Henry VIII Owned These 5+ Bizarre Objects

It doesn’t take a history degree to know that King Henry VIII of England was a few apples short of a full cart. In addition to imprisoning and sentencing to death several of his wives, his brain was literally being eaten away by syphilis, so perhaps it’s not all that surprising that he had a collection of peculiar things.

The 6 objects below are only some of the most bizarre pieces, so buckle up.

#6. An extra large codpiece

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Henry VIII popularized the Tudor fashion of wearing exaggerated codpieces, which were supposed to be symbols of a man’s virility and masculinity. Of course, the king had the biggest one of all — one roomy enough to be used as a pocket or to conceal a weapon, jewels, or other valuables (besides the obvious).

#5. A horned helmet

Photo Credit: Flickr.

The bespectacled, demon-faced Horned Helmet was a gift to Henry VIII from the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I in 1514. Court jester Will Somers took possession of it after Henry’s death in 1547 and likely earned some pretty awesome laughs because of it.

#4. A pair of football boots

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

In 1526, Henry VII commissioned a pair of leather football boots that would cost around $130 today. 14 years later, he banned football on the grounds that it incited riots. It didn’t stick, obviously, though that thing about the riots remains true.

#3. A “scavenger’s daughter”

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

This brutal instrument of torture was invented during Henry VIII’s reign and crushed its victims until they bled from the face. It’s basically the opposite idea of the more popular rack.

#2. A set of purple velvet bagpipes

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Henry VIII was actually a very talented musician — he played the organ, lute, flute and the virginal — an early form of harpsichord. A 1547 inventory lists among his instruments 20 recorders, 19 viols, 2 clavichords and 4 sets of bagpipes, which included the purple velvet set with ivory pipework.

#1. A marmoset

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Though not particularly concerned with the happiness of his many animals, Henry VIII nevertheless had a fondness for collecting them. He owned ferrets, hawks, falcons, canaries, nightingales and numerous dogs, along with more exotic pets like the marmoset he received as a gift in the 1530s.

 

Just a few tidbits to pull out at your next dinner party!

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The “Half-House of Toronto” Still Stands Strong After All These Years

A string of Victorian row houses went up on St. Patrick Street in the center of Toronto between the years 1890 and 1893. Each one was an identical, connected home and they were numbered 52 1/2, 54, 54 1/2, 56, 58, and 60.

Today, just 1 remains – 54 1/2 St. Patrick Street – and it turns out it was aptly numbered, since it’s standing as “half” a house.

Photo Credit: Google Maps

In the 5 decades between when the houses were built and the 1930s, developers were keen on obtaining the buildings, and used aggressive tactics – one resident told the local newspaper he had received upward of 300 requests in a year.

One by one people gave in and the houses were demolished to make room for “progress,” until only the Valkos family at 54 1/2 remained. And they weren’t going anywhere.

That fact didn’t stop the developers who had bought the rest of the row – they tore down all of the surrounding (and connected) properties until only 54 1/2 remained standing, looking as if a whole house had been cut in two.

Photo Credit: Google Maps

The actual process of disconnecting the homes from 54 1/2 was a dangerous undertaking – load-bearing walls connected bedrooms, and a single miscalculation could have caused the Half House to tumble along with the rest. Though it remained standing, the owner at the time of the demolition (Emily Brown, the Valkoses daughter and her husband) complained to city officials about seeping rain water, insulation, and the unfinished appearance of the outside of their home.

Emily moved into a nursing home in 2012, selling the property to Albert Zikovitz, who worked in an adjacent office building, before leaving her childhood home.

Photo Credit: Google Maps

Today, the building is privately owned and vacant, a remnant from a different time. Valued at over $650,000, the Half House of Toronto has been standing next to a housing project since 1975, and it doesn’t seem as if that will be changing anytime soon – if ever.

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These 7 Facts About a Variety of Topics are Absolutely Fascinating

Bob Ross, a house modeled after a famous TV show, and the origin of the word “dude.” These are just a few things you’ll learn in this wonderful fact set.

Read on and fill up that brain of yours with some sweet facts!

1. Duuuuuude…

Photo Credit: did you know?

2. I’d live here

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3. Age gaps

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4. Sacrifice

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5. Bob was the best

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6. Spy cats

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7. Brilliant

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14 Sweet Examples of Being Married to Your Best Friend

These 14 husbands and wives who married their best friends and couldn’t be happier with their decision.

1. A sense of humor is key.

Photo Credit: Reddit: mendicant

2. Make each other laugh and make your kids cringe.

Photo Credit: Reddit: spikeypeach

3. You gotta coordinate.

Photo Credit: Reddit: jaskmackey

4. That sounds like fate.

Photo Credit: Reddit: stueytaytay

5. I think they’re pretty good!

6. Not even bodily functions could keep them apart.

Photo Credit: Reddit: ModernMonk

7. He went above and beyond.

Photo Credit: Reddit: Mournhold

8. You must be honest with each other.

Photo Credit: Reddit: adyeardley

9. Aww.

Photo Credit: Reddit: devolvxr

10. But a funny asshole.

Photo Credit: Reddit: amosfargus

11. No such thing as TMI.

Photo Credit: Reddit: dowagerviolet

12. Keep the texting fun.

Photo Credit: Reddit: HolyBreakfast

13. They know how to share.

Photo Credit: Reddit: bizcat

14. Relationship goals.

Photo Credit: Twitter: @quinc____

Beauty is fleeting, but friendships last a lifetime.

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Native Japanese People Share the 12+ Biggest Tourist Faux Pas They’ve Ever Seen

There are different cultural norms around the world that are important to be aware of when traveling abroad. If you’re headed to Japan anytime soon and the culture is one that’s new to you, you might want to check out these 15 “oops” moments committed below – so you don’t follow in their cringe-y footsteps.

#15. I gagged.

“Full (and native) Japanese girl here! something I can finally answer! English is my second language so sorry if I do that thing where I don’t make sense lol.

I think the most cringey thing I have ever witnessed is at a sushi store.

Some sushi places, we have a container with (green) tea powder and you basically make your own hot tea (there’s a spout where you push and hot water comes out on your table/counter). So you basically put in the powder then add hot water into your cup and you have your tea.

I was eating sushi one day in Shibuya which is a very populated tourist spot and there was a family who were clearly foreign. One stood out to me as she was the daughter and seemed to scream “I love japan” from her clothes and everything. So her parents were asking her things and she would confidently answer.

So they asked her what that green powder was.

She confidently said it was wasabi.

So she proceeded to instruct them to put the green tea powder into the soy sauce and mix it together. So they did. I gagged a little.

Then she encouraged them to use their chopsticks to grab ginger out of a box that is used to share with others (basically a communal box of ginger with a tong in it so it doesn’t cross contaminate).

Not only did they use chopsticks to grab the ginger… they eventually used the tong to eat their sushi since they couldn’t figure out how to use chopsticks… then they put it back in the ginger container for the next customers to use. I gagged again.”

#14. What a guy.

“I lived in Japan for a few years, I’m not Japanese but speak the language.

Mostly guys in bars who think they’ll get a free flock of cute Japanese girls around them. Sure you get by easy in conversation as a foreigner but the shit some of them try to pull is crazy to me. A guy I went to school with had this “tactic” to trap girls in 4seat booths by just sitting down and not leaving. We all told him he’s being a dick but I think that made it worse. He started carrying a notebook of “pickup lines” and thought himself of some pickupartist. The cringiest I saw of him was probably how he rated all the girls in a coffee place as he entered in his notebook and then went on to try to speak to as many as he could(or the best looking). It would seem he’d study Japanese and needed help but he just had a number of cheesy pickup lines. Guys like this was not uncommon, this guy in particular even had a “apprentice”..

I later found out he married, got her pregnant and then cheated on her “openly” but didn’t give a shit. Then got fired and went back home. What a guy.”

#13. Every old person or sad-looking girl they see.

“I hate seeing bearded Hipsters who show up wearing all North Face with huge expensive cameras hanging off their necks. They then take pictures of every old person or sad looking girl they see. I’ll take whites dressed as narator or one piece any day.”

#12. Disapprovingly.

“I’m not Japanese but I saw some very short western tourist walking through Ueno station heavily intoxicated, stopping to throw up on the train tracks. A lot of Japanese people were staring at him disapprovingly. He then tried to get in a taxi but couldn’t explain where his hotel was because he was too pissed up. Oh I suppose I should state that this person was me back in my younger days. What an absolute melt I was.”

#11. A decent human being.

“As long as you have common sense, people are generally quite tolerant and understanding of tourists not knowing all the little cultural intricacies. Really, it’s quite hard to do something actively offensive without deliberately trying. Just be a decent human being and I sincerely doubt you’ll get in any trouble.”

#10. Directly onto the road.

“Someone clearing their nose/sinuses in the street. You know, cover one nostril then blow… letting everything fall directly onto the road.”

#9. Like an anime character.

“I have a friend who lived in Tokyo until last year and he said the worst thing is a white tourist who speaks Japanese to a Japanese person but gets it completely wrong and talks like an anime character.

He says it’s nice to hear someone try to speak their language but the Americans taking like an anime character is the worst thing ever.”

#8. Logan.

“How is Logan Paul not on the top of the list? I saw a video showing a compilation of his Japan trip. Even the stuff he did before the forest was horribly cringe-worthy and disrespectful.”

#7. The comments in this thread.

“The comments in this thread are cringier than most things I’ve seen listed so far.”

#6. Ah, levity.

“Run out of business cards.”

#5. Just…so much cringe

“Asked my wife.

She stopped for a moment and then said “Fat sweaty guys in hentai t-shirts in Akihabara trying to pick up the touts for the maid cafes while holding their purchases from the onaho shop”

I gotta say, that sounds pretty fucking cringy.”

#4. People who are loud.

“I work in a Japanese office, so I asked my co-worker this question.

He says that, despite what some may think, many Japanese don’t find it cringey when foreigners wear Japanese Kimonos or Yutaka. He also said, though it’s laughable, bad Japanese/anime Japanese at least shows that the person is trying to learn. So he doesn’t find that cringey.

People getting shit-faced and making an ass of themselves? Well plenty of salarymen and other Japanese workers do that just as often, so it’s not that bad.

People who can’t use chopsticks are to be expected, as they’re not used elsewhere.

So then, what does he find cringey?

People who are loud and butt in on conversations. People who are overly touchy-feely to people they just met (he said even hand shakes can be considered a bit of a cringe situation depending on how they’re done). Tourists trying to pick up girls at HUB is pretty cringey too, especially the super unhygienic ones that smell awful.

Edit: I talked to another co-worker. He said there was a foreigner in a park just bumbling around. The foreigner saw a bunch of little kids playing and went and tried to play with them. He took the ball and started saying “boing boing.” The mothers of these children immediately came over and took their kids away. Evidently boing is an onomatopoeia for boobs bouncing here and they thought he was being lewd.”

#3. In the suicide forest.

“Film a dead body in the suicide forest.”

#2. Believe it or not.

“Not Japanese but lived there. Touch and harass maiko/geisha.

Believe it or not they’re people trying to get to their jobs. Let them get there without accosting them for your Instagram pic.”

#1. In public.

“Ask for senpai notices in public.”

 

The more you know!

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Kenyan Filmmaker Went to Court So Her LGBT Film Wouldn’t Get Banned

People in the United States, as well as most of the Western world, are used to seeing love stories of all sizes, shapes, and types depicted on the big screen. But this story is a stark reminder of the uphill battle that the LGBT community faces in other cultures.

Recently, Kenyan filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu saw her internationally acclaimed independent film, Rafiki, banned in her home country because of its content. The film features two young women from opposing political backgrounds who fall in love, a storyline that was deemed inappropriate by the Kenya Film Classification Board back in April for “promoting lesbianism.”

Kahiu stood up for herself, her film, and for the LGBT community in Kenya when she filed a lawsuit against the board, claiming the ruling violated her right to free speech and free expression as an artist.

Recently, the High Court ruled in her favor, with Justice Wilfrida Okwany writing, “I am not convinced that Kenya is such a weak society that its moral foundation will be shaken by seeing such a film.” The judge also pointed out that the practice of homosexuality “did not begin with Rafiki.”

The decision means that Kahiu can submit her film for Best Foreign Language Film at the Oscars – although Rafiki has been shown at Cannes, in South Africa, and in Toronto, it must be shown in the country where it was produced for at least seven consecutive days to be eligible for an Academy Award.

Kahiu received the news while waiting to board a flight, and sent this out on Twitter.

Photo Credit: Twitter

The reactions were happy from her fellow Kenyans, who seemed to agree with the Court’s ruling.

Photo Credit: Twitter

Photo Credit: Twitter

Photo Credit: Twitter

Photo Credit: Twitter

The classification board, however, remained stubbornly against the ruling in a public statement, noting that although they would comply with the court orders, “it is a sad moment, not only for the film industry, but to all Kenyans who stand for morality, that a film that glorifies homosexuality is allowed to be the country’s branding tool abroad.”

Photo Credit: Twitter

Their CEO proved equally unmovable with the following Tweet:

Photo Credit: Twitter

With Kenyans awaiting a potentially landmark ruling on the constitutionality of punishing same-sex intercourse with up to 14 years in prison, the High Court’s ruling in Kahiu’s case could prove telling.

The bottom line in this case, though, was summed up nicely by Dudley Ochiel, Kahiu’s lead attorney:

“The ruling is a win for the freedom of expression and artistic creativity in Kenya.”

Let’s hope it’s not the last.

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10 Near-Death Experiences from People on Reddit

Even though we all know death will come for us eventually, it’s not on our minds the majority of the time. Some folks, however, have had an uncomfortably close brush with the Grim Reaper. Here are 10 stories from people who narrowly missed death.

10. Please, please, don’t dive into the shallow end of a pool

My “I survived” moment happened when I was fourteen. Playing around the pool my friends and I were playing Marco Polo. I was out of the water trying to get away from being tagged by my friend. “Fish outa water!” he screams, I dove head first with my arms by my sides into the shallow four and a half end of my pool.

I awoke later that night in the hospital not able to move anything: legs, arms, lungs (on a ventilator at that time) scared with no answers.

Twenty-four years later I still don’t know what I was thinking doing that. I’m now in a wheelchair with most of my mobility intact. I’m depressed at times about the incident but I can say “I survived!

9. A difficult family life

When I was 5 or 6 my oldest cousin (15 at the time) walked into my room while I was laying down and smothered me. She held me down, put a pillow over my face and sat on my chest while she tried to snuff the life out of me. And she almost succeeded. I lost consciousness and woke up to my grandmother and aunt (cousins mom) timing my pulse and screaming that they may need an ambulance.

This would become a theme with her. The adults caught her crushing pills and mixing it into my food one night. After that I was told to Never eat or drink anything she gave me. I had to be with an adult 24/7 or shed attack me. When i couldn’t swim she pushed me into the in ground pool and went inside. I almost drowned.

That entire side of my family was extremely abusive and were deep in the drug trade. Cops were never called for anything. She was heavily abused by her dad and I assume took her anger out on me. My bio dad was abusive in his own ways but no where near as awful as her dad so I can see how that would make her snap.

She had a sad life and has been missing since 2012.

8. Five bullets

When I was 8 my biological father came to my house in east Texas with his brothers pistol from his safe. He had bipolar disorder and after physically and mentally abusing my mother for the past two years after their divorce he snapped and decided he was done with her. It was supposed to be only my mother, my two sisters, and I in the house, but my mother called my grandfather who had the flu at the time to come to our house even though he lived two hours away.

My father came to the door and my grandfather answered, he told my father to go home but he refused, my mother came to the door and my father pulled out a pistol and they wrestled on the front porch which ended up with my grandfather getting shot where his appendix would be. The gun didn’t rack itself I assume because they were all holding the gun when he pulled the trigger so he wasn’t able to fire again. After he shot he dropped the gun and ran.

He wasn’t expecting any resistance or for anyone to be there to protect us, he only brought five bullets, and planned on using all five, one for my mom, 2 for my sisters, one for me, and the last for himself.

I had no intervention in the situation and slept through the whole thing. I had no idea that when I went to sleep that night it very well could have been my last. He only got sentenced to twenty years for assault with a deadly weapon because my grandfather survived. He’s 11 years in and is eligible for parole. I still like to think of it as an “I survived” story even though I wasn’t able to do anything to prevent it.

7. Pirate ambush

Working as a merchant navy officer.

Our vessel was about 60 nautical miles away from Somalia, our way was through the sea of Aden and into the Mediterranean from the Suez Canal. It was my shift at the time, 1600 to 2000 hrs. It was a calm afternoon.

As we approached the sea of Aden we were ambushed by two large boats from starboard(the right side of the ship). Around 20 Somali pirates (10 and 10 on each boat) attacked us. Some of them had AK’47s and fires immediately at the bridge. We had armed mercenaries on board, so we were protected, but nevertheless, in danger.

A stray bullet flew straight into the bridge (even to this day, I can’t even understand how that happened) and got me on my lower left leg. A burning sensation rushed through my body, I lost a lot of blood. Our armed security drove the pirates away with no casualties, and I got immediate health care from the captain and the 2nd officer.

I survived, and now I have a good story to tell.

6. Always check your mirrors

This just happened on Saturday night. I was at a friends with with a few of my friends and it was pretty late so we decide to take off.

Right when we get in the car another one of our friends calls and she sounds hammered and on the verge of crying. She says shes drunk in the city and her phones at 1% so of course I tell her well come get her. So I’m driving down I55 into Chicago and at one point the 4 lane highway splits.

I’m going left at the fork but in the right lane and I’m looking at my mirror to go into the left lane. The second I look up I realize there was a guy that was going right at the fork who changed his mind last minute and was less than an inch from smashing right into me but luckily I already began switching lanes.

Everyone in the car was screaming and I casually kept singing the song on the radio. My friend in the passenger seat went quite for a second and then said “let’s never talk about that.”

Turns out the guy actually grazed my bumper but it isnt really damaged at all. He was clearly drunk.

5. Oleander is surprisingly dangerous

When I was 5, we moved into a house where a massive oleander bush was growing over the fence. Oleander flowers littered the lawn. I played with them and then went inside, had something to eat, and played with my sisters for a bit.

Next thing I remember, I’m in a doctor’s office. I’m shivering and I ask for a blanket. The doctor puts a sheet of the paper that they use to cover the bed over me. They explain to my parents that I’m going to be fine and I can be taken home.

When I was a bit older (10 yrs), my mother told me that I had been telling her that my chest hurt and I couldn’t breathe, and she grew concerned enough to take me to the ER. I had fallen asleep in the car ans stayed asleep until waking up in the doc’s office.

I googled it and read that Oleander is incredibly poisonous and works by paralyzing the respiratory system. Just one oleander flower can kill a horse. People have died from using oleander branches to roast food when camping. I had gotten pretty severaly poisoned just by eating food with oleander residue on my hands. If I had bitten or eaten just a bit of the flower (which I very easily could have done since I was a dumbass that often ate random things), I would have died pretty quickly.

So… yeah… I survived.

4. A solid case for arachnophobia

Back when I was about six years old, my family lived in a house with a large hill behind it. There was a lot of dry brush back there, but enough clear ground to make it an ideal setting for games of make-believe involving mazes, labyrinth-like fortresses, or curiously well-lit sewer systems. I got to know the area so well that I scarcely needed to look where I was walking, and I’d frequently rush around without paying too much attention to my surroundings.

As a result, I have absolutely no idea where my assailant came from.

One afternoon, while I was using a stick to fight imaginary monsters, I felt a sharp sting on the side of my neck. I quickly slapped and squished whatever had attacked me, then went back to my quest, more irritated by the interruption than actually hurt. It wasn’t until later in the evening that I gave the assault a second thought, when my parents – who had noticed the wound – scolded me for picking at what they assumed was a mosquito bite.

“You need to keep your fingers off it,” my mother told me. “It already looks like it’s getting infected.”

I insisted that I hadn’t touched my neck, but nobody believed me… and I continued to receive admonishments over the course of the next two days. During that time, a growing section of my skin started to look like it was literally rotting away, which prompted a number of home remedies to be attempted. When none of them seemed to have any effect, I was finally brought to the hospital.

The nurse took one look at my neck and called for the doctor.

The doctor took one look at my neck, expressed his disbelief, and called for the surgeon.

The surgeon took one look at my neck, booked an operating room, and told my parents that I’d be going under the knife inside of an hour.

I’ve since been told that the progression of the venom – an unwanted gift from a brown recluse spider – had come dangerously close to entering my bloodstream. Had there been any further delay in excising the lesion… well, it might not have ended well for me. I still have a rather large scar on my neck (along with an acute case of arachnophobia), and I’ve learned to be much more diligent about examining those places where I might encounter a web.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get any spider-based superpowers, so I still feel like I got ripped off.

TL;DR: I was assaulted by a brown recluse spider. The wound went untreated for three days.

3. A close shave on ice

I’m an avid skier (former instructor) and one night while skiing (they use lighting on the mountain at night), there was a nearly invisible patch of ice across an entire corner/bend on a trail that I usually hit around 35-50mph depending on the day.

After a long day of instructing, most of us would have some drinks/tokes and go shred for a bit. So I was barely tipsy, zooming down the slopes and I hit this corner and immediately hear one of the scariest sounds in skiing. The sound of your edges sliding across ice, with almost zero traction

Now normally, a good skier has razor sharp edges to catch almost any surface, but after instructing for days/weeks your edges are dull af due to use and beginners running into your skies. So I’m now painfully aware of the ledge to my left and how it goes a significant way down the mountain, with rocks & trees & ice, plus no hope of help until my family decides I’ve gone missing at some unholy hour (it was already about 8pm).

So in those few seconds I contemplated a slow, cold death or frostbite at the very least while leaning into my turn so hard that my right leg was at a 30 degree angle to the ground.

I managed to catch a small snow-pile that other people had pushed to the edge and cut all my momentum as I threw myself down. You don’t want to immediately fall at those speeds because you will just slide right off or seriously injure yourself by catching an edge and tearing a muscle, etc.

Adrenaline was pumping and those few moments felt longer than the 9+ hours of skiing that day. But i survived. The isolation was the scary part.

2. Rip currents are no joke

I was living in Central America for a winter in my mid 20s. I made friends with a local family who had twin boys, around 18 years old. We had a beach day with a bunch of friends and family.

Everything was great, lots of us were playing in the surf and the waves were pretty intense but the water was only neck deep, so no big deal. Suddenly, I looked around and realized we were 50-100 yards out into the ocean, with the water very deep, I assume it was a rip current. I was fine, I’m very comfortable swimming but neither of the boys knew how to swim apparently.

Everyone was able to swim parallel to shore and get out of the current except one of the boys, who was silent with wide eyes and softly said: “Ayudame” or help me before he disappeared underwater. I was pretty tired from fighting the current but I couldn’t leave him. I was able to find him underwater pretty quickly. He was awake and kind of stunned and still, but never fought me thankfully. I started swimming backward towards shore but couldn’t swim fast enough against the current and we kept getting pulled out. Another friend swam closer and helped me time my swimming with the waves to save energy. I was beyond exhausted however and seriously considered needing to leave him so save myself. Somehow I kept going and finally felt sand under my feet and we were able to crawl up out of the water.

He rested for a while and was ok. I had to lie on the beach for 20-30 min and had the most intense heart palpitations I’ve ever felt. He thanked me profusely after of course and all was well. I have always felt tremendously guilty for seriously considering leaving him to drown so I could live. Scariest moment of my life for sure.

1. Don’t ignore tornado warnings

I was 7 when my mother attempted to race a tornado because she didn’t want to turn around and go back to her friend’s house to seek shelter in the basement. We were literally like a block or two away from their house and had just said goodbye as the tornado warning for the county we had to drive into (and our current county) was issued (about a 10-15 minute drive.) The weatherman on the radio was frantic saying typical stuff like it’s a very dangerous storm, get out of the car, do not try to outrun a tornado, get out of mobile homes and seek shelter in ditches, etc.

My family is full of idiots. She called me names when I started crying because I was scared and had me lean out the window to look for the funnel, and, because I was out of other options, I did. The sky went green, we were the only car on the road. It started raining hard and I couldn’t see shit. I thought about jumping out of the car and running back into the house or into a ditch but she was driving too fast on the highway and wouldn’t slow down.

About 10-15 minutes later we did drive through where the tornado had touched down, trees and powerlines were down, there was storm damage and hail/fog still on the road. We had narrowly missed it when it touched down and went back up minutes before we moved into the area.

I pissed myself in terror that day but I survived.

The post 10 Near-Death Experiences from People on Reddit appeared first on UberFacts.

15 People Share Troublesome Trends They’re Beginning to Notice

Society is changing before our very eyes, and sometimes what we see is pretty scary. We are living in strange times, people.

Folks on AskReddit weighed in on what trends they see that are disturbing and worrisome.

1. Take some responsibility

“Parents putting the blame of their child failing classes on the teacher entirely, as if their child could do no wrong in any capacity.

There are a lot of little fart knockers out there who need the parents to be parents and not a friend.”

2. Give me simple

“Seems like you can’t find any simple flavors anymore. Everything has to be fancy. You can’t buy a blueberry muffin, it has to be wild field berries and rolled oat muffin. You can’t by BBQ chips, it has to be Salsa and Roasted Peanut butter chips. Or whatever.

7-Eleven Slurpees used to be available in regular flavors, such as orange, lime, and cherry. I used to love the orange flavor. Now there are no more regular flavors anymore, just things with names like Honey Bubble Gum Sriracha Blast.

There’s rarely any solo caramel flavor anymore. Everything is salted caramel. Just give me regular caramel. What happened?”

3. Get your shots

“Anti-vax. We’re going to have smallpox again if they don’t get their kids fully vaccinated on the recommended schedule.”

4. I agree

“How deeply advertising is penetrating our everyday lives.

Here in Australia a big story at the moment is how a horse race was permitted to advertise via projection on the sails of the Sydney Opera House. Our most recognizable landmark was used as a billboard. It’s embarrassing.”

5. Listen up

“Adults with poor listening skills. Often when talking to a person my age or older they interrupt, talk over me or don’t listen beyond the first few words and I have to repeat myself until they comprehend.

I work with several people like this. And what’s even worse is it translates to email as well. I’ll send them a detailed email going over everything they need to know and then over the next few days I’ll get back multiple emails with questions that I already went over in detail in my initial email.”

6. This is a big problem

“I’m nearly 30, but it seems like teenagers/young people in their early 20s are developing serious mental issues like depression and anxiety earlier and earlier. It almost seems as if it’s normal for a teenager to be depressed and semi-suicidal, and social media isn’t helping.

The amount of pressure put on these kids at a younger and younger age to get into a good school, get a good job, succeed is more in-their-faces than ever, and being constantly connected means that it’s inescapable. When these young people reach adulthood in the next decade or so, and these deeply ingrained issues start to reallycome to fruition, I think we’re going to have a massive mental health tidal wave on our hands that the current professional medical field isn’t prepared to handle.”

7. Class problems

“Rising housing costs and increased homelessness. Seeing much more in the streets and can see why. Rents are so high that anyone struggling with a minimum wage job would be on the streets. Dual income properties are paying more than 60% of their income just for rent alone.

It isn’t long before the lower class isn’t a class anymore and the middle and upper classes will be the poor. The gap between the elite 1 % is growing far too big. Banks own the country and drive prices up. It is a shame.”

8. Let kids be kids

“This is something I’ve noticed change drastically (IMO) during my lifetime (and I’m only 33).

When I was preteen/”tween”, clothing in the girl’s section was clearly meant for children whereas these days most of it could be put in the Junior’s section and I wouldn’t even notice.

There’s also quite a difference in bras- none of the ones available in the girls section when I started wearing one had any padding. There was thicker lining so nipples didn’t show through, but not padded like push-up bras. Now, there are padded bras aimed at little girls just starting to wear bras- I saw them once at Kohls out of the corner of my eye and mistook them for women’s sports bras- it made me feel uncomfortable (and sad) when I went to browse and realized they were actually being aimed at little girls in the 7ish-14ish age range.

My husband held one up once and said, “Babe, you should get one like this! It’s really cute!” He was so embarrassed.”

9. Call out culture

“Maybe I’m just being paranoid but the rise of social media combined the current popularity of outrage-bait and “call-out culture” makes me feel like lynch mobs are about to come back in a big way.

I feel like we’re already entering a new “Salem Witch trials” era if the recent news is anything to be believed.”

10. Help me, Mother

“Can anyone else who works in retail, customer service, basically any public facing job confirm my hunch that over the last ten years there has been a sharp rise in the amount of grown adult men with so few social skills there mother has to come and order those turtle Beach headphones for them? Like they’ll pay with there own money, out of there own Metallica chain wallet but there mom does all the talking. Seems like a lot more grown adult men with the social skills of a shy child.”

11. Ghosted

“Ghosting. And I’m not just talking about millennials on dating apps, I’m talking middle aged hiring managers not bothering to let you know after an interview that they’ve selected another candidate. The more people I talk to the more common this seems to be nowadays.”

12. Annoying

“People blasting their music in enclosed spaces when there’s others around.Parents just handing their phones/tablets to their kids in restaurants and letting them just play shit at full volume. Like I get it, parents sometimes need to distract kids from acting up but if you’re going to do that give those kids some god damn headphones at least. Or you know…raise your kids like everybody else has been raised for generations?

Phone conversations on speakerphone.”

13. Proud to be dumb

“Willful ignorance. People who are proud not to have any knowledge about a given subject, but still have very strong opinions about it. I just had a conversation with a friend of mine on Facebook and her willful ignorance made me want to reach through the screen and strangle her.

She posted this fake news story about a “Pro-Choice Activist Proudly Having Her 27th Abortion.” It took me all of 2 seconds to Google it and find that it was fake. So I told her that it was fake and provided her with links to prove that it was and explained how and why I looked it up. She said: “I ain’t got no time for all that lol i just know it’s disgusting and anyone who does that is a mass murderer in my eyes.”

Okaaaaaaaay nevermind that literally nobody does that and I just showed her that. But whatever. I went on to explain to her about fake news and why it’s being spread and even pointed out that her sharing it is contributing to the problem. She still didn’t seem to care that it was fake.

So I reported the post to FB as fake news and just left it alone.”

14. Big Brother

“Increased government/corporate surveillance and law enforcement presence in every day American life.

There have been important conversations about privacy, NSA abuses, Facebook fuckery, etc in the past few years, but I don’t think much has changed. In the meantime kids graduating college this year do not remember a time before the Patriot Act and imo are way less offended/concerned with the myriad ways our privacy is violated on a daily basis.

Being constantly under surveillance is so normalized I feel like some kind of conspiracy freak when I talk about it. Weirdly, it’s also been politicized so that people assume I’m a right-wing extremist when I talk about it. We should all be concerned about it, tho.”

15. Idiocracy

“Ok, it’s been happening forever – but the dumbing down of pretty much every aspect of society to meet the lowest common denominator.”

The post 15 People Share Troublesome Trends They’re Beginning to Notice appeared first on UberFacts.

13 People Share What They Found in a Deceased Loved Ones Belongings

When we lose a loved one, they often leave behind a lifetime’s worth of belongings. Many times, these things don’t hold much significance – old receipts, clothes – but sometimes they can reveal things about their owner that you never knew.

While we can’t take material possessions with us when we perish, they certainly say a lot about the type of person we were on Earth…

These 13 people went on Reddit to share some of the most significant things they found in the belongings of their deceased loved ones.

1. Hidden

“My Great-Grandfather was a horrible person, he beat his wife and children, was insanely cruel to the family pets, drank away what little money they had. Basically, if you have an image of ‘bad working-class husband from the 1940s’ then you have the right image for him.

All his life, he always wore long-sleeved shirts, he NEVER took them off in front of anybody and never rolled his sleeves up. He permanently wore a long-sleeved button-down shirt to the point where even my Great-Grandma had never seen him shirtless, he wore clothes even to bed.

What’s more, my Gran never really knew anything about him. She says she asked him when she was very little about why they never saw their grandparents from his side, and he hit her and told her not to ask stupid questions.

When he died, my Gran’s family didn’t have the money for a fancy undertaker and whatnot, so they brought his body home to wash him and dress him for the funeral. On taking his shirt off, they discovered that he was covered from the shoulders down in religious tattoos; giant crosses, bible verses, images of angels and devils, all with a theme of redemption, many of the tattoos contained text asking for forgiveness.

After asking around a bit at the funeral, my Gran was able to piece together some information about his earlier life. It turns out that her father had been born into a VERY abusive family, had run away at an early age, and had ended up living in a poorhouse where the children were ‘cared for’ by nuns, by ‘cared for’ they meant that they were beaten regularly to discourage any sinful behavior (there was also some evidence to suggest probable abuse) and schooled in the Bible rigorously.

His upbringing had obviously left it’s mental scars on the man, helping to make him the abusive jerk he became in later life, but his tattoos and later handwritten notes they found show that he was aware of what he was doing and knew that it was wrong.”

2. Little Bits Of Their Lives

“When my husband’s grandma passed and they were going through her house they found shoe boxes with everyone’s names on them. Inside were just the most random things, toys they had played with, recipes they liked, scraps of fabric from old blankets, just little bits of their entire lives in these boxes she had been collecting for years and years.

My husband brought his home and another one, which I thought was maybe one she had started for our son, but it was for me.

Obviously, she didn’t have my childhood stuff, but she had recipes I liked of hers, the ultrasound picture from the baby we lost, little Beauty And The Beast trinkets (my favorite movie), purple flowers.

It was so sweet and so touching to think that even though she only knew me for 10 years, she thought enough of me to put that box together. None of the other in-laws had one, just me. I loved her very much, and I truly enjoyed talking to her and hearing her stories.

I never realized until then that it meant so much to her and that she cared about me that way.”

3. Not Your Dad

“Family friend of ours. There are three sisters. Two are the spitting image of their father, but the youngest looked like she was adopted. Their father was a heavy drinker and beat the kids. He died when the youngest was about 5 or so.

When their mother died in her 90s they got together to clean out the house. They went through a lot of the usual stuff, but one box had all of the kids’ birth certificates and old pics in it. With the youngest daughter’s birth certificate, there were pictures of her, her mother, and Father Ed, the young priest at their church. Their mother used to go get counseling from him when her husband was being abusive. The older girls remembering being at the church all the time while their mom would go to the priest’s house and talk with father Ed.

By this point, they didn’t even have to see the resemblance between their youngest sister and Father Ed before they put it all together.”

4. You Learn To Live With It

“My sister committed suicide when she was 22 years old, I was three years older, so 25 at the time.

She wrote a suicide note on an old typewriter even though she had a computer. In it, she wrote she was sorry but since her last boyfriend had broken up with her she only had one friend left in life and sadly that person couldn’t be there for her right now.

It had been a rough breakup and she called me a few times but I was so busy, had a new girlfriend at the time and I was trying to take on other work at my job so every night I spent like 2 hours studying as well.

It was a stressful time with very little time left over for me. My sister asked me to come and visit her and just keep her company, she was feeling lonely and she really needed someone to talk to. And I promised that soon I could, maybe next weekend, but the weeks passed and I never found the time and then she committed suicide.

Growing up we had been like most other brothers and sisters, worst enemies and best friends at the same time.

The same year she turned 17 she moved to another part of the country for dance studies (ballet and just a whole lot I know almost nothing about) and she was very nervous, so I thought I should be kind to her so I made her a little crappy bracelet from a leather strip, and on it I had written ‘I love you sis.’

So when we were going through her apartment, that bracelet was on her living room table. I never thought I would see that again, I had expected her to throw it away on the way to the train the same day she left, but apparently, she kept it for 5 years and was something she had been looking at on the same day she took her life.

It was like a mental blow of some sort seeing that bracelet again, the memories flooded back – remembering how I swore when I made a mistake with the bracelet, my sister’s expression when she left, the color of her bags, of playing with her on the beach when we were young, of tearing up one of her coloring books because I was mad at her…

I struggled for a long time with self-blame, even though everyone said it wasn’t my fault and I can’t blame myself.

At the time it sounded to me like trying to help a drowning person by saying ‘don’t breathe in water it’s not good’ but I am much better now, I still visit my sisters grave on her birthday every year, planting some flowers, lighting a candle.

The pain never really goes away, but you learn to live with it. I still miss my sister but it’s around the holidays they really return. It is over 10 years ago now but it still feels like almost no time has passed between then and now.”

5. Supportive Dad

“When my Dad died, I was holding his hand in the hospital. My sister and Mom held the other, most of his family (his 3 siblings, nieces and nephews) were there. The day after we buried him, my mom hands me a letter that he wrote.

2 years before he passed, he had a double bypass and valve replacement, he didn’t expect to survive the procedure.

So he wrote letters to family and friends.

The first line said it all. ‘I love you and I am proud of the man you’ve become.’

The rest of the letter just was him telling me that my girlfriend at the time was not good for me and why he felt that way (he was correct). The day we buried him was the last day I actually responded/talked to her.

Her email asking why I wasn’t responding to her was it. I was mourning the loss of my Dad, whom I loved and he was more than that. He was a friend too. She tried to make it about her. No. Just no.

After that, I found lots of things. He had bought a Penn State T-shirt when I was choosing a college. I had wanted to go to architectural school and was rejected by the schools I wanted.

I was going to become a history teacher instead. Turns out a couple weeks after I sent in the stuff for Penn State, one of the schools contacted me and said that I was accepted (the letter was actually dated 3 weeks before, got lost in the mail for a bit), and I went to architectural school after all.

Never knew he bought that shirt until we found it cleaning out his closet. He kept a key-chain I had bought for him when I was 12. It was banged up, broken and all. It said ‘Any man can be a father, it takes someone special to be a Dad.’

It’s been 6.5 years and I miss him.”

6. He Knew

“When my husband died, we got on his phone to get phone numbers to make make the necessary calls to his friends. We found a text he had written me during the night right before he died, but never sent.

It read like a suicide note (apologizing to me, asking me to tell the kids he loved them), even though he had a heart attack.

Apparently, he knew he was having a heart attack, and instead of calling 911 or waking me up, he wrote the text, and went back to bed (laying next to me) to die.”

7. Heartbreaking

“I was kidnapped as a baby and when my mother was murdered in July of 2014, I found all of the legal papers and court transcripts from the fight to get me back. It was heartbreaking to read what my mother had to go through to get me back.

My very abusive father took me with force and then died when I was about 2 years old. She had to fight all of my siblings from him to get me back. It took her 5 years. I was 8 months old when he took me.

You see, I was a mistress baby, my father had 30 years on my mother, and my siblings are his adult children.

I’m the youngest of his children by 26 years. When he died one of my half sisters came from Georgia to Arizona to take me back to Georgia. My mother was 50 miles away from finding him when he died in an accident on I-10 in Arizona.

My father was not a good man, he was heavily involved in smuggling coke via big rigs and what not so he hid his money using my name. Because of this, my siblings fought for custody to get the cash. I was the reason their family was torn apart.

My mother’s murder was not related to what happened to me at all. The case was ruled a suicide but too much stuff doesn’t add up. Lots of things were missing from the house, the manner in which it happened doesn’t make sense.

She was known to be pretty eccentric but she would have never left me to deal with the things I’ve had to deal with. One of her missing weapons turned up in an unrelated crime on the other side of town.

It’s all pretty messed up and after a year of fighting to have the case opened back up I gave up. The house was sold shortly after everything happened, she’s in a jar on my dresser and I am left to figure out how to navigate this situation on my own.”

8. Regret

“My uncle had a little trouble with the law before and ended up serving almost a year in jail. He did a little time before that, a week or two whatever. But this kind of hit home for him that the way he was going was not a good one. I do want to stress he was overall a really good guy. He treated me more like a son than a nephew. My own dad left when I was really young.

So anyway, he passed away and about a year later, his mom (my grandmother) passed away as well. My grandma would always stress to write him letters when he was in prison and I did too, but not as much as I should have. When she died, we were going through her closet and found a big box full of letters.

She never had much money, but apparently, she made sure to keep enough money on his ‘books’ so he could afford to send as many letters as he wanted because there were tons. At least 3 a week or so.

I read a few and it was heartbreaking. How he felt horrible for missing out on time with his kids and he talked about how he missed the little things like how me and him would toss a football around in the front yard. In nearly every one I read he said he wished I wrote him more but he didn’t blame me. I was in high school and he said I was probably more concerned with girls than an uncle in jail. It seriously broke my heart.

A few days later I had the idea to go through my uncle’s things and behold, every letter that my grandma wrote him was there. I never went through all his papers before then. I could go through and see their every conversation over that year and it really opened my eyes to how things really were back then. I didn’t go through all of it, not even half. I feel it was a private thing between mother and son.

Plus, I just don’t know if I could handle it. I have both their urns now, we cremated them, and I keep all the letters together with them. And in case anyone was wondering, my uncle never did go back to jail and he ended up raising two beautiful daughters and a son before he died.

I just wish they had more time with him.”

9. Her Own Words

“When my parents and little sister passed away in a plane crash, my cousin was in her room and happened to find her journal. There was an entry in it from when she was 14/15 that had an entry called ‘If I Died Tomorrow’ that was written to me, my dad and mom that basically said how she wanted us to be happy, celebrate her life, and to move forward.

I read it at their funeral and still fully believe that her words have kept me going a lot of times when I didn’t think I could.

I think it was what a lot of us needed to hear. She was wise beyond her years and I miss her and my parents dearly.”

10. Not Misplaced

“After my dad died, my mom found an envelope in his drawer with my name on it. It was a letter he wrote me when I was 3 months old (I was 21 when he died) and in the note there was a line that said ‘If you’re reading this, it means I’m no longer in your life,’ and also said that he hopes he can be a good dad, and he will always try to be there for me/help me with problems and hopes that we’ll be close, etc.

It kind of made me sad because I didn’t have the BEST relationship with him.

It wasn’t bad, but I was the kind of kid that would rather be left alone than spend time with my parents and stuff. He would on occasion ask if I wanted to watch a movie or play a game with him, and sometimes I would.

But for the most part, he let me just be by myself. And, up until I read that note I honestly thought he was like me and just preferred being alone, and didn’t mind that I didn’t spend a lot of time with him.

My mom and I also thought it was weird that we even found that note. My dad had a habit of misplacing stuff, and that note was written over 20 years ago and he managed not to lose that.”

11. A Very Hard Life

“My dad died in a car accident when I was 6. When he was alive, he wasn’t the kindest guy, he was very strict and pretty distant (a good dad in ways, just not very affectionate). After he died, my siblings who were in high school found out a bunch of stuff about him.

He was violated as a kid, and he told his dad, and his dad told him to suck it up and be a man about it.

Then my sister found medical records on our parent’s computer saying he’d attempted suicide a few times as an adult because he had severe depression, but he was so ashamed and couldn’t let us find out.

The man we thought was very rigid, ended up just being a guy who had a very hard life. I wish I had known him better.”

12. Super Secret

“Back when my mom died I went through what we kids lovingly called ‘Mom’s super secret blue box.’ It was this big blue satin box she kept in the bottom drawer of her dresser and we were absolutely forbidden to go looking in it.

I opened it to discover a pile of various papers and envelopes.

The papers were mostly random bits of things and more important documents like her birth certificate, baptismal cert, my dad’s baptism and confirmation certs, things like that. The real treasure trove was the envelopes.

The envelopes contained love letters between my mom and dad when my father was off on maneuvers when he was in the Army, and more importantly, letters sent from when my father was fighting during the Korean War.

I was hesitant to read them after I realized what they were but I went ahead anyway and discovered a whole other side to my parents.”

13.  Hoarders

“When my great-grandfather went into the nursing home, the doctor said he could never go back home.

When he went into the hospital in the Summer of 1997, we thought he’d be able to come back home after going through physical therapy and being fitted for a prosthesis.

He had developed gangrene on his right lower leg, and it had to be amputated at mid-calf. When the doctor said he couldn’t go back, we put him in a personal care home.

We started cleaning while he was in the hospital.

We found out my great-granddad (and great-grandmother, but she’d been dead for 3 years) were expert hoarders. They’d held onto stuff since at least the 1930s, probably longer than that. Nearly 70 years of junk was in the old farmhouse and all of the outbuildings.

Four or five generations’ worth of stuff was found on that property.

Starting with the house, we found my great-great-grand dad’s journals in a closet. We found some of my great-grandmother’s clothes, shoes, accessories, and jewelry in the front bedroom and one of the rear bedrooms.

We found about 40 years’ worth of National Geographic magazines in the dining room. There were also three sets of china in the dining room. We found some books I had in one of the rear bedrooms. Also found some toys and other stuff that I’d left down there.

Whenever they’d buy me a toy or a book, my great-grandparents insisted I leave it with them, ‘so it will be here for you to play with/read the next time you come down to visit.’

That might have been a good idea in theory, but the truth of the matter is that by the time I went down again, I’d be too old for the toy/book, or I might have lost interest in said toy/book altogether.

In my great-grandparents’ minds, my parents (especially my dad, whom they hated) would get rid of anything they (great-grandparents) bought for me the second I brought it home. They came up with this idea when my great-grandmother once asked if I still had some particular toy or book I didn’t really like, and I said my dad donated it to Goodwill.

In one of the closets, we found a metal tin, like the kind you might put homemade cookies or candy in during Christmas, filled with pennies.

When my great-granddad and I would go to the local bank (very local; been run by the same family for generations), he’d give me a few pennies to buy some of the Ford chiclet gum out of the antique gumball machine.

We found coins all over the house.

Found a cardboard box lined with foil, filled with quarters. Found what my dad thought was a statue in the shape of a gorilla, but it turned out to be a coin bank, filled to the brim. I was given the job of sorting and rolling the coins (long before Coinstar was more widespread).

It came to a little over $450. My dad let me keep half.

In one of the outbuildings, a smokehouse, we found probably one of the greatest treasures ever. In several black garbage bags, we found some handmade quilts my great-great-grandmother had made.

I think we ended up with 30 quilts. We gave some to a couple of friends of my mom, but the rest we kept. I still have a couple I sometimes pull out every winter.

In what was the “biddy house” (where baby chicks were kept), I found tons of Chiffon Margarine (only brand they’d buy) bowls and stacks upon stacks of newspapers.

There was one stack of nothing but the comics sections from the 1950s. If they had been in better condition, they might have been worth something, especially the ad copies. There was one ad copy for Kool-Aid, with a contest to name the pitcher, the grand prize being a lifetime supply of Kool-Aid drink mix, and perhaps a new bicycle.

Another ad copy featured another powdered drink mix that added carbonation to your water, basically turning it into soda. The copy read, ‘It even tickles your nose!’

In a building that once housed a couple of goats, I found a bunch of stuff that belonged to my grandmother.

Found a little pack of crayons, some hand-puppets and other dolls, and a Kotex booklet dealing with a woman’s period.

My great-granddad had bought a double-wide trailer at one point for storing some of the stuff.

I remember finding some books I think my great-grandmother bought for me to teach me to read, and a few other things.

In another building, the freezer house, there were two chest freezers. My dad had already cleaned one of them out and left the other one for me.

I found food going all the way back to when Nixon or even Johnson was in office. It was like going through a time capsule, but you wouldn’t want to touch any of the things inside. I just threw them out into the surrounding yard to let whatever wild animals (we were way out in the country) have at it.

Once cleaned out and fixed up, we moved in for a short time before finally selling it for good after I went to college.”

The post 13 People Share What They Found in a Deceased Loved Ones Belongings appeared first on UberFacts.

This Mother Explains Why Men Cause 100% of Unwanted Pregnancies

A mother and Mormon author posted a long piece to Twitter which posits that all unplanned pregnancies are the man’s fault – no exceptions. Gabrielle Stanley Blair is a mother of six from Oakland, California, and she’s got a hot take on birth control that people can’t stop retweeting.

If you find yourself rushing to disagree with her, we suggest you take a second and read through everything she has to say.

Photo Credit: Twitter: @designmom

Medical note: it is not true that women can only get pregnant 2 days each month. Presumably she’s referring to the basis of the rhythm method, which utilizes the fact that women have more fertile days and less fertile days in their cycles. However, the rhythm method, even when followed strictly, has about a 25% failure rate in the first year of use alone. Really, the only time there is a very high probability that a woman will not get pregnant after sex is while she’s on her period, and even that rule has exceptions, since sperm can live inside the vagina for up to 5 days. There is no time in her cycle that a woman can have sex without some form of birth control and be 100% certain she will not get pregnant.

Medical note: while it is very unlikely, it is not unheard of for a woman to get pregnant from a man’s pre-ejaculate, even if he doesn’t ejaculate. There is no way to have vaginal intercourse for any length of time without using some form of birth control and still be 100% certain no pregnancy will result.

Photo Credit: Twitter: @designmom

What do you think?

The post This Mother Explains Why Men Cause 100% of Unwanted Pregnancies appeared first on UberFacts.