15 People Reveal Which Magical Creatures They Believe Really Exist

Let’s be honest: it’d be pretty sweet if magical creatures existed in our world. I’d be lying if I said I wouldn’t love to ride a dragon to work every day.

Most of us won’t ‘fess up to really believing these creatures exist out there in the world, hidden from our puny human eyes, but these 12+ people aren’t scared to go on the record!

#15. Interesting to me.

“While I don’t believe that they actually exist, the way that Native American refuse to ever talk about Wendigos/Skinwalkers always seemed interesting to me.

Perhaps the original tribes has some loonies among them and therefore was deemed as “supernatural” or it simply served as a way to keep children away from the woods? Who knows.

Edit: Does writing about these creatures on Reddit also draw their attention to you? Because then I just fucked us all.”

#14. Changed into myth.

“Unicorns.
The earliest written accounts of unicorns describe them more akin to deer in looks. There’s also a abnormality they can have with their antlers where they curl together into what looks like a single pointed horn instead of two twisting antlers.
It makes sense that they could be changed into myth.

Also, there’s a REAL species of flying dragon!
Ok, so Gliding dragon is a better description…. and it doesn’t breathe fire. Its native to indonesia”

#13. Before we could understand.

“Aralez. Mythological dog angels from Armenian culture. With the widespread stories of dogs saving people’s lives, providing companionship, and giving their very lives for people I can only believe that the Armenian tales recount tales of dogs in prehistory. Before we could understand the depth of their emotion and mental lives fully.”

#12. From the watery depths.

“Kraken.

Wouldn’t surprise me if one appeared from the watery depths.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraken#/media/File:Denys_de_Montfort_Poulpe_Colossal.jpg”

#11. Eaters of the Dead.

“I am Ojibwe. When people in the past faced Starving-Times due to crop failure/drought, or tribal warfare etc-people who had no other choice would eat the dead out of absolute desperation. People would go mad from starvation before they finally did this. As you can imagine, it was deeply shameful for survivors. After the Starving-Time, no one in the community wanted to discuss it, what they had to do to survive.

For our people, the Wendigo legend originated with these experiences. The Wendigo was a euphemism, an ACTUALIZATION of the survivors emotions during and after the Starving-Time, wherein the urge to eat became all-consuming of a person’s spirit. That the maddening hunger possessed them to such an extent that it would cause them to eat the community’s dead.

Instead of discussing their actual feelings about the cannibalism that was caused by starvation, the story of the Wendigo began. It continued to shape in retelling for centuries and centuries since time immemorial between different Ojibway communities.

So picture the Wendigo. A huge, towering spirit that walked the bush. It’s power was so great, that it knocked down trees as it moved. It came to life every winter, especially after drought. When the People could not store enough food in spring, summer and fall-for winter.

When the communities crops had failed. When the forest had been dry as tinder, and no berries and roots could grow. When the fishing had been poor because the fish were not running in the streams. When the hinting was poor because animals starved. Because animal-mothers could not eat enough and they did not produce milk for their babies and the babies died, and the mothers starved. When even the beavers the Land left because the streams dried up and because the birch trees withered.

That was when the Wendigo came to the Land to torment the People. It followed them through the bush as they searched for food, until they could go no further. The Wendigo then ran down the People. Possessed the People. Made them mad with hunger and lust for food of any kind. Made them so evil and mad that they would eat the dead. The Elders. The children. And if the Wendigo entered you, you also became a Wendigo. You could then possess others to become Eaters of the Dead as well.”

#10. Especially not at dusk.

“I don’t think it’s necessarily likely per se, but my family are Irish and they hardcore believe in the Fair Folk, or the Aos Si. They’re not exactly fairies, they’re … different? Meaner. You don’t fuck with them, basically, and if something’s going horribly wrong in your life it’s probably because you fucked with them or you made them angry. And you have to be careful how you talk about them, too – kind of like with skinwalkers, you don’t name them. You just call them the Fair Folk, or the Folk.

They mostly hang out and try to get you to owe them a favour. You don’t take anything from the Folk, or you owe them one, and you don’t want to be in that position. There’s lots of different types that do lots of different things, though.

I don’t wanna come off as that weirdo who believes in what is… essentially fairies, but I grew up with the stories and I have a healthy level of skepticism about this. I’m not saying they’re real but I’m also not about to step into a fairy circle any time soon. Especially not at dusk.”

#9. Hiding in the depths.

“Anything from the sea really sounds plausible to me considering how little we have explored it. Sea serpents and the Kraken are major examples of something that could realistically be hiding in the depths and only come up to the surface on rare occasions.”

#8. I’ve dated it.

“The Jersey Devil. I’ve dated it.”

#7. Just some poor rabbits.

“Jackelopes definitely exist. Only they’re not some weird rabbit antelope hybrid. They’re just some poor rabbits infected with the Shope Papilloma Virus which causes strange horn-like growths.”

#6. I believe.

“Nicholas Cage. Some say it’s all movie magic, but I believe he’s real.”

#5. Really really really.

“It’s not that I inherently believe there is scientific evidence corroborating its existence, but I just really really really want Mothman to exist.”

#4. The one who stops the flow of rivers.

“Not that I think it’s likely, but I love the Mokele Mbembe legend. Supposedly some sort of dinosaur-like creature living in the swamps in Cameroon or thereabouts. It’s name means “the one who stops the flow of rivers.”

Legend has it that this enormous beast has a long neck, and is bigger than an elephant. It’s supposedly walks along the riverbeds and swamplands most submerged, and has been thought to kill large predators like crocodiles, but then not eat them. There is a story about a small village that killed one of these creatures and ate it, and a short time later, everyone who had eaten its flesh became sick or died.

The main reason it’s so compelling is that the jungle and swamplands where it supposedly lives are so dense and impassable for people that it could have conceivably lived in the relatively unchanged climate for thousand upon thousand of years, and humans would have never encountered it, or even been able to venture into its habitat with any reasonable effort.”

#3. They steal your undies.

“Trolls are real and they steal your undies.”

#2. Probably less exciting.

“Some form of yeti or Sasquatch, aka “Bigfoot”, most likely did exist at one point in time. It doesn’t seem entirely unreasonable to me, albeit the real thing was probably less exciting.”

#1. Basically nil.

“Do aliens count?

I guess aliens.

I don’t think there’s a chance in hell that they’ve visited Earth, or abducted people, but somewhere out there?

Yeah, I definitely think so.

The universe is so mind-bogglingly massive that the odds of us being the only life in the universe are basically nil.”

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4 Crazy Vacations Your Ancestors Totally Went On

Back in the old days, entertainment options were pretty limited. Theme parks weren’t a thing, the Internet and television weren’t even a glint in anyone’s imagination, and travel was basically limited to where you could drive. Don’t get me wrong, there were things that you could do, but safety wasn’t exactly guaranteed.

What followed was that our ancestors likely took some pretty dangerous holidays – perhaps without even realizing how people a couple hundred years in the future would see things differently. I’m sure it also has something to do with the fact that we have a lot more rules, regulations, and government branches designated to making sure the human population doesn’t dwindle to zero due to pure stupidity.

It’s a big job, to be sure.

But before all of this beautiful mess we’ve created, our people had to wing it. And wing it, they did.

#4. Hermit stalking.

People who stumbled across people like Robert Harrill – later known as the Fort Fisher Hermit – told their friends how awesome it was to sit and chat with a real-life hermit. And then more people came. Seriously.

For his part, Harrill was a man who had a rough go of things before settling in his abandoned wartime bunker in North Carolina, and though he might have been interesting, he probably would have preferred being alone. Because why else does one choose to live alone in the middle of nowhere?

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

He did get over it when people kept coming to the tune of 10,000 a year, and made a decent living off the change they left after listening to his sermons on the hard lessons life had taught him.

#3. They went to Yellowstone.

Yeah, yeah, some of you have been to Yellowstone, too, but not when it offered a “bear lunch counter,” like it did in 1919. It was a raised bear feeding platform accompanied by nearby bleachers for spectators and yeah, it’s about as dangerous as it sounds.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

A ranger rode a horse-drawn cart out onto the feeding platform and gave a lecture while a swarm (literally) of bears showed up for their free lunch. VIPs could even pay extra to be up on the platform and feed the bears (by hand) themselves.

The bears did eventually start attacking people for food and the program was phased out. If only humans had learned their lesson when it comes to bears in Yellowstone.

#2. Visited the Orient – without leaving the States.

Residents of San Fransisco’s Chinatown figured out a way to make a quick buck during the Great Depression – they played up racial stereotypes for white tourists in everything from added “oriental features” to fake opium dens and “captured” white women.

New York’s Chinatown got wind and followed suit, and residents there staged events like knife fights between “opium-crazed men” while actual tour guides warned their parties to stay close lest they end up in cages of their own.

I’m adding this as a place on my time-travel todo list.

#1. Octopus wrestling.

Photo Credit: Old Seattle Times

In the 50s and 60s, people in the Pacific Northwest used to wrestle octopi. On purpose. If you’re picturing man vs. octopus in some kind of cage fight, though, think again – it was basically divers who competed to see who could find the biggest octopus and drag it back to the surface.

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Awkward Sex-Education Stories That Show Just How Much We Need Sex-Ed

Regarding sex, what people don’t know can definitely hurt them. For some reason, sex education is kind of controversial in America.

All I can say is, these 20 awkward sex-ed stories from AskReddit are proof positive that we Americans need all the sex-ed we can get.

1. It’s a legitimate question.

“Girl sitting behind me stood up and asked, ‘How many calories are there in semen?’”

2. “Preach”

“When I was in sex ed many years ago, all the guys got to write questions for the girls on paper notes and vice versa. One of the guys wrote: ‘What is the largest thing you could fit inside of you?’ One of the girls answered: ‘an infant.’ Preach.”

3. Good Shot

“We had to give presentations on different contraception methods during a sex ed unit of our health class. 5-6 member groups did presentations about condoms, female condoms, the pill, etc. One of the guys doing the presentation was flexing an IUD between his fingers. It shot out of his hand and hit a popular girl 20 feet away in the eye.”

4. “Dribble”

“A girl in my high school sex ed class didn’t quite understand how she could get pregnant if a dude pulled out before he finished. Then her basketball player boyfriend stood up and yelled, ‘Before a man shoots he’s gotta dribble!’”

5. Oh, the irony.

“I took my high school’s health requirement over the summer. I opted for the four-week course, which was about 70% the cliche summer school crowd. We had all types of troublemakers.

Also there was a pregnant girl. She was pretty far along, already showing in the belly department. The teacher had just done the contraceptives lesson and was doing a little post-lecture review. She asked us, ‘What is the most effective form of contraception?’

As expected, we said ‘use the pill specifically for contraception, but wear a condom to protect against diseases.’ Totally legit, everyone was on board.

But the pregnant girl raised her hand and said, ‘Mrs Miller, I’m confused. I thought the safest thing would be to not let the boy finish inside of you, so shouldn’t the pull-out method be the safest?’

Our teacher explained the error of her ways, to which the girl replied ‘Damn, I thought pull-out would be foolproof. That’s what I’ve been using.’ There were no words.”

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The Absolute Best Piece of Advice These 15 People Ever Got

Advice is a hard thing to give and to get. You’re never sure if you want it, if someone is listening, or if it will make a difference or just end up driving the other person away. That’s what makes it so special when it comes through on both ends with such beautiful clarity you can’t help but share. Just like these folks did on AskReddit.

#15. Make it worth something.

“There will come a time in your life where you’ll have nothing to offer someone but your word. Make it worth something.”

Edit: Oh shit my first gold?! Thank you kind stranger! I really do feel like I’m internet famous.”

#14. Check your shoes.

“Probably “If it smells like shit everywhere you go, check your shoes.”

I’m much less of a miserable asshole these days.”

#13. Your younger self.

“Be the person you needed when you were young.”

#12. You’re not supposed to be sure.

“This was specifically when looking to transition to a significantly higher responsibility role, but I have found to be applicable to any time I’m facing a new challenge. “Don’t be worried if you’re not sure you can do it. You’re not supposed to be sure. If you were already sure you could do the job, you’d be bored within a month.”

#11. Change.

“Life doesn’t change, unless you change it.

You can’t sedate your way out of a crappy life, you have to get up and make changes.”

#10. With friends or family.

“Years of love have been forgotten in the hatred of a minute”

Really helps whenever I get into an argument with my friends or family.”

#9. Uncomfortable conversations.

“Your success will be largely dependent on the number of uncomfortable conversations you are willing to have – Reddit”

#8. Short and simple will do.

“One of my favourite teachers in Highschool told us:” If you need five pages to talk about 20 lines of poetry, you are obviously bullshitting me. State three well constructed arguments for your point of view and I’ll be happy to reward you for that. Claim. Reason. Proof. Nothing more.” He repeated that before every exam and it really helped me to boil my rather confused teenager thoughts into clear statements. I still think of him today while writing reports for work.

TLDR: Keep it short and simple.”

#7. Priorities and options.

“Don’t make someone a priority when all you are to them is an option”.

#6. A great boss.

“My first great boss told me “never make yourself indispensable or you’ll never get promoted”.

It’s worked for me.”

#5. Get off the fence.

“Sometimes the worst decision is no decision. Sometimes you just have to make a decision, any decision, then make that be the right one.”

#4. Pay now.

“You can pay now, or you can pay later, but it’s almost always cheaper to pay now.”

It seems like a lot of people think this is only referring to money, it’s not.”

#3. Money well spent.

“If you lend someone some money and never see them again, it was probably money well spent.

Got told this after I lent a friend $100 and the fucker dropped off the face of the planet.”

#2. Morning and night.

“Do something that makes you want to get up in the morning. Find someone that makes you want to go home in the evening.”

#1. Respect yourself.

“Respect yourself enough to walk away anything that no longer serves you, grows you or makes you happy.”

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These 10 Photos Show What Difference a Day Can Make

Can you believe these 10 photos were taken just a single day apart? The change is absolutely extraordinary.

1. Hurricane Harvey

2. Chernobyl, USSR

Photo Credit: chernobylguideback-in-ussr

3. Sahara Desert

Photo Credit: animalreadertelesurtv

4. Japanese Tsunami

Photo Credit: daypic

5. Fall of the Berlin Wall

Photo Credit: ingpeaceproject

6. Mount Saint Helens’ Eruption, 1980

Photo Credit: vulkaniaoffthegridnews

7. Stock Market Crash of 1929

Photo Credit: etoretro.ruaif

8. The 2010 Haiti Earthquake

Photo Credit: pokazima, novate

9. Earthquake in the Indian Ocean

Photo Credit: dailymail

10. Hurricane Katrina

Photo Credit: vevphotochronograph

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This Japanese Artist’s Illustrations Will Make You Think about Life

Great art makes us think about life in new ways. And the works of Japanese artist Avogado6 do just that. While not much is known about this mysterious artist, his works speak for themselves. Enjoy.

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Photo Credit: Twitter: @avogado6

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Photo Credit: Twitter: @avogado6

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These Newspaper Edits Are So Ridiculous, They’ll Make You Do a Double-Take

In the newspaper industry, there are bound to be typos. With so many copies going out each day, you can’t expect for everything to be perfect. All we can hope for is that when things do go wrong, it ends up making something pretty funny in the process.

1. Words, words, words!

Photo Credit: Reddit: Kenuff

2. Oh, y’all knew what you were doing.

3. “Are you sure this is the only picture we have?”

Photo Credit: Reddit: angryman8000

4. I’d fight for a porg any day.

Photo Credit: Imgur

5. This is my nightmare.

Photo Credit: Imgur

6. Now we know who’s really in charge.

Photo Credit: Reddit: SearScare

7. They’re still at large.

Photo Credit: Reddit: CgSw

8. What a unique name…

Photo Credit: Reddit: final_count_down

9. At least she looks happy.

Photo Credit: Imgur: rossmiers87

10. That’s…not how numbers work.

11. You could have used so many other verbs…

Photo Credit: Imgur: WullieBlake

12. Um, we’re good.

Photo Credit: Reddit

13. He’s such a good lawyer, not even he was safe.

Photo Credit: Imgur: WullieBlake

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7 of the Most Beautiful Libraries from around the World

When was the last time you visited your local library? While some are new and updated, the sad truth is that many libraries are bland, brick buildings.

But there are still historic, grand temples that we can all visit if we’re lucky enough to be able to travel. Here are 7 of the most beautiful libraries in the world.

1. Biblioteca Classense – Ravenna, Italy

The main hall of the Biblioteca Classense was constructed in the 1700s and holds over 800,000 volumes.

2. Rijksmuseum Research Library – Amsterdam

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

This research library was constructed in 1885 by Dutch architect Pierre Cuypers and contains 450,000 volumes.

3. Biblioteca Do Convento De Mafra – Mafra, Portugal

Photo Credit: Flickr,Rosino

This library is now a museum and was founded in 1717.

4. Real Gabinete Portugues De Leitura – Rio De Janeiro, Brazil

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The name translates to “the Royal Portuguese Cabinet of Reading” and this building dates back to the 1880s. This library also holds the largest collection of Portuguese works outside of Portugal.

5. Strahovská Knihovna – Prague, Czech Republic

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Parts of this building date back to the 1600s.

6. Bibliothéque Sainte-Geneviéve – Paris, France

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

This Paris library is now part of a university and contains 2 million holdings. The building dates to the mid-1800s.

7. Stiftsbibliothek Sankt Gallen – St. Gallen, Switzerland

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

This public reference library contains 170,000 volumes, and some of the collection survived a 10th-century fire. The building was designed in the 1700s by Austrian architect Peter Thumb.

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Former Racists Reveal What Made Them Change Their Ways

A lot of the threads on AskReddit are pretty silly, but not this one.

AskReddit users who used to have racist beliefs share what made them reevaluate their lives and change their ways. Hopefully, these responses will rub off some other people.

1. Just meet people

“Met black people, met asians.

Realized they’re just people and it took more energy to hate them irrationally than it did to just… Not. From there it was easy to not be racist against others.”

2. Words of wisdom

“The military.

We all bleed red.”

3. Mum

“I wasn’t racist but my mum was. I had a middle-eastern friend and she realised she’s not a terrorist that race doesn’t make you a terrorist – being a terrorist does.”

4. Australia

“This is gonna sound ridiculous but I grew up white trash in Australia in a very white suburb, where somehow immigrants (that didn’t exist to any great degree) were the problem (not the rampant spousal and child abuse /drug addiction).

I (and many others) grew up being taught that hate. For me the first time I really was confronted with that I was 9 and Changes by Tupac released and it blew my mind.

By the time I got to highschool and had to interact with actual ESL immigrants I was thankfully not a racist.”

5. Always a good idea

“Travelling.

To actually experience the culture of other people is a brutal eye-opener.”

6. Interesting

“I realized that I didn’t dislike black people for being black…I disliked pretty much everyone regardless of color. Just lived in a sh-tty area and everyone was sh-tty.

Left and everything got better.”

7. A new environment

“Leaving home. My mom is Japanese and raised me Japanese, racism and all. I left my house late 17y/o and now that I’ve lived on my own, I grew to be myself, and with that, grew up mentally.”

8. Gay

“This is in the same vein, but not actually racism. I was raised in a Baptist church. My family simply didn’t discuss gay people because there was no reason to. As I grew up, I became pretty homophobic due to the church. Not as bad as the absolute psychopaths you see. But, bad enough.

Then, I worked at this place when I was like 20 and made a friend named Marlon. He was an older guy, in his 60’s, but cool as hell. We used to talk and hang out for hours. He gave me a DVD box set of ‘Carl Sagan’s Cosmos’ was just an all around good guy.

Then one day, he stopped me and was like. ‘Were you at a gay club this weekend?’ I told him I wasn’t and he was like ‘Oh, I saw your twin there then.’ I kind of laughed it off and went on. Then, a few minutes later the realization hit me and I went back to him and was like ‘You were at a gay club, are you gay?’ he confirmed that he in fact he was.

At this point I had a decision to make, this guy who I thoroughly respected and really liked. What do I do about him? Do I hold onto my prejudice, or do I admit I was wrong? The decision was easy to make once I thought about it, took less than two seconds. Suffice to say now I go to gay pride festivals, I keep a dog tag I got from one on my key ring and I’m a huge supporter of LGBT rights.

I know he wasn’t trying to change anything about me. But he did, in a profound way. Not only did he make me think different about gay people, but he also made me think about all my prejudices and that helped me become who I am today.”

9. One on one

“One on one time with white people.

I had bad experiences with white peers when I was a kid. I was always left out and felt ostracized. As an adult, I still feel that way sometimes. It helps to have one on one time with acquaintances and friends who are white. You get a better sense of their inner monologue. By finding common ground, you make better assumptions about them even in their absence.”

10. Growing up

“A part of my family is racist. There are pictures of child me with David Duke when he was running for some office. I’m not sure what he was running for.

I’d say just growing up and experiencing life.

Southeast Texas can be rough in areas and I’ve had good and bad things happen from all races. My uncle and granddad told me they’d beat me if I dated a black girl. Stupid things like that. Everyone is just trying to make a life for themselves and I see no reason to hate a race.”

11. Don’t generalize

“I was raised to not be racist. I didn’t even recognize being white as a child, I told people I was peach colored. I had best friends who were black, Spanish, Middle Eastern.

Then I went into a group home. My friend was jumped for being white, I was made fun of, got yelled at walking down the street, called snow bunny, was told I could never understand hard times. And for a long time it made me bitter and judgemental.

Now that I’m out of those situations I don’t generalize anymore and I’m back to my old self.”

12. A new lifestyle

“Ooh i can finally answer one of these in a serious way. So i was raised in the bible belt by a super far right dad.

My mom and sister were pretty normal, but growing up I hated Obama and i was on the email list for a couple groups that were extremely pro second amendment and far right. This seemed normal to me and all through out high school I acted like a jack a– to people in my school who weren’t white or supported a liberal agenda.

Eventually i went off to college.. took a year off.. and moved back in with my dad while I saved up money to hike the Pacific Crest Trail on the West Coast. During that year that I took off I interacted with so many minorities and liberals and people who I would have hated in high school. But after living a ‘hippy’ lifestyle for 2 months while hikking the PCT and even living at a “Eco-Feminist-Hostel” in Hawai’i for 2 months I became a lot more chill.

Now I’m no longer racist and I’m a lot less likely to judge someone for their beliefs no matter what they are.”

13. No brainwashing

“I was raised by racist parents and grandparents but I just grew up and formed my own ideas.

Public school helped, most of my friends were Mexican as we lived in a mostly Mexican town growing up. It wasn’t a big realization or anything. After I turned 9 I stopped believing in God, stopped being racist. By 12 I was interested in politics and left leaning while my parents are die hard republicans. I just formed my own ideas and didn’t let them brainwash me.”

14. Some wise words

“My hometown still has an active and organized arm of the KKK, and there were cross burnings and race riots around 2003, so this was where I grew up, and I’m happy the N-word doesn’t appear as the first unconscious thought I have when I see a black person.

It feels weird saying ‘black person’, or ‘Hispanic’ nowadays, thanks to the US military.

I came out of the service around 2011, and it took a couple of years before I ‘got’ that racism is still a big thing out here. I just forgot that skin color mattered while in there.

Still seems so d-mned stupid that you’re going to divide yourselves because of how our ancestors evolved protection against sunlight.

Don’t we have mutual enemies to fight? People that need our help? Children to raise and protect?

Are we this devoid of better things to do?”

15. Again, meet people

“I met a holocaust survivor.

He was a child at the camp in Sobibor. It was a life changing experience. Without it, I’d probably have ended up being part of the alt-right. Instead, I got a real wake up call and have taken to being a major supporter or human rights.”

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9+ Interesting Facts About Marijuana

It seems like every week another state in the U.S. is legalizing marijuana.

Will YOUR state be next?

In the meantime, enjoy these facts about the sticky icky icky.

1. That figures

Photo Credit: did you know?

2. Smoke ’em if you got ’em

Photo Credit: did you know?

3. Hollywood connection

Photo Credit: did you know?

4. A helpful drug

Photo Credit: did you know?

5. This sounds like a dream job

Photo Credit: did you know?

6. I’ll take an ounce of maned wolf pee

Photo Credit: did you know?

7. Good thing he got caught

Photo Credit: did you know?

8. Ancient weed

Photo Credit: did you know?

9. Nuns having fun

Photo Credit: did you know?

10. Not a single one…

Photo Credit: did you know?

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