There are hundreds of thousands of thoughts running through our minds every single minute. In such a busy world that we live in, we’re bombarded with information, whether from media or other people that we have to process somehow. And this is one hell of a task to do, yet it never ends.
So let’s all put a pause on whatever it is that our pacing minds and bodies are thinking and doing and sit back to enjoy the moment. While devouring so much content, voluntarily or not, we often forget to reflect on the things we see, read and hear.
This time we’re going to do just the opposite with our monthly collection of “Today I Learned” posts that spark the joys of curiosity and learning. Scroll down, upvote your favorite posts and let this break last longer with more TIL posts that we have prepared for you, here, here, and here.
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TIL Norway sends The UK a christmas tree every year to thank UK for saving Norway in WW2
TIL in the early 90s LL Cool J shared with his grandma that he couldn't survive as a rapper now that gangsta rap was popular. His grandma responded, "Oh baby, just knock them out!" which inspired him to write 'Mama Said Knock You Out' a grammy award winning certified platnum single.
TIL that the Magic Eraser has no chemical solvents in it. Instead it is a special foam with super sharp microscopic edges that basically scrapes off dirt.
Aye, it's effectively a soft sanding pad. They rub off paint and smear it.
With so much information bombarding us every day, it may be challenging to separate valuable information from things that do nothing but waste our time. So Bored Panda reached out to Alex Wong, the “Hijack” Copywriter, who has been on a mission to help small and corporate businesses “hijack” their clients’ minds and help them to grow their businesses and sales.
"When it comes to learning something new, I always try to stick with reputable sources. Well-respected sites, books, journals, and academic papers are better than blogs or sites focused on getting the most attention and clicks," Wong said.
He added that if he's not sure, he always asks others who are more familiar with the topic what they recommend. "Reddit and Quora are great resources to get feedback on a wide variety of topics," Wong added.
TIL Flowers exposed to the playback sound of a flying bee produce sweeter nectar within 3 minutes, with sugar concentration averaging 20% higher.
TIL that the "Perfect Aryan" poster child that was widely used in Nazi propaganda was actually Jewish. The photo was selected from a Nazi-held contest, where the photographer of the baby had submitted the photo as an ironic joke.
TIL The founder of Sony hired an outspoken critic of their products so they could make better products. 20 years later, he became the president of Sony.
It's no secret that when it comes to learning new things, many people don't know where to start or try to find excuses not to. Wong, however, believes that he's built differently than most people since he doesn't lack motivation.
"For me, once I found out that learning something is beneficial, even if I may not want to do it initially, I will still find a way to do it. For example, I’m currently learning how to run FB ads to market a book I published. Even though it would have been easier to hire someone to do it, I figured it would be beneficial for me to learn about the platform and how they work. That way, I will be able to run ads for any products in the future," he explained.
Wong argues that in the end, it all comes down to finding your "why". "Once you find a strong enough reason to do something, the next step is figuring out 'how' to do it. Most people don't want to put in the hard work to learn something new but still want the results," Wong concluded.
TIL that in 1845 79 people died in a bridge collapse that happened because a large crowd had gathered to watch a clown in a bathtub be pulled up a river by four geese.
TIL that Supai, AZ is the most remote community in the contiguous US. It is 8 miles from the nearest road and is only accessible by foot, mule, or helicopter. It is the only place in the United States where mail is still carried in and out by mules.
It's a tribal community Inside the Grand Canyon. They don't want a road, because they would be drastically over-run with tourists. Also, people who are willing to hike 8 miles are far quieter than hundreds of vehicles.
TIL in 1982, Byron Peiss wrote a book called the Secret. In it, there are clues to 12 treasure boxes hidden in various places all around the US and Canada. As of 2022, only 3 of the 12 boxes have ever been found. If a box is discovered, you can exchange it for bragging rights and a precious gem
Previously, we also spoke with Helen Marlo, a licensed clinical psychologist and Jungian psychoanalyst who provides psychotherapy, psychoanalysis, and consultation about how we can all become better at learning new things every day.
According to Marlo, “it helps to understand what messages we have internalized about curiosity as well as the responses received from others when we express curiosity.”
“For example, many internalize that being curious means they “do not know something” or are not intelligent. That inhibits curiosity and its negative effects are compounded because it limits further learning,” the professor explained.
TIL Ladybugs are extremely promiscuous, and as a result have rampant STD'S
I'm going to be thinking about this all day now.... A row of ladybirds lined up outside the clinic, not looking eachother in the face
TIL that the disability with the highest unemployment rate is actually schizophrenia, at 70-90%
Not surprising considering how schizophrenia can impact people’s relationship with reality as well as considering how the world views people with such mental disorder. To add, how in most part of the world, the disease is often treated as paranormal condition.
And factor in that many schizophreniacs go off their meds periodically and can't function in a normal job as a result. It's sad, but it's understandable.
Load More Replies...Crazy thing I learned about schizophrenia: In developed countries, people that can hear voices typically have a negative experience, like "you are worthless," "no one loves you," etc. Everything the voices say is horrible. In less developed countries, their experience is typically positive. "You're amazing!" "You're doing a great job!" The reason? Less developed countries see the person as hearing voices from ghosts or spirits, which is a positive experience for everyone involved. In developed countries, we shame mental health and treat people with such conditions as lepers and vile creatures. You can actually take someone that has a negative experience and actually work on it to make it positive. It's amazing what a little compassion can do for someone.
It has more to do with heritage than the country you live in. People with parents from third world countries who migrate to the first world and are born in an developed country still hear uplifting voices. Where as people with parents from the first world, migrate to a third world country and are born there mostly hear negative things
Load More Replies...Job applications really don't treat people with disabilities nicely, huh
Nope. Autism Spectrum here and I can't tell anyone because when I was learning how to apply, I was told that I'd have my hand held. ... almost literally. Pass!
Load More Replies...Asperger Autism is similar with about 80% in Germany. 85% in US, according to this: https://thinkingautismguide.com/2018/02/why-is-autistic-unemployment-rate-so.html
Wow, this surprises me for some reason. I’d really like to see the study that came up with the 85% unemployment rate which seems to be mentioned everywhere but no one listed the source. I can find the study that lists the unemployment rate at 66% but it’s from 2015. I think I want NOT to believe it because I don’t want anyone struggling with Autism to think they cannot hold down a job.
Load More Replies...Some troll (not the first word that came to mind) is gratuitously downvoting random comments. I can't fathom the mind that thinks that this is amusing.
And I go around upvoting when I see someone downvoted without a darn good reason.
Load More Replies...It is a debilitating condition. I've treated many people diagnosed schizophrenic. Some were highly functional with the right med combination and awareness of symptoms, it was a very small percentage. Most had marginally functional lives but not consistently
The sad part is that when they are on meds that work well for them and take them consistently, they are perfectly normal and can hold down a job. But just ONE episode can cause them to lose everything. I used to volunteer with a mental health organization and I saw a guy lose both his job and his housing in less than a week. Both his boss and his roommate thought he was on drugs and he couldn't correct them because the stigma of schizophrenia is worse than the stigma of being on drugs. In America, in theory people with mental illness have some job protections through the Americans with Disabilities Act, but in reality most people wouldn't feel comfortable disclosing that information.
I worked with a guy that must have had it because I can't think of why else he started trying to fist fight the air.
At my work, they just play the music loud to drown out the voices. Problem solved.
Not surprising at all considering the tendency of those with schizophrenia to be noncompliant with taking medications and the very serious difficult to deal with common symptoms of paranoia, delusions, disorganized though and speech, and abnormal physical behaviors. It's a devastating mental condition.
I was diagnosed with schizophrenia nearly twenty years ago and after many years of fighting it, I just gave in and confronted the entities. Now I work for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, trying to bring as many little ones home as possible. My indigenous ancestors claim I am not mentally deficient but would rather be a shaman in their culture.
I've have a couple of schizo friends and generally they are great people to know but take them off their medication they can be truly unpredictable and downright scary.
You’re thinking of dissociative identity disorder (DID). Very different from Schizophrenia. And, I hope people get that you’re joking.
Load More Replies...TIL there's an unexplained global effect called "The Hum" only heard by about 2-4% of the world's population. The phenomenon was recorded as early as the 1970s, and its possible causes range from industrial environments, to neurological reasons, to tinnitus, to fish.
Research suggests that “individuals who feel secure in relationships are more likely to feel and express curiosity including feeling free and confident to explore others’ viewpoints; pursue a new hobby, or learn a new subject area,” Marlo noted.
Among many new things we can learn every day, language is one of the most beneficial ones. She explained that learning a new language has many benefits including improving cultural awareness and increasing empathy.
There has been an argument that learning languages have the ability to prevent diseases like dementia, but Helen warns that data on that is still unclear. “However, very generally speaking, there is a “use it or lose it” principle when it comes to our brain health. We are less likely to “lose it” when we “use it."
TIL A 2017 study found that the introduction of iodized salt in 1924 raised the IQ for the one-quarter of the population most deficient in iodine.
In France, in those days, there was a slur which said 'crétin des Alpes', basically mountain (Alps) idiot, because of the intellectual deficiency due to the lack of iodine in this area.
TIL that breast cancer used to be known as "Nun's disease" due to the higher prevalence amongst nuns, who were at increased risk due to their celibate lifestyle. An association between reproductive history and cancer risk wasn't proven for about 250 years after it was associated with nuns.
So they lived long enough to die of cancer, unlike their reproducing sisters
TIL Queen Sophie of the Netherlands’ marriage with King William was so turbulent that when she died, she was buried in her wedding dress because she viewed her life ended on the day she got married.
Turbulent? He raped her, abused her (physically), cheated on her with many women and was an unstable, sick man.
TIL In the 1990s Marvel released their financial reports in comic book form. The comics featured characters like Spider-Man and The Incredible Hulk discussing revenue sources and future business plans.
TIL Certain types of fly larvae are ideal for treating gangrene because they feed on dead and infected tissue but leave healthy tissue alone. However, because of the nature of this type of treatment, many people are reluctant to try it.
Maggots clean wounds up beautifully! I treated a festering skin cancer infected with maggots & they had made the skin as clean as a whistle. Was amazing to see.
TIL The Xerox 914, the first commercially successful photocopier, came equipped with a 'scorch eliminator'. The scorch eliminator was actually just a fire extinguisher, which was required as the device commonly caught fire.
Ah yes, Xerox. The company that invented the computer business and then gave it away.
TIL Lucky Charms were invented by a General Mills employee who chopped Circus Peanut candies into a bowl of Cheerios.
TIL a Berlin-based artist tricked Google Maps into thinking that a completely empty street was bursting with traffic by filling a wagon with 99 smartphones, opening Maps navigation on all of them, and then slowly pulling the wagon along Berlin streets.
TIL there is a species of mushroom that infects and zombifies carpenter ants. The mushroom slowly takes control of the ant’s motor functions and leads them away from the colony to die in a place ideal for growing. Then the mushroom grows out of the ant’s head.
TIL Charles Darwin spent 6 months in South America looking for a lesser rhea (an ostrich-like bird) only to have one served to him for dinner. Halfway through the meal, Darwin realized what he was eating, gathered the parts and sent them to England for taxidermy and formal classification.
TIL of "Target Fixation": a phenomenon where an individual becomes so focused on an observed object (be it a target, or hazard to be avoided) that they inadvertently increase their risk of colliding with the object.
TIL Michelangelo created a sleeping Cupid figure and treated it with acidic earth to appear ancient. He then sold it to a dealer who then sold it to Cardinal Riario of San Giorgio who later learned of the fraud and demanded his money back. Michelangelo was permitted to keep his share of the money.
TIL about the lia radiological accident, where three Georgians discovered two abandoned radioactive sources in the forest around which "there was no snow for about a 1 m (3.3 ft) radius, and the ground was steaming", they then decided to use them as heat sources for the night. One died.
TIL that nearly all mammals, from mice to giraffes, have exactly 7 cervical vertebrae in their necks; the only exceptions are sloths and manatees.
TIL: According to Guinness World Records, PATH, a mostly underground pedestrian walkway network in downtown Toronto, is the largest underground shopping complex in the world. PATH spans more than 30 kilometres of restaurants, shopping, services and entertainment.
TIL one of the moons of Mars (Phobos) orbits Mars much faster than Mars rotates, and completes an orbit in just 7 hours and 39 minutes. From the surface of Mars it appears to rise in the west, move across the sky in 4 hours and 15 minutes, and set in the east, twice each Martian day.
TIL about a Brazilian Con artist called Carlos Kaiser, who had a decade long career as a Football player, and managed to sign for multiple teams, without player even one regular game. The one time he almost had to play, he started a fight during, to get a Red Card, avoiding to actually play.
TIL Pope John Paul II forgave his attempted assassin Mehmet Ali Ağca who shot him four times in 1981. At the Pope's request, the Italian President pardoned Ağca of the crime and he was deported back to Turkey. Ağca requested to meet Pope Francis in 2014 but Francis chose to decline.
TIL of a plane who made a forced landing on a Greenland ice cap in Nov. 1942. In attempting their rescue, 6 more planes either also stranded or crashed and it would take the survivors 5 and a half months of sheltering on the glacier until they were all rescued.
TIL that a politician from the United Kingdom, John Bell, believed that he was a bird, stating that he could fly much better than a bird, because he kept his shoulders oiled. Despite his state of mind, he remained a Member of Parliament until his death in 1851.
TIL that consumption of the Australian aquatic fern called Nardoo can cause you to starve if improperly prepared. The plant contains vast quantities of an enzyme that obliterates thiamine (vitamin B1), making your body unable to unlock energy from food, even if eating a full nutritious diet.
TIL: Prior to the D-Day landings, men were covertly sent ashore from submarines to collect samples of the sand to see whether it could support the weight of the tanks, trucks and other vehicles.
Also, in preparation for the landings, the Allied forces ran practice landings on the Welsh coast. The boats carried no ammunition for their guns. Unfortunately, a German U-boat patrol spotted the exercise and sank many ships, killing a lot of servicemen at no risk to the German crews..
TIL about Narbacular Drop, a puzzle game made by students at DigiPen University of Technology, which emphasized the usage of portals to solve puzzles; the entire team was later hired by Valve Software and would go on to make Portal
And portal 2( plz don't tell me the end) Edit: I have now.
TIL it took around 3 billion years for the very first single-celled organisms to eventually evolve into basic animal life forms. For comparison, dinosaurs were around for about 165 million years, modern humans have been around for 300,000 years.
And still some people think that a cat not turning into a dog means evolution doesn't exist.
TIL the US Navy has a 'Fleet Admiral' rank which only four people have ever achieved. It includes the unique benefit of active duty pay for life.
TIL in 1981 Chicago mayor Jane Byrne moved into the crime ridden Cabrini–Green public housing project in an attempt to improve its reputation. Despite having bodyguards she left just a few weeks later, furthering the public perception of Cabrini–Green as the "worst of the worst" in the city.
TIL Throughout much of the 20th century, a majority of states once required a blood test (mostly for STIs) before issuing a couple a marriage license.
in my country it's still required (to prove couple isn't related and to inform them about rh factor compatibility)
TIL Some flying insects have biologic versions of gyroscopes. The haltere is a small bell like structure that vibrates and can account for changes in rotation using the Coriolis effect, so the insect knows its position and can make corrections.
Note: this post originally had 65 images. It’s been shortened to the top 40 images based on user votes.
TIL Snoopy is a beagle. Saw it on a little boy tshirt at the doctors waiting room.
I used to have a beagle that slept on top of her dog house. I thought that was something Charles Schultz made up but I guess it's a beagle trait.
Load More Replies...TIL Snoopy is a beagle. Saw it on a little boy tshirt at the doctors waiting room.
I used to have a beagle that slept on top of her dog house. I thought that was something Charles Schultz made up but I guess it's a beagle trait.
Load More Replies...