Fear of explosions?
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- mg33
Do any of you have a fear of stuff blowing up? I often will be in my living room and get kind of tense thinking a house on the street might blow up, gas leak or something. Same thing happens sometimes when I'm walking outside. Or hear some huge explosion from down the street. Coincidently someone just lit off a single firework in the parking lot behind our place and since it's kind of foggy out, it was loud as fuck and made me jump.
- 20020
I think you are a psychic.
- cannonball19780
I'm not afraid of explosions at all. This is a problem because when things do explode I don't even flinch and then I get all this shrapnel in my eyeballs and dick balls.
- I hate it when I get schrapnel in my dick ballsmonospaced
- lolCanHasQBN
- haha
I'm weirdly OK with explosions...Jaline - This is perhaps one of the best responses ever on QBN.detritus
- pango0
no and never thought of that.
i fear dolphins one day would grow legs and starts raping people on the street.- thanks asshole now I'm never going to sleepcannonball1978
- they gang rape too... FCUK!! i just had that image in my mind!!! O_O...... not goon sleep tonight!pango
- i_monk0
I'm actually immune to explosions.
- mg330
Pango:
Dolphins Evolve Opposable Thumbs - "Oh Shit" Says Humanity
HONOLULU–In an announcement with grave implications for the primacy of the species of man, marine biologists at the Hawaii Oceanographic Institute reported Monday that dolphins, or family Delphinidae, have evolved opposable thumbs on their pectoral fins.
"I believe I speak for the entire human race when I say, 'Holy fuck,'" said Oceanographic Institute director Dr. James Aoki, noting that the dolphin has a cranial capacity 40 percent greater than that of humans. "That's it for us monkeys."
Aoki strongly urged humans, especially those living near the sea, to learn to communicate using a system of clicks and whistles in a frequency range of 4 to 150 kHz. He also encouraged humans to "start practicing their echolocation as soon as possible."
Delphinologists have reported more than 7,000 cases of spontaneous opposable-digit manifestation in the past two weeks alone, with "thumbs" observed on the bottle-nosed dolphin, the Atlantic humpback dolphin, and even the rare Ganges River dolphin.
"It appears to be species-wide," said dolphin specialist Clifford Brees of the Kewalo Basin Marine Mammal Laboratory, speaking from the shark cage he welded shut around himself late Monday. "And it may be even worse: We haven't exactly been eager to check for thumbs on other marine mammals belonging to the order of cetaceans, such as the killer whale. Oh, Christ, we're really in the soup now."
Thus far, all the opposable digits encountered appear to be fully functional, making it possible for dolphins–believed to be capable of faster and more complex cogitation than man–to manipulate objects, fashion tools, and construct rudimentary pulley and lever systems.
"They really seem to be making up for lost time with this thumb thing," said Dr. Jim Kuczaj, a University of California–San Diego biologist who has studied the seasonal behavior of dolphins for more than 30 years. "Last Friday, a crude seaweed-and-shell abacus washed up on the beach near Hilo, Hawaii. The next day, a far more sophisticated abacus, fashioned from some unknown material and capable of calculating equations involving numbers of up to 16 digits, washed up on the same beach. The day after that, the beach was littered with thousands of what turned out to be coral-silicate and kelp-based biomicrocircuitry."
"My God," Kuczaj added. "What are they doing down there?"
It is unknown what precipitated the dolphins' sudden development of opposable thumbs. Some dolphin behaviorists believe that the gentle marine mammal, pushed to the brink by humanity's reckless pollution and exploitation of the sea, tapped into some previously unmined mental powers to spontaneously generate a thumb-like appendage. However, given that 95 percent of the world's dolphin experts have committed suicide since learning of the development, the full story may never be known.
"You must believe, sleek ocean masters, that many of us homo sapiens weep with shame and disgust over the degradation to which our species has subjected our All-Mother, the Great World-Sea," read the suicide note of Dr. Richard Morse, a Brisbane, Australia, delphinologist and regular contributor to Marine Mammal Science. "If you are reading this, I estimate that it is the day we know as August 31, 2000. Please be decent and kind masters to our poor ape-race. Oh, God, I'm so sorry about the tracking collars."
"Scientists once wondered whether dolphins, with their remarkably advanced social and language structures, are actually smarter than we are," said Aoki, ushering reporters out of the laboratory he claimed "will either be a smoking hole or a zoo exhibit in the coming Dolphin Age." "Well, we're not wondering anymore."
- drgs0
I like to explode stuff
- caterpus0
Yes. I work in downtown NYC, I live in fear, the terrorist won.
- set0
No, I'm fine.
- dijitaq0
no fear of explosions even though about 10 years ago i was two buildings away from a car bomb explosion.
i'm scared shitless of lightning.
- spot130
I'm good, no worries. You could also worry about having an aneurysm or a deadly bee sting if explosions aren't doing it for you. My advice, stop watching CNN.
- zoozoo0
yea
- epic_rim0
Do Michael Bay movies give you nightmares?
- zoozoo0
yeah but its the dialogue, not the explosions... zing haha
- Beeswax0
not explosives but this scares me
- mekk0
- ali0
No not even after after someone blew up a firework right behind me which deafened me for 3 days.
- pillhead0
hahahaha, No.
- sine0
- set0
I was on a tube when the 7/7 tube bomb went off and heard the explosion. They stopped the train and told us there was a power cut and we all walked back to the station n the side of the tracks. I went home none the wiser until I turned on the news and realised what had just happened.
Was a little nervous getting in the tube for the next few months but don't give it a second thought any more.