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We as a species love fascinating and interesting things. Sometimes we even need to suspend our disbelief upon seeing an unbelievable picture. Surely, that bonsai can't be just growing randomly in the middle of a lake!

There is a community for enthusiasts of those kinds of pictures. It's called r/CantBelieveThatsReal and has amassed over 47k members since its inception in 2020. It features real pictures from nature, history, and many different parts of the world. Some are spooky, some mind-blowing, others might make you say, "How is this even possible???" Let us know which entries you find the most fascinating and unbelievable by upvoting them!

#1

Frozen Bamboo Path In Kyoto

Frozen Bamboo Path In Kyoto

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dew avatar
DEW
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5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We have bamboo in our backyard and it is really pretty when it snows.

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#2

The Glasswing Butterfly. One Of The Most Delicately Beautiful Creatures To Exist

The Glasswing Butterfly. One Of The Most Delicately Beautiful Creatures To Exist

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Mark
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5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It looks like a sail that you’d rig to a catamaran or windsurf board

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#3

DMX Wearing Anti-Paparazzi Scarf That Ruins Photos By Affecting Flash Photography

DMX Wearing Anti-Paparazzi Scarf That Ruins Photos By Affecting Flash Photography

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PeeledPotato
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5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

that would be amazing for celebrities to wear to ward of unwanted paparazzi

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Some things we can't believe are real due to their aesthetic value. "The beauty found in art and nature is so intense that sometimes you just have to pause and take it in," psychologist Gema Sánchez Cuevas writes for Exploring Your Mind.

A beautiful landscape, a fascinating work of art or a moving poem have the power to trigger a positive emotion in us. Professor at the University of Barcelona Rafael Bisquerra refers to them as "aesthetic emotions." According to him, "art – or any object creating beauty – can spark numerous responses in people, both positive and negative – which have their roots in emotional response."

#4

This Bonsai Tree Naturally Growing In The Middle Of A Lake

This Bonsai Tree Naturally Growing In The Middle Of A Lake

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#6

This Polish Statue Looks Like Darth Vader After A Snowy Day

This Polish Statue Looks Like Darth Vader After A Snowy Day

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In reality, we're not only moved or interested in things that are pleasing to the eye. "The brain is also fascinated by mysterious things that arouse an intense interest in us," psychologist Valeria Sabater writes.

When there's a stimulus that combines the known with the unknown, it inspires, interests and arouses our brains. Our minds love a mystery and strive to solve it. Let's take that picture of the frozen bamboo in Kyoto. It automatically makes us ask: "How does this happen?"

#7

A Single Drop Of Sea Water Under A Microscope

A Single Drop Of Sea Water Under A Microscope

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#9

Srirangam Temple,india!!

Srirangam Temple,india!!

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How else can we describe this feeling of fascination? It's definitely positive: it makes us feel happy, joyful, inspired, interested and amazed. Sabater calls this "a psycho-physiological state of great transcendence."

#11

Butterfly Eggs Of The Species Nymphalis Antiopa

Butterfly Eggs Of The Species Nymphalis Antiopa

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#12

A Frozen Windshield After A Windy Night

A Frozen Windshield After A Windy Night

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KDS
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5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This bugs me it looks like an octopus put it’s arms all over it.

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Why is fascination so powerful? As Sabater puts it, "every stimulus that generates fascination in us almost instantly activates our limbic system." That's the part of our brain that regulates our behavioral and emotional responses. "Once this area is stimulated, endorphins (pleasure hormones) are released, which can even help people focus and flow with new ideas," Sabater writes.

#13

Hyperion, The World's Tallest Living Tree (379.7 Feet)

Hyperion, The World's Tallest Living Tree (379.7 Feet)

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#14

This Is A Crack In Steel Through An Electron Microscope

This Is A Crack In Steel Through An Electron Microscope

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#15

The Pathways At Ohio State University Were Paved Based On The Routes Students Took Before There Were Paved Paths

The Pathways At Ohio State University Were Paved Based On The Routes Students Took Before There Were Paved Paths

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The psychologist also pulls out an interesting fact related to the origin of the word "fascinate". It has its roots in the Latin word "to bewitch." It had a negative connotation in the past and people associated it with controlling a person against their will. However, nowadays the word "fascinate" has a light-hearted connotation, referring to feelings of well-being.

#16

Valonia Ventricosa, Also Known As Bubble Algae Or Sailor's Eyeballs Is A Species Of Alga Found In Oceans Throughout The World In Tropical Regions. It Is The Largest Single Cell Organism. That's Right. What You're Looking At Here Is A Single Cell

Valonia Ventricosa, Also Known As Bubble Algae Or Sailor's Eyeballs Is A Species Of Alga Found In Oceans Throughout The World In Tropical Regions. It Is The Largest Single Cell Organism. That's Right. What You're Looking At Here Is A Single Cell

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#17

This Photo Of Cemetery Looks Like 2 Photo Put Together

This Photo Of Cemetery Looks Like 2 Photo Put Together

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David
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5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

that would be an interesting / frustrating jigsaw puzzle photo

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#18

A Copy Of The Mona Lisa Painted Alongside Da Vinci By His Apprentice. Unlike The Original, The Paint Was Preserved, Showing What The Iconic Painting Would Have Looked Like In 1517

A Copy Of The Mona Lisa Painted Alongside Da Vinci By His Apprentice. Unlike The Original, The Paint Was Preserved, Showing What The Iconic Painting Would Have Looked Like In 1517

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Fascination's not-so-distant cousin awe also has its own impressive amount of research. "People can experience awe when confronted with a vast natural landscape, like Zion or the Grand Canyon, or when listening to extraordinary, complex music. People might also feel awe when witnessing an extraordinary act by another person or while viewing art that changes how they see the world," according to the Arizona State University.

#19

The World's Biggest Horse, Brooklyn "Brookie" Supreme

The World's Biggest Horse, Brooklyn "Brookie" Supreme

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#20

Mount St. Helens Before And After Its 1980 Eruption

Mount St. Helens Before And After Its 1980 Eruption

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#21

This Building Has Cartoon Windows

This Building Has Cartoon Windows

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Researcher Michelle Shiota says that awe is exclusively a human experience. "The capacity for awe relies on something that humans are certainly best at," she explains. "That is taking a mental map of things and people in the world and forming an internal mental representation of those things."

#23

The Best Preserved Dinosaur Fossil Ever Discovered- A 110 Million Year Old Nodosaur

The Best Preserved Dinosaur Fossil Ever Discovered- A 110 Million Year Old Nodosaur

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#24

In Germany You Can Play Pong With The Person On The Other Side Of Traffic Lights

In Germany You Can Play Pong With The Person On The Other Side Of Traffic Lights

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"When we're in an awe state, part of what our minds are telling us is that prior experience doesn’t necessarily apply here," she continues. "What we think it's doing is promoting a cognitive and behavioral state – and perhaps even a physiological state – that makes it easier to take in information."

#26

A US Coin That's Been Cut Out

A US Coin That's Been Cut Out

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#27

Children Living In Siberia Getting UV Light Exposure During The Long Dark Winter Months

Children Living In Siberia Getting UV Light Exposure During The Long Dark Winter Months

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Bex
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This is so Russian. Like it wouldn't still work if they moved around and played. But no. Stand there at military rest until you are healthy child! You must vitamin D!

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Danish Susanne
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I grew up in Denmark and my mother used a sunlight once a week, when we were children. The whole family, not just us children.

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Pille P
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

We had this in 80s in Estonia, we were told it is against parasites and skin diseases. I can still remember the specific smell of the violet looking lamp (I only saw through those almost black goggles of course)

david2074 avatar
David
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When I was a kid I remember my mom or I think it was my grandmother having a sun lamp. Basically a UV light for home tanning. I sort of knew not to stare at it but I'd be even more careful of it these days.

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keyboardtek
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I could use that to combat my Seasonal Affective Disorder, and I am just in North Carolina!

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David
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I have SAD but I don't find the lights do much for me. For me it isn't really about a lack of vitamin D or light. It's about it being too cold outside to go do things and crappy rainy weather when I do and stuff like that. Even if the bright light magically followed me around it would still be too cold to go to the beach, enjoy walks and bike rides, kneel down in my garden and so on.

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EP
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

How long is one winter night in Siberia in hours? Where I am located in America it’s 14 hours of night (sunset to sunrise) in winter. Missing out on 3 extra hours of daylight because it’s winter is agonizing. 6pm feels like midnight and the evenings drag on forever bc of how the early darkness makes one feel. Saying this out loud that’s not a huge impact in comparison to other parts of the world but it feels like it. So I cannot imagine what these even longer winter nights feel like. Ouch.

ceciliastenqvist avatar
liaqvist
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

It could be between 14h and 24h. Here in southern Sweden its 15h right now but will increase to 16. In northen parts there is only a few hours of daylight, so night is somewhere between 20-24hours during winter. Its the opposite in summer.

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I'm.Just.A.Girl
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had no idea they had to do this, I mean now it all makes sense. Well I am so naive and ignorant of other geological locations and cultures. But I want to learn!!

ellenranks avatar
Diolla
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I have a solarium in my bedroom for use in the winter. Good voor Vit D and against winter blues.

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Shaunn Munn
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Ya know, they could have let the kids play and they'd have gotten the same treatment. Those poor little soldiers.

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Jane Hower
Community Member
4 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This is why people should be outside more. Keeping them in during Covid was a crime!!!

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Mickie Shea
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The guy working the light. Is he a cook or something, just cooking the kids?

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Mary Peace
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

How long did they have to stand still like that? Is the room heated?

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Faith Nicole
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I always wondered if countries or states that experience 24/7 darknes for a period of time did some type of light therapy, especially for the kiddos. Glad to see they do,

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Ąåřţđęşịɠŋȿ
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

seems like you could have some activity for them, rather than just standing at attention.

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Snake Queen
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Can someone help me out? Why do they need UV light and why are they almost naked and what is going on? Sorry

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Powerful Katrinka
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

To get the equivalent of sunlight exposure so they don't get sick from insufficient Vitamin D.

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#28

Motorcycle Built From An Old Tractor

Motorcycle Built From An Old Tractor

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Barry Meyer
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

My brother had a pickup with a tractor engine. Had to sit and idle for like 10 minutes on really cold days before it even moved. I asked him "man why the hell did you buy this" he says "a 200 dollar truck's a good deal"

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#29

Spectators At The Fagradalsfjall Eruption, Getting As Close As They Can To Lava Without Getting Singed

Spectators At The Fagradalsfjall Eruption, Getting As Close As They Can To Lava Without Getting Singed

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Mark
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Icelandic people are just so chill. There’s almost no crime, and they’re even buddies with flaming pimples of the earth

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#30

Basketball Court In A Cave

Basketball Court In A Cave

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So let yourself focus on these pictures from nature and elsewhere that we found on the r/CantBelieveThatReal subreddit. Don't be afraid to "stop moving", as Liota said, and bask in the awe that these images elicit. Apparently, it's really good for your well-being.

#31

Old Meets New In China

Old Meets New In China

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Quirinus
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5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Those lights seem to be awfully bright. Light pollution at its "finest"

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#32

Comparison Of The Tip Of A Hypodermic Needle, Viper's Fang, Spider's Fang And The Stinger Of A Scorpion

Comparison Of The Tip Of A Hypodermic Needle, Viper's Fang, Spider's Fang And The Stinger Of A Scorpion

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#34

This Is What Two-Time Olympic Gold Medalist, Alex Gregory's Hands Looked Like After Rowing 600 Miles In The Arctic In 2017

This Is What Two-Time Olympic Gold Medalist, Alex Gregory's Hands Looked Like After Rowing 600 Miles In The Arctic In 2017

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#35

A House Built Under A Large Boulder (Portugal)

A House Built Under A Large Boulder (Portugal)

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#36

Ever Wondered How They Install Those Huge Power Line Towers ?

Ever Wondered How They Install Those Huge Power Line Towers ?

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#38

500 Circulated $1 Bills Next To 500 Un-Circulated $1 Bills

500 Circulated $1 Bills Next To 500 Un-Circulated $1 Bills

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#39

This Is What Happens To Aluminum When A 1/2 Oz Piece Of Plastic Hits It At 15,000 Mph In Space

This Is What Happens To Aluminum When A 1/2 Oz Piece Of Plastic Hits It At 15,000 Mph In Space

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David
Community Member
5 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Googled - In case you were wondering about the thickness - this was not in space. It is a land based test NASA did to show the damage. And another source said the projectile was 1.2 ounce, not 1/2 ounce. But that's still a big hole from a little thing moving really fast. -- Bonus info, to thig is " the act of begging". I typoed thing as thig and wondered why it didn't flag as a spelling error. I didn't know thig was a word.

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#40

Salt Ponds In San Francisco Bay; Red From Algae That Thrive In Salty Water (Aerial By Nearmap)

Salt Ponds In San Francisco Bay; Red From Algae That Thrive In Salty Water (Aerial By Nearmap)

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