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Severed head phenomenon
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2020-12-01 at 11:16 PM UTCI have seen before footage of the eyeballs of a severed head moving as if to look around, but this was after a very swift beheading with one quick slice of a sword. And this can still make sense, as if done quickly, the head might still have enough oxygenated blood to still be alive for a couple seconds. This recent footage from the nagorno karabakh conflict, however, is different and puzzling.
https://hoodsite.com/nagorno-karabakh-azerbaijani-soldiers-behead-armenian-soldier-put-head-pig/
The severed head seems lifeless, until someone moves the dead body of the victim. Once the body is moved, the head opens the mouth and shows us its tongue, as if eating a delicious pistachio icecream. Or perhaps a coffee flavoured one, mmmmm đ.
A user on the website comments, saying "What you saw there was a phenomenon where the head was reacting to the dude stepping on the chest of the body even though it's totally severed. When you're prepping for turtle soup you cut the turtles head off and place the body in boiling stock. The minute the turtles body touches the boiling stock, the severed head sitting on the cutting board will open up its mouth like it's screaming."
I have never heard of this phenomenon, and I find it intriguing.
Thoughts?
wat u fink star trek?
p.s. the linked website is good for footage from the conflict; I have not been seeing any food footage from the conflict anywhere else, but then again I have not really been searching for it in particular or anything. -
2020-12-01 at 11:21 PM UTCThat's why they used to bury the head and body of certain people at opposite ends of the town, to make it harder for them to communicate wirelessly.
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2020-12-01 at 11:22 PM UTCInteresting.
Its probably just nerves. -
2020-12-01 at 11:27 PM UTCI used to chop chickens heads off with an axe on a wood chopping block on a farm. The chickens would run headless right into the wall, then get back up again and crash into the opposite wall. Some would even get up again a time or two after that. All with no head at all, no brain at all.
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2020-12-01 at 11:43 PM UTC
George Floyd couldnât breathe with a foot stepping on his neck this Armenian dude is breathing beheaded. Different breed
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2020-12-01 at 11:48 PM UTCWhat if you stepped on the body's foot and the severed head let out a loud, "Owwwwwwwwwwwwwwww!!"?
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2020-12-01 at 11:54 PM UTC
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2020-12-02 at 12 AM UTC
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2020-12-02 at 12:01 AM UTCIve chopped off a lot of heads and can tell you that this is quite common.
Bodys and heads will expand and contract their muscles as they die.
If you want to know whether of not a person can remain conscious is yes and no.
If I chopped off your head you wouldn't have enough blood or oxygen to use for more than a couple seconds during which time you are not going to be doing much thinking anyways.
You won't be decapitated and pondering what you want for dinner.
It is more like this,
*CHOP*
person's thoughts "oh shit!"
and then their isn't enough to have the abilty to think anymore.
The brain is starved of oxygen and you fade out.
I know you fucks have ODed before and woke up all the sudden and it's 17 hours later and your in a hospital.
It happens that quick.
Every time I ever ODed the very last thing I remembered was pushing the plunger on the needle down and that was it.
Half the time I didn't even get the needle removed and it was usually very used and bent out of shape and had a barb on it so it just dangled. -
2020-12-02 at 12:07 AM UTCSupposedly, you weigh 21 grams less at the moment of death.
The April 1907 issue of American Medicine featured a paper by Dr. Duncan Macdougall describing his experiment whereby the beds of dying patients were placed on a sensitive balance. Believe it or not, he was trying to weigh the human soul! The paper was titled âHypothesis Concerning Soul Substance Together with Experimental Evidence of The Existence of Such Substance.â Macdougall of Haverhill, Massachusetts placed six dying patients on the specially constructed balance and concluded that at the moment of death there was a loss in weight of about three quarters of an ounce, or 21 grams. He had previously determined the weight loss attributed to evaporation of moisture from the skin, and by comparison this was sudden and much larger. He even controlled for weight loss due to urine and fecal eliminations and concluded that these could not account for the change in weight. Air loss from the lungs was not the answer either, as he determined by lying on the scale himself and noting that breathing had no effect on weight. -
2020-12-02 at 12:10 AM UTC
Originally posted by infinityshock lovingly allowed lard-ass lanny the luxury of lapping the loins-leviathan while the little lad larps as a laotian ladyboy lapdancer---.0101110--1-1-----10.-110.1011-----...-.1.0-1-.1010-10--01-011------.-.--------.-1----000011---(bÂanned) i see this regularly from dead 'things'
i dont know the scientific explanation…but i do know that muscles retain their fuel to contract regardless of the body being dead. the nerves have 'crossed wires' or 'misfires' and it causes a muscle to expand and/or contract.
ive seen people trying to collect dead deer, hogs, and other dead animals and they do all kinds of weird shit. breathe…turn their heads…wag their tails…opening the mouth…with the most common one ive seen is legs moving like theyre running.
ive read similar stories online from morticians.
weird nervous behaviour and muscle memory are pretty well known, the really interesting thing in OP is when the detached head appears to react when they kick the body -
2020-12-02 at 12:38 AM UTCThe answer lies within the state of reality itself, as it really is. The fabric of all reality. Energetic forces, detached from matter and time and space.