You’ve Probably Never Heard About These 10 Cultural Practices from Around the World

Our world is full of different belief systems and cultural norms that might seem strange at first to an outsider looking in. But once you take the time to learn about how these practices came about and how they’re influenced by a unique culture, it’s easier to understand how truly cool our differences can be.

These 10 practices might sound strange at first glance, but trust me – they’re more fascinating and beautiful than anything.

#10. If you live in China, a metro might go right through your apartment building.

Photo Credit: East News

And you thought living near the train tracks was a bad thing – this metro station in Chongqing is located inside a residential building and trains pass through the sixth floor. The solution has also been used in crowded spots in Japan, and residents are typically not too thrilled about the feat of architecture.

#9. Driving is a whole different experience in Egypt.

Photo Credit: East News

Even though they have the same traffic laws as the rest of the world, the fact that they’re not enforced leads to people doing pretty much whatever they want on the roads. It’s definitely somewhere you’re going to want to keep your eyes peeled if you pull out onto the road.

#8. Filipino fast food restaurants sell giant portions.

Photo Credit: Instagram,mugtown10

Not because they like to stuff themselves with fries, Americans – it’s because many Filipinos share lunch with friends, a tradition called barkada, so the large portions essentially amount to “family style.”

#7. Indonesian people eat off banana leaves instead of plates.

Photo Credit: Instagram,bandungevents

They gather together in a botram, a term that means “eating together,” a tradition that unites people regardless of their origins They share banana leaf plates and everyone eats with their hands.

#6. Whole families in Pakistan ride on a single motorcycle.

This definitely seems different for people in America, who deal with complicated and extended laws for securing children on the roadways, but in Pakistan, it’s not uncommon to see an entire family riding on one motorcycle. It’s not because they believe it’s safe or comfortable, but simply a necessity.

#5. The cult of Kumari in Nepal is made up of little girls.

Photo Credit: East News

Move over, Dalai Lama – and Cinderella, for that matter – little girls in Nepal dream of representing the Hindu goddess Taleju on earth. It’s said that she possesses the bodies of little girls, and her cult searches living children for the embodiment of Kumari.

There are more than one, but the Royal Kumari lives in Kathmandu and is selected after passing several strict rituals. She then settles into the palace and receives gifts, visitors, and blessings.

#4. Indian women born under a strong Mars influence might have wedded a tree.

Photo Credit: Instagram,amitbittoodey

In Vedic astrology, it is believed that people born under a strong influence of Mars will not have happy marriages. They are called “manglik,” and are encouraged to meet and date each other, in order to neutralize the strong negative influences.

The situation is made harder for women because Indian people believe they can worsen the health of their husband. So, in order to try to make herself more attractive for marriage, tradition encourages manglik women to first “marry” a tree so that the curse can be left with it and not carried into a marriage with a man.

After the ceremony, the tree is cut and burned.

#3. Jewish people build temporary tent dwellings and live in them during Sukkot celebrations.

Photo Credit: Creative Commons

The tents are called sukkah’s, and the most important aspect is that they be open to the sky so that Jews can contemplate the wanderings of their ancestors in the Sinai desert. Building and using the tent – in a backyard or on a balcony – is considered a sacred duty and the faithful spend as much time there as possible during the week of Sukkot celebrations.

#2. People in Great Britain need a license for each television set they have at home.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

BBC is public television and therefore funded by licensing fees. Every citizen who owns a television or other device they use to watch live broadcasts are subject to a separate fee. If you claim to not need or want a license, you have to explain your reasons for not watching television or be slapped with a hefty fine.

#1. Newborn babies in South Korea are considered to be 1 year old.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

There is no year zero, essentially. Things can get even more complicated if a family uses the Lunar New Year to mark age as well – a child born toward the end of a lunar year could turn two before they see month outside their mother’s womb.

Rest easy – they do use contemporary Gregorian calendars when filling out legal documents and deciding when a child is eligible to start school or enter into contracts on their own.

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This Online Museum Is Preserving Sounds for Future Generations

Conserve the Sound is not your average museum. It describes itself as “an online museum for vanishing and endangered sound” and it’s exactly what the world could use right now. Daniel Chun and Jan Derksen are the brains behind the operation, and they’re committed to preserving sounds that are vanishing from our everyday lives.

Some examples include a rotary phone, typewriter keys, and the buzzing sound of a vintage intercom.

Remember the vintage viewfinders you used to play with as kids? That sound is cataloged by Conserve the Sound as well.

Be sure to browse through the online museum’s website. I guarantee there’s something on there to make everyone feel like an old timer. What a great idea!

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The Number One Source of Trash in the Ocean is Cigarette Butts

I often picture plastic bottles when thinking about pollution in our planet’s oceans. But Business Insider recently pointed out, the number one source of trash in our oceans is cigarette butts.

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Many smokers simply deposit cigarette butts on the ground when they’re done smoking for a few reasons. Most people don’t go to the effort of extinguishing their smokes, so they don’t put them in a trash can for fear of starting a fire. On top of that, public ashtrays are rarer than they once were, so they’re often difficult to find on the street.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

Many cigarette filters contain a non-biodegradable type of plastic called cellulose acetate that doesn’t break down over time and instead washes into waterways. And you know all those people you see smoking on the beach? Those butts end up directly in the ocean.

Photo Credit: Max Pixel

It’s estimated that about 60 million cigarette butts have been removed from the ocean since the 1980s. Cigarette filters still contain many of the harmful materials that cigarettes have including arsenic, lead, and nicotine. This can have even more negative effects on marine life. It’s up to smokes to dispose of their cigarette butts in the proper manner. A company called TerraCycle will send smokers a recycling repository designed to collect ashes and filters.

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Top Beer Producer to Eliminate Plastic Rings and Glue Its Six-Packs Together

It’s no secret that the plastic rings that hold our beloved six-packs together are horrible for the environment. They end up in oceans and animals become caught in them and starve to death. I’ve even seen photos of turtles who got stuck in them and the plastic totally changed their shapes. Overall, it’s an environmental disaster. And you know that quite a few people aren’t taking the time to cut up the rings before putting them in the trash.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

But there’s good news from a top beer producer. Carlsberg, based in Denmark, has taken a bold step forward and come up with a glued six-pack design called the Snap Pack. This allows the six-packs to stay together without any extra plastic by using dots of glue.

The glue is strong enough to keep the cans together during transport but can be pulled apart easily.  It took three years to perfect the design. Carlsberg estimates that their new measure will reduce their use of plastic by 75% and will save over 1,300 tons of plastic each year. The Snap Packs will debut in the UK in September 2018 before they spread out to the rest of the world. Let’s hope other companies follow Carlberg’s lead.

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8+ Fascinating Facts About Hurricanes

Hurricane season is upon us once again. Those of us who live inland are not as familiar with the facts about these awful storms as the people who live on the coast. But, regardless of where you live, it’s important to know about the forces of nature.

Below are 10 interesting facts about hurricanes that might just blow your hair back.

10. If you look it in the eye, it will tell you its secrets.

Image Credit: Pixabay

A ragged, symmetrical eye means the storm is struggling to maintain its strength, while a smooth, round one signals a strong, stable storm. Oddly though, the smaller the eye is, the more intense the storm.

9. Hurricane Patricia is the strongest hurricane ever recorded.

Image Credit: Pixabay

She made landfall on the western coast of Mexico in 2015 as a huge category 5, with sustained winds of 210 mph off the coast and 150 mph when she made landfall.

8. There are only hurricanes in North America.

Image Credit: Pixabay

While a mature tropical cyclone is known as a hurricane in the Atlantic and eastern Pacific Ocean, it’s called a typhoon when it appears near Asia and a cyclone everywhere else in the world.

7. The wind is only part of the danger.

Image Credit: Pixabay

Weather reports typically focus on wind speeds, but more than half of the deaths related to hurricanes result from the storm surge, which is when the ocean water is pushed inland by the winds.

6. They get names so we can keep track of them.

Image Credit: nhc.noaa.gov

Meteorologists began naming hurricanes in the 1950s to make it easier for forecasters and news reporters to talk about them. Today, the Atlantic and eastern Pacific oceans each get a separate list of alternating names that are reused every six years.

5. The greatest danger is in the eyewall.

Image Credit: Pixabay

The bands of wind and rain that spiral out from the center of a hurricane cause damage, flooding, and tornadoes. But the eyewall — the tight group of thunderstorms in the center — causes the most damage with its winds when it hits the shore.

4. Hurricane Hunters are a thing.

Image Credit: Public Domain

They’re basically Helen Hunt in Twister, except they fly specially outfitted airplanes into the middle of storms to measure wind speeds and other meteorological data. They also drop sensors called dropsondes inside storms to read their activity.

3. The name of a particularly bad storm is usually retired.

Image Credit: Wikipedia

There’s no use tempting fate, I suppose, which is why the names of the most destructive and deadly hurricanes are taken out of circulation. Since hurricane names first started being recorded back in 1954, more than 80 names have been retired. For example, Matthew and Otto were retired after the 2016 hurricane season, and will be replaced by Martin and Owen the next time their letters roll around.

And, in case you were wondering, yes, Katrina, Sandy, Harvey, Irma, and Maria have all also been retired.

2. The eye is warm.

Image Credit: Pixabay

This might not surprise you considering it’s a tropical storm, but since the eye is formed by air rushing down from the atmosphere to replace low pressure that’s being sucked away from the surface, the temperatures in the eye exceed 80 degrees Fahrenheit even thousands of feet above the Earth’s surface.

1. California has different problems.

Image Credit: Pixabay

It seems a little weird that a state with hundreds of miles of coastline rarely deals with hurricane threats. While they certainly have their own issues with earthquakes and fires, to be sure, the colder temperatures of the Pacific ocean make hurricanes more unlikely. The worst one in history hit San Diego in 1858 and was only a category 1.

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Here Are 20 New Words Merriam-Webster Is Adding to the Dictionary This Year

Our language is constantly evolving. Many of the new words that get introduced into the Merriam-Webster dictionary come to us from the online world. And boy oh boy, are there a whole lotta slang terms.

Here are 20 new words that the Merriam-Webster dictionary is adding to the big book in 2018.

1. BOUGIE (ADJ.)

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Short for bourgeois, this term means “Marked by a concern for wealth, possessions, and respectability.”

2. FINTECH (N.)

“Products and companies that employ newly developed digital and online technologies in the banking and financial services industries.”

3. BINGEABLE (ADJ.)

“Having multiple episodes or parts that can be watched in rapid succession.”

4. HAPTICS (N.)

“The use of electronically or mechanically generated movement that a user experiences through the sense of touch as part of an interface (such as on a gaming console or smartphone).”

5. FORCE QUIT (V.)

Photo Credit: Flickr,Vincent Brown

“To force (an unresponsive computer program) to shut down (as by using a series of preset keystrokes).”

6. AIRPLANE MODE (N.)

“An operating mode for an electronic device (such as a mobile phone) in which the device does not connect to wireless networks and cannot send or receive communications (such as calls or text messages) or access the Internet but remains usable for other functions.”

7. INSTAGRAM (V.)

“To post (a picture) to the Instagram photo-sharing service.”

8. BIOHACKING (N.)

“Biological experimentation (as by gene editing or the use of drugs or implants) done to improve the qualities or capabilities of living organisms especially by individuals and groups outside of a traditional medical or scientific research environment.”

9. TL;DR (ABBREV.)

“Too long; didn’t read—used to say that something would require too much time to read.”

10. MARG (N.)

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

A margarita. According to Merriam-Webster, the first known usage occurred in 1990.

11. FAVE (N.)

Favorite. This word is older than it looks: It dates back to 1938. (“Lester Harding, heavy fave here, clicks with pop songs,” was the first usage, according to the Oxford English Dictionary.)

12. HANGRY (ADJ.)

“Irritable or angry because of hunger.” People have been hangry (or at least using the word) since 1956.

13. RANDO (N.)

According to Merriam-Webster, this “often disparaging” slang means “A random person: a person who is not known or recognizable or whose appearance (as in a conversation or narrative) seems unprompted or unwelcome.”

14. GOCHUJANG (N.)

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

A spicy paste used in Korean cuisine that is made from red chili peppers, glutinous rice, and fermented soybeans.

HOPHEAD (N.)

Originally a slang word for a drug addict dating back
to 1883, this word these days means “A beer enthusiast.”

16. ZOODLE (N.)

“A long, thin strip of zucchini that resembles a string or narrow ribbon of pasta.”

17. ADORBS

“Extremely charming or appealing: adorable.”

18. GENERATION Z (N.)

Photo Credit: Unsplash,Jenna Anderson

The generation of people born in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

19. TENT CITY (N.)

“A collection of many tents set up in an area to provide usually temporary shelter (as for displaced or homeless people).”

20. MOCKTAIL (N.)

“A usually iced drink made with any of various ingredients (such as juice, herbs, and soda water) but without alcohol: a nonalcoholic cocktail.”

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12+ Travelers Reveal Their Scariest Experiences Abroad

For most of us, traveling is a treat. We save up a nice chunk of change to see a part of the world we’ve never seen before. But the more you travel, the more likely you are to run into the darker sides of the world abroad.

And that’s exactly what happened to these 15 people.

 

#15. Incredibly lucky

“I was traveling in Nicaragua several years ago when I got lost and ended up having to take a taxi at 9:30pm back to my hostel. When the taxi pulled up to the curb, the taxi driver locked the taxi doors and told me that I had misunderstood the fare. He claimed I owed him $100 USD which was several times more than we had agreed upon. I tried to pry the doors open from the inside but was completely trapped. Thankfully, he let me out of the taxi after taking all the money I had on me.

The hostel workers told me I was incredibly lucky. A few days earlier, a taxi driver had kidnapped another young female, assaulted her, then dumped her barely conscious body in a field outside town thinking that she was dead. A few local schoolchildren found her on their way to school in the morning.”

#14. The cops spoke with us

“On the red-eye train, stopped for a layover in New York. My friend and I are half asleep, sitting across from each other. A homeless guy snuck into the train, pulled his pants and underwear down and tried to sit with my friend, encouraging her to “help him out.” I woke up just in time to see it happen. Took me telling at the guy to find another place to sit for him to hurriedly pull his pants up and move somewhere else… only to try the same thing to another woman, who was extremely vocal about it.

The cops spoke with us. Apparently this guy was known for stealing cans from the subways and this was a new MO for the guy.”

#13. A Russian militant roadblock

“I went to visit Ukraine with my parents because they wanted to see the small villages where their parents were born. We have no family in the area so we hired a guide to take us around since the country can be a bit corrupt. As we were driving around on a highway we suddenly were stopped in traffic (literally middle of nowhere). The guide gets out of the car and takes a look, then quickly jumps back into the car, does a U-Turn and drives off telling my mom we can’t go to her mom’s village. We ask why and he says that was some kind of russian millitant roadblock. This was during the whole Crimea thing.”

#12. A night train in Naples

“A friend and I were waiting for a night train in Naples and after someone tried to steal our bags decided to go everywhere together. It was a good thing because a man who had been whistling at us for an hour tried to follow us into the bathroom.”

#11. I would be safe from then on

“I was walking around in a town in Algeria. I wandered in to a neighborhood, and noticed there were hardly any people out. A little further, and there were literally no people out. I started to feel a little uneasy. And then I see an extremely tall man walking towards me, straight towards me, obviously with intent. He gets closer, and I see an older gentleman with a long grey beard and wearing a grey tunic. I stop. He comes right up to me and says, in pretty good English, “you’re not safe here, we need to get you off the street”. I say “OK”, and he says “follow me”.

We walk a few blocks and we come to a door, he says “wait here a minute”, and he goes inside. He opens the door again and invites me in. When I get inside, there are maybe a dozen men. They are all dressed in black, and they are staring absolute daggers at me. Grey-beard lays in to them, starts shaking his fists at them, gets really worked up. Then one of the younger guys goes in to the kitchen and brings out some tea and cookies, and offfers them to me.

So, I’m drinking tea, and trying to smile, and one of the young guys asks where I’m from and I say “The States” and he starts talking about the CIA and stuff… and then I say “you think the CIA is bad here? Let me tell you about Central America”, and then pretty soon everybody is warming up to me and we’re laughing and talking shit about American foreign policy and drinking tea.

After a bit of that the older man invites me back to his apartment. He has a huge library. I gift him a book that I had finished. And then he tells me what had just happened. His little brother, who was one of the younger men, was the leader of a radical group, all the other men I had met. He had overheard them getting ready to kidnap me. But he had shamed them for not being good hosts, and for disrespecting him because it was his house. He said that I would be safe from then on.

TLDR: Gandalf saves my life and got a copy of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance for his trouble.”

#10. A long screwdriver

“1992 I was walking up the stairs to the ticket booths in the Warsaw, Poland central train station. All of a sudden this dude is falling down the stairs coming to rest a few stairs above where I was standing. Dude had a long screw driver sticking out of his abdomen.”

#9. Screaming like they were going to die

“Was on a flight once going into Orlando that hit some unexpected turbulence. This was no ordinary turbulence. We went from 0 to 100 in an instant. People literally flew out of their seats, luggage fell from the overhead bins, people screamed like they were going to die. There were several sudden drops in elevation strong enough that people’s arms flew up in the air and my butt came out of the seat. I’ve flown quite a bit and sometimes it gets bumpy. This was the first time I seriously thought something bad was going to happen.”

#8. Lost him

“I was stalked by a guy while walking through the Tiergarten in Berlin. I was walking a path, enjoying the park alone. I saw this guy standing on the edge of the walkway just looking off into the distance. I passed him and when I was about twenty feet away, he turned and followed after me, keeping pace. I started to take a very meandering path, even leaving the park and entering again. The guy stuck with me the whole way. Eventually I got to a place with some sharp turns and heavy greenery. I was able to lose the line of sight and put myself up against a corner. I’d just been in Switzerland and had bought a pocket knife, so I opened the blade and held it inside my jacket pocket. I stood there, waiting, and then this guy comes walking out of the path confused and obviously trying to see where I went. When he finally spotted me, he jolted and since I had the drop on him, he played it cool and continued walking as if he hadn’t followed me there. He stopped a little ways ahead, and I kept watching him. I wanted to confront him to find out why he’d followed me, but since I was a visitor in the country, I thought better of it. Instead, I waited until I saw a big group of people leaving and fell in with them. He started to follow me, but I finally lost him outside the garden. It unsettled me because to this day I have no idea why he was following me. I’m a guy and at the time I was in my early twenties, pretty fit, and had a sour disposition, so I didn’t seem like a prime mugging target. But, maybe he thought otherwise.

EDIT: Half the reason I posted this story was because I hoped someone on Reddit would know what the guy was doing. You didn’t fail me.”

#7. Our moms just started calling…

“In 2016 I went to Brussels in a school trip, we were at the train station and we left to Germany I believe. Several hours later all of our moms just start calling and texting us asking where we were and stuff. Turns out there was a bombing in the train station. It’s crazy to believe that the bombs were probably already planted when we were there.

Edit: we didn’t actually got on a train, we were just visiting the station.”

#6. Thankfully

“A good friend of mine in Zimbabwe was grabbed at gunpoint and forced into a van, thankfully they only took her to an ATM and made her drain her account then they left her somewhere outside town. Could’ve been so much worse.”

#5. A pack of wild dogs

“I had a pack of wild dogs chase me from my bus stop to my hotel at 3 am in Kosovo. I also had a old woman yell at me in Russian about not making my bed right on the train and then watched over my shoulder til it was to her satisfaction when I was on my way back to Bucharest from Moldova.”

#4. Losing my wallet

“Got pickpocketed by a group of 3 on a Paris metro. I’m paranoid of losing my wallet, so I’m always checking myself. When I realized it was missing, I made a bigger scene than the pickpockets were making (they shoved me into their friend and were trying to convince people I knocked him down). I stopped the train from leaving the station. One of the other passengers left to get got conductor and security. I guess that didn’t sit well with the pickpockets, so they gave me back my wallet and took off running.

Edit: This event still freaks my wife out.”

#3. Staring at me while I slept

“I was staying in a weird hostel by myself in Barcelona, woke up to a man staring at me while I slept. He was looking over a one of those wood dividing screens that the shared room had. I pretend to still be asleep because I was afraid of what he would do if I move or confronted him and I didn’t know if there was anyone else in the room. He stared for like 2 hours until finally my alarm rang cause I had to to take an early train, so I put all my stuff in my bag and left the room. As I left I told the owner, but I was really in a hurry and didn’t ask what he was going to do with the guy.”

#2. Face to face with a cow

“Hiking in Huaraz Peru, has been told to watch our gear as locals (and apparently foxes) might make off with items left around the campsite. So we made sure to clean the campsite extra well, packing all our gear in the tent and inside the fly. And after a long day hiking, off to bed. Middle of the night our tent starts shaking like crazy, I wake up freaking out thinking we were getting robbed, I started yelling and screaming. Part of the tent pushes in real far. I manage to get outside to start swinging and come face to face with the cow that had wandered into the tent ropes and got startled. Pretty lucky that it didn’t step down into the tent and hit us.”

#1. A bus from the 80s

“In India our bus rounded a corner in the mountains and another bus was on the other side of the curve. Both busses skid to a stop about 1 foot from one another. Both drivers started laughing and poking fun at each other. We saw a bus from the ’80s that fell down the mountain about 15 minutes later. Hella intense.”

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10 Super Weird British Foods

The British have some pretty interesting food and drinks that you can’t find anywhere else.

Despite being staples of their diet, many of those items don’t translate to the rest of the world, and people around the globe find them to be downright weird. Take a look at these 10 examples from people who shared their thoughts on Buzzfeed.

1. Crisps in a roll

Photo Credit: Instagram,such.a.flannel

“The weirdest British dish is without a doubt crisp rolls. A dry roll. With crisps in them?! Why?!”

2. Spotted dick

Photo Credit: Flickr,Brad Lauster

“What is spotted dick and why is it called that? Is it named after someone? I’m confused.”

3. Scotch eggs

Photo Credit: Flickr,Brian Malcolm

4. Brown sauce

Photo Credit: Instagram,peacockdrums

“A food defined by its colour and category. They didn’t even both to name it!”

5. Chips with vinegar

Photo Credit: Flickr,LearningLark

6. Mince pies

Photo Credit: Flickr,Yortw

“Once my British friends and I made a savoury pie with minced meat (ground meat) and I called it a mincemeat pie and they were like ‘oh actually…’ because apparently that’s WRONG!?!?”

7. Sausage rolls

Photo Credit: Flickr,Alpha

“Why are y’all so obsessed with sausages and sausage rolls? Specifically from Greggs. What’s so great about Greggs?”

8. Black pudding

Photo Credit: Flickr,Andy2Boyz

“Being an American with an English boyfriend, I spend a decent amount of time in north west England. Can’t wrap my head around black pudding. Pig’s blood and cereal? And it’s at every breakfast place ever there.”

9. Yorkshire puddings

Photo Credit: Flickr,Rob Friesel

“They are awesome, but so weird, like weird-shaped savoury pancakes.”

10. Beans on toast

“Yeah i don’t get the whole ‘mushy carbs on top of toast’ thing, i.e. beans on toast, fried potatoes on toast, etc.”

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Women Share Their Terrifying Stories of Being Stalked in Public

Maybe it’s been in a bar, at the movies, or walking down the street, but every woman has likely had an experience where a random male stranger has made her uncomfortable, at the very least. At the extreme (but not uncommon) end of the spectrum are the men that have made us want to run away or send a desperate text to a friend or loved one.

Women have even come to expect this when they go about their business alone in public and yet, for men, it can be hard to comprehend how prevalent these encounters are. That’s one reason these tweets, and the women who were brave enough to share their experiences and face the backlash, are so important.

#15. Be there for your fellow ladies, gals.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#14. “Don’t worry.” Right.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#13. Trust your instincts.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#12. Never too early to educate your kids.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#11. So much nope.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#10. My heart is in my throat just reading this.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#9. Talk to your kids.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#8. Good looking out.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#7. Another good example.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#6. When the people who are supposed to protect you don’t.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#5. When not even your dog is a deterrent.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#4. I wouldn’t have left my house for a week.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#3. Making new friends is a bonus.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#2. Don’t hesitate.

Photo Credit: Twitter

#1. Nightmare.

Photo Credit: Twitter

h/t: WokeSloth

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Russian Man Creates Rehab Center for Wolves and Images Show Their Gratitude

A Russian man provides wolves, these majestic predators with everything they need to recover and re-enter their natural elements, including his unconditional love. Kirill Potapov, a St. Petersburg native has a love for animals that extends beyond that of the normal person, and it has led him to start a rehabilitation center for wolves in need of medical attention.

Despite all odds and their struggles with trust at the outside of the project, the wolves seem to respond with great affection and gratitude of their own. You can see this in the images below.

Photo Credit: Instagram

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Photo Credit: Instagram

This guy has the wolf kavorka or something – in real life, give wild animals, especially injured ones, their space!

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