Of all the historical scientific icons, in my opinion Albert Einstein should lead the list. You would think that someone with his accomplishments would be honored after his death even more so than when he was alive. Today’s post is a story that I found concerning Mr. Einstein after his death. It just goes to prove that human beings suck and no matter what the reasoning, they can justify any weird and bizarre actions that they think is necessary. Read on and be horrified like I was.

Did you know that Albert Einstein’s eyes are sitting in a bank vault in New Jersey? About the same time that pathologist Thomas Stoltz Harvey absconded with the brain mere hours after the famed physicist’s death in New Jersey in 1955, Einstein’s ophthalmologist, Dr. Henry Abrams, removed his eyes. Abrams placed them in a jar and locked them away in a bank vault. Although rumors pop up from time to time that the eyes will be put on the auction block, Abrams maintains that he has no plans to sell them. “When you look into his eyes, you’re looking into the beauties and mysteries of the world,” he said. “They are as clear as crystal; they seem to have such depth.”

Here’s just a little trivia factoid.

The creature designers for Star Wars based Yoda’s eyes on Albert Einstein’s eyes.

And finally a relatively famous quote by Albert Einstein that I’ve always loved and respected: “I love Humanity, but I hate humans.” It just proves to me that he was even more intelligent than I thought.

R.I.P. AL

10/23/2025 👽ODD SCI-FACTS👽   Leave a comment

I’ve been fascinated for decades about anything related to space travel. I can thank my mother for that when shortly after Sputnik made its appearance she showed up in my bedroom with paint brushes and paints. She then proceeded to turn my bedroom into a huge space mural filled with planets, stars, meteorites, and spaceships.. She knew I loved anything related to space travel because I was already a sci-fi junkie at the ripe old age of five. Today’s post contains information that I’ve picked up along the way concerning the space race and weird little factoids that you may never have heard before. I hope you enjoy them.

  • Our galaxy is so wide that, at the speed of light, it would take you 100,000 years to cross it.
  • A meteorite the size of the school bus would destroy the entire eastern seaboard of the United States.
  • The volume of the Earth’s moon is the same as the volume of the Pacific Ocean.
  • A solar flare is basically a gigantic magnetic arch-like horseshoe magnet-that attracts itself inward, back to the surface of the sun.
  • The famous Halley’s Comet returns to earth every 76 years. It last appeared in 1986 and will reappear here again in 2062.

  • A solar flare, ejected from the sun’s surface, can reach speeds of 190 miles per second or 306 kilometers per second.
  • It takes 3 minutes for the sunlight that is reflected from the moon to reach our eyes.
  • Astronauts are not permitted to eat beans before they go into space because the methane gas released while passing wind can damage spacesuit materials.
  • A light-year is the distance light travels in one year or 870,000,000,000 miles or 9.4 5 trillion kilometers.
  • A Martian day lasts 24 hours, 37 min., and 23 seconds. And Earth Day last 23 hours, 56 min., and 4 seconds.

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Here’s a salute to one of the greatest minds of all time.

Galileo Galilei

Here’s fair warning to some of you out there with outrageous or ridiculous theories. Galileo got into trouble with the Inquisition for his many theories, and spent some serious time in prison. The fact that he was correct made no difference.

TIME TO BLAST OFF