Top 10 Old Wives’ Tales Debunked
Published on May 19, 2008 - 177 Comments
Almost all of us have, at some time, been chided by a parent or grandparent who has been mislead by an old wives’ tale. Their intentions are always good, but unfortunately they are misguided. There are thousands of old wives’ tales - ranging from the seemingly logical to the outright bizarre.
This is a list of ten of the most common old wives’ tales which are, in fact, bunkum! Feel free to use the comments to tell us about some of the more unusual tales you have come across in your life.
In fact, both colds and fevers cause dehydration - so liquids are essential when suffering from either. In addition, missing out on food when you are sick is never a good idea as food provides the body with the sustenance it needs to get healthy. So, you should feed a fever and feed a cold. This, of course, does not mean to overeat - it means to eat healthy balanced meals.
There is an old wives’ tale that says that if you eat within an hour of swimming you will get cramp. The Red Cross says that eating directly prior to swimming does not increase risk of cramp at all. They do, however, recommend at least waiting for digestion to begin if you have eaten a particularly fatty meal. They also recommend that you not eat gum or food while you are swimming.
There is actually not an iota of evidence to support this tale - no food type (not just chocolate) can cause acne or bad skin. Needless to say, eating too much chocolate or sugary food is unhealthy for the body, but it will not cause skin problems. Acne is actually caused by changes in the lower layers of the skin surrounding hair follicles.
It is possible that this tale came about due to allied propaganda during the second world war when rumors were spread that the British airmen had excellent night vision due to eating carrots. The myth was spread to stop the Germans from discovering that the British were using Radar. While carrots contain vitamin A which is good for healthy eyes, eating lots of them will do nothing to improve your vision.
There are a huge number of myths about how to catch a cold, but in fact there is only one way to catch a cold virus - by direct contact with the virus itself. You can stand outside on a cold night with wet hair and your chances of getting a cold do not increase at all. The reason that colds seem to spread more in Winter is not from the cold itself, but the fact that people tend to live more often indoors and this increases your chances of coming in to contact with a sufferer. It is also worth mentioning that if you get a cold in your nose, you can not stop it from spreading to your chest if the virus is programmed to attack you there. Most cold medicines are completely pointless and do nothing to help except alleviate the pain through the inclusion of painkillers.
My parents constantly told me off for sitting too close to the television when I was a kid - I was told that my eyesight would deteriorate from doing so. The same was also said of reading in dim light. In fact, neither of these things do any damage to the eyes. It should be noted, however, that spending too much time in front of the TV is not good for children (regardless of how close they sit) as research has shown that children who spend 10 hours or more in front of the television each week are more likely to become overweight, aggressive, and slower in school.
The tale states that masturbation will cause blindness (in France it is said it will cause deafness). This is not true (at least not completely) and the idea has probably been spread in order to prevent children from masturbating for religious reasons. Curiously, sperm contains quite a lot of zinc, and a serious zinc deficiency can cause a decline in vision. However, it is nearly impossible to cause a zinc deficiency through masturbating.
While it is true that constant knuckle cracking can reduce the strength of your grip and cause swelling, it does not lead to arthritis. There are many causes of arthritis (such as trauma or infection of a joint, or old age), but knuckle cracking is not one of them.
If a person suffers from an ulcer, spicy food can often aggravate it; however, ulcers are not caused by spicy food at all - if they were, ulcers would be pandemic in many eastern nations. An ulcer is usually caused by overuse of medications like aspirin and anti-inflammatories.
It is almost certain that this strange old wives’ tale has come about because of the appearance of wart-like growths on many toads. In fact, these growths are not human compatible at all. Warts are caused by viruses and they are almost always exclusive to a particular genus of creature. Human’s cannot catch warts from other animals, and animals can not catch human warts. The most common human wart virus is called the human papillomavirus.
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1. KMac - May 19th, 2008 at 4:41 am
good list, ive heard about most of these. definitely happy that knuckle cracking doesnt cause arthritis
2. boomshine87 - May 19th, 2008 at 4:44 am
i saw on tv that when you crack your knuckles the cracking sound is a release of carbon dioxide! Well, that’s my excuse anyway…
3. Raz - May 19th, 2008 at 4:45 am
My mum’s gonna get an earful from me after I show her this..
4. Jackrussell - May 19th, 2008 at 4:54 am
Nice list. The tale of TV’s damaging eyes must have come from the times of CRT tubes. The refresh rate and resolutions makes my eyes tired. Compare older CRT tubes with the Plasma and LCD screens. Big difference
5. carpe_noctem - May 19th, 2008 at 5:16 am
Thank god for number 4!!
No really, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard every single thing on this list, despite the fact not a single one of them every made sense to me…
6. NickChuck - May 19th, 2008 at 5:17 am
I absolutely LOVE the pic for number 4, ahahahaha!!
Now after spending so much time in front of this computer, I’m going to go eat a carrot! At least I can hope for a placebo effect.
Great list!
7. Cheeshygirl - May 19th, 2008 at 5:18 am
Nice list. Thought I’d add one that always drove me nuts. Shaving hair will NOT make it grow back in thicker. Your hair follicles determine how much and the type of hair you have. They do change slightly as you age but shaving has no effect. It just shortens the hair. Thanks for the great lists Jamie and contributors. This site is the highlight of my day.
8. Bjesomar - May 19th, 2008 at 5:21 am
Staying naked in cold weather will increase your chances of getting sick with cold, because it decreases your immunity capabilities. If there are no viruses around, you wont get sick, however, we are surrounded with millions of bacteria and viruses, but if our immune system is working, we might not get sick even if we catch virus.
9. Bjesomar - May 19th, 2008 at 5:27 am
Watching TV or computer screen to close is bad for eyes, because the eyes are designed to accept reflected light from the surface of item they are watching, and not used to receive bright light emmited from the surface of TV. Therefore, without proper light, eyes will tire faster, and eventually you might develop inflamated eyes (eyes become red)- anyone who ’s been up in the night watching TV knows that. However, your eyes will not worsen dioptry from watching TV at close range.
10. Blaze fielding - May 19th, 2008 at 5:29 am
THANK YOU FOR NUMBER 6! for the past 2 month ive been saying this to my mum, and everytime it resulted in a lengthy argument! I showed her this and she didnt say one word haha
11. Bjesomar - May 19th, 2008 at 5:33 am
People have acne problem due to fact that their skin produces grease and excretes them on surface to gain protection from skin dehydration. If there is a blockage in the excretion process, grease will build up and you got acne problem. When you eat chocolate, which is rich in grease, your grease excretion increases, and acne problem develops more often. Therefore chocolate indirectly increases number of acnes.
12. bucslim - May 19th, 2008 at 5:41 am
If masturbation causes blindness and deafness, then I’d be as blind and deaf as Anne Frank by now.
13. Quiana - May 19th, 2008 at 6:04 am
I hate when people say masturbating will make you blind. If thats the case wouldn’t having sex make you blind too? I mean masturbation or sex it tends to leed to the same out come
14. carpe_noctem - May 19th, 2008 at 6:15 am
Quiana, I know, if you think about it it’s completely biologically retarded. If that was the case, the entire human race would be blind… I once heard too that it causes hair to grow on your palms, and ignoring the awesomeness of freaking people out with my palm hair, that makes absolutely zeeerrooo sense.
Bjesomar, I’m pretty sure certain viruses are virtually incapable of functioning in extremely cold weather, and rugging yourself up all nice and cosy actually prolongs any exposure to the virus. Contracting the virus is almost exclusively done indoors, or in warm weather. Then again, if you were naked in arctic temperatures, getting a cold is the least of your worries….
15. warningdontreadthis - May 19th, 2008 at 6:32 am
8,5 and 3. Yeah I was warned about those things all the time.
Great list.
16. chris - May 19th, 2008 at 6:33 am
It’s funny that people still believe in all these.
Bjesomar, you are misled regarding acne. Read up on the subject. Diet has nothing to do with it.
17. JwJwBean - May 19th, 2008 at 6:36 am
bucslim did you mean Helen Keller? Anne Frank was neither deaf nor blind.
18. Tyler Straub - May 19th, 2008 at 6:52 am
Is it just me, or is #6 really hot?
19. dangorironhide - May 19th, 2008 at 6:57 am
Great list! I’ve heard most of the truths before, but there’s a couple I haven’t heard before.
If #4 is false, then why are my eyes always bleary on a Saturday morning??
Am I the only one who find the picture for #6 strangely attractive, yet veeery creepy at the same time?
20. McSquida - May 19th, 2008 at 6:57 am
Thank you for number 6! Been having arguments with people for years about this.
Interestingly, I was always brought up to Feed a Cold and Starve a Fever. Intrigued to see that the normal tale is the other way around. I guess that really shows how bogus the tale is.
21. McSquida - May 19th, 2008 at 6:58 am
On the contrary JwJwBean, she’s very deaf and blind now.
22. Kreachure - May 19th, 2008 at 7:02 am
Excellent list, I heard of all of them.
Except for #6, that is. If cold temperatures don’t increase the chances of getting a cold, then why do people get so easily sick after being in such a situation?
I heard that cold temperatures reduce the efficiency of the immune system response (the same way a fever benefits the immune action against pathogens). So by staying in a cold environment, it’s more likely for a virus to invade your body while your defenses are weakened, right?
Therefore, I would say that the chances of catching a cold on a cold night with wet hair DO increase. What am I missing here? I know I get sick as hell in the cold, and I could probably die if my hair was wet while at it.
23. cres - May 19th, 2008 at 7:05 am
Peptic ulcer is actually more commonly caused by bacteria - Helicobacter pylori. The discovery of its role in peptic ulcer was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2005.
24. Kreachure - May 19th, 2008 at 7:05 am
Also, ditto on #6 girl’s hotness-creepiness.
25. dangorironhide - May 19th, 2008 at 7:05 am
McSquida (#21): Shame on you, that was terrible…
26. Diplomat - May 19th, 2008 at 7:08 am
McSquida: Are you trying to be cute? Anne Frank has been dead for about 60 years.
27. McSquida - May 19th, 2008 at 7:08 am
I’m sorry. I’ll go the corner now.
28. McSquida - May 19th, 2008 at 7:08 am
Yes, diplomat, I’m well aware of that.
29. KingoftheHorizon - May 19th, 2008 at 7:11 am
thank you for number 4
and such a cute picture
i mean cool
cos im manly
and men dont find kittens cute
30. YogiBarrister - May 19th, 2008 at 7:54 am
How ironic, a list of old wives tales that contains an old wives tale. Most ulcers are caused by a bacterial infection. although long term use of aspirin can do similar damage to the stomach lining.
31. TerranRich - May 19th, 2008 at 8:09 am
Great list! I LOVE the debunking of myths, urban legends, and other untruthitues.
And it’s funny that some people (commenters) still believe in some of these OWTs (old wives’ tales). Ah well, ’tis the human condition to come to conclusions with little to no facts.
32. TerranRich - May 19th, 2008 at 8:11 am
Untruthitudes, sorry. Can’t even quote Samuel L. Jackson right.
33. tassadar - May 19th, 2008 at 8:12 am
Number 6 & 5 in my humble opinion are dangerous: you can’t catch a cold in cold weather? Are you serious? In such conditions your body is weakened and therefore you are more vulnerable to viruses.
As for number 5, the word radiation doesn’t ring any bells?
34. PT - May 19th, 2008 at 8:36 am
What do you mean with #4 “nearly impossible” that’s not good enough I need to know for sure. Can I suggest someone out there undertakes some research and gets back to me as I already wear glasses and can’t afford to take any chances. I will be wearing boxing gloves until I get a definative answer.
35. jfrater - May 19th, 2008 at 8:39 am
PT: let me put you out of your misery: you would need to masturbate constantly whilst starving yourself for long enough to cause your body to become deficient in zinc - and then wait for that deficiency to begin to effect your eyesight
36. jfrater - May 19th, 2008 at 8:39 am
tassadar: you can get your body defenses down to zero - but if you don’t come in to contact with the cold virus, you won’t catch one
37. Trwander - May 19th, 2008 at 8:55 am
Number 5 is wrong. I believe your eyesight can be deeply effected by screens (TV, computer) and reading in dim light, and so do many optometrists and scientists, while many others agree with you. This is why these are THEORIES and nothing is entirely proven.
“My” theory is extended periods of time in front of a screen will cause your eyes to focus on that depth range and the lens to be underdeveloped for longer sight ranges.
Just because the one study you read has data saying they are not correlated doesn’t mean it’s true. There have been studies showing the opposite:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16111755
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10335839
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pu.....t=Abstract
Lessons to be learned:
Correlation does not mean causation.
Research before you preach.
Theories are just that, theories.
38. Joss - May 19th, 2008 at 8:55 am
Although foods can’t cause acne or breakouts by themselves, many foods contain ingredients that aggravate or encourage the bacteria that DOES cause acne. The body is a whole; if you eat unhealthy things, your body - including the skin - will be unhealthy.
39. dofnup - May 19th, 2008 at 8:55 am
Have known about these for a long time … now if only all the stupid ppl who love to argue with me that these things are true could read this list ò_ó
40. Sadkiddo - May 19th, 2008 at 8:57 am
great post! finally i’ve got something to put on my mom’s face, although she probably ask for a different source, anyway, great post! hahahaha.
41. Kreachure - May 19th, 2008 at 8:59 am
jfrater: Yes, you won’t catch a cold without catching the virus itself, but #6 says that standing in cold weather does NOT increase the chances of developing a cold, which CAN’T be true if cold temperatures weaken your defenses!
42. Joe - May 19th, 2008 at 9:00 am
Ugh, I hate when people don’t even check the actual wives’ tale they are “debunking”. The phrase is: “Feed a Cold to Starve a Fever” - meaning “Eat and drink when you have a cold, so it doesn’t get worse, based on malnutrition and dehydration to turn into a fever”.
And is good advice, foolish.
43. YogiBarrister - May 19th, 2008 at 9:01 am
Thanks for debunking #4, that one is incredibly stupid. Obviously masturbation doesn’t cause blindness… but it does cause this:
http://images.dpchallenge.com/.....271113.jpg
44. Joe - May 19th, 2008 at 9:05 am
Also, “TV and Eyesight” *definitely* is wrong on here. It absolutely casues problems with eye focusing and lax.
45. jfrater - May 19th, 2008 at 9:14 am
Joe: you are wrong, the phrase is not “feed a cold to starve a fever” - a fever and a cold are two different things. Even a google search for “feed a cold to starve a fever” comes up with 9 results. The straight dope covers the topic here, confirms my wording, and confirms that it is an old wive’s tale: http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a5_154b.html
Also interesting is that some literature have “feed a cold, starve a fever” while others have “starve a cold, feed a fever”.
46. jfrater - May 19th, 2008 at 9:16 am
Oh - Straight Dope also says that most eye specialists say that TV and Eyesite is an old wive’s tale - though some people still claim it to be true.
http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a5_105.html
47. jfrater - May 19th, 2008 at 9:17 am
dofnup: sadly, it seems that some are - and STILL believe the old wive’s tales!
48. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 9:41 am
Great list, but you’ve made an error in #2.
Aspirin and Ibuprofen can burn holes in your stomach lining, but they have discovered that most ulcers are caused by infection by the bacterium Helicobacter pylori. It is thought to play an important role in causing both gastric and duodenal ulcers.
Genetic predisposition (either through producing excess hydrochloric acid, or some defect in the mucosa of the stomach), and stress are contributing factors as well. Cigarette smoking is often a stressor as well, Nicotine spurs acid production.
Another dis-honorable mention; Sitting on cold hard surfaces will cause a kidney infection. Same logic as the catching a cold. Its a bacteria or virus that causes infection - always.
49. Blogball - May 19th, 2008 at 9:48 am
I knew about the catching a cold myth. I remember a while back a mother was screaming at her kid who was outside in the cold rain with bare feet to come in the house before he gets pneumonia. I was a guest in her house and made the mistake in telling her not to worry and that it was just an old wives tale about catching a cold in the rain. She told me to mind my own business and continued to scream at her kid to come in the house. That was last time I offered my knowledge concerning these types of situations.
50. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 9:58 am
Blogball; I actually had a teacher phone me to complain that my older boys (grade 6 and 8 at the time) were removing their coats in the school yard in winter to play basketball. I asked her if she was going to suck over them when they got chapped hands and arms. She said no. I said “me either” and tried to hang-up. She said, but what about if they get sick, and the other kids in the school yard, what if they take off their coats and get sick? I actually laughed at her. I had to explain the mechanics of illness to a teacher. She never phoned me again.
51. Becca - May 19th, 2008 at 10:08 am
Wow, interesting list…VERY happy to hear about that knuckle thing:P
I’m very pleased that I can now rub the “reading in dim light is fine” thing in my mom’s face. Thanks, Listverse=D
52. Blogball - May 19th, 2008 at 10:09 am
Mom, that’s funny there are some people that you will never be able to convince when it comes to the cold weather cold thing. I don’t even try anymore.
How about the one where if you drop a penny off the Empire State building and if it hits somebody in the head they would die instantly because the penny would go right through the skull and into the brain. Anyone remember that one?
53. Sidereus - May 19th, 2008 at 10:21 am
I can speak from personal experience that lowering your immune system to practically nothing does not necessarily mean you will get sick. Chemotherapy has depleted my white blood cells eight times now and I only felt sick (as in illness) once.
54. Kreachure - May 19th, 2008 at 10:28 am
Okay, someone, anyone, PLEASE explain to me “the mechanics of getting sick” and the reason for not believing that staying out in the cold won’t get you sick even though people who stay out in the cold do get sick. Why do we need to protect ourselves in winter at all, then?
55. Mr.Graves - May 19th, 2008 at 10:36 am
To the people saying the TV myth is true, try this experiment: Replace ‘TV’ with ‘anything’. Stare at a light bulb too much. Or a fixed point on a wall. Or a mirror. It’s the eyes, not the TV. The TV doesn’t do anything any other light source can do if you sit and stare at it long enough.
Here, stare at this pretty pinwheel for 4 hours a day for the next 20 years. Report back.
56. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 10:37 am
Blogball; Yes, I know that one. People forget the net weight of the penny is diddly squat. Terminal velocity it dependent on weight. That penny is wafting around all over the place before it ever hits you. You would have to shoot it out of a gun to get anything worse than a little tiny bruise.
Some old wives’ tales have a nugget of truth.
Kids should eat a peck of dirt before they die. Good advice; lack of exposure to pathogens is responsible for many of the auto-immune diseases in western society. For goodness sake, get a dog, let your kids swim in the creek, let them play in the dirt.
Chicken soup is good for colds; well actually any warm steamy nutritious liquid will do, but it does help open up the breathery.
Don’t scratch, you will make it spread; Actually true, either by spreading of the substance that caused the rash, but also the act of scratching itself provokes a histamine response.
I could go on, but I’m monopolizing the comments, so I will quit.
Great Topic Jamie.
57. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 10:39 am
Kreachure; So you don’t freeze to death silly. Or get frost bite, or get chapped hands, faces and feet.
Being cold also requires more energy to maintain body heat; you need more food. Eventually you will lose more heat than your power plant can produce - then you go to sleep and never wake up.
58. mauve - May 19th, 2008 at 10:49 am
sorry jfrater, i don’t mean to offend you and i thoroughly enjoy your lists, but the correct spelling in the title and throughout the article shouls be “old wives’ tales”, as the noun is plural, thus the possession is expressed only by the apostrophe, without the ’s’ and, also, as the word ‘wive’ does not exist in english, only ‘wife’ does.
other than that, great list
59. jfrater - May 19th, 2008 at 11:09 am
mauve: you are, of course, correct. Thanks for pointing out my error. I have now fixed it.
60. jfrater - May 19th, 2008 at 11:13 am
Mom424: regarding sitting on something cold - I have heard the same thing except that it will cause piles - also a myth
61. Kreachure - May 19th, 2008 at 11:40 am
Mom424: Sure, but long before any of that, YOU GET A COLD. My question is why. Or are you saying that people start sneezing, getting the sniffles, coughing, get to bed and wrap themselves with a warm blanket and drink hot cocoa, because they got frostbite?
62. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 11:54 am
Kreachure; People get more colds in winter because they are indoors, in small enclosed areas where the spreading of virus is easy. They did a huge experiment in the 50’s or 60’s with military volunteers, left ‘em outside ’till damn near frozen stiff - no higher incidence of illness.
Also the Inuit in Canada had little illness until we introduced the viruses. Virus do not live in sub-zero temperatures. They require a warm environment in which to thrive. Of course now they all live in houses in the winter, so they get the same damn things we do.
So sorry, but you are wrong. Very much so. You will not get a cold from being cold or damp.
63. PregnantMomma - May 19th, 2008 at 11:55 am
I’m currently pregnant - so I hear TONS of Old Wives Tales!! Carrying all out in front = boy, Carrying weight all over = girl, heartburn = baby with tons of hair, craving sweets = girl, craving salts = boys, blah blah blah…the list goes ON and ON…it’s ridiculous. (this isn’t my first baby, so I’ve already proved most of these wrong) LOL.
64. SarahJ - May 19th, 2008 at 11:55 am
no matter how much proof there is, some people will just never accept that these are not true!
good list!
65. Barack Obama - May 19th, 2008 at 12:03 pm
Listen–JF has about a paragraph to sum this stuff up in general terms. So, generally speaking, if you stand out in the cold you will get…cold. Certainly not ‘a cold.’ Let’s not nitpick…
And I’ve eaten about 162 tons of carrots over the years trying to keep 20/20 vision.
Thanks mom……..DAMNIT.
66. Ashyja - May 19th, 2008 at 12:04 pm
I used to work on a 800*600 CRT screen that operated at 58Hz for several hours a day for some years. When I finally started my driving lessons, I had to make a sight test and I was able to see every single piece correctly.
67. Sen. Ego/Id - May 19th, 2008 at 12:06 pm
Everybody knows that chocolate doesn’t cause acne.
Being an ugly tubby virgin causes acne!
ah, the memories.
68. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 12:10 pm
Kreachure; Mechanics of getting sick. Virus introduced by direct contact, virus inserts itself into host cell (where depends on the virus), host cell begins spitting out copies of self. All the symptoms of illness are from the body’s response to invaders. Here is a quote from a good article on the subject;
“How Cold Viruses Cause Disease
Viruses cause infection by overcoming the body’s complex defense system. The body’s first line of defense is mucus, produced by the membranes in the nose and throat. Mucus traps the material we inhale: pollen, dust, bacteria and viruses. When a virus penetrates the mucus and enters a cell, it commandeers the protein-making machinery to manufacture new viruses which, in turn, attack surrounding cells.
Cold symptoms: the body fights back. Cold symptoms are probably the result of the body’s immune response to the viral invasion. Virus-infected cells in the nose send out signals that recruit specialized white blood cells to the site of the infection. In turn, these cells emit a range of immune system chemicals such as kinins. These chemicals probably lead to the symptoms of the common cold by causing swelling and inflammation of the nasal membranes, leakage of proteins and fluid from capillaries and lymph vessels, and the increased production of mucus.
Kinins and other chemicals released by immune system cells in the nasal membranes are the subject of intensive research. Researchers are examining whether drugs to block them, or the receptors on cells to which they bind, might benefit people with colds.”
If you still don’t believe me here’s the link
http://www.healthnewsflash.com.....n_cold.php
69. JayArr - May 19th, 2008 at 12:10 pm
Yo, Cheeshygirl: my mom’s best friend started shaving her upper lip when she was a teen… hate to say it, but the facial hair does indeed get thicker and grow longer once you start (and continue) shaving. BTW, Diane’s mustache rivals what mine was when I was in my 20’s. :-O
Sitting close to the TV is not good because it causes eye strain - this can lead to headaches and blurred vision for a short period of time (not permanent damage though).
Bucslim, you have excellent typing skills for a blind guy! I use a brail keyboard…
Number 6 is just TOOOOO skinny for me; not that I can see her or anything…
I prefer catching a cold to death by hypothermia - oi!
On ulcers, etc., I have GERD and (well, nevermind that)… and it is indeed genetic for me - my dad’s side of the family - every generation for at least the last 4.
Oh, BTW, I hear that arthritis leads to knuckle cracking.
70. kiwiboi - May 19th, 2008 at 12:11 pm
Terminal velocity is dependent on weight.
Mom - yes, but let’s not ignore the drag coefficient
71. Kreachure - May 19th, 2008 at 12:11 pm
Well, I snooped around for a while, and found this out: it turns out that cold weather indeed does not give you a cold, but it does give you many SYMPTOMS from it, like a runny nose, sneezing, sore throat, etc., and that’s what I was wondering about.
So you might not get a cold in cold weather, but in a way you WILL get sick. It’s not like you can stay out in the cold until your limbs start getting numb and frozen. You’ll feel sick, and BE sick, before that happens.
72. Tonny SS - May 19th, 2008 at 12:13 pm
I have heard about number 5 for a long time ago.
I have been telling my relatives (my mom and my sis) for the longest time that TV and dim light reading do not affect eyesight.
It strains you eyes, but not deteriorating. I keep getting rebuked, pretty harsh.
73. ElleMNOP - May 19th, 2008 at 12:13 pm
I disagree on two counts, but on technicalities:
Re: Getting a cold…standing out in the cold with wet hair will deplete your immune system and make it harder for it to resist viruses which, of course, are the impetus for a cold.
Second: Sitting to close to the tv does strain your eyes, just as sitting in front of a computer too long or in front of a book to long will deteriorate your vision. I’m sure I’m not hte only person who had to get glasses after starting to read book after book in college.
74. Lokelani - May 19th, 2008 at 12:18 pm
Whenever I had a cold as a child, my dad would not allow me to walk around barefoot (on cold tile) or drink anything with ice.
However even as a child, deep down, I always felt he was wrong.
Funny, eh?
75. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 12:26 pm
ElleMNOP; yes. You needed glasses after college, not because you over-used your eyes, but because you’re getting older.. Geez.
It also requires a pattern of being cold, wet, and under-nourished to deplete your immune system. Me walking to the bus stop every day in winter with wet hair (you think I would have just got up earlier) did absolutely nothing to me. Nor will it have any adverse effect on an individual in good health. Wrong-O deary.
Also the mustache thing; hair grows below the surface of the skin, cutting it has no effect. Now it does make it have a blunt end, and the hairs don’t have the opportunity to be bleached by UV, so they appear thicker and darker. Wrong again.
Kiwi-boi; You are absolutely correct, we shouldn’t forget about the drag co-efficient. (Area in relation to weight, correct?). Like a lead pellet and a sheet of paper of the same weight; what hits the ground first?
76. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 12:43 pm
Kreachure; Not to split hairs, but reaction to cold weather and having a cold are not even close.
The body responds to very cold weather by making excess mucous to protect those sensitive tissues from freezing. In response to this excess snot, we breathe through our mouths. The air in winter is dry, therefore you get a sore throat. You also shiver to try and generate more heat. This is not the same as a fever, where you feel cold because your temperature is high.
Suck a losenge, go indoors and all the symptoms disappear damn near immediately; they certainly don’t last a week.
77. kiwiboi - May 19th, 2008 at 12:43 pm
Re: Getting a cold…standing out in the cold with wet hair will deplete your immune system and make it harder for it to resist viruses which, of course, are the impetus for a cold.
ElleMNOP - irrespective of how weakened your immune system happens to be…without physical contact with the cold virus you will not catch a cold.
The standing out in the cold business is irrelevant.
78. Sen. Ego/Id - May 19th, 2008 at 12:49 pm
Here are some other interesting Old Wives Tales that have been debunked:
1)Walking backwards instead of forwards, to get to where you are going IS a good way to make up for lost time.
2)Talking too much on your cellphone can give you brain cancer and/or make you steril(if you keep your cell phone in your pants pocket)….OK this is more of a New Wives Tale
3) If you are capable of rubbing your tummy and patting your head at the same time, It WILL make you the life of the party.
4)Turning what’s uncool yesterday into cool today WILL NOT start a short lived trend that few really care about.
5)Staring directly into the sun (for a prolonged length of time) Will make you horny as hell.
79. bucslim - May 19th, 2008 at 12:51 pm
# 17 JwJw Bean - Go watch Clerks II and get back to me.
80. Ozhan - May 19th, 2008 at 12:52 pm
Once discovery channel aired a theory of a proffoser who did experiment with cathing cold. In there, it’s said: When our body temp. tend to drop our body starts to focus on main parts. Therefore sends less hot blood to the nose/fingers etc to fuel our torso,legs etc. So the first defence, the nose becomes vulunable to virus attacks.
81. copperdragon - May 19th, 2008 at 12:56 pm
re: #1
Frogs and toads do not cause warts. Worrying does.
That is why people who worry alot are called ‘worrywarts’.
82. GP - May 19th, 2008 at 12:58 pm
Has anyone ever heard of this one?
“on women, it is not recommended dying your hair while on your period, as the hair won’t catch the new color”
It seems to be pretty popular in south america.
Also, there’s another one which claims cutting your hair when there’s full moon will make it grow faster…
I wonder if they’re common outside of south america.
83. copperdragon - May 19th, 2008 at 12:58 pm
chocolate does not cause acne.
greasy potato chips cause acne.
chocolate causes love, sex, marriage and babies (not necessarily in that order)
84. PJMurphy - May 19th, 2008 at 1:20 pm
Regarding the carrots….
The RAF had a fighter equipped with radar, which had wonderful success shooting down German planes. But how to explain this without giving away the secret? Thus the old story about carrots and night vision.
But why carrots? Why not oranges? Or chewing gum?
Carrots are very high in critical vitamins. Britain, at the time, was under siege, and supplied by convoy. If it were a choice between a case of oranges, or a case of bullets, it was the bullets that went on the boat.
This led to concern that the average diet was becoming deficient in vitamins. Carrots were one of the foods that could correct this, and were easy to grow in Britain.
Thus, the “night vision” story had the dual purpose of concealing the existence of RADAR, and encouraging the populace to grow their own vitamin-rich food.
85. kiwiboi - May 19th, 2008 at 1:29 pm
Kiwi-boi; You are absolutely correct, we shouldn’t forget about the drag co-efficient. (Area in relation to weight, correct?).
Maybe more a measure of how “streamlined” an object is, with reference to shape and structure.
Like a lead pellet and a sheet of paper of the same weight; what hits the ground first?
Exactly. People forget that Galileo’s Principle makes one or two grand assumptions; not least being the assumption of zero drag and air resistance.
86. kiwiboi - May 19th, 2008 at 1:40 pm
Frogs and toads do not cause warts. Worrying does.
copperdragon - you’re joking, right ? Warts are caused by a virus - it’s that simple.
87. Mom424 - May 19th, 2008 at 1:44 pm
Copperdragon; I’m assuming you were being funny.
Hormones (why puberty is the time for zits) cause the sebacious glands (oil glands) in your skin to work overtime. Excess oil then traps bacteria; inflammation is a result of infection. Thus a pimple. Tiny white heads and blackheads are excess oil without the bacteria.
If you have bad acne, get yourself to the doctor. Anti-biotics can help and will prevent you from getting those cysts. You know; deep pimples that look like peas under the skin.
88. Nelia - May 19th, 2008 at 1:46 pm
I don’t have time to read through all the comments, so forgive me if this is a repeat.
It was recently discovered that the flu virus transmits more easily in cold weather. The cold keeps it alive longer, and the dry winter air allows it to travel farther. Humidity weighs it down. So standing outside in the rain will actually lower your chances of getting sick (aside from the fact that being cold and wet can damage your immune system). But standing outside one a dry cold day will definitely up your chances.
89. Catriona - May 19th, 2008 at 2:15 pm
Even though they’re not true, I find myself using some of these on my own children.
‘Eat the Carrots you’ll see better in the dark’ (Meaning eat your bloody vegetables)
Don’t stand in the rain you’ll catch a cold, (and I don’t want another load of wet washing)
Stop cracking those knuckles you’ll get arthritis, (and I’m sick of listening to the noise)
Move back from the TV you’ll go blind if you sit too close, (and I can’t see Bob the Builder!)
Very Sad!
90. kiwiboi - May 19th, 2008 at 2:19 pm
So standing outside in the rain will actually lower your chances of getting sick (aside from the fact that being cold and wet can damage your immune system).
Nelia - you need to spend quite some time in the cold before your immune system is compromised in a meaningful way. I’m not sure about your standing in the rain theory either (though I realise you are talking about flu, not the common cold). FWIW, here’s what the Mayo Clinic says about the common cold :
“Both children and adults are more susceptible to colds in fall and winter, when children are in school and most people are spending a lot of time indoors. In places where there is no winter season, colds are more frequent in the rainy season.”
http://www.mayoclinic.com/heal.....DSECTION=4
But back to first principles : irrespective of the state of your immune system, if you don’t have contact with the virus you don’t get the sickness.
91. kiwiboi - May 19th, 2008 at 2:20 pm
Catriona - LOL; so true !
92. Dana - May 19th, 2008 at 2:22 pm
I have a few gray hairs at my widow’s peak and I just pluck them out. Each time I do that, someone decries, “But 10 more will grow in their place!”
Good list!
93. XC - May 19th, 2008 at 3:44 pm
very funny list…
i didn’t know the one about masturbating, actually.
this might seem mean, but when i was younger i used to tell my cousin’s their heads would explode if they watched the microwave cook stuff…i guess they don’t need a list to know that one’s not true anymore, though
94. goof_ball - May 19th, 2008 at 3:44 pm
i crack my knuckles a lot and people ALWAYS say “you’re gonna get arthritis”
95. MPW - May 19th, 2008 at 3:55 pm
i heard that if you masturbate excessively your penis will take the shape of a banana
96. MPW - May 19th, 2008 at 3:57 pm
one i heard a few years ago is that when you are microwaving with a plastic bowl in the microwave if a man stands too close the radiation can cause breasts to form on his body
97. XC - May 19th, 2008 at 3:59 pm
well, i guess that works too
98. MPW - May 19th, 2008 at 4:04 pm
are those turds chasing that kitty cat?
they look ferocious
99. Kreachure - May 19th, 2008 at 4:11 pm
From the Wikipedia page on Common cold:
With respect to the causation of cold-like symptoms, researchers at the Common Cold Centre at the Cardiff University conducted a study to “test the hypothesis that acute cooling of the feet causes the onset of common cold symptoms.” The study measured the subjects’ self-reported cold symptoms, and belief they had a cold, but not whether an actual respiratory infection developed. It found that a significantly greater number of those subjects chilled developed cold symptoms 4 or 5 days after the chilling. It concludes that the onset of common cold symptoms can be caused by acute chilling of the feet. Some possible explanations were suggested for the symptoms, such as placebo, or constriction of blood vessels, however “further studies are needed to determine the relationship of symptom generation to any respiratory infection.”
The link to the study and other sources are on that page.
100. MPW - May 19th, 2008 at 4:20 pm
i have a cold right now and it is 100 degrees outside
101. MPW - May 19th, 2008 at 4:22 pm
it is really annoying to be sick during a heat wave
when your hot you feel uncomfortable
and when your cold you feel miserable
102. derekouyang - May 19th, 2008 at 5:03 pm
it’s not really the nature of the tv that may hurt your eyes, just the proximity of the object being seen to your eyeball. too much exposure to a close object leads to myopia, whether it’s a tv screen, computer screen, or book.
103. copperdragon - May 19th, 2008 at 5:08 pm
not kidding about the warts!!
I only get them (on my fingers, always in the same places) when I have excessive work or family stress. I have both right now - large complex work project and recent separation from missus.
104. MPW - May 19th, 2008 at 5:25 pm
must be from the excessive masturbation:)
105. emibby - May 19th, 2008 at 5:26 pm
Hmm, always thought that the carrot thing and the swimming thing was true. Psh, yeah, let my mom try to make me eat carrots now!
106. Aaron - May 19th, 2008 at 5:32 pm
So then I must need glasses for a different reason…
107. Lynn - May 19th, 2008 at 5:40 pm
Eating carrots improved MY night blindness.
I don’t care what the experts say..
not listening..
la la la…
108. sarahj - May 19th, 2008 at 7:06 pm
Well Catriona I have sat here laughing, very clever and very funny. I Will let your boys borrow my glasses anytime, if they have been sitting too close to the television, Im sure youd love that
109. Lokelani - May 19th, 2008 at 7:13 pm
Lynn: That was classic. Ha ha! I love it.
110. jasontimmer - May 19th, 2008 at 7:25 pm
jfrater, re #2-
Gastric ulcers are now thought to be caused by an infection by helicobacter pylori. While aspirin and anti-inflammatories reduce blood viscosity and may predispose someone to infection, they are not the primary cause.
111. MPW - May 19th, 2008 at 9:46 pm
the lady in picture 6 is pretty hot for having a “cold”
112. nejikun - May 20th, 2008 at 12:21 am
MPW: The things chasing the Kitten are a character called Domo-kun of an anime (I forget which one).
Kiwiboi: I thought that Terminal Velocity was resultant of the mass combined with air resistance. Try this: Drop a feather. Now put that same feather in a vacuum tube (a tube with no air, not a vacuum cleaner tube) It will fall much faster in the Vacuum.
The old wives’ tale I loved was the one about making a face, and having the wind change and it staying that way.
113. StudentBiology - May 20th, 2008 at 12:56 am
a bout number 5,
your eyesight will get worse, here an example from my colleges at university: The Inuit (native folk of antartica) never had eyesight problems until we westerns introduced reading = if you read a lot during childhood you will have a much larger chance of needing glasses when you are round adulthood, this is because your eyes need to focus a lot on close object this can cause that you later can’t focus on objects in the distance.
And about the cold thing:
No from cold things you wil not get sick but walking around in the winter without “protection”(cloting) can increase chance of getting a long infection, beacuse see Mum 424:
The body responds to very cold weather by making excess mucous to protect those sensitive tissues from freezing. In response to this excess snot, we breathe through our mouths. The air in winter is dry, therefore you get a sore throat.
But in your mounth there are fewer mucius membranes to protect you from virusses and bacteria, and the air you breathe normally gets heated when you breathe through your nose, but this does not happen when you breath through your mounth, So dont go running through the snow or rain with no cloting on, it is really not good for you.
114. StudentBiology - May 20th, 2008 at 12:58 am
nejikun:
Do note that everything in a vacuum, not matter the mass, falls at the same rate of velocity
115. nejikun - May 20th, 2008 at 1:38 am
Studentbiology: That’s my point, I was merely illustrating. In a normal atmosphere, however, a small pebble weighing and identical amount to a feather will fall faster. Hence, the mass combined with air resistance.
116. FJ - May 20th, 2008 at 1:56 am
Bjesomar you’re so right about the cold!
Cardiff University recently performed a study proving prolonged exposure to poor weather conditions will lead to the development of a cold!
xxxx
117. kiwiboi - May 20th, 2008 at 3:17 am
Kiwiboi: I thought that Terminal Velocity was resultant of the mass combined with air resistance.
nejikun - Well, there is also the small matter of gravity. Terminal velocity is the point at which gravitational and drag forces are quivalent.
Try this: Drop a feather. Now put that same feather in a vacuum tube. It will fall much faster in the Vacuum.
Read the comments above about Galileo’s Principle (#85, for example; the bit about Galileo’s assumptions).
(a tube with no air, not a vacuum cleaner tube)
Well gee…I’m glad you pointed that one out.
118. Drogo - May 20th, 2008 at 3:39 am
If you keep crossing your eyes, one day they’ll stay that way permanently.- If that was true, a buddy and I would be cross-eyed.
It’s bad for your eyes to watch TV in the dark, you should have a lamp on. - A salesman invented that claim. He had a stock of small lamps that weren’t selling. He came up with the gimmick of calling them TV Lamps to promote sales.
119. kiwiboi - May 20th, 2008 at 3:43 am
Those quoting the Cardiff University study…did you people not actually read about the experiment you are quoting/misrepresenting ??
Kreachure said : It concludes that the onset of common cold symptoms can be caused by acute chilling of the feet.
FJ said : Cardiff University recently performed a study proving prolonged exposure to poor weather conditions will lead to the development of a cold!
Ok, try this (from Cardiff University BioSciences Common-Cold Centre), referring to the study in question :
The authors propose that when colds are circulating in the community some persons carry the virus without symptoms and that chilling the feet causes a constriction of blood vessels in the nose and this inhibits the immune response and defences in the nose and allows the virus to replicate and cause cold symptoms. The chilled person believes they have caught a cold but in fact the virus was already present in the nose but not causing symptoms.
Note the references to the word “virus”. It was not the cold temperature that caused it, but the fact that they already carried the virus !
Bottom line (once more!) : if you don’t carry the common cold virus you don’t have a cold.
http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/biosi.....ncold.html
120. Tomo - May 20th, 2008 at 3:49 am
Curiously, three of the ten items listed have to do with eyesight; TV doesnt hurt, masturbation doesnt hurt and carrots dont help!
Therefore, there is nothing worng with spending a weekend watching porn and going to town on yourself. You don’t even have to make up by stuffing your face with corrots!
121. Kreachure - May 20th, 2008 at 5:38 am
Well, look at what it says right below the question you quoted:
“Colds and flu are definitely seasonal, with more colds in the colder weather but there is no real agreement as to why colds are seasonal. Most textbooks state that there are more colds in cold weather because we tend to crowd indoors in poorly ventilated rooms. This crowding theory has been around for over a hundred years but it does not really make sense, as our cities are just as crowded in summer as winter. A new theory that has been put forward to explain the seasonality of colds and flu, and this theory puts forward the idea that our noses are colder in winter than summer and that cooling of the nose lowers resistance to infection. If the weather is freezing outside we wrap up in winter clothes but we still leave our nose exposed to the freezing air. Every time we breathe in we cool the nasal lining and weaken our local defences against infection. If this theory is correct then [b]covering our nose with a scarf in cold weather could help prevent colds.[/b]”
So it seems WE’RE JUST NOT SURE.
122. kiwiboi - May 20th, 2008 at 6:14 am
Kreachure - I am neither supporting nor opposing the Cardiff “results”. I was responding to the misleading (actually, wrong) interpretations of this “experiment” that people were providing.
In fact, from what I have read about this particular study (ie. as detailed on the Cardiff Univ. page we are quoting), there appears to be no robust science behind either the experiment or the results. It reads more like a high-school project.
Also, regarding your follow up quote from the Cardiff site that This crowding theory has been around for over a hundred years but it does not really make sense, as our cities are just as crowded in summer as winter.
…that statement is shallow and wholly open to challenge. For example, people spend more time in enclosed spaces during the winter (eg. it’s cold outside, so you stay inside). And so on…
So it seems WE’RE JUST NOT SURE.
Well, actually, I think we can be fairly sure. I’m happy to take the word of the Mayo Clinic and generally held medical opinion over those who appear to have conducted a sloppily executed experiment (ie. Cardiff). Having said that, I’m always prepared to be open-minded.
In any event. what we are most definitely sure about takes us back to where this discussion began : you must have the cold virus in your system in order to have a cold. End of story.
123. Crimanon - May 20th, 2008 at 7:34 am
I’m not sure where to start, dick jokes or the people who still believe the tales.
124. kylemeat - May 20th, 2008 at 10:14 am
StudentBiology … #113 … I stopped reading your post after the first sentence when you said the Inuit were natives of Antarctica.
125. Peri1020 - May 20th, 2008 at 10:20 am
63. PregnantMomma: My sister’s first two pregnancies were carried out in front and they were both boys. Her third was carried across the body and…yep..a girl. She declined to further the experiment by having a fourth.
126. Mom424 - May 20th, 2008 at 10:25 am
Studentbiology:
What school? I’m making damn sure my kids don’t go there. The Inuit didn’t need glasses because they weren’t reading before we came along. When the lady Inuit’s eyes became too poor for the close work sewing required, their daughters took over. And if they’re eyes weren’t suited from the git-go they performed other womanly duties. It’s not that their eyes deteriorated once they began reading, its that it wasn’t an issue UNTIL they began reading.
Pay more attention in class!
127. JayArr - May 20th, 2008 at 11:27 am
Dana (92) - It’s more like 10% chance that the individual hair will never grow back… not more in its place.
MPW (95) - It depends on which hand you use
StudentBiology (113) - the reason the Inuit did not have vision problems in their old age was because they did not live long enough to ’see’ the degeneration happen… poor vision lead to falling through the hole in the ice or being eaten by the polar bear they could not see… Now they have polarized prescription sun glasses and rifles.
Okay… I’m done inciting riots.
128. Mathilda - May 20th, 2008 at 11:48 am
I used to drive my grandmother crazy by going outside in winter with wet hair! (And I very, very rarely had colds when I was younger.) In fairness to her, she was a young teenager in Philadelphia during the flu epidemic in 1918 when 13,000 Philadelphians died within about a month. She remembered seeing corpses left on front porches of houses; the hospitals were full, one could hardly leave them in the house, and they could not dig graves fast enough. I imagine after living through something like that while people are dying all around you that one would have a “better safe than sorry” attitude about preventing illness, and I wonder if that’s not the same for a lot of others.
My favorite is how when one must wear a hat when outdoors in cold weather because “you lose half of your body heat from your head”. Apparently this came about because of a study which said that up to half of the body heat was lost via the head - except that the participants were fully clothed EXCEPT for their heads. So it is not any worse to wear a coat with no hat than to wear a thin or short sleeved shirt or sweater and shorts with a big thick ski cap! You’re still going to be cold.
So I personally will continue to go outside for nice long walks in the winter, with my damp uncovered head sticking out, and I will bet that I get fewer colds than someone sitting in a nice warm toasty bar watching football with a bunch of random strangers and their strange germs.
129. Agua - May 20th, 2008 at 11:55 am
sitting too close to the tv…..my mother thought I had bad eye problems and made me wear BIG eyeglasses even though I didn’t need it…for five years. Now she has eye problems….
130. MPW - May 20th, 2008 at 12:17 pm
even though i am a righty my left arm is more muscular
131. MPW - May 20th, 2008 at 12:30 pm
i must workout
132. WarningDontReadThis - May 20th, 2008 at 12:44 pm
MPW: Don’t work out too hard now.
133. Mom424 - May 20th, 2008 at 12:48 pm
JayArr; You are mistaken, read my post just before yours. The Inuit, in general had a fairly long life-span. Well into the macular degeneration years. It just wasn’t an issue.
134. jasontimmer - May 20th, 2008 at 3:18 pm
121. Kreachure - “our cities are just as crowded in summer as in winter.” No, they arent. Look at all the people going for walks on their work breaks, extended smoking periods out of doors, people sitting outside restraunts, all in summer. these things dont really happen in winter. everyone is cooped up indoors, encouraging the spread of viruses. I work in a hospital as an RN. Right about the time it gets too cold to enjoy yourself outside, thats when I see all the kids start coming in with flu and RSV.
135. dofnup - May 20th, 2008 at 3:19 pm
Oh, man, I gotta chime in on the pregnancy myths … I am currently 35 weeks pregnant and I do believe I’ve managed to hear them all, the mexican myths from my family and the U.S. myths from my coworkers. It’s really funny when the mexican and U.S. myths are totally opposite XD
What really surprised me was when my college-educated mother started spouting some of that “wisdom” at me … you think you know a person!
There’s no escape, though, cuz the next chapter is, you guessed it: baby myths! >_
136. al - May 20th, 2008 at 3:41 pm
i heard in my biology class that the cracking of knuckles is when a ligament, catch on the top of a bone then snap back into place, this wears the ligaments. we were also told that this can cause arthritis. im gonna trust my biology teacher on this one. shes a doctor
137. MPW - May 20th, 2008 at 3:50 pm
doctor schmoctor:)
138. WarningDontReadThis - May 20th, 2008 at 4:17 pm
MPW: How is the work out going?
139. MPW - May 20th, 2008 at 6:13 pm
its all good
140. Aoede - May 20th, 2008 at 8:04 pm
RE: losing heat from head -
Well, your head is very badly insulated, and you’ve got a bunch of big blood vessels going through your neck. I’m not sure if that’s going to make up FIFTY PERCENT of heat loss, but it’s probably going to be more than your abdomen loses, right?
RE: the Inuits-in-Canada argument -
That doesn’t address the temporarily-lowered-immune-defenses argument. Of course you have to have the virus PRESENT before anyone can get sick from it… is this not obvious?
RE: the Bio-teacher-said-so argument -
Yeah, well, if the AP Bio teacher in the US’s top sci/tech high school can say with all seriousness that “cold blooded” means “adapts well to cold conditions”…
RE: shaving/cutting hair
I can’t back this claim at all, but I’ve read that while cutting doesn’t have any effect on hair thickness, close shaving may irritate the follicles (indirectly, I guess?) and thus cause thicker hair to grow.
RE:
141. Aoede - May 20th, 2008 at 8:05 pm
Oh, and RE: the first sentence of this article -
The past tense of “mislead” should be “misled”. But that’s not important.
142. gatorboy - May 20th, 2008 at 8:25 pm
theyre all good except for the one about the tv. both my brothers sat right in front while watching and now they both have glasses. i never sat close to the tv and i have perfect vision. i dont care what anyone says i still believe in that one
143. MPW - May 20th, 2008 at 8:29 pm
gatorboy: not a very good argument
144. Aoede - May 20th, 2008 at 8:35 pm
I don’t think he was trying to argue anything. Sounds like an affirmation of personal whatsit to me.
145. MPW - May 20th, 2008 at 8:39 pm
okey dokey
146. TulaneMED - May 21st, 2008 at 6:25 am
To not get a cold or flu- Do not touch your eyes or nose during the season, without washing your hands first. This is how docs do not catch as many colds as they should during those months. Its one of the things that you learn during your first few months of clincal training. Its strange that we don’t disseminate that information out there, but it really works.
147. JayArr - May 21st, 2008 at 11:26 am
Mom424(133) - I was joking!
Well… nuff said… time to wreak havoc in another thread…
148. Mathilda - May 21st, 2008 at 11:53 am
Aoede: The surface area of a sphere (assuming one’s head is roughly spherical!) is 4 pi r2, whereas the area of, say, a circle of abdomen would only be pi r2. So to have equivalent sized amounts of skin exposed it would probably be closer to having most of one’s abdomen and torso (the front part, anyway) hanging out in the cold. And I’ve got lots of hair so my head is actually pretty well insulated. It’s all because my mom shaved my head as a kid so that it would grow in thicker.
149. Noodle The Cat - May 21st, 2008 at 12:59 pm
An example of why I come to this site. Good list.
150. Csimmons - May 21st, 2008 at 1:09 pm
On #4, SCHWEET!
151. Cambrex - May 21st, 2008 at 5:27 pm
I was always told that if I sat on a stone or any other cold, hard surface for too long, I’d become infertile.
I was told that it’s a Russian thing though, so *shrug*
Even though I now know it’s not true, I still always put something down…Just In Case.
152. MPW - May 21st, 2008 at 6:44 pm
cambrex: that beats the hell out of a vesectomy
snip snip
153. StudentBiology - May 22nd, 2008 at 2:00 am
To Mum 424:
First: about the antartica thing: my bad sorry about that
second they needed (what my professor told us)glasses for seeing in the distance not for reading or close work so mum 424 what you say is right but I wasn’t reefering to that,
but to they other comments: I think I will definetly have a word with my professor
154. ciunas - May 22nd, 2008 at 3:00 pm
Interesting list. As regards #10, which I’ve always heard the other way round — ‘feed a cold, starve a fever’ — it’s not a straightforward recommendation, it’s a warning. The second clause is conditional on the first. Thus: [if you are foolish enough to] feed a cold, [you will find yourself having to] starve a fever. As regards #1, George Orwell mentions somewhere a popular belief that washing your hands in water that’s been used to boil eggs causes warts. (Why anyone would want to do this is of course a mystery.)
155. avi - May 24th, 2008 at 6:40 am
ciunas:correct
156. otay - May 25th, 2008 at 7:25 am
so…… sitting in front of a computer screen and masturbating while eating a carrot is ok?
157. Jennie - May 25th, 2008 at 7:25 pm
I’ve heard all of these!
Can’t help believing one or two of them. Its how I was raised lol!
otay: Suuuure, why not?! lol
158. md - May 26th, 2008 at 6:17 pm
if you expose yourself to the cold, you greatly increase your risk of falling sick. your immune system will be less capable of rapid response.
159. Bones - May 29th, 2008 at 3:23 am
this list is way cool.
it reminds me of being like five and getting yelled at for sitting too close to the tv. hahaha in your face mum!
160. Kacie Landrum - May 30th, 2008 at 2:21 am
I have very long hair that takes up to 12 hours to air-dry. So I wash it at night and sleep on it wet. Even in the dead of winter, I walk around with wet hair most evenings. If being wet and cold increased your odds of catching disease, I’d probably have died a long time ago. Instead, I’m unusually healthy.
161. ronRonnie - June 2nd, 2008 at 6:23 am
Actually certain foods can cause acne. The sugar in chocolate, or other foods, causes insulin in the body to spike, which in turn causes the oil glands in the skin to produce more oil. This can lead to acne.
162. Crimanon - June 2nd, 2008 at 8:09 am
ronRonnie: Take it from some of the regulars. These (Jamies) lists are well researched. If you feel so inclined, like some of us are, try doing your own search and you’ll find the same results. The Wiki, is not the be-all-end-all of info.
163. Alex - June 4th, 2008 at 8:55 am
About #6:
To catch a cold, you have to be infected with one of the many viruses that cause the common cold. No virus = no cold, no matter how cold you get.
But, and it’s an important but, getting cold may actually increase the likelyhood of the cold-virus establishing an infection. Not because it weakens the immune system (you have to get severely chilled out for that), but because one of the body’s primary lines of defense is our body temperature. Most cold viruses don’t thrive at normal body temperature - let alone at elevated body temperatures, which is why fever is such an important defense against infections.
Breathing the cold winter air temporarily lowers the temperature in the tissues lining the nose and throat, making it easier for the virus to take hold. This is one of the reasons colds are more common in the wintertime, although the crowding factor, which raises the risk of actually being infected, is probably even more important.
164. Alex - June 4th, 2008 at 9:02 am
Oh, and about #4, here’s another gem for you:
In Sweden, where I live, the old wives tale is that you get hairy palms from masturbating. Or if you don’t develop hairy palms, you’ll become a hunchback. Or go insane (but only if you’re a girl). Scary stuff…
165. rushfan - June 5th, 2008 at 7:56 am
I HATE old wives tales! They are so annoying. And as impossible to kill as many urban legends, which are equally annoying. You cannot spread enough knowledge to convince people that what they want to believe is incorrect. I live in South Texas with a huge hispanic population, so you pretty much can’t talk about any topic without someone adding some tidbit of wisdom like shaving my baby’s head is a good idea because her baby hair is blocking her thicker, prettier hair from coming out. Really?! What?! And I agree with PregnantMama’s comment, when you’re pregnant, you get an endless supply of ways to know what you’re having and what it will look like and blah blah blah. You just have to nod and smile because if you disagree with them, they get offended.
166. TGDJB - June 6th, 2008 at 5:13 pm
#161: As an insulin-dependant diabetic, I can tell you that insulin spikes in no way, shape or form lead to oily skin. Many diabetics, in fact, need to use artificial moisturizers to keep their skin supple.
Acne is not a food-borne affliction.
167. Crimanon - June 6th, 2008 at 8:59 pm
If anything related to chocolate is going to give you a few zits, it’s going to be rubbing your face after eating it. Why would you scratch you face with your hand covered in chocolate anyway? Slobs!
168. Janet - June 10th, 2008 at 10:28 pm
What is up with the sign and the kittens.I think that is really sick to even think of!!!!!
169. Stevie Wonder - June 20th, 2008 at 2:15 pm
i masterbated several times a day when i was a teenager,look at me now.dont listen to this kids.lies.
170. Shadowpaws - July 7th, 2008 at 10:29 am
My father likes to trot this old wives’ tale out for anyone that will listen. He firmly believes that boys are supposed to take after their maternal grandfathers and girls their paternal grandmothers. Having studied a little bit of genetics in school, I do believe this is bunk. Anyone else heard this?
171. Vic - August 18th, 2008 at 3:44 pm
There’s a lot of misinformation in this post. You wrote: Needless to say, eating too much chocolate or sugary food is unhealthy for the body, but it will not cause skin problems.
This is not true. A number of foods can cause acne. Some people are sensitive to iodine, others sugars and many fried foods, altered fats and dairy products. Also, carrots have been shown to improve vision visa vis its carotenoids and nutrients that support tiny blood vessels of the eye.
172. poopsie - November 21st, 2008 at 6:57 am
So anyone know about being out in the cold with no jacket causing kidney problems? My mother in law always worries about that and I recently heard a nurse mention it, but I can’t find any information on it.
173. Ktanaya - December 13th, 2008 at 9:25 pm
feed a fever,starve a cold - in my nursing class at uni, we interpreted it, as did my lecturer, as feeding a fever more heat and starving a cold of cold. which is only partially debunkable (the fever part only), and then only under certain circumstances.
fever is your body’s way of defending itself from bacteria, most of which will be killed by the raised body temp, and sweating can take some toxins with it. so sometimes its good to keep someone with a fever warm. unfortunately, if allowed to run too long and too hot it will cook you as well. therefore most doctors don’t worry about fevers unless they get too high, which i think is somewhere around the 40 degrees C mark. at which point you can start fitting.
i have never heard it in reference to diet and illness, just in reference to body temp.
174. Steve - January 6th, 2009 at 1:40 pm
as for #5 - it’s like this: does a whisper hurt your ears? No. Neither does reading in dim light.