“Today Years Old” Is a Meme That’s Sure to Teach You Something

Have ever found out a simple detail about the world around you that you can’t believe you didn’t know before now? Well, you’re not alone. One of the latest memes to take the internet by storm is “today years old,” where people post things they learned today that have changed the way they look at the world, their childhood, products, or life in general. Essentially, they’re tidbits of knowledge that should be common but are somehow…not.

Read through this list of 15 good ones, and I bet you’ll have your mind blown at least once!

#15. Trying this ASAP.

Image Credit: Twitter

#14. Love.

Image Credit: Twitter

#13. If you could see my face right now…

Image Credit: Twitter

#12. Interesting.

Image Credit: Twitter

#11. Stealing this rtfn.

Image Credit: Twitter

#10. Wait, seriously?

Image Credit: Twitter

#9. I guess it had to stand for something?

Image Credit: Twitter

#8. I don’t want to know if this is true or not.

Image Credit: Twitter

#7. Am I wrong, or is this adorable?

Image Credit: Twitter

#6. A modern revelation for you.

Image Credit: Twitter

#5. I guess he was okay with it?

Image Credit: Twitter

#4. Shatner either loves or hates this.

Image Credit: Twitter

#3. It’s like he’s a real person now.

Image Credit: Twitter

#2. It’s kind of abstract, to be fair.

Image Credit: Twitter

#1. Imma use it even more now.

Image Credit: Twitter

 

Ok, I learned a lot just now…

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Twitter Users Share 20 of the Most 2000s Things They Ever Did

The 2000s were a heck of a time. Any remnants of that decade now seem dated in all the best and worst ways.

Photo Credit: Twitter

So let’s take a little trip back in time to relive those glory years, shall we?

1. Re-ripped

Photo Credit: Twitter

2. How’d it go?

Photo Credit: Twitter

3. Oh, Limewire…

Photo Credit: Twitter

4. One of many

Photo Credit: Twitter

5. Cold calling

Photo Credit: Twitter

6. ZUNE

Photo Credit: Twitter

7. Quite a television program

Photo Credit: Twitter

8. Shazaam

Photo Credit: Twitter

9. Those were the days…

Photo Credit: Twitter

10. Took a while

Photo Credit: Twitter

11. Personal songs

Photo Credit: Twitter

12. This might be the winner

Photo Credit: Twitter

13. Before camera phones

Photo Credit: Twitter

14. Pop it

Photo Credit: Twitter

15. Uh oh

Photo Credit: Twitter

16. You were not alone, my friend

Photo Credit: Twitter

17. All dolled up

Photo Credit: Twitter

18. Decked out

Photo Credit: Twitter

19. HitClips

Photo Credit: Twitter

20. She’s crafty

Photo Credit: Twitter

What are your confessions from the 2000s?

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6+ Secret Spots in Ancient Mayan Cities That Are Hidden from Tourists

The Mayan civilization was well ahead of its time, a fact which is reflected in incredible structures and amazing ancient treasures. Every year, archeologists and other researchers discover more and more mysteries hidden in temple complexes and buried deep in caves and other sacred spaces.

Below are just 7 secrets living in the ruins that remain out-of-sight when you’re following a guided tour.

 

#7. The Balancanche Caves, Chichen Itza

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Most people have never seen the Balancanche caves, not even on a tour, because they’re almost 2 miles from the Mayan temple complex. Translated, it means “cave of the sacred jaguar throne,” and researchers believe the Maya performed rituals there 3,000 years ago.

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

You can only see one of the most famous rooms in the complex — the Mayan Tree of Life — in a 3D model that shows the limestone column in the center. The builders of the temple believed it connected the heavens to the underworld.

#6. Temple of Kukulkan, Chichen Itza

Image Credit: Wikimedia

This pyramid has been closed to the public since a tourist fell off the stairs in 2006, but you can still see it from a distance. What you can’t see, however, is that there are two smaller pyramids hidden inside the large outer structure and a secret room inside the smallest one.

Image Credit: YouTube

Recently, researchers found a 65 foot underground lake below the pyramid using magnetospheric exploration that they believe may be one of the Maya sacred cenotes. But will it might sound cool, archeologists fear that the water could result in the total destruction of the pyramid at some point in the future.

#5. The Ancient City of Tulum

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

It’s the only (known) Mayan city located on the Caribbean Sea. The 40-foot cliffs that make up most of it were marked by impermeable walls designed to protect the city from attack. While you can see them from the pristine beaches, getting close enough to touch is another matter.

#4. Coba Pyramids

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The ancient city of Coba offers what many tourists are looking for — a chance to climb to the top of a 135-foot-high pyramid and snap that photo op they’ve been dreaming of for years.

Unless you do climb all 120 steep steps, though, you’ll never get a peek at the ritual chamber inside that was used for ancient sacrifices.

#3. Pyramid of the Magician, Uxmal

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Uxmal is a 130-foot pyramid, but it’s really just the outermost one that you can see. 5 of them were actually built on top of each other over the centuries.

#2. Cenote Ik Kil

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

A cenote is essentially a giant sinkhole, and this one — a popular tour stop — was used as a place for sacrificial rituals.

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

What you can’t see, however, are the more macabre findings on the cenote’s floor. 130 feet down, archeologists have found human skeletons, animal bones, and ancient jewelry.

#1. Temple of the Inscriptions, Palenque

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The temple sits on top of the tomb of the local ruler, and there are 617 hieroglyphs on the inner walls, some of which still have not been deciphered. There is a hall with 3 chambers at the top of the pyramid, and inside one of them, a sacred passage to the tomb which was still full of treasures and artifacts when it was discovered back in 1949.

Image Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Tourists are not allowed inside the tomb, though a replica of it is on display at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico.

 

Kind of makes you want to grab your Indiana Jones hat and go exploring, huh?

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People Reveal The Things They’re Most Nostalgic about from High School

High school was a different time…and that’s not just the nostalgia talking. You had less responsibilities, more free time, and your friends were guaranteed to be in the same place every day.

So, when people on Reddit were asked what they miss most about high school, they couldn’t wait to chime in. Keep reading to hear their answers and take a trip down memory lane.

1. Freedom

I miss the freedom I felt hanging out with my friends and how excited I could be over nothing— meaning we may just be riding around or stopping at Wendy’s for a Frosty, everything brought me happiness. I miss the specific type of freedom and joy I got from those moments.

2. Everyone knew everyone

In a way, I felt like I mattered more. Sort of a “big fish in a small pond” kind of deal. I was so much more involved in extracurriculars than I am now. I played a varsity sport, was in two musical groups, and was in two other academic teams (think speech team, mock trial, mathletes kind of thing). I had more of an identity. In college and beyond, you’re kind of dumped into the “real world” where there are thousands of people like you out there, and it’s easier to lose a sense of purpose and belonging in the anonymity of the masses.

Also, everyone knew everyone. Yeah, there are a few people you might not like so much, but you get to see your friends every day. You knew where to find people. That might be a bad thing if you’re deliberately trying to avoid someone, but I personally was on pretty good terms with everyone at my school.

3. Not-so-instant

Social media consisted mostly of AIM. No Facebook, and MySpace wasn’t very popular yet.

Also, cell phones were a rarity. I really miss not being expected to be instantly reachable at any time. Don’t get me wrong, I appreciate the hell out of my pocket computer, but that aspect I do miss.

4. Everything was easy

It was so easy. I had a car my parents paid for, zero bills, all the money I made was personal spending money, I had a constant group of friends to hang out with and went to school in one of the best areas of the city with tons of shops within walking distance.

I was a privileged upper-middle-class kid and everything was ridiculously easy. High school was great.

5. No worries

How straightforward and safe it was. Your biggest worry was having bad grades or getting rejected by your crush.

Adulthood is like having your blinders removed and realizing you are walking on a narrow edge with chasms at the sides.

6. No problem

I had so much hope for the future. I could enjoy the “here and now” without letting the bad things get to me too much because I knew that high school was only a small part of my life. Didn’t have money? No problem, I’ll have more when I get older. No girlfriend? No problem, I’ve still got plenty of time to find “the one”!

Looking back, I can see that teenage thought that life would just “happen” to me. Ignorance was bliss, but now I’m paying for it.

7. Friends

Seeing friends every single day.

You try to stay in touch as much as possible but I certainly underestimated how hard that is.

8. What is everyone up to?

I miss knowing what everybody is up to! I know it sounds weird and I don’t mean it in a creepy way at all. It was just much easier to know what everybody was doing and how they were when you saw them every day. No weird “let’s get coffee sometime” texts to friends to catch up. No complicated friend groups. No having to go out of your way to meet people. No having to introduce yourself with your occupation tagged on the end.

9. Crushes

I think the thing I miss most is that feeling that goes through your entire body and soul when you see that pretty girl for the first time and she smiles at you and you just know that you two are going to have some great times together. I miss that feeling of having such a crush on her that even just knowing you might run into her tonight is enough to get you feeling like electricity in the air just before a big thunderstorm.

10. The sweet spot

Freedom in Grade 9 and 10.

Those two years you are in that sweet spot. Not old enough to really have to worry about your future but not so young that parents are constantly stressing about where you are and what you are doing.

I could go to school, hang with friends after school, not do homework, not study and still keep people happy. I got average grades which for 16-year-old me was more than good enough.

11. Simple

How simple everything was. All you had to do was go to school every day and do homework when you get home. That was the only thing I had to worry about: some homework and maybe a test or two, maybe a crush I had on some guy… but that was it.

12. Missing everything

I miss the people. I was unpopular (or so I thought, turns out they liked me when I wasn’t pushing everyone away.) I was in a small school, 300 people total. I miss the lack of responsibility. I miss the lazy afternoons in the spring when it was warm enough to take your coat off and lounge at the park nearby. I miss going to lunch at the burger joint on the corner and walking back to school with a pop in one hand and a cheeseburger in the other joking with my friends. I miss the feeling of endless possibility. I miss the sound of the crowd screaming when I got my first and only win on the wrestling team. I miss cheering the football team. I miss my teachers, even the ones I hated.

13. Bills? What are those?

Having a job but no real bills.

14. Brenda

I miss Brenda. She wasn’t into me or anything; she had a boyfriend, but she would talk to me sometimes when we were finished with track practice and I was waiting for the bus and she was waiting for her ride. She talked a mile a minute and said whatever was on her mind, and I found her delightful. We talked to each other at track and cross country meets too. I remember one time we were talking at a cross country meet while it was pouring down rain, and for some reason, she hugged me. I don’t know why she did it, but it felt wonderful. Sometime during junior year, her boyfriend knocked her up. She finished junior year, took summer school to get enough credits to graduate, and the two of them went off to get married. I never saw her again. (Sigh)

15. Theatre

I did theatre for most of high school. I miss hanging out with my closest friends in the auditorium every day. I miss making memes with each other before a show. I also miss the collective sense of accomplishment when we had a good show. It was just blissful.

16. Laughter

Man, I used to laugh so much! It was just a different kind of laugh where your stomach hurts and you sometimes even fall to the ground. I can remember a couple of times it happened so vividly and it kinda makes me feel sad that it doesn’t happen anymore.

17. Time and energy

No responsibilities, tons of free time, loads of energy. I’d go to school at 7, get off at 3, work 4 till 8 or so, hit the gym for an hour, go home and shower, and go to bed. Doing that 5 days a week now would absolutely kill me.

18. Boredom

The thing I miss the most is being bored. I don’t know if teenagers currently even have this anymore. Five to six kids sitting there trying to figure out what to do with themselves. Among our stupid ideas were:
– Trying to do skateboard/razor scooter tricks into a pool.
– Blowing up a large ants’ nest with kerosene.
– Deciding to play 7 minutes in heaven with a definitely inadequate ratio of guys to girls, which led to some hurt feelings, but eh.
Our collective imaginations got lazier once I got a car and we all just piled in there and loitered at the mall non-stop.

19. Naive

The ability to be naive about how the world really works.

20. More crushes

It’s strange, but… having crushes. I can’t remember the last time I knew a girl and just… pined for her. Just not being able to speak correctly around or to her, fantasizing about the smallest things, just wanting to be around her.

I just miss having that kind of innocent, weak-in-the-knees… just, sorta, desire. And not ‘desire’ just in the context of sex. I mean just liking somebody so much and wanting so much to tell them (and having real difficulty doing so) and wanting so badly to have them like you back.

I miss that feeling. I miss that… pull, in my heart, toward somebody.

21. Friends and teachers

A few friendships and some awesome teachers/classes as a result of awesome teachers. Now, most of those friendships have splintered into absolute nothingness and most of the cool teachers have retired, moved, or died over the last 5 years.

22. Lucky

The teachers. I didn’t realize how lucky I was to have wonderful teachers until several years later.

23. Bad to the bone

Not having a care in the world. Skipping class to break into the attic above the theater and pilfer stuff or fish at the pond behind the football field. Going to football games and making out under the bleachers only stopping to check the scoreboard now and then. Doing cringeworthy stuff to be edgy before I even knew what cringe or edgy was.

24. Best desks

Those desks where the chair was attached. I could crack my back so good with those things. I miss being able to do that regularly.

Anyone else feeling nostalgic?

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The Time a Computer Error Led to the Philippines Declaring War on…Pepsi?

Computer glitches are frustrating, but has one ever cost your company about $8 million and resulted in your headquarters being literally bombed? No?

Then consider yourself lucky, because that’s what happened – and more – when Pepsi accidentally announced a winning number in their Number Fever promotion back in May of 1992. Every day, residents of the Philippines checked under their bottle caps to see whether they’d won the usual daily prize of roughly $5 or had managed to nab a cap that would change their life to the tune of $40k.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

The promotion was working, too, in a country with tons of soda drinkers but where Pepsi, as in the rest of the world, consistently came in as #2 to rival Coke. Sales in the Philippines had spiked 40%, and Pepsi’s share of the market had risen to 26% as they gave away $5 prizes to 51,000 people and $40,000 to a mere 17.

All of that changed on May 25th, 1992, when the winning number flashed on the television screen – 349 – and literally hundreds of thousands of people thought they had won the day’s grand prize. They marched to Manila’s Pepsi plants the next morning to find that the number had been mistakenly printed on 800,000 bottles. Only two also contained the security code that declared the cap an authentic winner.

Pepsi owned the error and apologized (and presumably fired D.G. Consultores, the Mexican marketing firm that generated the numbers via computer). They even offered everyone with a 349 bottle cap $20 to help alleviate their disappointment.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

But people were not having it.

They formed mobs that turned into organized factions with elected leaders who called for product boycotts – some even had their own propaganda. Riots ensued and homemade bombs flew as the plants and factories erected barbed wire in an attempt to protect their investments and employees. Death threats abounded and fretful executives hired bodyguards and armed delivery trucks (between 32 and 37 of them were overturned, burned, or otherwise vandalized during the early days). Many chose to leave the country altogether.

One homemade grenade missed its target, killing a schoolteacher and a 5-year-old student and wounding 6 others.

The people would not be placated by $20, and they didn’t understand why such a big company wouldn’t honor its commitment even if an error caused the uproar. One protestor, a 64-year-old woman named Pacienncia Salem, summed up the thoughts of a nation when she said:

“Even if I die here, my ghost will come to fight Pepsi. It is their mistake. Not our mistake. And now they won’t pay. That’s why we are fighting.”

The giveaway was meant to boost sales, and well into 1993, Pepsi saw their market share take a dive and their expenses go up – they had budgeted a total of $2 million in prizes and were now up to $10 million. Plus, you know, workers were afraid for their lives.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

Pepsi refused to back down, despite having to respond to 698 civil suits and 5200 criminal complaints (all of which were tossed out of court), but, even so, the ire eventually began to fade. Sensationalist claims, like Pepsi having orchestrated the protests for their own gain (?) and rival companies having been involved, gained no traction.

It wasn’t until 2006 that a Philippines Supreme Court ruling officially closed the book on all outstanding court cases and found that Pepsi was not obligated to honor payouts that resulted from the computer error.

An end, perhaps, but likely not the one all of the protestors were hoping for back in 1992. Win some, lose some, I suppose.

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Enjoy These 6+ Spooky Facts About “It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown”

It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown is a timeless Halloween classic. Despite the facts that I never really got into Peanuts and kind of think most of the kids are horrible bullies to Charlie Brown, I still watch it every year without fail. Heck, I’ll probably make my son watch it, too – at least as long as his grandfather has anything to say about it!

If this sounds like your childhood – or adulthood – then you might be interested in these 7 fun facts about the special!

#7. The voice of Violet puked after every recording session.

Photo Credit: Charles Schulz

For many Peanuts specials, children were used to voice the characters instead of adults. Anne Altieri, the voice of both Violet and Frieda, was so anxious that she threw up every time she had finished a session.

At least she waited?

#6. Kids sent Charlie Brown candy for years.

Photo Credit: Charles Schulz

Charlie Brown receiving rocks instead of candy angered viewers so much that for years they sent sacks of treats to Charles Schulz’s California office.

#5. Some scholars thought the Great Pumpkin was a real myth.

Photo Credit: Charles Schulz

Schulz told the Schenectady Gazette in 1968 that he’d received letters from academics asking where the story of the Great Pumpkin had originated. Schulz reportedly told them to broach the topic with Linus instead.

#4. CBS wasn’t happy about losing the rights.

Photo Credit: Charles Schulz

The rights for the three holiday Peanuts installments went up for grabs in 2000 after spending decades at CBS, and ABC ending up winning the day.

One CBS executive commented to Variety that it was “a shame that a few more dollars meant more to them than years of tradition and loyalty.”

#3. It’s secretly about Santa Claus.

Photo Credit: Charles Schulz

The Great Pumpkin was conceived as a metaphor for the hope and disappointment associated with Santa Clause – Schulz was particularly concerned with the children whose parents could only afford small or scant gifts, despite their being “good” all year long.

#2. It was the first time we saw Lucy snatch the football from Charlie Brown.

Photo Credit: Charles Schulz

…at least in animated form. Schulz, producer Lee Mendelson, and director Bill Melendez were discussing how Lucy’s habit of pulling the football away from Charlie Brown had never been seen in animation and thought they would give it a try. The same went for Snoopy’s World War I Flying Ace.

Both scenes, as you know, went over quite well.

#1. The show’s composer was found naked by police.

Photo Credit: Charles Schulz

Composer Vince Guaraldi locked himself out of his house naked after a shower, having heard noises and gone to investigate. Police arrived to find him climbing a ladder to his second-floor window, and when he shouted, “Don’t shoot, I’m the Great Pumpkin,” they did not exactly understand the humor.

At least, not for a few months.

Happy Halloween, Charlie Brown!

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Anyone Between the Ages of 27 to 34 Will Love These 15 Happy Photos

The ’90s and ’00s were totally bangin’…and if anyone disagrees, then they probably weren’t a kid during that time. So, if you want to reconnect with your childhood through some photos that’ll make you feel all warm and fuzzy inside, scroll through the list below!

1. The Russian roulette that was renting from your neighborhood video store

Will the movie you’ve been waiting weeks to see be available? Did you REWIND??

Photo Credit: Flickr Creative Commons

2. These pagers

One of the earliest tools capable of alerting you when the kilos of coke you were smuggling were waiting for you at the docks.

Photo Credit: Witoppager

3. Snoop Dogg wearing Tommy Hilfiger

Photo Credit: The Fashionisto

4. Rachel and Phoebe making sure you got milk

Photo Credit: Milkpep

5. The Microsoft Encarta

Dad talked about how back in his day, real encyclopedias were better because they were books grandpa bought with monthly payments.

Photo Credit: Flickr Creative Commons

6. Your first cell phone

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

7. TLC wore Tommy Hilfiger too

They told us what scrubs were and why they can’t get no love.

Photo Credit: LaFace Records

8. These beanie babies were going to make you rich, so you never cut the tags off

But the little poem on the tag was nice too.

Photo Credit: Flickr Creative Commons

9. I think we can all agree Clueless was the best film of the 90s

Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures

10. The unrealistic #lovegoals of A Walk to Remember

Photo Credit: Warner Bros.

11. Your Chuck E. Cheese’s birthday party

You did too have one. I was there.

Photo Credit: Flickr Creative Commons

12. The book store where you bought Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

13. Your first cosmetics

RIP Bonne Bell

14. Where you got all your toys

Photo Credit: Flickr Creative Commons

15. How you bought video games there by carrying these slips of paper to the register

Photo Credit: Reddit

Your favorite memory missing from this list? Dude, my bad.

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15 People Share the Worst Day of Their Entire Life

No one likes to remember the worst day of their life – but these 13+ people are baring their souls for us. The least we can do is read their stories with empathy and compassion.

Listen up.

#15. A few feet short.

“Finding my father face down on the kitchen floor dead. As best we can tell he’d been in the middle of a very serious heart attack and was trying to get to the phone but was a few feet short of making it.”

#14. I’d probably lose it mentally.

“Really more like a month but it was earlier this year when I was passing a 10 millimeter kidney stone. After a couple days of writhing in pain I went to the ER only to find out it was too big to pass naturally. So I had to wait a couple of days in sheer pain before having a surgery that involved a tube with a small saw on the end going up into me (through the urethra) and breaking up the stone. Luckily I was passed out for the surgery, but after I woke I was in even more pain than before. Peed blood for two weeks straight, and it hurt like you couldn’t believe to go to the bathroom as well. Had to pass around 20 kidney stone fragments over the next few weeks that each hurt on their own. I then had to go back to get the stent they put in me removed, and that involved the doctor sticking another tube in me (also through the urethra) and grabbing a foot-long tube and pulling it out, however I was not put under for that procedure. That was easily the most uncomfortable and painful experience I’ve ever had. To summarize, if someone told me I’d have to go through that again I’d probably lose it mentally. I wouldn’t wish that experience on my worst enemy.”

#13. Just up and left.

“My partner left me after 9 years of living together and 17 years of friendship. Just upped and left in the night, and I later discovered that plans had been in the works for several months. I awoke to the house and car keys and a letter saying “I hated you the entire time.” I try very hard never to think of it.”

#12. She was there and we needed it.

“The night of september 14th and morning of the 15th, 2012.

I remember it quite vividly. I was making tomato soup. One of my favorite things to do is dip toast into soup. Try it.

Anyways my soup was almost ready. I was house sitting my parents house while my dad was in the hospital for surgery. He had ALS and was getting a feeding tube installed because he couldn’t eat anymore.

I’d talked to my mom earlier that day and dad had been doing well. They were talking about discharge.

It was 9:34 according to the stove. I answered the phone and my mother was in tears. She wanted us to say goodbye to dad. The surgery had gone fine, but the ALS had reached his lungs. This was it.

After the phone call we frantically called all of our childhood friends. My dad had always been a mentor for many of them as well and they needed a chance to say goodbye as well. One of them was even there the next morning despite living on the opposite end of the country.

One of them had the brilliant idea of asking someone from the church to aee if we could get a ride to Kingston to see dad. They “happily” obliged.

We got to kingston just before midnight. 11:57. I brought my guitar along to sing to dad as he went. I figured if he sang to us bringing us in to the world, I would do him the same honour.

And so we got to the hospital and they took him off life support. He had requested a do not recessitate order. The hospital ignored that for long enough for us to get there. Thank you Kingston General.

And for the next seven hours I watched my father die. Slowly suffocating as his lungs failed to function. I remember feeling so guilty because I wanted him to just die quickly. But we were afforded no such luxury. His skin got more and more pale, and his breaths weaker.

Worst day of my life. I was 20. He was 52.

In some kind of divine sendoff he died at 6:54. Just as the sun was coming over the horizon. The flag of the hospital was also at half-mast.

Afterwards we dropped by a gas station to pick up a pack of cigarettes. I walked into the store and the clerk made a friendly offhanded comment. “You look like you had a rough night” assuming I had been out drinking or something. Me, my mother, and my brother all broke down and told her what had just happened. That cashier just hugged us as we cried into her shoulder for like 30 minutes.

It’s not normal to cry on the shoulder of a cashier you’ve never met. But she was there and we needed it.”

#11. We knew he was gone.

“August 2nd 2018

The day my dad passed away suddenly and completely unexpectedly. My dad was just about the healthiest he’s ever been, except when he was in his 20’s. He was 69 years old.

My mother called me and said something was wrong around 11pm, I was out of bed and at their house in less than 5min.

He was laying in bed, he wasn’t breathing, his heart wasn’t beating. My mom was on the phone with 911, crying. I was doing CPR, the woman from 911 was counting out the beats. I switched over places and my mom took over, I ran to make sure the front door was open and look for the ambulance or anyone. I ran back inside and continued CPR. Then a police officer was there. She took over the compressions, I ran back outside to flag down the ambulance. They arrived and started working on him. I had to keep my mom out of the way, keep her sane, I had to stay strong, not break.

He was gone when I got there. They worked on him at their house, in the ambulance, and at the hospital. We knew he was gone. Telling them to stop was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do. My mom was… no words can describe her. I had to be strong, make the calls, talk to people.”

#10. The worst 24 hour day.

“The worst 24 hour day was when I was in New York while my husband was in Florida – he was misdiagnosed and died of internal bleeding. I was getting updates from the hospital all day while I was trying to get a flight and he died that evening. When I got to the house in Florida, I found out it had been robbed.”

#9. A year later…

“Sept 11 2017. I got fired, someone hit my car, and I was diagnosed with testicular cancer. A year later I got the all clear tho and a better job with a 30% raise.”

#8. She never came back.

“I’ve had some extremely bad times in my life but the first of them was 31/12 1969. My mum was sewing and said she was going to her friend’s house to borrow her sewing machine. She never came back. She just abandoned 3 young children to be with another man with 5 children.”

#7. The day my son was born.

“20th August 2014, the day after my first son was born (which incidentally was the very best day of my life)

Out of nowhere we were told he has a critical heart condition, would be transferred by ambulance to a children’s hospital and require surgery to save his life.

The bottom fell out of my world with no warning or expectation. Fucking sucked. The difference between the extreme high of the day before (plus hormones, first time mum nerves and post labour exhaustion) made the drop that much harder to bare.

Fortunately the surgery went very well, his doctors are fantastic and 4 years later he is doing great. Although he will require further open heart surgery one day.”

#6. Weird out of body experience.

“4th January, 2018.

The timing could not have been worse. Within literally 60 seconds of one another, I discovered that:

– The only person I have ever loved, my long-term partner, had cheated on me with one of his friends who I had met before, including other inappropriate things that they were sending/receiving – particularly pictures of me.

– My 29 year old sister had stage 3 breast cancer.

I was on his phone and saw the evidence to which my heart just sank and I was trying my best not to show any feelings. I didn’t want to over-react and wanted to think clearly in the moment, so I waited around 30 seconds trying to process what I had just seen and how I am about to go about this. As I am about to call him over to come and sit with me whilst I tell him what I’ve just found, I receive a phone call from my mother telling me that my sister has cancer. I was staying at my partner’s home at the time after spending a few days away at New Year. I’ve never felt such a clusterf**k of emotions. I needed someone to lean on and talk to about the news I just got about my sister, but the only person I could do that with, and the only person I have ever done that with, is now sat next to me, not knowing what I’ve just found on his phone and realising that my trust and love has been betrayed. I felt like I had no control over my life for that moment and when I recall on it, all I can see is me having this weird out-of-body experience, looking at myself from the other side of the room whilst I try and cope with the news.”

#5. Lying next to me in bed.

“Sept 6 2013, I woke to find my 47 year old wife, dead of a heart attack, lying next to me in bed.”

#4. I missed reading the message.

“I woke up to the news of the terrible tsunami in Japan on March 14 2011. An hour later I was told that my best friend committed suicide in another country.

I found out that she actually messaged me on MSN(back in the day when WhatsApp was still new), asking when am I going to visit her. I missed reading the message until the day I found out she committed suicide.

I have a hole in my heart ever since and still have days when I’ll break down. We were like sisters.”

#3. Trifecta.

“My car got stolen and my grandpa died on the same day. When I got back from the funeral my apartment had been robbed.”

#2. He didn’t give any sign at all.

“Today. I just found my room mate who had hung himself in the garage. The house is full of cops & EMTs. He didn’t give any sign at all.”

#1. The same thing.

“When I was 17 my sister died of cardiac failure on her 20th birthday. When I was 28 my best friend died on father’s day of the same thing, he had a 1 month old.”

I don’t even want to think too hard about the question because the answer would be too tough!

The post 15 People Share the Worst Day of Their Entire Life appeared first on UberFacts.

Eight-Year-Old Finds Viking Sword After Skipping Stones on a Lake

Playing in the lake is always fun. But it’s extra fun when you find an ancient artifact!

A Swedish-American girl named Saga Vanecek – her real name – had only moved to Sweden a year ago. She and her family had previously lived in Minnesota and are even big Vikings fans.

While vacationing at Vidöstern Lake in Tånnö, Småland, Saga’s father, Andy, asked her to go grab him a buoy. The lake level was lower than usual due to drought, and he wanted to warn area boaters. Along the way, Saga picked up some stones and skipped them across the lake’s surface.

Andy, according to The Local, was growing frustrated with his easily distracted daughter. “I was getting impatient because the World Cup game was about to start!”

Then Saga found a stick. “I picked it up and was going to drop it back in the water, but it had a handle, and I saw that it was a little bit pointy at the end and all rusty. I held it up in the air and I said ‘Daddy, I found a sword!’ When he saw that it bent and was rusty, he came running up and took it.”

Photo Credit: Andrew Vanecek

Andy decided to take it to his neighbor who had some practice in archaeology. Both concluded the sword might be of real interest and turned it over to authorities. Shortly after, Saga and Andy were told the sword was likely from the 5th or 6th century AD, which makes the relic pre-Viking.

How did the sword get in the lake?

A representative of the museum that took possession of the sword said, “When we searched a couple of weeks ago, we found another prehistoric object; a brooch from around the same period as the sword, so that means — we don’t know yet — but perhaps it’s a place of sacrifice.”

Saga and her father were tasked with keeping the find a secret until now, so that no would-be treasure seekers would come disrupt the site (except of course Saga told her best friend). But now that the museum’s work in the lake is done, the secret is out – and was celebrated at Saga’s school with an ice-cream party.

The work on the sword, however, is just starting and it may take at least a year to complete the preservation of what might be known as “Saga’s Sword.”

Photo Credit: Jönköpings Län Museum

Life to come

Clearly, after pulling a pre-Viking sword from an ancient lake, Saga is the next Queen of Sweden. However, she says her future includes a career as a doctor, veterinarian or actress in Paris. She is not interested in becoming an archaeologist, although she likes to learn about “old stuff.”

We’ll see what the sword chooses. It’s destiny, after all.

The post Eight-Year-Old Finds Viking Sword After Skipping Stones on a Lake appeared first on UberFacts.