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Saturday, 29 July 2017

Unexpected Signs That You Have a Unique Body

11 Unexpected Signs That You Have a Unique Body

Each person has character traits, peculiar only to him or herself. Aspects of the psyche that are — if present in others at all — extremely rare. But did you know that our bodies can possess many unique features too?!

Today Bright Side tells you about exceptional physical skills and characteristics found in only a tiny percentage of people around the world. If any of you want to try some of this stuff for yourselves, there’s a bonus at the end of the article!

11. Flexible tongue

© eastnews  

When it comes to the "flexible tongue" skill, certain tongue length and muscle tone are a must. In addition to genetics, the environment can also be a factor in this trait’s formation. For example, Indians are particularly likely to have flexible tongues. Scientists believe that this has to do with the peculiarities of their language.

The extent of tongue flexibility may vary. Researchers even went as far as to conduct a special study on the subject. 63% of the test participants managed to fold their tongue into a roll, 14% managed to bend it in half, and less than 1% were able to shape their tongue into a triple pipe.

10. Movable ears

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Approximately 22% of people on the planet are capable of wiggling one ear, while no more than 18% can do it with both ears. But this was not always so: our distant ancestors used to be true virtuosos at making all sorts of movements with these body parts. The fact is that the muscle responsible for ear movement was once well developed in humans but became redundant in the course of evolution.

9. The ability to wiggle individual toes

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No matter how you try, you won’t be able to wiggle each of your toes in turn. That’s because only the big toe and the little toe are fitted with individual muscles, while the rest are controlled en masse by just one set of muscles. Most people in the world can easily move their big toes, but only a minority can do it with little toes.

Incidentally, some researchers advise women against marrying men who can wiggle their little toes separately from the rest: such people tend to attach too much importance to their personal freedom!

8. The ability to touch your elbow with your tongue

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It is believed that no more than 1% of people in the world have this ability. To perform the trick, you need to have a particularly short forearm and a long tongue. But, even with these features, you’ll still need good flexibility and very strong motivation!

7. Diastema

© eastnews  

Diastema is a gap between the front teeth,occurring in about 20% of humans. From the viewpoint of dentists, it’s an anomaly that requires medical intervention. But many people, including celebrities, think that this feature adds uniqueness to their image!

6. The ability to raise one eyebrow

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The ability to raise only one eyebrow depends on how well you can control your facial muscles. Interestingly, people born with this feature often possess the skill to move their ears as well. Scientists believe that early humans were able to wiggle their eyebrows separately — the way certain present-day species of monkeys do at the sight of danger.

5. Dimples on the cheeks

© eastnews  

Possessed by approximately 25% of the world’s population, dimples are a defect in the structure of the zygomatic muscle, which is responsible for smiling. In people with this physiological feature, a small bundle of the muscle gets attached to the bone. As a result, when a person smiles, a portion of the cheek is drawn inward. Dimples are particularly noticeable with chubby cheeks because fat makes the indentations more pronounced.

4. Holes above the ears

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Approximately 5% of people on the planet are born with a small hole above one or both earsInterestingly, in the USA, such people constitute less than 1% of the population, while in Asia this distinction is diagnosed in approximately 10% of newborns. Scientists are yet to reach a conclusion about the causes of this feature’s formation and the role it plays in the body, but some believe that the holes could be an evolutionary remnant of fish gills.

3. Hitchhiker’s thumb

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Hitchhiker’s thumb is a physiological phenomenon in which the upper phalanx of the thumb can bend 90 degrees in the direction opposite to the palm. This hyperextensibility is caused by the presence of a special gene, known as the "bendy thumb gene." Such a feature is inherited and occurs in about 25% of people.

2. Missing tendon

Gather all the fingers of one hand together, and tense your wrist. If the tendon on the inner side of the wrist doesn’t become visible, you must be one of the 14% of people who don’t have the long palmar muscle. This muscle belongs to the vestigial parts of the body — those whose necessity has disappeared in the course of evolution. Experts say that the absence of the long palmar muscle does not affect the grip strength or any other functions assigned to the hands.

1. Darwin’s tubercle

© eastnews  

The protruding segment on the inside or outside of the ear is called the Darwin’s tubercle. The famous scientist once suggested that this feature was the consequence of the fact that early people’s ears used to be pointy. It is believed that those who possess this distinction (no more than 10% of the world’s population) are better at sensing voice tonality. Such people can also hear high-frequency sounds and clearly identify particular sounds, even in noisy places.

And now...the promised bonus!

You can develop some of the above-mentioned unique skills through exercise. Of course, you won’t acquire superpowers, but you will be able to impress your friends and tone your muscles at the same time!

Learn how to raise one eyebrow here.Here are instructions on how to wiggle your ears.You’ll gain the ability to lick your elbows by following this advice.Learn to perform tricks with your tongue here.

Preview photo credit imgur

Wednesday, 19 July 2017

Mysterious Mental Disorders Our Brain Is Capable of

10 Mysterious Mental Disorders Our Brain Is Capable of

According to statistics, every fourth person on Earth suffers from a mental or behavioral disorder.

Bright Side decided to examine the most unusual of them in order to prove once again how mysterious the human brain is.

Quasimodo syndrome

© PROSOPOPEYA PRODUCCIONES  

Quasimodo syndrome, or body dysmorphic disorder, is an extremely dangerous mental disorder known for obsessive thoughts about a highly exaggerated or even imaginary physical defect. Patients constantly look in the mirror, trying to find an angle at which the supposed defect isn’t visible; they refuse to be photographed, in order to avoid their drawback being captured in a picture; they take excessive care of their appearance; they have love life problems due to this particular flaw; they have low self-esteem; they feel awkward in society, suspecting that others notice the "defect" and laugh at it. Sounds familiar?

The absurdity of this syndrome is revealed in the silent short film Contracuerpo.

Erotomania

© Castelao Producciones S.A.  

Those suffering from erotomania are sure someone’s in love with them, typically someone of a much higher social status (for example, a celebrity). The patients believe their imaginary admirers show their attitude toward them through special signs, secret signals, telepathy, and coded messages in the media. It’s difficult to fight the disorder: even if the supposed lover directly says "no," a patient with erotomania interprets this as part of a secret strategy that hides their relationship from society.

This syndrome is raised in the movie From the Land of the Moon (Marion Cotillard’s character).

Capgras delusion

© Alcove Entertainment  

This syndrome makes a patient believe someone close to them or they themselves have been replaced with a doppelganger. The patient can claim that bad deeds attributed to them were committed by their double, who looks exactly like them. This disorder is often accompanied by schizophrenia.

The feature film The Double, based on the novel of the same name by F. M. Dostoevsky, reveals the essence of this disorder.

Fregoli delusion

© Paramount Animation  

In this case, the patient believes exactly the opposite: under the mask of strangers or surrounding people hides someone close to them, who constantly wears makeup and changes their appearance for the purpose of pursuit.

The syndrome was first described in 1927: one young girl believed she was being pursued by two actors from the theater she used to visit, taking the form of people she knew or met.

This topic is partially revealed in the animated movie Anomalisa.

Adele Syndrome

© Les Artistes Associés  

Adele syndrome is an obsession that makes a person experience a pathological love affection. Doctors have recently recognized it as a mental disorder that seriously threatens a person’s health and life, comparing it to gambling, alcoholism, and kleptomania.

Symptoms of the disease resemble deep depression but can be much more dangerous: persecution of a person, self-deception, delusive hopes, voluntary self-sacrifice, ignoring friends’ or other close people’s advice, reckless actions, and loss of interest in other topics and activities.

You can watch The Story of Adele H, a movie about the syndrome and the young woman it was named after.

Cryptomnesia

© Canal+  

Cryptomnesia is a kind of memory impairment whereby a person cannot remember when a particular event took place or whether it was a dream or reality, for example, if they wrote a poem or simply remembered something they had read. In other words, the source of information is forgotten, and the person cannot determine whether the idea belongs to them or to another person.

This syndrome often goes along with the “jamais vu“ phenomenon, opposite to ”deja vu," when suddenly there comes a feeling that a well-known place or person seems completely unknown or unusual, as if seen for the first time.

In the photo, you can see a fragment from The Science of Sleep.

Alice in Wonderland syndrome

© Roth Films  

This syndrome changes the patient’s perception of surrounding objects and space: they can perceive them as much smaller or larger or realize they’re far away but, in a strange way, very close. The most difficult case is when a person perceives their own body improperly: they cannot understand its shape and dimensions. In this case, neither the patient’s eyes nor any other sense organs are damaged, and the changes concern only the mental state.

Obsessive-compulsive disorder

© Appian Way  

Patients suffering from obsessive-compulsive disorder are subjected to obsessive anxious thoughts they cannot control and get rid of, or "rituals": special actions that, as it seems to a person, they’re forced to perform. At the same time, a person perfectly understands the absurdity of their actions, but their non-fulfillment leads to unbelievable anxiety and, eventually, to constant observance of these rituals.

A vivid example of a person suffering from OCD is Leonardo DiCaprio’s character in The Aviator.

Paraphrenia

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Paraphrenia is a combination of paranoid delusions and grandiosity. The patients’ delusional ideas are constantly accompanied by pseudo-hallucinations and "false memories." The patients consider themselves rulers of the world, ascribe themselves immortality, divine origin, claim they wrote the great writers’ books working under these pseudonyms, and so on. People with such a diagnosis tend to look very arrogant and mysterious.

Multiple personality disorder

© Blinding Edge Pictures  

Dissociative identity disorder is a rare mental disorder that divides a person’s personality, and there’s an impression of several different personalities in one body. These individuals can have different genders, ages, nationalities, temperaments, mental abilities, world views, and even illnesses. The causes of this disorder are severe emotional trauma in childhood: for the purpose of psychological protection, the child begins to perceive what’s happening to them as if it were happening to someone else.

The most striking story with a personality split occurred in the USA in the late 1970s. When the rapist Billy Milligan was arrested, it turned out that 24 people were living in his head. You can read about this story in Daniel Keyes’s book.

The main character of the movie Split also suffers from such a disorder.

Preview photo credit Cross Creek Pictures

Wednesday, 12 July 2017

Facts We Bet You Didn't Know About Our Indian Film Industry That Will Simply Blow Your Mind!

9 Facts We Bet You Didn't Know About Our Indian Film Industry That Will Simply Blow Your Mind!

GARIMA SATIJA | JULY 08, 2017

    

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Bollywood is more than what the world perceives of. When we talk about cinema, all that comes to our minds is acting, cinematography, sound effects, editing among other things. But Bollywood is more than that. Indian film industry is all about costume dramas, catchy yet quirky songs, masala entertainer and more, right?

Being one of the largest film industries across the world, Bollywood has also set several world records and there are other crazy facts too that leave you stunned. 

For all the Bollywood buffs in you, here’s some enlightenment on the facts that will, for sure, blow your mind.

1. The Kapoors make the largest screen family of Bollywood!

YTIMG.COM

While the debate on nepotism has taken over the world of entertainment in the recent past, here’s how it all started.

Not only the industry is ruled by celebrities but also their families. Prithviraj Kapoor carved his own path in the world of entertainment, and he worked hard enough to make it easy for his decedents to start off their career with utmost ease. Not only that, he passed on his knowledge of the acting world upon his three sons -- Raj, Shammi and Shashi Kapoor among other relatives. So much so, that now the almost the entire Kapoor clan is taking the industry a notch higher.

And for this achievement, they also have a set a Guinness World Record. About 24 people from the extended family have worked in the industry. And so, Kapoors are the largest screen family of Bollywood.

2. Jagdish Raj Khurana was the most typecast actor ever!

CLOUDFRONT.NET

Also, contributing to the debate on how easy it is to get typecast in Bollywood. While SRK is called the King of Romance and his serious roles such as in Fan fail at the box office, did you know that there exists an actor who played the same role in 144 films precisely, and for that, he holds a Guinness World Record too?

Jagdish Raj Khurana is the actor who holds the record for being the most typecast actor in the world. He played the role of a police inspector in 144 films.

3. Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai has won the most number of awards ever in Bollywood!

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Just take a blind guess on the most number of awards a Bollywood film would have ever won? Beyond your expectations, the number is 102. The movie that has won these many awards is Hrithik Roshan’s debut movie -- Kaho Naa... Pyaar Hai, and it was added to the Limca Book of records too.

4. You think our films aren’t good enough? This Bollywood movie is a part of Spain Colleges’ syllabus!

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Zoya Akhtar’s Zindagi Na Milegi Dobarawas a soothing cinematic experience for most of us. The movie, which revolves around friendships and what you actually want from life, was mostly shot in Spain. And weren't you all fascinated to spend your vacations there too? Yeah, that is the impact the film had on all of us.

And not surprisingly, the movie contributed to the tourism of the country so much (causing an increase by 65 percent) that now the movie has been included in the syllabus of the colleges there. Yes, the students of marketing management have it in their syllabus as a case study.

5. How long do you think a Bollywood movie had spent in the making? 20 years?

No, it’s not Mughal-e-Azam, the film that took 14 years to complete, but it is Love and God movie from the same director.

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Love And God (Qais Aur Laila) took 20 long years in the making and after crossing several hurdles that include the deaths of Guru Dutt in (1964) and director K. Asif in (1971), the incomplete movie was finally released in 1986.

Haven’t watched the movie yet?  You can put this on your must-watch list!

6. How many songs do you think a Bollywood singer can record in a day? Well, Kumar Sanu recorded 28.

WALLPAPERSPICK.COM

Don’t we all miss Kumar Sanu’s songs? We all were on a nostalgia trip when he, after a very long, time sang for Dum Laga Ke Haisha -- Tumse mile dil mein utha dard karaar.

The singer was touted to be the next big thing after the death of Kishore Kumar. He sang so effortlessly that he would sing several songs in a day – sometimes as many as 28 songs. Yes, the singer has a set a Guinness record for the same.

7. Did you know that 10 National Award winners came together for one Bollywood film and it was one of a kind!

THELADIESFINGER.COM

Let’s talk about the star-studded films and how they ensure the success of a film? No, let’s talk about the talent-studded film for a change? As many as 10 National Awards winners worked in a single Bollywood film and looked like there was too much awesomeness at one place. The movie in talks is Drishyam, that stoked flames of curiosity before its release.

Who are the national award winners? Ajay Devgn, Tabu, director Nishikant Kamat, writer-filmmaker and composer Vishal Bhardwaj, the legendary Gulzar, cinematographer-turned-director Avinash Arun, editor Aarif Shaikh, production house Viacom 18 Motion Pictures, producer Kumar Mangat Pathak and director Abhishek Pathak.

8. Tamil actress Manorama acted in the most number of films – 1000!

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How many films do you think an actor can act in his entire career span? Well, renowned Tamil actress Manorama acted in approximately 1000 films and she received Guinness World Record for that.

9. In the year 2013, Indian Film industry made as many as 1,724 films, and that’s a whopping number.

BOLLYWOODMANTRA.COM

When we say that we eat and breathe films, we aren’t kidding. Almost every Friday, most of us check which all movies have released and pick one up to head the theatres for, right? That is one o the reasons that inspire our Indian film industry to make more films. So much so, that it now holds a record for churning out the most number of films in 2013. Yes, the industry saw the release of 1,724 feature films in the year.