You Can Taste Garlic With Your Feet

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UNSOLICITED WISDOM NUGGETS

You Can Taste Garlic With Your Feet

This isn’t a dare. It’s biochemistry. Garlic contains allicin, a molecule so tiny and potent it slips through skin. Rub garlic on your feet, wait 30–60 minutes, and boom, your mouth joins the party.

Your body is basically a haunted house, and garlic is the ghost that gets in through the walls.

You didn’t ask for this knowledge. But now you can’t un-know it.

Your Stomach Gets a New Lining Every Few Days

Your stomach is basically the CIA of your body, sees too much, knows too much, deletes everything. The acid in there is so strong it could dissolve metal.

So to avoid digesting itself, your stomach pulls the ultimate reset: it sheds and regrows its lining every 3–5 days.

Internal witness protection. Full blackout. It’s not denial if your cells are literally replaced.

A Day on Venus is Longer Than Its Year

Venus takes 243 Earth days to rotate once. But it only takes 225 Earth days to orbit the Sun. Translation: a year on Venus is shorter than a day.

You could literally celebrate your birthday before your alarm clock goes off.

Time doesn’t just fly, it melts, stretches, and plays Uno with itself on Venus.

Einstein would weep.

Crows Can Remember Human Faces and Hold Grudges

Crows have better facial recognition than your phone, and they never forget.

Scientists in creepy masks once captured a few. Years later, even wild crows who weren’t there remembered and attacked the masked intruders.

They communicate. They gossip. They plot (the CIA should have tried weaponizing crows before cats).

They’re basically flying goths with a grudge and a group chat.

Octopus DNA is So Weird, Scientists Think It Might Be Alien

Octopuses have 500 million neurons, 8 arms that think independently, and the ability to taste through their suckers. But their DNA? Total chaos.

It’s got more protein-coding genes than humans, and a big chunk of it looks like it was scrambled by a mad scientist or dropped off by a UFO.

Which raises the question: are we studying them… or are they studying us?

Goosebumps Are Useless Now, But Used to Fluff Our Fur

Ever get goosebumps during a scary movie or a cold breeze? That’s your body trying to fluff up fur it hasn’t had since caveman times.

It’s an old feature, like a floppy disk port or appendix (for those of you lucky enough to not drink too much Skrewball and ignore a ruptured appendix for 2 days thinking it’s an extended hangover. So I hear anyways).

Apparently, evolution left it in, just in case. In case what though? In case robots take over and send us back to…? Oh, sh….

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